Lieberman Software, headed by super smart Phil Lieberman,  has long been in the Windows admin market. Now Phil is eying the cloud with  Enterprise Random Password Manager, which now brings its identity management  features to cloud providers. 
According to Lieberman (the company and the man), IT  interest in the cloud is growing, but so are fears that data will be stolen or  spied upon.
  
  We at Redmond  are working a cloud security story, so a recent e-mail exchange with Phil was  timed perfectly. Here's the gist of Phil's thoughts: 
  "The entire nature of   how insecure the cloud is and how cloud  vendors are not taking ownership or providing services for cloud security is a  big story that the cloud vendors don't want exposed. Any auditor that allows  critical information to reside on these cloud platforms without being able to  fully audit the access and security is simply not doing their job.  Or if  the auditor tells the client that cloud adoption is a mistake and the client  moves forward anyway, some companies have better management and direction than  others.
  Unfortunately, the auditors may find their client companies  jumping in to the pool (cloud cesspool), committing their companies 100 percent  between audit cycles, then having to give these companies the bad news that  their 'findings' show that they did something really risky and stupid just to  save a few bucks.
  Very few companies are doing their due diligence about cloud  security.  The cloud vendors are telling us they have no interest in  implementing security until customers demand it.  It is going to get ugly."
Are you a Lieberman customer? If so, send your thoughts to [email protected].  Third-party news also welcome at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on March 31, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		If you've never read The Onion, you might want to start. This  site has satire in the tradition of the old National Lampoon, though a heckuva  lot cleaner. Nat Lamp died before the computer market really took hold, so it  is The Onion that can skewer our favorite devices and vendors.
A recent story talks about a computer company that began  in a garage three decades ago, and is now in a smaller garage.
While not nearly as funny as stuff they've written about  Steve Jobs, it is a fairly clever little piece of humor. If you find something  funnier, shoot the link to [email protected].  
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on March 29, 20102 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		We continue to go through your responses to Doug's censorship  vs. free speech blog: 
  I don't know which is worse: that members of the KKK read  your newsletter or that I agreed with him on freedom of speech. I was surprised  and appalled when I read the signature on the letter after reading and mostly  agreeing with it. Thankfully, I don't agree with the hatred of anyone different  than me.
  I totally agree that the right to preach your beliefs and to  find like-minded people should be protected. However, my freedom cannot and  should not impinge on someone else's freedoms. The minute the speech goes from  beliefs to threats, that threshold has not only been crossed, but destroyed. 
  I, however, do not agree with the whole hate speech thing. It's  a slippery slope to start to say that one type of speech is protected, but  another is not – that is how dictators come to power. We must be vigilant to  protect all individual's freedoms (whether we agree with them or not), lest we  all become pawns to another's goals and find we've lost our freedoms.
    -Joe
  The  freedoms of speech and thought are basic human rights.
  To  deny them validates the beliefs of those who irrationally fear those whom they  demonize and strengthens both the position and the intensity of their language. 
  Censorship  also denigrates those who deny these freedoms by allowing them to forget or  marginalize the humanity of those they are censoring.
  Live  and let live, speak and allow others to speak, listen and learn. 
  You  don't have to agree with what you hear and discuss but open discourse is the  best way to combat the hateful beliefs and misconceptions which drive  intolerant speech. O
    Open  discourse is also the only lasting way to open the minds of others, which  ultimately frees people from intolerant ideas.
    -Todd
  So the Rabbi thinks we should  censor and persecute particular groups he feels are a negative influence on  society? That's never been done, so let's give it a try! Maybe we should elect  him to a high office so he has the power to really get things done.
    -G
  The most erroneous stories are  those we think we know best -- and therefore never scrutinize or question.
    -Sephen 
  I appreciate your thoughts. I find this whole issue a major  quandary. While I find hate speech repugnant, who defines "hate?" Google  pulls it services from China  because of censorship. I suspect that China thinks that the pro-democracy  messages that they have been censoring are hate speech. A devout Muslim  considers a critical cartoon about Mohammed to be hateful, but a critical  cartoon about Jews (or Christians or Hindus or…) to be righteous. As a  Christian, there are behaviors that I oppose, but if I state that the Bible  says those behaviors are wrong, I am speaking hate. I personally try to  separate the person from their action, but it can be a challenge.
