I didn't see this coming. Yahoo has actually
given
in to corporate raider Carl Icahn, and is allowing him and two others of
his choosing to join the Yahoo board. Icahn now controls three out of the 11
seats.
As owner of 5 percent of Yahoo shares, it makes sense to have Icahn on the
board. Then again, he's actively trying to dismantle the company. If I were
the Yahoo chairman, I'd treat Icahn like a Mexican jalapeno and steer clear!
Posted by Doug Barney on July 22, 20080 comments
Doug
asked
readers recently what they would do if they ran VMware and needed to take
on Hyper-V's pricing (read: free). Here are some of your suggestions:
What would I do if I was VMware? PANIC.
-Anonymous
Well, I would ultimately slash the price of the ESX products, give away
the Workstation and servers for free (but have fees for support), add more
hardware vendor support or alliance, and publish more books or best practice
guide documents.
-Cornelio
Here is a plan for VMware: Provide a hypervisor and a VM maker for home
users. Servers are where the money's at, but if you want users to keep your
name, you have to provide the same wares at home. Well, maybe not the same,
but something that will transfer readily between work and home.
What I envision is a VM platform that would allow a home user to run
one or more OSes independent of the hardware. When it's time to upgrade your
hardware to a better system, you just package up your system as-is, copy it
somewhere (online storage, DVD, whatever), get your new machine and drop it
down. How many people are forced to move to Vista (for example) because they
got a new laptop? If it were a VMware microkernel, they could just mount their
old OS on a new system -- no fuss, no settings to reset, no new or significant
nuances to learn. No doubt people would pay a PC premium for this ease of
use, and it would knock down Microsoft significantly as it cannot force a
vendor to upgrade to its new OS package since any VMware-ready machine would
be OS-independent.
-Tom
A price increase might work for Smirnoff vodka, but it won't work for
software. It's the death knell for VMware. Just ask your corporate managers
who will force you to go with the lower-cost alternative -- especially from
a name-brand vendor like Microsoft.
-Mike
Add Pat to the ever-growing list of people who don't like Vista:
No, you are not being too rough on Vista. You're just not being rough
enough. I have been preaching to all my users not to purchase computers with
just Vista alone, but to purchase business PCs with both operating systems
on them (Vista with a downgrade to XP). This way, they can choose and later
ease into Vista if they want to or when Microsoft cleans it up. Some of my
users did not heed the warning, went out and purchased a new computer, and
are now complaining, "It operates too slow, can't get on the Internet,
stops me from creating documents," and the list goes on and on.
I personally do not own a Vista computer and will not until Microsoft
fixes the kernel, but if I wanted to imitate a Vista computer, all I would
have to do is to let my XP Pro computer get fragmented and full of temporary
Internet files.
-Pat
And if you're an iPhone fan that gets teased
for your iFervor, give this reader's advice some consideration:
In response to the YouTube
video you referenced, I was really hoping to see some pwnage, but I didn't
see or hear any. That guy didn't own the reporter; he sounded like he wanted
to go home and cry. Where's his sense of humor? I was expecting some kind
of humorous response in response to a pretty humorous question.
How about answering the question, "Have you ever seen a woman naked?"
with, "Why, yes, in fact your mom told me I'd get an encore of her performance
last night if I stood in line to get her the new iPhone. But I'm actually
getting this one for myself. I wouldn't pay to see THAT again." Did I
miss something?
-Chris
Got something to add? Let us have it! Leave a comment below or send an e-mail
to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on July 22, 20080 comments
Research in Motion just
plugged
a hole in its BlackBerry that could allow hackers to use PDFs to break into
BlackBerry servers. The company suggests that customers patch by moving to BlackBerry
Enterprise Server version 4.1, service pack 6 for Exchange.
I have a BlackBerry and love the e-mail. I hate, though, the way it deals with
attachments -- or doesn't deal with attachments. Talk about a kludge. No wonder
so many are switching to the iPhone.
Posted by Doug Barney on July 22, 20080 comments
Rumors have been circulating that Steve Jobs was ill when he showed up to the
latest iPhone debut looking thin and gaunt. Apple reps claimed that Jobs was
getting over the flu, but rumors persisted, especially since Jobs was diagnosed
with cancer of the pancreas several years ago.
Wall
Street flipped out over the rumors that Jobs is seriously ill after the
company refused to talk about his health on a recent earnings call. Investors
promptly started dumping the high-flying stock.
Another indication that Jobs is sick is the fact that Fake Steve Jobs is tossing
in the Fake Steve Jobs Towel, and will now post under his real name: Dan
Lyons. One theory is that Mr. Lyons wouldn't want to satirize a sick man.
I have no clue what may be wrong with Jobs. My hope is that the cancer is still
contained. It could be that his pancreas isn't working and he's fighting against
full-on diabetes, which could explain the weight loss. That's not a great scenario,
but is far better than metastasized cancer.
