Pillar Stands on New Storage System

This is one of those press releases that tried to make a new technology offering sound like a dramatic tale of love and deceit set during the Crimean War. If you can figure it out, let us know what it's about.

Seriously, dig this: "If data is the lifeblood of an organization, the applications are its heart."

It just sort of goes on from there.

Posted by Lee Pender on 02/06/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments


More Microsoft-Yahoo News (And Some Other Stuff)

Let's not even pretend that there's going to be a bigger story this week (or maybe this year). Let's just get right to some links:

Microsoft's earnings per share would -- get this -- break even for the next couple of years if the Yahoo deal goes through.

Congress would look into the deal, too, according to one intrepid news source. Oh, really? A $46 billion deal involving Microsoft might get some attention from Congress? In other news, Bill Gates has a lot of money. (Sorry, we're still kind of bitter here about the Super Bowl.)

And here's some other non-Yahoo stuff worth reading but not necessarily expounding upon:

Linus Torvalds says that Microsoft isn't likely to launch those Linux patent suits.

And Gartner's top-ranked business intelligence vendor in terms of "ability to execute?" It's based in Redmond!

Posted by Lee Pender on 02/06/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments


ScriptLogic Adds to Help Desk Tools

We love how software vendors call their products "robust," as if they're describing a bold wine with a heady palate. Robust, but not arrogant...

Posted by Lee Pender on 02/06/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments


RTM for Windows Server 2008, Vista SP1

Some of the things that Microsoft has been promising for a while are coming to fruition. This week, Redmond released to manufacturing Windows Server 2008 (formerly "Longhorn") and the first Vista service pack.

Posted by Lee Pender on 02/05/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments


Another Look at Microsoft and Yahoo

"I feel the earth move under my feet
I feel the sky tumbling down, tumbling down"

-- from "I Feel the Earth Move" by Carole King

We've had a little bit of both the last few days -- moving earth and tumbling sky. (And, yes, RCPU apologizes to our more macho readers for quoting an artist as...uh, sensitive as Carole King two days after the Super Bowl. Hey, we're feeling introspective.) First, the earth moved on Friday, as Microsoft (finally) proposed a $44.6 billion buyout of Yahoo. Hey, that much money in that many briefcases hitting a boardroom table would make anybody's floor shake.

Then, of course, the sky tumbled down -- at least here in New England, where the local football eleven, the Patriots, will not come home to a celebration of a perfect season but rather to slate-gray skies and a renewed Bostonian sense of inferiority toward New York thanks to the Giants' Super Bowl victory. Oh, well. At least we still have the Red Sox here in Boston, although it feels right now as though they won the 2007 World Series approximately 437 years ago. Collectively, we're all a little down around here.

Anyway, given that this is RCPU and not ESPN.com, we'll focus on the moving earth of Microsoft's bid for Yahoo -- the name of which, as always, we mention here sans obnoxious exclamation point. Redmond's bid to take on Google (with which, as you might imagine, Google is none too pleased) is the one story that has competed with the Super Bowl and Super Tuesday for newsprint and online eyeballs the last few days.

Fortunately for Microsoft, government regulators on both sides of the globe seem, for now, uninterested in blocking the potential deal. As for everybody else's reaction, the takes have ranged from the ridiculous to the sublime to the indifferent, and pretty much everything in between.

Casually canvassing the Redmond Media Group cognoscenti, RCP Editor in Chief Scott Bekker wondered not just whether Microsoft and Yahoo would ever be able to integrate, but also how much sense it makes for two companies that are both losing ground to Google to combine with the goal of catching Google. Can the blind lead the blind? Ed Scannell, industry veteran and editor of Redmond magazine, RCP's sister magazine geared toward IT types, posited that Microsoft might need to change its hostile attitude toward open source if it plans to buy what is essentially an open source company.

Here at RCPU, we're mindful of a couple of things. First of all, the proposed takeover isn't a done deal. Let's not forget that -- especially given news this week that Yahoo might not be so excited about a Redmond takeover after all. Beyond that, let's not forget to note how staggering Microsoft's offer really is. The company would likely have to borrow money for the first time ever in order to pull off the deal, and the price tag, at upwards of $40 billion, dwarfs that of Microsoft's biggest acquisition to date: that of online ad firm aQuantive.

We're also wondering to what extent the Yahoo bid plays into something we've discussed before -- Microsoft's attempt to move the market to Web services rather than be moved by the market. Steve Ballmer's still talking about Windows, Office and servers as major revenue producers, but Microsoft's recent executive hires and the potential $45 billion cash outlay for Yahoo seem to scream that it's time to start thinking about the end of desktop software as we know it and move to -- not just imagine -- a world in which most computing is delivered via some sort of service.

Of course, for Microsoft, that would mean seriously downplaying the model and the products that made the company what it is today -- and playing catch-up to Google, a nimbler, more established (in Web 2.0 world, anyway) competitor. None of that will be easy. Just ask IBM, which had considerable trouble shifting its core business away from mainframes years ago.

