Containing the Cloud

Cloud computing may not take over our entire world of computing, but it's clearly going to represent a large chunk of how we conduct business. And that has some rather huge security implications .

For one, all these service companies need to ensure that their software -- and your data -- is safe. This means that the security software market is going to be less about anti-virus on your PC and more about anti-hacker on huge server farms.

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Posted by Doug Barney on 07/17/20080 comments


VMware Price Hike?

There's an old story about economics that I think my dad once told me. It seems that Smirnoff vodka was losing market share to its lower-priced rival, Wolfschmidt, back in the '60s. Instead of slashing its prices to match those of Wolfschmidt, Smirnoff did something no one expected: It raised 'em. All of a sudden, Smirnoff was a premium brand, and sales rose.

Apparently, VMware is the Smirnoff to Hyper-V's Wolfschmidt. Over in Europe, VMware is raising prices, at the exact same time that a nearly free Hyper-V is coming to market.

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Posted by Doug Barney on 07/17/20080 comments


Heckling iPhone Fans

The Apple crowd is a pretty loyal lot. These are the folks that line up whenever there's a hot new Mac, iPhone or Steve Jobs sighting.

One TV reporter, though, mistook this crowd for the Dungeons & Dragons-type folks that camp out waiting for the next PlayStation or Nintendo. This TV reporter thought Apple fans were pimple-faced losers with no social skills -- and no guts.

But when he asked, on camera, a bunch of folks standing in line for the new iPhone if they had ever kissed a girl, he got completely owned by one dude. This guy coolly explained how uncool it was to assume that iPhone fans were a bunch of dweebs. After this got More

Posted by Doug Barney on 07/17/20080 comments


Mailbag: Microsoft Plays Monopoly

Microsoft is sounding an alarm over the Google/Yahoo ad deal, calling it a monopoly in the making. Coming from Microsoft, this might be ironic -- but not that surprising:

Ironic? No, it's about time. Turnabout is fair play.
-Anonymous

This is just as ironic as when IBM got to finger-pointing at Microsoft during the Microsoft monopoly hearings. Youngsters might not remember IBM's own monopoly issues, but the rest of us do.
-Stan

What goes around comes around. I think Microsoft is justified using the same arguments that have been used against it -- and the results should be the same if the legal systems are balanced as they claim.
-Anonymous

Microsoft's enemies have used the monopoly chip against them and now they want to turn the tables on Google. Having politicians and the courts involved in this is not good for the consumer's pocket book or for technology innovation. I trust the market to make the corrections needed.
-Tom

After reading your comments about Microsoft, the potential Google/Yahoo deal and the words "monopoly" and "ironic" in your column, another word immediately came to my mind: HYPOCRITE. Kind of like the pot calling the kettle black. Just like a terrorist calling the United States a bunch of murderers. Kinda of like sending a fat, overweight U.S. senator overseas to a Third World nation to investigate their poverty and hunger. Tennessee Williams said it best in "The Rose Tattoo," Act 3: "The only thing worse than a liar is a liar that's also a hypocrite!"

How long before we see Microsoft changing its trademark to a guy wearing a black hat, a tuxedo and a monocle?
-Les

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Posted by Doug Barney on 07/17/20080 comments


Microsoft and the Cloud: The Desmond Perspective

Michael Desmond is editor in chief of Redmond Developer News , our magazine for corporate development managers (we also own Visual Studio Magazine ).

Last week, Mr. Desmond tackled an issue we've been talking about here: whether Microsoft can move from a maker of packaged software to a services company. And like this here Redmond Report, the real insight came from readers.

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Posted by Doug Barney on 07/16/20080 comments


Mailbag: Uh-Oh-XML

On the topic of Microsoft's OOXML file format, Angus has an interesting question:

How is OOXML a standard when even Microsoft's own Office suite does not yet fully support it?
-Angus

In the wake of the WSUS glitch that Microsoft eventually fixed, Doug asked readers whether they value a patch's stability more than its speed. Most of you went with the former:

Stability, of course. Does it matter if a hacker brings down your server or a Microsoft patch does it for them? If the data isn't available, it's useless.
-LouAnne

With patches, as with medical interventions, the primary guidance lies in the injunction: "First, do no harm."
-Fred

I will take stability over speed.
-Mark

The stability is more important. Their newest version of Explorer has now locked me and others from accessing a file we need to do our job. I am the administrator for the file but don't have access to the file.

