ScriptLogic's Nick Cavalancia shared some other company  news: Longtime CEO Jason Judge has left the company. For this to make sense,  you have to have read the previous item.
As you recall, Quest bought ScriptLogic two-and-a-half  years ago. Quest made good on its pledge to maintain ScriptLogic's independence  by keeping Jason on as CEO (my guess is Judge remaining was part of the  contract). I've seen this happen before, such as when Quest bought Aelita  Software. The founder and head of Aelita, Ratmir Timashev, stayed on during the  transition, but left afterward to start virtualization vendor Veeam, itself a  very cool company. 
My guess is that Judge has something similar in mind.  Judge is used to running his own show, having started companies, run companies and,  in the case of ScriptLogic, given them serious legs. I'll be curious to see  Jason's next move!
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on February 03, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		I talked to my old pal Nick Cavalancia, vice president of  Windows management for ScriptLogic, about a new direction for the company. This  is a little complicated so bear with me. 
Quest Software last year bought a company called  PacketTrap, which does network monitoring. Now, years earlier, Quest had bought  ScriptLogic, though many don't know this because ScriptLogic is run pretty much as  an independent company with its own brand, salesforce, product line, executive  staff and development team. This is a smart move as ScriptLogic is known by  thousands upon thousands of IT managers and admins.
Now, Quest is selling PacketTrap technology to managed  service providers and as a free suite. Meanwhile, ScriptLogic is selling  PacketTrap as Perspective, a premises-based management and network monitoring  tool for small and medium-size businesses. The software monitors core Microsoft  products such as SQL Server and Exchange, as well as VMware. It also works with  network gear from Cisco and Juniper, which together own a vast swath of the  network market. Perspective, by integrating with Desktop Authority, is a true  member of the ScriptLogic family.
I hope Oracle learns a lesson from Quest and ScriptLogic  and leaves Sun alone.
Third parties are welcome to share their news with me and  the Redmond Report readership by writing [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on February 03, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		When Microsoft was under the antitrust gun, former  government target IBM piled on. Now that Google is gaining dominance, it's only  fair that Microsoft take a few shots. 
And that's just what Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith  did in a recent speech, arguing that Google's 90 percent share of the online  advertising market should raise serious questions -- questions Google should be  made to answer. 
Smith is not alone. Nicolas Sarkozy, president of France  and husband of the best-looking first lady ever, also wants Google investigated.
Is Google good or bad for media? And what do you think of  antitrust laws? If you back them, who would you prosecute? Render your verdict  at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on February 03, 20102 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Steve Jobs is a real American hero. It's tough to knock  the guy, but I'll try anyway: His products are almost always closed and  expensive, and he has a penchant for going after journalists for doing their  job. 
Despite these flaws, Jobs generally has the moral high  ground, and that's why his recent Google comments sting so much. Google is  famous for claiming to "do no evil." Jobs isn't buying it, saying it's  all a load of...well, you fill in the blank.
Jobs' beef seems to be over Google going after the iPhone:  Jobs isn't competing in search, so why should Google enter the phone wars?
I don't get it. I'm in favor of competition, and as long  as Google competes with the iPhone fairly, what's the beef? Clearly, there are  other ways Google has violated the "Do no evil" code. 
Is Jobs right to be irritated? You tell me at  [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on February 03, 20109 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft has been busy lately with patches, in  particular patching the famous hole that let Chinese hackers break into Gmail.  Last week, Microsoft released four under-the-radar fixes -- not plugging holes  per se, but correcting "idiosyncrasies."
Here's a quick rundown:
  -  Software updates don't always update, so there's a new  tool for Vista, Windows 7 and Windows Server  2008 (R2, as well). 
 
 
-  Some machines with an NVIDIA USB-enhanced host  controller interface freeze after moving data to USB devices. There's a hotfix  for those with real troubles, while other folks can wait for a fix through a  software update.
 
 
-  Error reporting in Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2  has its own errors which are fixed through a quick update. Errors include  system hangs and keyboard shortcut glitches.
 
 
-  Those wanting to restore Windows XP or Windows Server  2008 R2 backups have a new utility that replaces the no-longer-available  removable storage manager. 
Posted by Doug Barney on February 01, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		I thought I could ignore the iPad, but as someone who  might be asked to buy one (or three) as Christmas presents, I can't resist.  First, given Steve Jobs' track record and knack for design, this will be a  raging success. But I have to question why it's based on the single-tasking  iPod/iPhone OS rather than the richer, multitasking, full version of the Mac OS. 