But if anybody can pull it off, Redmond can. Windows and Office, while they might not be the products of the future, are still cash cows in the present. They could cover the cost of snapping up Yahoo, loans and all. And with new, Web-savvy blood coming in to run things -- think Ray Ozzie and Stephen Elop -- Microsoft seems serious about weaning itself off of a reliance on old, standby technologies.

So, what does all this mean for partners? Well, we're not sure yet. Nobody is. It might be time, though, to start thinking of what your place in a Microsoft SaaS universe will be and what kinds of transitions you'll have to take your business through to get there. Then again, you probably should have been thinking about that for a while, anyway.

Of course, a potential Microsoft-Yahoo deal could turn out to be a disaster, or just a flop. But it could also be the catalyst to jumpstart a rivalry with Google that could actually end up doing both companies and the industry as a whole a lot of good.

That is, of course, if the deal happens. Like the Pats in the Super Bowl, nothing is a sure thing.

How do you think a Microsoft-Yahoo deal would affect your business? Sound off at [email protected].

Posted by Lee Pender on 02/05/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments


Microsoft Moves into Open Source's Back Yard

Microsoft is opening a research center in Cambridge, Mass. -- better known as the People's Republic of Cambridge -- which will give Redmond a presence in the Free Software Foundation's home territory.

Posted by Lee Pender on 02/05/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments


Deconstructing Microsoft's Earnings for the Channel

RCP Editor in Chief Scott Bekker digs deep into Microsoft's most recent earnings statement and uncovers some things that the rest of us hadn't yet discovered.

Posted by Lee Pender on 01/31/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments


SEC Could Help Partners

Call it a hat trick, as Bekker serves up a tidbit on how the Southeaster... uh, sorry, not that SEC...the Securities and Exchange Commission might be able to help you, partner.

Posted by Lee Pender on 01/31/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments


Oh La La! French Police Go Open Source

Despite what you might have heard, nobody in France actually says "Sacre bleu!" as an expression of surprise. Maybe people did at one time, but they don't anymore. These days, "oh la la!" (yes, just like in the old Sassoon commercials) is the expression of choice. So, if you're going to react with shock to the fact that the French national police force has dumped Microsoft for Ubuntu Linux, please, use the proper French expression.

Over the next few years, the gendarmerie -- remember, there's a national police force in France, not a collection of local police entities like what we have in the U.S. -- is going to shift its 70,000 desktops from Windows to Ubuntu, which, incidentally, is far and away the operating system with the name that's most fun to say.

Les flics ("the cops" in French) say that they'll save more than $10 million a year in license fees. And they're already using OpenOffice and Firefox, so there shouldn't be too much of an open source culture shock inside the organization. What we're wondering, then, is whether it's really true -- as Microsoft claims -- that running Windows is actually cheaper than running Linux despite the cost of Windows license fees. Sure, there might be some issues with integration somewhere, and there aren't as many experts trained to service open source applications as there are to service Windows, but still...$10 million a year? Oh la la, that's a lot of money.

We kind of wonder, too, whether, the European Union's regulatory war on Microsoft might be having a ripple effect on government IT departments overseas. (Oh, by the way, the U.S. will keep an eye on Microsoft for another 18 months, too.) We've read that some major European cities have also started to ditch Redmond's wares, and Europeans -- especially those who work in the public sector -- are sometimes more prone to listen to their governments than Americans are. (Actually, that's also true for people who don't work in the public sector. Your editor distinctly remembers reading and hearing during his time in France about how public service announcements about safe driving actually worked over there -- and fairly quickly and impressively, too. Then again, some of them were pretty disturbing.)

In any case, we're not going to jump on the alarmist, Microsoft-is-dying bandwagon that probably has one or two fewer seats today. Remember RCPU's rule: No matter what happens, Microsoft makes more money. But, the more Linux penetrates enterprise and government settings on the desktop, the more Microsoft had better think long and hard about what its partners and customers need Windows to be -- maybe, to start with, lighter, cheaper, more flexible and less like Vista.

Do you run into competition from open source on the desktop? Is running Windows really cheaper than going with Linux in the long run? Let me know at [email protected].

Posted by Lee Pender on 01/31/2008 at 1:21 PM1 comments


Tech Data To Distribute Fujitsu Servers

Another Bekker creation for your channel enlightenment.

Posted by Lee Pender on 01/31/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments


Cisco Trots Out Data-Center Switch

Dig the lead of this story:

"Cisco Systems Inc. introduced on Monday a new data-center switch that the company says can copy all the searchable data on the Internet in less than eight minutes, or run 5 million concurrent high-quality videoconferences between New York and San Francisco."

Wow. That actually sounds...pretty impressive.

Posted by Lee Pender on 01/30/2008 at 1:21 PM0 comments


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