Have you greened your datacenter, server rooms, desktops or  even storage arrays? If so, how'd you do it? Your advice and experiences could  help drive an upcoming feature story on green computing and datacenter  efficiency. Let me know how you can help at [email protected].
 
	Posted  on October 30, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		If you want attention, you must do something outrageous,  even if it's falsely outrageous. We have Madonna kissing Britney, celebs  purposely leaking risqué tapes, and now Gartner publicly questioning whether  Microsoft is still relevant. And, like a dope, I'm falling for the Gartner  bait.
At a recent Gartner event, analysts grilled Stephen Elop,  head of the MS business division. These know-it-alls argued that Microsoft hasn't  adapted to the new world and still pushes fat clients and monolithic  applications. 
Now, I also believe in leaner software, but let's look at a  few facts. The Mac -- a good, old-fashioned fat client if I've ever seen one --  is the gold standard for many as to what's cool. And while I believe Office is  bloated and unwieldy, it remains the standard. (Its open source rival,  OpenOffice, is not much slimmer and it's doing just fine.) Microsoft is moving  to Web-based apps at about the same speed as IT -- slow and steady. 
If these Gartner analysts are so smart, why aren't they  running Microsoft? As they say, those who can't do, analyze.
Am I too rough on the self-inflated eggheads from Gartner?  Tell me where I'm wrong at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on October 28, 20098 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		OK, now that I've lambasted Gartner, I do have to admit the  group was one of the first to push the idea of giving Windows 7 a virtual  machine to run older apps. Actually, this was an idea I and a few others also  promoted and, as I recall, slightly before Gartner made its pronouncement. Microsoft  -- being, I believe, far smarter than me or Gartner -- was apparently already  working on what's now known as Windows 7 XP Mode.
The idea is simple: A full rev of XP runs alongside Windows  7 so all your old apps and drivers still work. The implementation is a bit more  complicated. First, your PC's processor must be virtualization-enabled. Second,  you need a high-end version of Windows 7 (Home Basic users need not apply).
The biggest issue involves security and administration. Let's  face it -- you're now running two complete operating systems which must be  managed, secured, updated and patched. Is all this worth the trouble just to  run a handful of older apps? You're the expert, so you tell me at  [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on October 28, 200910 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Last Thursday, Steve Ballmer was in New York announcing the availability of  Windows 7. Meanwhile, I was clear across the country, in Redmond, meeting with Microsoft executives on  another matter.
Before I give my take on Windows 7, I have to comment on the  very notion of a product launch. For an important product, Microsoft starts by  leaking details literally years before it ships. As it moves along, the company  announces the various alpha and beta versions. By the time the product formally  ships, hundreds of thousands are already using it. 
So what's the point of launching a product that's already been  launched? Publicity! Only Microsoft has the clout to make such an approach  work.
While I'm usually against this hype-factory launch strategy,  it's justified for Windows 7. After using 7 for the last few months, I'm not  blown away by the features -- but that's not the point. The real revolution is in  its stability and enhanced security. This combined with some nice interface  tweaks give Microsoft an OS that stands up well to the Mac, saves IT time and  headaches, and is fun to boot!
Is Windows 7 all it's cracked up to be? Answers welcome at  [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on October 26, 20096 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The recession is finally catching up with Microsoft as its profits dipped nearly 20 percent compared to last year.
 While it's easy to see the sky falling, keep in mind that  Microsoft is still very profitable, pulling in $3.6 billion in the last  quarter. Given the circumstances, the Wall Street intelligentsia congratulated  Microsoft for doing so well. (And after the trillions Wall Street has lost,  they'd better!)
Microsoft has taken some dramatic steps to keep profits on course,  slashing expenses and handing out a Redwood tree's worth of pink slips. This  bodes well for a recovery. A leaner, meaner Microsoft can really take off when  this economy finally comes around.
What is Microsoft's financial future? Predictions welcome at  [email protected]. 
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on October 26, 20092 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
  Doug is still in transit today, but he'll back for Monday's edition of Redmond Report. Filling in for him is MCPmag.com Editor Michael Domingo.
Fallout from the Oracle-Sun  Microsystems deal rained down on Wednesday, as Sun announced 3,000 employees would  be cut. The damage amounts to 10 percent of the workforce. 
It's a move that wasn't unforeseen,  according to this SFGate.com piece that has Sun bleeding red at the rate of  $100 million a month.
 
	Posted by Michael Domingo on October 23, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
  Doug is still in transit today, but he'll back for Monday's edition of Redmond Report. Filling in for him is MCPmag.com Editor Michael Domingo.
One rumor floating around the  blogosphere is that Microsoft is making a deal with Twitter and Facebook that  would allow Bing to search status updates. Twitter would be an easy one to do,  but Facebook is problematic, as most of those updates are private.
 It's funny, but as I was writing  this and looking for confirming reports straight from the Redmond campus, like  a shot across the bow, Google straight-up announced its own Twitter updates  search deal.
 Looks like Google is taking  Microsoft and Bing seriously now. Does that mean we have a real war brewing or  has it been brewing all along? Tell us what you think by e-mailing [email protected]. 
 