Let's face it: Nearly all of us need a laptop. If the  iPad were indeed a computer, it could act as a laptop replacement or companion,  just like PC-based tablets and netbooks. But I can't see lugging around my cell  phone, laptop and an iPad -- especially through airport security. A Mac OS-based  tablet could do all the things the iPad does, but also word process, run all  common Web apps and browse without limits. 
The iPad may cost from $499 to $829. In this recession --  and when I can get a sweet laptop for $400 -- this seems a tad steep. But that's  just the beginning. Like the iPod and iPhone, it's all a big money suck. Videos,  books, tunes -- Apple wants you to pay for all this, too. Given that, the iPad  should be a Park Avenue/Hamptons/Silicon Valley status symbol. Unfortunately,  regular folks who can't afford it will be wasting their gotten gains on stuff  they don't need. 
The iPad is cool for sitting around the living room, car  seat (passenger, please!) or airplane, and listening to tunes, reading a book,  watching video or doing some low-level messaging. This is a niche market -- and  an expensive one, at that.
Having said all that, I'm not a technology and design  genius. Steve Jobs is. And I predict Jobs will prove me dead wrong. Now, if  Jobs would only build a Mac-based netbook...
By the way, will Apple be forced to change the iPad name?  Given all the late-night jokes, it might not be a bad idea.
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on February 01, 20107 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Last April, the economy was crashing worse than a Lindsay  Lohan SUV, and critics were predicting the fall of the Redmond empire. I wrote a long essay, "The  Strength to Endure," arguing that Microsoft would be just fine. 
Microsoft's latest earnings report backs my case, as  rampant Windows 7 sales have Microsoft bean counters working overtime. Not only  did Microsoft pull in nearly $19 billion (with an impressive net income of  nearly $7 billion), but sales rose 60 percent compared to a year ago. 
In fact, this is Microsoft's best quarter ever! Driving  this success is some 60 million Windows 7 licenses. Xbox Live is no slouch,  either, with 23 million current members (I have a pretty rabid one in the house). 
How will Microsoft do in the coming decade? Let us know  by writing [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on February 01, 20104 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Sometimes, stories like the one I'm about to bring you  turn out false. But I'll proceed in assuming it's true. Apparently, an  ex-Microsoft worker inadvertently posted release dates for nearly all important  products Redmond  is working on. 
Here's a rundown of the leaked dates: Windows 8 will be  out July 2011, Office 2012 a year later, and SQL Server 2011 in -- you guessed  it -- 2011!
These dates may be real Microsoft dates, but software is  software. As a young journalist, I liked nothing better than to clobber  companies for missing dates. Now that I've been doing this for 25 years, I've  learned a thing or two about software. For one, I still can't write it, and for  two, it's unfair of me to be critical when people who can write it take longer  than they thought they would to finish. 
My hunch? Real or not, these dates are meaningless. Do  you care about or believe release dates? Express yourself at  [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on January 29, 20102 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Oracle held a press conference longer than a Joe Biden  diatribe this week to explain to the world just what it intends to do with Sun.  I'm talking five solid hours of exec-speak.
Now, I'm usually not happy when a cool, independent  company gets bought, but Oracle is probably the best buyer for Sun. Like Sun,  Oracle is feisty and pushes more envelopes than my local post office. 
The good news is that Oracle wants to maintain the Sun brand,  but only for "some products." Most of the messaging revolved around  integrating Sun into Oracle, thus reducing any hope for Sun independence. More  good news is that Oracle remains committed to both Java and Solaris. 
In classic Oracle style, the company used the acquisition  of Sun to go right after Microsoft. In particular, Oracle wants to go after the  Office franchise with a cloud version of OpenOffice. I've used OpenOffice briefly and talked to Redmond Report  readers about it, and it's pretty solid software. The only beef is that it's  too much like Microsoft Office! 
I hate to see Sun go, but I'm interested to see what  Oracle does with all this technology. Is Sun-Oracle good for our industry? Let  us know at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on January 29, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Friends, your faithful scribe has been attacked, reviled,  subjected to ridicule and hostility. Bob Evans, senior VP at TechWeb (which,  incidentally, competes with nearly every property I run) came across my item  about Oracle buying Sun. 