  Ugly mess this freedom stuff. Causes all sorts of problems. Is  it all or none? 
    -H
  As much as I would love to segregate the hate-mongers from the rest of society, we have a  long tradition of letting speech speak for itself. Those that don't hate can easily recognize those  that that do, so there is really no sense in censoring such speech.
  More importantly, the slippery slope is that restricting  hate speech can lead to restricting all sorts of ideas based upon the beliefs  of those doing the restricting. There are those who "hate"  conservatives and there are those that "hate" liberals.  There are also those who hate Christians, Muslims  or Jews. Mostly, there are those that hate anything or anybody who is somehow different than themselves. 
  Who censors the censors? And who protects each person's  right to speak (even of their position is idiotic) if it is not us? 
  Some consider Michelangelo's David and Playboy magazine  equally pornographic and would restrict both -- yet the Supreme Court agrees  than pornography is not illegal and though obscenity is illegal, the  high court can't seem to decide what constitutes obscenity.
  The bottom line is that if I don't get to judge what I  should or should not access, who does? You? Congress? POTUS? Should we have Web  censors like we have (broadcast) TV censors?
  I am concerned that illegal activity on the Web cannot be  traced to the perpetrators or even to the jurisdiction where the illegal  activity takes place. 
  If there was some way to categorize Web content by type  (without prejudice) and by the identity and credentials of the source, it would  be much easier for the typical user to tell whether or not a source is  reliable. If I could read Web-based content and be sure of the credentials of  the source, the legitimacy of a Web site, and the identity of the person  sending me spam, I would be much happier. 
  The fact that there is so much hate in the world is  certainly disturbing but the idea that somehow gagging those that express such  hate will make them, or their like-minded readers, hate any less is simply  ridiculous. 
  Only an open expression of ideas among honest people will  reveal the truth and falsehoods of unfettered speech.  
  -C Mark
  I think that your recognition of the hate problem is great. I  am not sure what the solution is short of censorship. I believe that pressure  should be put on the hosting sites, but even that may not work because many of  the sites are in foreign countries. There are several e-mail lists that send  out vicious racial and religious comments. Again, I am not sure of a good  solution but I would very much like to see something done.
    -Jerry
  Here's my  not-so-hidden agenda on Web hate-speech. I'm a Scientologist. 
  For that, I've  been told on the Web, "I hope you die in a fire." I've heard more  f-bombs than sailors' barracks. In the real world, I've found two notes  advocating death to Scientologists. 
  Visit any Web  news that mentions Scientology -- even its prominent members -- and you'll find  its comment section an armory of hatred dripping with venom. 
  YouTube prints  cesspools of rage, four-letter words and expressions of violence under any  unmoderated Scientology-related video. And under videos about any other  minority you can name. 
  In my  experience, ABCNews is the only major news site that takes seriously "violation  reports" about readers' posts that violate its terms of service. Most  sites have no one-click way to report violations; you have to go searching. At  the far end of the scale is the St. Petersburg Times, which only purges  outright vulgarity about Scientology. A zillion micro-sites and blogs purge  nothing on any topic. 
  As to  censoring hate-speech on the Web, my gut so agrees with Rabbi Cooper! 
  But what if my  emotions are wrong? Should we let Web hate-speech alone?
  If  hate-crazies aren't allowed to vent, posture and display their anger verbally  to their Web buddies -- and get their team's "attaboys" -- might they  increase actual violence against Jews, blacks, Hispanics, Asians, other  minorities and Scientologists? 
  If that's a  possible trade-off, I'll take their virtual, verbal violence over physical. 
    -Jon 
  My  own opinion is that the Web should be a free-for-all! This is not to say that  we should not educate and speak out against all hate, pornography and the bad  the Internet has to offer, but we must remember "freedom is not free".  We all must pay a price to remain "free" and if that payment is to  allow a free Internet, then so be it. At what point do we stop restricting what  people have to say, and who will be the judge of what is considered appropriate?  Remember that you have the choice to visit or not, and the real reason to keep  the Internet free is the fact that you do have a choice. We are not China!