	Posted by Michael Domingo on October 23, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		
  Doug is still in transit today, but he'll back for Monday's edition of Redmond Report. Filling in for him is MCPmag.com Editor Michael Domingo.
Live from New York, it's Steve Ballmer stating  "I'm a Windows 7 PC, effective immediately" at the official launch  event. (I'm guessing when he made that  proclamation, he wasn't as adorable as the little girl in the ads.)
Now, if Ballmer really were a PC, I'd  guess that he would be the shiniest, most souped-up, Windows 7-sporting Alienware  desktop, not an underwhelming ASUS netbook.
 Windows 7 officially went on sale  a day earlier in the U.K., on Oct. 21, because of a postal strike. The early launch  doesn't matter much; Windows 7 has been tested, debugged (for the most part)  and manhandled by well over 8 million beta testers, so we weren't expecting any  surprises.
 For consumers, an upgrade is likely  to come from the purchase of a netbook or a new computer. And for enterprise  folks, there's a modest list of upgrade-worthy features, outlined here. 
Worth an upgrade? Especially if  you're running Vista, the answer is yes. 
 
	Posted by Michael Domingo on October 23, 20092 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
				Doug is traveling today, so filling in for him once again is Online News Editor Kurt Mackie.
		
		Windows 7 hits the streets on Thursday, and some retail  stores will be open at midnight tonight to let the teeming hordes get their  hands on boxed copies of the OS, as well as new PCs running it.
But let's face it: That's the general public that's been  watching those Kylie TV ads. IT pros are a different, tougher breed,  unimpressed by the ease of taking pictures of pet fish and transferring them to  your PC. Windows 7 means hard work ahead: app compatibility testing, hardware  assessments, deployment planning, image packaging, migration and management.  Does that spell excitement...or dread?
It turns out that the IT pro crowd was particularly unmoved  by the last big Microsoft OS splash, namely Vista.  IT organizations ignored Vista in droves and  continued to run XP, such that 79 percent of PCs running in organizations today  run XP, according to a Forrester report.
 Forrester is  warning IT pros that their days of resisting the Microsoft OS refresh cycle are  coming to an end. Like some cataclysmic apocalypse, support for the venerable  XP will eventually come to a close, and then IT personnel will be judged --  maybe by a bad job performance rating, or something, if things go awry. 
Those preparing for doom need a date, and Forrester gladly provides it. It's "the end of  2012" -- that's when organizations should be off XP to avoid app  compatibility issues, Forrester says.  Those poor IT souls not heeding such advice face additional torments, such as  the end of the security patch delivery cycle. On April 8, 2014, no more security  patches will be issued by Microsoft for XP.
If all of the neat features in Windows 7 haven't convinced  you to move off XP, maybe fear will. And maybe you'll want to buy a little  Software Assurance while you're at it. The Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack  (MDOP) is a set of tools that's one of the perks to Software Assurance licensees.  It contains MED-V, which lets large organizations continue to run legacy apps while  also centrally managing those apps. In fact, Microsoft just announced that MDOP  2009 R2 has just been released to its volume licensing customers.
 Even high Microsoft officials tend to downplay Windows 7,  suggesting that OS upgrades will happen with the PC refresh cycle, rather than,  say, tomorrow. But really, won't you repent for ignoring Vista  and just upgrade to Windows 7? Confess your OS migration plans to Doug at  [email protected].
 
	Posted by Kurt Mackie on October 21, 20093 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
				Doug is traveling today, so filling in for him once again is Online News Editor Kurt Mackie.
		
		Microsoft Security Essentials (MSE), Redmond's free anti-virus software for  consumer users, is on the job and has detected nearly 4 million malware threats  in a week's time after its full release. The United States leads the malware  tally, particularly with trojans, according to Microsoft's findings.
 Shouldn't everyone be happy now that Microsoft has gotten involved  in the industry it helped spawn (the software security industry)? Companies  like McAfee, Symantec, Computer Associates and others have followed close to  Microsoft's software like a barnacle to a ship's hull. In fact, their anti-virus  and anti-malware solutions now tend to dog Windows. Consumer users are hit with  daily security uploads and installs on power-up, and a complete virus scan of a  machine can take multiple hours.
Perhaps this security software "bloatware" is one aspect  that moved Microsoft to get involved in the business of its partners. Moreover,  MSE is free, without the annual subscriptions of third-party security software.
Microsoft has said that MSE is solely aimed at providing basic  protection for users who wouldn't buy anti-virus software anyway, such as in  the developing world. However, based on Microsoft's own stats, it seems people  in the United States  aren't buying security software either, or their subscriptions have lapsed. And  we're not the developing world...yet.
Software security experts still seem to be assessing MSE's  impact. In particular, there's worry that the sharing of security information  will break down if proprietary concerns become more important than cooperation.  Some unkind words have been exchanged over MSE's release by software security  vendors, who say Microsoft just can't cut it.
 Will Microsoft Security Essentials spell the end of  third-party anti-virus companies? Will Microsoft bury its partners this time,  meaning fewer eyes looking out for malware? Is the road to good intentions  going to have a bad side effect, or will you be glad to be finally rid of  security bloatware under Microsoft's watchful eyes? Tell Doug at  [email protected].
 
	Posted by Kurt Mackie on October 21, 20093 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		We've had some interesting discussions about netbooks lately  and even have some fresh letters on the topic here.  Some see netbooks as crippled, neutered or otherwise barely capable computing  devices. 
That, apparently, is the minority as these puppies are  leaping off the shelves, with sales rising an astonishing 264 percent this year. 
Maybe our stimulus money should've gone to a netbook startup  rather than cutting hiking trails and building museums for politicians.
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on October 19, 20093 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft got a bit of a shiner last week when users of  T-Mobile Sidekick discovered their data had vanished into the cloud faster than  a Richard Heene balloon. 
At first, it was thought that all was lost, and Microsoft  offered customers $100 in free services to make up for the missing bits and  bytes. Loath to give up, Redmond  techies went to work carefully restoring the databases and attendant backups.  Voila! Much of this data is now coming back!
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on October 19, 20094 comments