Developers Wonder About Windows Mobile 7

From the Somebody Must Care About This file comes a story about the uncertain status of Windows Mobile 7.

Posted by Lee Pender on 11/11/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


Microsoft Documents Vista SP1 Failures

Well, failures of driver installations, to be specific...and printers in particular did not fare well.

By the way, many thanks to those of you who have written to share your opinions of Vista SP1 for Redmond magazine's reader review. We're a little late following up with you (sorry about that), but someone from the magazine will be in contact this week.

Posted by Lee Pender on 11/11/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


Light Patch Tuesday on Tap

There will only be two lonely patches for Patch Tuesday this month.

Posted by Lee Pender on 11/11/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


Cisco Sees Tough Times Ahead

Don't press any panic buttons or anything, but some of the projections coming out of mega-vendor Cisco don't sound too positive -- even if they also shouldn't be too surprising.

Posted by Lee Pender on 11/06/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


Microsoft Wants To Make BizSpark Fly

It's a tough time to be...well, anything in business right now, it seems. But it's a really tough time to be a startup business, what with credit markets still tight and so forth. But there's some hope for those companies trying to get a technology infrastructure up and running, and it's coming from Microsoft.

BizSpark is a program through which Microsoft is providing lots of technology and services with no up-front costs to companies that are fewer than three years old and earn less than $1 million per year in revenue. It's a shot over the bow of open source for Redmond, which has at times in the past had trouble convincing small companies that the total cost of ownership for Microsoft technology is less than that of open source.

Well, nothing's cheaper than free, and free is the initial price tag that BizSpark carries. Of course, the idea is to get small and emerging firms hooked on Microsoft by offering something free up-front -- not exactly a novel concept, but historically a pretty effective one in lots of different markets. The timing of it seems pretty good, too, and BizSpark will also include reasonable credit terms for when money does inevitably change hands.

Windows Azure is, or can be, prominently involved in the plan, and hosting partners will also have a role as providers of low-cost hosting to BizSpark customers. And if BizSpark does start a fire that burns open source, the entire Microsoft partner community could end up benefiting from the introduction of a new generation of small companies into the Microsoft fold. That could end up providing a little relief for everybody.

Are you participating in BizSpark? If so, how? Tell us at [email protected].

Posted by Lee Pender on 11/06/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


Windows 7 Not Looking Too Bad, Some Say

Well, one says, anyway...a blogger who takes a pretty long look at the successor to the forlorn Windows Vista.

Posted by Lee Pender on 11/06/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


Salesforce.com's Benioff Laughs in the Face of Danger

With the aftermath of the U.S. election in full bloom (by the time you read this), NFL playoff races heating up and much of the country basking in unusually warm fall weather, we're going to head back a few months and make...an Olympics reference! Or, at least, a track and field reference, which might as well be an Olympic reference. (Seriously, though, doesn't it seem as though the 2008 Olympics happened about 17 years ago? The shelf life for an event is short in our YouTube culture.)

Anyway, did you ever watch one of those middle-distance races in which one runner would dart way out ahead of everybody else, only to get caught about three-quarters of the way through the race and finish fifth? We're fairly sure that this runner is called the rabbit -- he or she sets the pace early in a race but never really has a chance to win it.

We're wondering here at RCPU whether Marc Benioff and Salesforce.com -- pioneers in Software as a Service -- are starting to grow floppy ears and a fluffy tail. Salesforce.com has done a pretty solid job of leading the SaaS-based customer relationship management race, but a few big-name competitors are starting to catch up. Microsoft, of course, is among them, not only with Dynamics CRM online -- a direct competitor to Benioff's company -- but also with the whole Azure S+S platform.

And there are others starting to leg it forward in the SaaS scramble. SAP, Oracle -- they should have Salesforce.com looking over its shoulder at least a little bit. But this week, at the company's Dreamforce show in San Francisco, Benioff spoke with the confidence of a runner who'd already lapped his foes. He took more shots than Sarah Palin in a forest full of moose -- at Oracle, at SAP...but less so at Microsoft, which he (for once) treated with a bit more caution.

We like Benioff and Salesforce.com here at RCPU because the CEO is a quote machine and because the company is a pretty genuine pioneer in what could eventually become a pervasive computing model. But we can also see this trailblazer going the way of Netscape...or, more likely, Lotus: snapped up eventually (although probably not in this economy) by a larger competitor but still continuing to produce innovative technology. That second scenario doesn't seem so bad, actually, at least for customers and Salesforce.com partners.

But Benioff won't hear of it. Salesforce.com is building or planning to build datacenters worldwide and ramping up its offerings to compete with the other runners in the race. Benioff's got bluster, and he's got a lead. But does his company have the kick to finish off the race? We'll see.

What has your experience been with Salesforce.com? Have you worked with the company as a partner or customers? Let us know at [email protected].

Posted by Lee Pender on 11/05/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


Microsoft Eats Itself with ActiveX

So if Vista's got much better security than XP, what's posing a threat to the pariah operating system? Uh, Microsoft's own ActiveX, actually. And who's making that claim? Er...Microsoft. Yeah. That's a little awkward.

Posted by Lee Pender on 11/05/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


New Windows Server Component in CTP

It's called Services Connector, which sounds like part of a highway off-ramp or something.

Posted by Lee Pender on 11/05/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


Microsoft Updates Identity and Security Apps

Identity and security might sound like topics to discuss with a therapist, but at Microsoft they're key components in a burgeoning product line. Redmond this week announced that it's adding some capabilities to a couple of identity and security applications.

First off, there's Identity Lifecycle Manager, which combines identification management and certificate management -- sort of the chocolate and peanut butter of security, as we once called them, much to the amusement, apparently, of some folks in Redmond.