    -Vin 
Share your thoughts with the editors of this newsletter!  Write to [email protected]. Letters printed in this newsletter may be  edited for length and clarity, and will be credited by first name only (we do  NOT print last names or e-mail addresses).
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on March 29, 20108 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		As you probably know, Google no longer has a native  search engine for mainland China.  but instead redirects users to its uncensored Hong Kong  engine. This all stems from a dispute over Chinese hacking which made the  government-mandated censorship suddenly unacceptable. 
What's interesting is that Hong Kong is now officially  part of China  proper. However, the Chinese authorities have wisely let Hong   Kong hang onto some of its long-held freedoms and run it as a  separate "administrative region."
Always on the lookout for opportunity, Microsoft  continues to follow the Chinese rules and is actually looking to get bigger in China,  Microsoft now says.
What do you think? Should American companies follow the  rules of other countries even if they conflict with our values? Shoot me your  ideas at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on March 29, 20108 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Last December we ran a story (
Bing, Bang, Boom!) that you  all helped to write. The whole idea was that we asked  what you thought of  something and you wrote an entire story based on your, and only your opinions.  Turns out you liked Bing quite a bit, though few were ready to give up the  Google.
Now Microsoft is prepping a brand new Bing due this  spring (which means it could be any day now, but is likely a few months off). 
The entire look will apparently be revamped, and there will  be more real-time info from sites such as Twitter. There will also be more  contextual information, so instead of a bunch of simple results when you query  on "baking bread," it will give you sites related to the process of  baking rather than random sites about bread. 
What do you think of Bing? What is your favorite search  engine? Has anyone used Wolfram Alpha? Search your brain and send your top  result to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on March 29, 20103 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Doug's Wednesday blog item about Web censorship not only brought in a deluge of letters from all of you (see below), but also one from a spokesperson from the Klu Klux Klan:
  When the day comes you silence all opposition, America will    have ceased to exist. Silence the Ku Klux Klan and you muzzle this   nation  permanently. 
  With no voice of dissention what would have happened  to the   Watergate story? Having only one side of an argument means you get no    truth at all.
  Learn the lessons of propaganda: is propaganda your  truth, my   truth or the truth. The answer is my truth, I don't care about your    truth and the truth is what you decide it is. If we take away your   truth, and my  truth do we get the truth? No, far from it. You will then   have no way to reach  the truth.
  Likewise, hate is what you say it is. If I dislike  green beans   will you say I hate all vegetables? If I love lima beans does that    mean I love all vegetables?
  What has made America the country it is? The  right to speak,   publish and preach your truth, trusting the public to know what  to   ignore and what is to be called truth.
  - Rev. Dr. Travis Pierce, National Membership Dir.
    The Ku Klux Klan, LLC.
  
And here's your take:
  The Web should be a free-for-all without censorship. After    all, who is going to censor it? If I censor the Internet, I know that I   will  make certain groups angry (MoveOn.org, Salon, ACORN) due to my   definition of  hate speech. I didn't like many things President Bush was   doing but I  still believed it to be hate speech to call for his   hanging, showing him as Hitler,  etc. I would very much dislike having   those groups in charge of censorship. Leave  it free and everyone can be   offended, if they so please. 
  I would make one exception: if the action is illegal, then  the   Internet should reflect that (NAMBLA is an example, as pedophilia is    illegal).
    -Scott
  Just read your Redmond Report newsletter, which I read    religiously. While I feel that hate groups and hate speech to be very   morally  wrong and disgusting, especially in this day and age, I think   censorship is far  worse. It's a slippery slope to go down. Who knows   what's next, especially if  it ended up to some government agency to   regulate and enforce? These guys  couldn't manage making a ham sandwich   (and no, I'm not wearing a tinfoil hat  either). This is a human issue I   feel that needs to be fixed through education,  not technology. 