They sent a fix to the problem a year ago, but it still hasn't fixed the problem. To access any file I need, I have go to Explorer to retrieve any of the my documents. If I try "save as" or change the drive in the program, all the files I have in that program freeze and I lose data. Which also means I can't repair my Access database as it means I have be able to select a drive.
-Ruth

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Posted by Doug Barney on 07/16/20080 comments


New Citrix Tool Promises Virtual Interoperability

Citrix this week announced " Project Kensho " (which is a Zen term referring to one's initial enlightenment), a set of tools that should make your choice of hypervisor, as Dr. Evil might say, "inconsequential."

Kensho tools take advantage of Open Virtual Format (OVF), a standard that lets IT and application makers build virtual machines that run independent of the hypervisor. This way, a VM could be easily moved from VMware to Xen to Hyper-V.

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Posted by Doug Barney on 07/16/20080 comments


Microsoft and Monopoly: This Time, Google/Yahoo Is the Culprit

\Alanis Morrissette made the word "ironic" famous in her song "Isn't It Ironic?" Well, Microsoft may be the black fly in Google and Yahoo's chardonnay as Redmond is trying to get the U.S. Congress to put the kibosh on the Google/Yahoo ad deal. According to Microsoft, the deal would create a monopoly in Web ads , as the duo would control some 90 percent of the market.

Here's the ironic(al) part. Microsoft has been trying to buy Yahoo and ultimately wants to corner that same market. And what kind of share does Microsoft have in desktop operating systems, productivity suites and browsers? Isn't that ironic, don't you think?

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Posted by Doug Barney on 07/16/20080 comments


Yahoo Fight Gets Wacky

You would think that when billions of dollars are at stake, the stake holders would all have their stories straight. But Yahoo and Microsoft have very different versions of what led to the offer Microsoft made to acquire Yahoo's search business.

The offer was made on Friday and fairly promptly rejected by the Yahoo-ites. This surprised Microsoft, which claims that the chairman of the Yahoo board, Roy Bostock, solicited the offer. After receiving the offer that Bostock allegedly asked for, called Microsoft's behavior "erratic and unpredictable."

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Posted by Doug Barney on 07/15/20080 comments


Get Ready for SQL Server 2008

SQL Server 2008 is nearly here, and it's still 2008! Microsoft says the software will be released to manufacturing by the end of September, and then out to customers a short time later.

I poke fun, but on the server side Microsoft has been hitting its dates pretty dang well. Hyper-V was even early.

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Posted by Doug Barney on 07/15/20080 comments


No Stopping Microsoft File Standard

This spring, Microsoft's Office Open XML file format was approved as an ISO standard. But not all were pleased. Several countries -- Venezuela, Brazil, India and South Africa -- all objected and filed appeals. Now an ISO document has emerged that points to those appeals falling on deaf (or at least disinterested) ears.

When it comes to standards, Microsoft is darned if it does, and danged is it doesn't. For years Microsoft has been bashed for not doing enough to support existing standards, and even less to offer its own technologies to standards bodies. So when Microsoft offers its Office file formats, the critics complain that the process was flawed. I'm glad to that ISO appears to be making the right choice here.

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Posted by Doug Barney on 07/15/20080 comments


WSUS Glitch De-Glitched

From our previous item, it's clear just how important it is to patch, regardless of occasional conflicts. But many using Windows Server Update Services (WSUS) recently found that the server update service can't update their servers . Microsoft has already fixed the software that is itself designed to fix software.

My guess is that the rush to fix problems is creating flawed patches and conflicts with other bits of software. What say you? Is the speed or the stability of a patch more important? Send your answers to More

Posted by Doug Barney on 07/14/20080 comments


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