Anyway, ILM2 -- the "2" part is just a code name for now -- is in release-candidate mode as of this week. Scheduled for general availability in the first half of 2009, ILM2 will include a nifty integration with Microsoft Office that will expand ID and certificate capabilities outside the bounds of IT to regular folks.

For example, a "knowledge worker" (as in a non-IT person, as if IT people have no knowledge) will be able to grant or deny an employee permission to use a network or application via, say, an automatically generated e-mail in Outlook. In other words, an IT person won't have to do it -- a non-IT manager will have simple, Office-based control over who gets to do what, and IT will have control in turn over what the manager gets to do.

"One of the greatest security risks enterprises have is loss of identity," John Chirapurath, director of marketing for the Identity and Security Division at Microsoft, told RCPU in a phone chat late last week. "When somebody leaves an organization, how does IT know? It's really the knowledge worker who knows."

There's a customization opportunity there for the channel, Chirapurath, better known as J.G., said. "ISVs can expand and extend our solution," he said. "At the same time, there is also a very powerful services story. Partners can look at the problem of identity management in a holistic fashion and design the right processes and self-service capabilities so you do identity management right from day one."

Microsoft's also updating another product, Intelligent Application Gateway, with Service Pack 2 for the application. "ILM is really all about identity and certificate management and self service," J.G. said. "IAG is about using those identities and governing access."

IAG SP2 adds virtualization to the mix, as it'll run as a virtual machine on Microsoft's Hyper-V hypervisor. It'll also grant partial access to certain applications, alleviating the "all-or-nothing" nature of access that exists today, J.G. said.

"Today, access is all or nothing," J.G. (and yes, we like calling him that) said. "It becomes a very complex problem because either you have to give [users] all access or no access [to an application]. IAG provides intelligence to that access -- very fine-grained access." A customer could, for instance, access an order-fulfillment part of an application but nothing else, J.G. said.

With SP2, IAG will also support Firefox, as well as Linux and the Mac OS. "Access is not a Microsoft-centric problem," J.G. said. With IAG SP2, hopefully it won't be a problem at all -- or certainly not one worth talking to a therapist about.

Posted by Lee Pender on 11/04/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


Hacked, Cracked and Striking Back

Andrew McLennan finally got tired of being ripped off, so he started a security company.

Well, it didn't happen exactly like that, but McLennan's experience as a video game developer did eventually lead to his founding of Metaforic, a maker of anti-tamper software. During his time at Steel Monkeys, a Belarus-based game developer, McLennan saw the company's products hacked, cracked and available for illicit sale literally before Steel Monkeys had released them in some markets.

"We had so much stuff pirated, it was ridiculous," McLennan said in a robust Scottish brogue. "We had stuff available in Russia before it was available in the U.K. We did get kind of fed up -- you'd spend nearly two years working on something and then see it stolen from you."

So, with funding from the Scottish government, McLennan founded Glasgow-based Metaforic, which launched in the U.S. in late October and has an office in San Jose, Calif. McLennan, the company's CEO, said that MetaFortress, the company's flagship product, can "stop any hack in its tracks."

But there's more to MetaFortress than just the fact that it prevents hacking, piracy, theft and reverse-engineering, McLennan said. Not only does MetaFortress do all of those things, but it does them in a way that's easy to deploy and doesn't significantly affect application performance.

Instead of requiring eight weeks to six months, as some other applications do, MetaFortress adds protection to an application in an hour by automating the process of adding protection, McLennan said. "Because we're so easy to use, we've become easy to adopt."

Beyond that, McLennan added, while most anti-tamper tools reduce the performance of the applications they protect by anywhere from 5 to 20 percent, MetaFortress clocks in at a 0.2 percent performance downgrade. And, he said, while competitors protect an application for anywhere from a week to a month, Metaforic's product offers three to 18 months of protection.

And MetaFortress isn't just for game developers. Metaforic is targeting the enterprise with its product, selling not only to ISVs but also to companies that do internal app development or want to protect critical elements of their infrastructures. The company is looking for partners, too -- both for traditional partners and for companies that might want to OEM MetaFortress. Channel members in the financial and government fields are of particular interest, McLennan said, because "they're difficult industries to get into."

Still, McLennan admitted that nobody's perfect. MetaFortress isn't un-crackable, he said -- it just provides better protection for longer than competing products do. "We're not claiming we're uncrackable," he said. "The hacker has to do everything manually. All we're trying to do is bore the attacker to death."

Posted by Lee Pender on 11/04/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


Microsoft PDC Leftovers

There sure have been a lot of announcements at Microsoft's Professional Developers Conference this week. We say that with a touch of incredulity because the PDC always struck us as being a tad esoteric and not having the broad-based appeal of, say, Tech-Ed.

OK, granted, Azure is more of a development platform than anything else, so it makes sense to announce it to developers. But it's also a critical part of an overall SaaS -- sorry, S+S -- strategy, so we might have expected an unveiling at a different, somewhat more inclusive conference. (And that goes double for Windows 7, even though developers will take some interest in it, as well.) Oh, well...it all ends up on the Internet, anyway, right?

Anyway, between Azure and Windows 7, PDC has been the most eventful Microsoft show for quite a while. We've commented ourselves into carpal tunnel syndrome this week writing about it, so for the last RCPU of the week, we're just serving up links to stories you might have missed:

There was a Windows Server 2008 R2 preview.

Live Mesh and Live Framework got some air time.

Redmond Developer News's Kathleen Richards brings us a story on cloud-based SQL services.

And here's something about Visual Studio for the Skittles and Mountain Dew crowd (the PDC target audience, after all).

Posted by Lee Pender on 10/30/2008 at 1:22 PM0 comments


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