    -Derek 
  Someone  much smarter than I once said something to the effect,   "I may completely  disagree with what someone says, but I will fight to   the death to defend their  right to say it." Any censorship on the   Internet is the start of a  slippery slope toward providers deciding   what can and cannot be passed over  their networks. Giving any   monolithic entity that sort of power is extremely  dangerous.
    -Anonymous
  It should be left alone. Otherwise, who gets to decide  what's   allowed on the Web? Maybe haters will get in power and they will then    decide, like in Nazi Germany. The truth will set you free!
    -Ronald 
  As much as I despise the garbage that is spewed by hate    groups, I don't feel that censorship is the issue. Unfortunately, I   don't have  an alternative. The problem is that with the advent of the   Internet, this crap  is available to one in the comfort of one's own   home, as opposed to having to  “work” a bit to seek out like-minded   individuals, as in the past. In effect,  they are closeted racists and   bigots. Additionally, hate mail is forwarded by  people with little or   no thought as to the damage that's being done when they  do so. I am   certain that everyone has received forwarded racist “jokes” that  one   would not speak to another for fear of being labeled a bigot.
   I have taken  a stand in my small way by replying to the   sender, suggesting that they  certainly did not mean to forward   something of this nature and asking them to  please not send anything   like this to me again. I also suggest they think about  how they're   presenting themselves, either overtly or inadvertently. One person  was   the mother of a friend who would pass these freely on. She was offended   at  me when I called her attention to what she was forwarding -- fairly   ironic. We  have mended our friendship and she does not forward those   items to me, though I'm  uncertain about the rest of her e-friends.
    -Stu
  The  freedoms of speech and thought are basic human rights.
  To  deny them validates the beliefs of those who irrationally   fear those whom they  demonize and strengthens both the position and the   intensity of their language.  Censorship also denigrates those who deny   these freedoms by allowing them to  forget or marginalize the humanity   of those they are censoring.
  Live  and let live, speak and allow others to speak, listen and   learn. 
  You do  not have to agree with what you hear and discuss but   open discourse is the best  way to combat the hateful beliefs and   misconceptions which drive intolerant  speech. Open discourse is also   the only lasting way to open the minds of  others, which ultimately   frees people from intolerant ideas.
    -Todd
  I am the member of an ethnic group that is one of the main    targets of a number of these hate groups and I say a resounding NO to    restricting them. One thing that has to be remembered is the person,   group, etc  determining what should be restricted today may/will not be   the one making the  decisions in the future. When that person, group,   etc is changed, what is  considered hate today will change and it won't   fit the current definition of hate. 
  The only real deterrent to hate is vigilance, education and    activism -- out of which, hopefully, comes reasonable, responsible   people and  laws. 
    -James
  I don 't agree that networks should be unrestricted.  If  we   start with criminal behavior and work forward, we can see that there are    restrictions on various forms of speech in our open society.  There is   no  divine right to “say anything, anytime, anywhere.”  The easy   anonymity of  the Web has inspired many who would not venture out in   daylight.
  I am hopeful that the spirit of the law can be applied,    perhaps refined slightly, to apply to hate Web sites and networks.    There  is real damage caused by hate speech (fighting words) and there   should be real  legal and civil consequences.
    -Ira
  Who would be responsible for deciding what is and is not   acceptable?   Perhaps my view of not acceptable includes not allowing   tech-related  information to be exchanged, since that might enable my   users to DIY themselves  into a mess of a computer.  Maybe someone else   wants to keep me from accessing  Facebook, where I keep in touch with   friends old and new, some of whom I  haven 't seen in person for 25   years.
  
  If parents want kids to see only kid-friendly stuff, they   should be  monitoring what their kids are doing.
  
  If employers want their people to only work, that 's their   business if it 's  their connection and equipment.
  
  But if someone tries telling me I cannot say what I want in a   public forum  dedicated to the topic I am discoursing upon, that takes   away my freedom of  speech and is not acceptable.  I agree not   everything should be said, done  or maybe even thought. But this is   America, and freedom is a right not  to be given up so lightly.
    -Anonymous
  The demoncrats already call ANYTHING conservative hate  speech.   Then they start calling conservatives all sorts of hateful names. Banning   hate speech will end all speech that's not  government approved. 