Jobs is a rather remarkable man, and losing him as the head of Apple would
be a crushing blow for the entire industry. What are your thoughts? Send opinions
and comments about Jobs to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on July 22, 20080 comments
As Chico Escuela might say, software has been berry, berry good to Microsoft.
And despite the over-hyped Google threat, Microsoft keeps printing money faster
than the U.S. mint (though slower than a Chinese bank these days).
Case in point: the most recent fiscal year wherein Redmond brought
in over $60 billion (and by Redmond, I mean the company, not the magazine,
unfortunately).
The only dark cloud is on the Web, where Microsoft actually lost almost half-a-billion
dollars. Microsoft, as it has shown with the Xbox and ERP applications, can
weather some rather massive losses as it waits for its strategy to succeed.
My opinion? Online services are no different.
Disagree? Tell me where I'm wrong by writing to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on July 21, 20080 comments
I've pointed out many times -- some may say too many times -- that Google has
too much power. It knows too much about us (and this is only getting worse),
has too much control over Web advertising (which it somehow achieves without
creating any of its own content) and now it wants to completely corner the market
on Web ads with a
proposed
deal with Yahoo.
I felt a bit like a voice in the wilderness. Now Bill Snyder of InfoWorld
(where I worked back when it still had a magazine) has joined me in the boondocks
with a column asking whether we want a monopoly on the Web, and warning that
"Google
is becoming Microsoft's evil twin."
Am I too tough on Google, or do you also fear a Google monopoly? Comments welcome
at [email protected].
And while you're at it, what's your favorite defunct magazine? InfoWorld,
Byte, Network Computing, PC/Computing, AmigaWorld?
Send your thoughts to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on July 21, 20080 comments
Some developers interested in trying out the beta of Live Mesh are a bit disappointed.
No, not in the software -- in their ability to get it. It seems there's a
waiting
list to get the test software.
I've read up on Live Mesh and still don't completely get it. Here's what I
think I know: Live Mesh isn't a product, but a set of tools that let developers
build applications. These applications are designed not just to share data across
the Internet, but keep it synchronized, as well. This is a very Lotus Notes-ian
concept, which used replication to sync end user machines with databases stored
on servers.
There are lots of potential uses for Live Mesh. For starters, consumers can
share photos and music, or collaborate on blogs. My ideal use is to have a single
place for all my documents, bookmarks and messaging tools. This way, I can have
a full environment and data set no matter what machine I'm working on.
I pine for this capability every time my Dell Latitude D520 needs a new motherboard,
an all-too-frequent event. In the absence of such a system, I have to kludge
together a working system out of an old machine, contact my online backup provided
to get my files (this company isn't open at nights or weekends, when I actually
do most of my work), and install new bits of software like my IM client.
Redmond magazine columnist Mary Jo Foley examined Live Mesh and found
it much more a consumer play. Check out her analysis here.
I know you in IT are much smarter than I am, so how do you keep multiple machines
in sync? Save my sanity by e-mailing your techniques to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on July 21, 20080 comments
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.
That may work for a while, but in the long run, VMware is going to have to
react to Hyper-V pricing. Look at what happened with Netscape. It kept charging
for its browser even as IE was free. Hmm, didn't the Netscape browser business
ultimately disappear?
What would you do if you ran VMware? Send your corporate tactics to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on July 17, 20080 comments
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
Microsoft has suggested that Windows 7 will pretty much be based
on Vista. Too much of a not-so-good-thing? Here's what some of you think:
Over the last months, I have read several news reports saying that Windows
7 will address the 'bloatware' that Vista has become by being more of a thin
client that can be readily expanded. Now Veghte is saying it will be built
on Vista? Did those reporters fall for more obfuscation?
As the world swings toward making more use of laptops and notebooks,
Microsoft must understand that these devices are NOT readily upgradeable to
have terabytes of RAM once Windows 7 releases. I have an old Dell Latitude
at home that I'm not throwing away just because it can't support Vista; I'm
moving to Ubuntu.
-Ian
I think that Microsoft made a major stumble at the wrong time. Vista was
way late and many of the great features were stripped in order to finally
ship it. It was so slow and riddled with bugs and incompatibilities that it
got extremely bad press. At the same time, Linux was making huge strides in
compatibility and ease of use with Ubuntu, etc. A couple years ago, Linux
wasn't in a place to compete at any level with Windows, but now it is much
further along.
Microsoft making a big announcement that Windows 7 is based on Vista
so you might as well upgrade to Vista now is going to backfire on the company,
I think.
-Matt
I saw in your post today that you included some Windows 7 information,
and I wanted to clarify a minor point. In your post, you write the following:
"Second -- and this is the first such official proclamation -- Veghte
stated that Windows 7 is based on Vista."
There was a post
by Chris Flores on the Windows Vista blog in May which disclosed this information.