In that item I said, "I admit it: I'm a huge fan of  Sun Microsystems...But it soon may no longer be a company at all as the European  Union this week approved Oracle's proposed $7.4 billion buyout. It's such a  done deal that Larry Ellison is planning a Hugo Chavez-style five-hour company  and press event next week on the matter."
Evans decided to give me a lesson in journalism. In his mind, I was directly  comparing Larry Ellison to Hugo Chavez. 
But if you read my sentence correctly, you can see I'm  comparing the "company and press event" to a Chavez event. It's a  simple metaphor. 
Evans lays further groundwork, suggesting that maybe I "got  confused and was thinking of Fidel Castro, who like Chavez is also a brutal  tyrant but who has legitimately earned his reputation for long-windedness for  the past 60 years in Cuba."
Anyone who knows anything about Chavez knows that he  loves to give marathon speeches. A quick Google search could have told Evans  that. 
So Mr. Evans' entire premise is wrong, but he uses it  anyway to attack me and one of my properties, saying, "The one and only  thing a media brand has going for it is credibility with readers. And when  nitwits like Barney write gratuitous and vicious things about a CEO of Ellison's  caliber, it just adds to the growing disillusionment so many people have these  days with media properties that fail to respect the audiences' intelligence..." 
And, as if the reader didn't already know how he feels,  Evans calls me "asinine." This guy is pulling out all the stops!
Mr. Evans is also a mind reader, as he makes clear in  this passage: "Is Larry Ellison's [sic] everybody's hero? Surely not. Can  he be hard-edged and savagely competitive? You bet he can, and those traits  lead to another quality of Ellison's that Barney and perhaps others object to:  he's one of the wealthiest people in the world."
Let me get this straight. Even though I never maligned  Mr. Ellison, somehow Evans thinks I'm jealous of his wealth. Mr. Evans is an  adjunct professor at Carnegie Mellon. Does he teach students to make such leaps  of logic? 
Now here's a lesson for Mr. Evans, and I won't use words  like "nitwit" and "asinine" to make my point. Even in blogs  and newsletters, writers have to be careful and statements should be grounded  in fact. Evans didn't parse my sentence properly and falsely argued that Hugo  Chavez isn't known for long speeches. That double-error is the same kind of  shoot-from-the-hip journalism Evans falsely accused me of.
I've been wrong many times, and when I am, I admit it  publicly. In fact, loyal Redmond Report readers are the ones that keep me on  the straight and narrow. 
Mr. Evans is a different animal. He refuses to admit any  error and seems quite happy with what he's done. Unlike him, I'll show some  class and not say how I truly feel.
Yesterday, I posted a comment on Evans' blog, to which he  responded in a rather evasive manner. When I tried to respond, the system  blocked my post. I'm still shut out of the comments section. I'm not sure if  this is a glitch or censorship, but unlike Evans, I'm not going to jump to any  conclusions. 
Whether you agree with me or Bob, feel free to share your  comments on his blog. Of course, as a loyal Redmond Report reader, you're more  than welcome to write me at [email protected]. 
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on January 27, 201021 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		In 1999, while at Network World, Carolyn Marsan and I  interviewed Vint Cerf about IPv6. Cerf was beseeching the entire industry to  move as quickly a possible to IPv6 since IPv4 addresses were running out. 
Thanks to a kludge or two, 11 years later there are still  IPv4 addresses left -- but not many. Over 90 percent of all possible IPv4  addresses are in use. At this rate, all of them will be gone by 2013, says the  Number Resource Organization.
The good news is that IPv6 has been here for a long time,  it works, and companies such as Microsoft are doing a great job supporting it. 
I guess the lesson here is we should all get moving on  IPv6. Vint Cert will thank you!
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on January 27, 201012 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		I used Notes in a past life and didn't much care for it,  at least as far as pure e-mail goes. It was clunkier than my rusted-out '96  Ford Bronco (which is my daily driver). But many people love Notes, especially  IBM, which is touting an upcoming version that's a bigger social butterfly than  the late Truman Capote. (Remember when social butterflies actually had some  brains?)
Project Vulcan, a Notes and Domino technology with no set  delivery date, aims to help corporations build their own social networks, both  for internal use and customer outreach. The technology also lets employees track who is doing  what, a feature similar to the activity streams in SharePoint 2010.
Who has the clunkiest daily driver? Tell us about your  jalopy at [email protected]. 
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on January 25, 20101 comments