  Consider how politically correct is used. Check how   China  treats bloggers. Also, remember that the Tiananmen Square    massacre never happened, according to the Chinese government.
  Today you can Google Tiananmen Square and read about it. Maybe    not tomorrow.
  Where is Buffy when you need her?
  You may publish my comment but not my ID. I fear what was my   government. The November elections will be suspended.I'm a   normal computer guy otherwise.
    -Anonymous
  I think that the Web should be a free-for-all. But I also    think that it shouldn't have the same rules as wire taps and evidence    collection. When a person posts something to the Web he does not expect   to have  the same privacy as he would have over the phone. When you call   someone, that's  personal communication. The Web is a public forum so   anything you say can be  used in a legal matter. What about social sites   like Facebook and Myspace? It  would depend if the owner limits who can   access their information. If it is by  invitation-only, then it would   fall under the wiretap rules. If anyone can see  it, then it would not.   While on the subject, how about the arcane rule about  encryption only   have a limited key i.e. PGP with 128 bit encryption? If you  want or   need to encrypt your info, so be it. We have the right to privacy just    like the law has the right to collect evidence. It's not our   responsibility to  assist the investigators in collecting evidence   against us.
    -Paul Bonney
With  the battle lines drawn between Apple, Microsoft and Google for mobile  supremacy, here are some of your thoughts   on who will reign supreme: 
  I'm with Google. While I have a lot of hatred for Microsoft    for many of their practices, Apple is worse. Apple wants complete   control,  wants everyone else shut out and wants competitors to just   accept it. 
    -Anonymous
  I'm rooting for all. The competition is a very healthy thing. I   carry an iPhone  (and love it) but know that if no one challenges the   leader then Apple will get  to big for their britches, and, regardless   of which company it is, lose  respect for the customer. It also spurs   innovation. The iPhone, for example, is  a great product, but the pace   of innovation will slow if there's no one there  to push them. If there   was no AMD what kind of processors would Intel be  producing today? 
  
  I like the simple elegance of Apple products. I also appreciate   the  flexibility and creativity that an Android (open source) option   can bring to  individuals and hardware makers alike.
    -Greg 
  Your  blog points out that Google is taking a Microsoft   approach -- they'll build the  software and invite others to build the   hardware. I would say that I root for  Apple. I think that the fact that   they build both is a strength of theirs.
  Sent  from my iPod because droids are only cool in a Star Wars   movie. 
    -Vicke
  What is Apple's alternative?  Surely they aren't pushing that   cludgy, buggy and nightmarish QuickTime? Or is  there something else   they have that I'm not thinking of?
    And on the other side, isn't  Microsoft pushing Silverlight for   mobile applications?
    -Gerry
Doug asks for your favorite and least-favorite virt venders. You  respond:
My favorite vendor is VMware, for the win. They   offer:
  
  - Live Migration for killer functionality
  - Dynamically powering on and off servers(well, idling them) for   killer  functionality
  - Resource pools and over subscription for killer functionality that   will  enable the future of hosting solutions!!!!
  
  For my least favorite… I like and dislike things about all of them. 
  -Owen
  
  We  are a VMware shop. Out of 500 servers, at least two-thirds   are virtual and  running on ESX. It just works. Disaster Recovery,   backup and upgrading software  (with snaps) are all much easier now.
   
  So  when it came to VDI, we obviously tried View. That fell   on its face. We're now  using Citrix's XenDesktop running on the ESX   hypervisor. Have there been  issues? Yes. Any new technology has issues.   But the user experience is so much  better with XenDesktop.
  We  may always be a VMware shop. But with the prices they're   charging, that may  change in the future.
    -Andy
Here's some more of your responses for the possibility of  third-party patches in Microsoft's   Patch Tuesdays:
  I think its a good idea. My home system, which runs Ubuntu,    keeps all my software up-to-date. I think third-party software running   on Windows  should be updated due to the fact that the update process is   not the easiest  thing to keep up with, especially being a system admin   that's busy with other  things. I can't tell you how many times I've   heard "I need my Adobe (Flash)  updated." I just don't have the time to   keep flash updated on 100 or so workstations.  I have it set so all   machines in the organization check and install updates.  Having Flash   and other Adobe software updated with automatic updates would be  great.