-Mary
Rick shares his thoughts on Microsoft's approach
to standards:
I work in a part of the technology sector where collaboration and cooperation
are essential. In my opinion, Microsoft sets itself up for the cheap shots
in the manner it tries to collaborate or share with the technology community
at large. It's one thing to invite the technology community to participate
in the creation of a file standard, as opposed to developing a file standard
and presenting it to the technology community for ratification or acceptance.
The first approach is inviting and suggests willingness to accept outside
review and input; the latter is easily construed as an obnoxious attitude
("Here it is, take it or leave it").
Still, a powerful argument against collaboration is that development
speed suffers dramatically. Also in the mix is the fact that system changes
are best made in the design phase and not the implementation phase. So when
a non-Microsoft entity makes a valid observation or suggestion, Microsoft
can ignore it on the grounds that it would be too costly to implement, opening
itself up to criticism.
-Rick
Robert is still wondering about Diane Greene's unexpected
departure from VMware:
Seems to me that EMC overlooked a significant factor in that by letting
Greene go, users who were accepting of VMware as "the best game in town"
are now going to say, "Hmm, guess I should look at Microsoft and Xen
and etc." The old law of unintended consequences may really come to bear.
-Robert
And Charlie gets the final word (hopefully) on the Nick
Hogan hate-train:
I agree with you -- Nick Hogan is a dirt bag. Here's a rule of thumb:
There are no real heroes on "reality" TV. Most all of the participants
are either losers, wannabes, has-beens or, as you put it, dirt bags.
-Charlie
Tell us what you think! Leave a message below or send an e-mail to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on July 17, 20080 comments
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 posted
on YouTube, I'm sure this guy has plenty of interested gals.
Posted by Doug Barney on July 17, 20080 comments
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.
There may be an upside to this. It just may be easier to secure a service provider's
infrastructure than it is to lock down hundreds and thousands of systems that
may be scattered throughout your enterprise. If that's true, our data may ultimately
be more secure in the cloud.
Of course, when you shift computing models, you also need to shift how you
secure it all. In this case, securing browsers and network connections is key,
as is locking down passwords and, as always, protecting data on local systems,
whether it comes from a cloud or not.
Is the cloud more or less secure? Answers welcome at [email protected].
Meanwhile, I got a great letter from Andrew in response to an item about whether
Microsoft will be as powerful in the cloud as it is in packaged apps:
"In today's article titled 'Microsoft
and the Cloud: The Desmond Perspective,' you raise the question whether
Microsoft can move from a maker of packaged software to a services company.
What a lot folks don't look at or bring into the discussion is that in fact,
Microsoft has made this possible for years through subscription licensing.
Partners such as ourselves have been offering Microsoft software in the cloud
for quite some time. The only difference now is that they are working to have
their own offerings.
Being one of those providers, we know that it will be quite some time
before their direct offering will have the full capabilities that many of
their partners are already able to provide. For example, we provide SharePoint
as both a WSS and MOSS offering today through one of our divisions (http://www.sharepointhosting.com/).
Today, we have over 1,000 current SharePoint customers and growing exponentially.
A number of these are Fortune 100 companies running mission-critical sites.
When you add in the other clients that have used our services for more limited
needs such as pilots, temporary project sites, etc., that number equals over
3,000 customers that we have worked with.
Microsoft has quite often looked to their partner community to lead the
charge and we are right out there on the front lines!"
Posted by Doug Barney on July 17, 20080 comments
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
Here are some of your responses to our recent question about what you'd like
to see in the pages of Redmond magazine:
Since my world is centered around Dynamics GP, I would like to see more
about the Dynamics product line and Great Plains in particular and the blending
of that world with the Microsoft stack.
-Ronald
I find the most useful types of articles are overviews of new Microsoft
products, where an article of two to 10 pages describes a new product, explains
what hardware and software is required, walks you through a basic installation,
and mentions common configuration mistakes.
The second most useful article to me are those describing methods of
automating common network management tasks, whether this be through scripting
or a Microsoft or third-party management product. Finally, I would really
like to see a series of articles on how to secure various Microsoft products
-- how to secure an IIS installation, how to secure a SQL installation, etc.
I realise space is limited, so I'm just talking about a two-page article with
bullet points and an overview, rather than an in-depth "War and Peace"-type
article."
-Mark
Finally, Brad minces some of our words:
In your newsletter you state: "Say what you will about the folks
in Redmond, I've never seen them all erratic and unpredictable. In fact, every
time I've seen the company act erratic, it was part of a greater plan."
OK, you've never seen Microsoft be erratic and unpredictable, but every
time it was part of a greater plan? If you've never seen them be erratic,
there is no "every time"!
-Brad
Tell us what you think! Leave a comment below or send an e-mail to [email protected].
Posted by Doug Barney on July 16, 20080 comments