    -Anonymous
  I  strongly agree with the consensus amongst your readers that   Adobe products  being included with the Microsoft patches would be a   really good thing,  especially because many of the patches are not   cumulative and a reboot is  needed after each. 
  There  is also another problem I've come across: I've deployed   Acrobat and Adobe  Reader via Group Policy. Ever try using Adobe 's auto   patch method when the app  is managed that way? Forget it. The only way   I know to do it is to add the  patch to your install point and actually   redeploy the app package every time  you want to update it. This means a   long delay at boot time for the end user. I  hope that if MS   distributes for Adobe, the patches will install even when the  app is   managed, such as it does for managed Office applications.
    -Charlie
  That's a BIG YAY!
     -Jim
Finally, unlike the defunct company and product names sent  to Doug,   your answers don't end:
  I still have an Amiga Technologies Inc A4000T that has been    running for 13 years, non-stop (except for hard drive and fan   replacements). It's  my house controller, using CyberCron to execute   CyberX10 commands to control  X10 power modules (light switches and   outlets). 
    It also has a PhonePAK, which is my telephone answering machine.    And I listen to CDs on it. 
    -LeEric
  It has to  be the Singer minicomputer. Only ever saw one at the   Arthur Andersen training  center in St. Charles, Ill. Singer's the only   sewing machine  company I know of that branched out in this direction.
    -Lee
Share your thoughts with the editors of this newsletter!  Write to     [email protected]. Letters printed in this newsletter may be      edited for length and clarity, and will be credited by first name only     (we do  NOT print last names or e-mail addresses).
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on March 26, 20103 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		I have to admit I don't fully understand BizTalk.  Middleware is always a bit imprecise to me, and BizTalk is no different. And service-oriented  architecture, in which BizTalk plays, is confusing to me even after reading an  entire book about it. 
So forgive me if my report on the next version of BizTalk  lacks depth.
What I do know is that BizTalk is all about integrating  software systems in what used to be called enterprise application integration.  BizTalk talks the talk by integrating with over two dozen major applications  such as SQL Server, SAP, Oracle, Seibel, DB2 and PeopleSoft. 
Now let's talk about deliverables. BizTalk 2009 R2 will  now be BizTalk 2010 and, apparently, will ship this year. New features include a  new dashboard, hooks to System   Center, better connections  to trading partners and updated support for SAP and Oracle eBusiness Suite. 
Do you use BizTalk? If so, how? Explain it all at [email protected]. 
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on March 26, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		I recently got a demo of Office 2010, SharePoint 2010,  Exchange, SQL Server and Communications Server all working together. It is a  rich and complex offering, with myriad ways of communicating. We used to have a  telephone, fax and the postal mail. Now with this combo we have telephony,  e-mail, video, Web conferencing, instant messaging and various kinds of alerts  -- plus you can still use fax and the U.S. mail!
For me, a simple man of the past, it's a bit too much. It's  like you spend all your time communicating and no time working. 
The good news is IT groups can choose which mechanisms to  invoke, maximizing communication efficiency while minimizing disruption.
All of this is prelude to news about the next version of  Office Communicator Server. The new rev, expected this year, doesn't just  detect whether you are present on the network, but where you are physically. As  a boss, this is tempting. As an employee, it seems a little uncomfortable. 
Do you use Communicator (Redmond claims over 100 million adherents)?  If so, share your thoughts via a simple e-mail at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on March 26, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Dell is not exactly known as a research company, but with  its reach into IT shops around the world, one could argue the hardware maker  could out research Gartner or IDC. So I am presuming the company's findings that 87 percent of IT folks will adopt Win 7 are credible. 
One reason the percentage is so high, Dell said, is  because Win 7 has been proven fast and reliable. 
I've been hearing from a lot of you about your trials  dealing with budget cuts and layoffs. One thing cuts have hurt is upgrade  plans. One reader's shop is still on Windows 2000 and has no plans to move. If  it were a better economy, I'd bet the planned adoption number would be well above  90 percent.
What are your upgrade plans for Windows clients or  servers? Tell us all by writing [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on March 26, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Microsoft's first even enterprise volume license plan,  Select is being discontinued and replaced by Select Plus.
If you don't want to move up to Select Plus, you'll need to  renew your Select license by July 2011. 
One of the key differences is that Select pricing is based  on forecasts, while Select Plus is based on actual purchases. Select Plus also  offers more flexibility when you purchase with the aim of eliminating cases  where IT paid for licenses for new software but couldn't use them because  delivery dates slipped.
Experts, while not happy that one option is going away,  believe that Select Plus is far simpler for IT to manage.
Has Microsoft licensing improved in recent years? You tell  me at [email protected].
 CORRECTION: The year 2011 was inadvertently left off at the end of the second paragraph, above. It has been added. Our apologies for this error -- Becky Nagel, Editor 
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on March 24, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		It's no secret that Google wants nearly all that Microsoft  has -- productivity software, operating systems, browsers and, more recently, enterprise mail. 
Google Apps, which includes hosted e-mail, has snagged a few  high profile customers, and now Google is hungry for more. 
Migration is always a bear, and Google hopes to ease the  move with Google Apps Migration for Microsoft Exchange. 
The idea is to keep Exchange running while the mailboxes are  migrated to Google. Google claims it's a piece of cake that only requires four  steps. Exchange is a pretty rich and complex product, so I'm guessing it’s not  that simple.
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on March 24, 20103 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Here are some of your responses for Doug's idea of  third-party patches, like Adobe, being bundled with Microsoft's Patch Tuesdays: 
  Huge YAY from me! Currently, Adobe requires a "Yes,  Install" click and a manual restart for the installation of  patches. For many of the users in my office, they just don't take the time  to do this and thus the software goes without the update.
   I would be  thrilled to have the updates installed automatically so I don't have to worry  about the Adobe security holes being open on the workstation computers in the  office. 
  Also, I wouldn't have to go around to every workstation to ensure that  the updates have actually been installed.
    -Heidi
  Yes, please make Adobe patches part of Patch  Tuesday. We need an easy way to patch Adobe products and harden our  Microsoft OS systems. Pushing patches via WSUS gives us some hope that the  Adobe products will be effectively patched. 
    -Tony
  Adding third-party software to Patch Tuesday would help to  improve the overall security rating of all those PCs on the internet and I  think it may help those PCs from becoming Spam-Bots.
    - Raymond
With Microsoft, IBM and Azure all vying for a piece of the  cloud computing pie, Doug wants to know who you trust to deliver the best  experience. One reader believes there is already a clear choice:
  IBM, because I haven't heard any negative press on their  entry. And I don't hear about AS400's and OS390's crashing.
    - Pat
Finally, here are some more of your responses for your top  companies or products that have gone the way of the dodo: 
  Atari for the Atari 2600. This put game consoles on the map.
  The Coleco Adam home computer. It was affectionately known  as the "adam bomb" due to poor sales.
    - John 
  My favorite defunct product is the eight-track. It was  practical, robust and had good fidelity.
    - Carlos
  Your article brought up many memories. The VIC-20 was  the first computer I could barely afford in college.
  Prior to serving time with Wang systems (more on that later)  my career started on Data General equipment. Their OS was phenomenal (this  was 1983) but their hardware sucked. If you accidentally kicked one of the  support legs, the system would crash. Also they had just released their VS  series that was a full 32bit!
  I used a Wang VS100 for a year in 1984. The system  drove me nuts! It was entirely function key driven. No GUI or command  line interface. It had a secret box inside of it that did the word processing. None  of the service techs really knew what it did, they just knew not to touch  it. 
  If I had to choose my favorite dead product, I would vote  for the HP3000. We had one at our office when I started in 1985. We  went through five different versions over 20 years and the original software  written would still run. The product line is dead now but there are still  people using it.
    -Roger
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	Posted by Doug Barney on March 24, 20100 comments