It's a question we've heard a lot in the last couple of days: Who decided to
hold a conference in Houston in July?
Well, Microsoft did, and the thousands of partners who are descending upon
the city this week will likely be met with a Texas-style welcome: temperatures
in the 90s (today's high topped out at a relatively cool 92) and high humidity.
Great.
Maybe it's your editor's bias toward Dallas-Fort Worth (mainly Fort Worth),
but RCPU has never been a huge fan of Houston. As a native Texan, your editor
knows and loves huge swaths of his home state -- Austin, San Antonio, the Hill
Country, parts of the Gulf Coast, the desert mountains of West Texas and, of
course, Cowtown (or Funkytown, or whatever you want to call Fort Worth). Texas
can be beautiful.
[Click for larger view.] |
But RCPU came to Houston expecting to spend a lot of time in the hotel, and,
well...we've been pleasantly surprised. The RCPU team -- four strong for this
event -- strolled over to a downtown steakhouse Monday evening for dinner after
the show and had a great time and a spectacular meal. Then, we strolled back
by Minute Maid Park -- the Astros' stadium, which, we have to say, looks kind
of funny from the outside -- and over to a place called Discovery Green.
[Click for larger view.] |
Discovery Green, officially dedicated in April, is a lovely little park with
a small pond and a fairly swanky restaurant (from what we hear; we haven't eaten
there) plopped in the middle of it. It's breezy and pleasant -- pretty, really
-- and it's right in the middle of downtown, directly across from the convention
center. Color us impressed. We had a lot of fun downtown.
Houston's still a bit sprawly for our taste -- our team's two hotels are about
15 miles apart -- but it's nothing a good GPS and a city-wise driver can't handle.
It's also a bit warm, but good food and Texas friendliness -- along with ice-cold
central air conditioning in every building -- go a long way toward making us
feel comfortable even when the thermometer climbs toward triple digits.
Let's put it this way: RCPU firmly believes that all conferences from now on
should be held in San Diego, America's
most beautiful city...preferably in March, when it's 33 and sleeting in
Boston. But we'll take Houston any time of year over the schmaltz
of Orlando or the sensory overload of Vegas. (Most people would probably
prefer Vegas, though -- your editor acknowledges being an exception in that
regard.)
So, maybe it's the melted-in-our-mouths filet mignon talking, but we'll give
Houston an unexpected thumbs up...for now. There's still a lot of conference
to go, but as long as the AC works in the convention center, we should be just
fine.
Posted by Lee Pender on July 08, 20080 comments
Last week's
launch
by Microsoft of Hyper-V brought out the enthusiasts right out of the gate,
as even gritty bloggers recognized that the hypervisor's price tag as part of
Windows Server 2008 (that is, free) is
pretty
alluring.
However, as we expected, not everybody is all that thrilled so far. We've been
hearing little tidbits here and there about how VMware and its ESX competitor
don't need to lose any virtual sleep over Hyper-V, but Angelo sent us the most
detailed user review of Microsoft's newest creation that we've seen yet:
"I have been experimenting with this 'new' product that is supposed
to compete with VMware ESX. And I have several notes that you and others should
be aware of.
- Every time any Microsoft OS patches are deployed, you begin having
issues with the guest OSes. I have tried different update orders: host first,
then Guest (ugly); guests first.
- There is no easy way to set up isolation networks and determine which
guests are attached to each virtual network.
- There is no reporting on the VM utilization of CPU, memory, drive
or network.
- There is no native support for cluster in a box (CIAB), without purchasing
expensive SANs.
- Provisioning new workstations is still a massive undertaking, and
keeping that image patched or up to date poses a real challenge.
As far as I am concerned, it is a nice toy to play with, but if you want
to get work done, stick with what works. The strength and power that VMware
has are well worth the money."
Thanks, Angelo. So, there you go -- not everybody's in line with the claim
that users won't give anything up when switching from ESX to Hyper-V. We expect
more of these e-mails in the days and weeks to come, both in support of ESX
and in defense of Hyper-V. Help us fill out or collection by contributing at
[email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on July 02, 20080 comments
Yeesh, this is kind of ugly. The "tel" (or just the "Intel,"
depending on how you read it) in Wintel is
saying
no to Vista.
There's really nothing left to say here, but we're sort of enjoying looking
at the Vista car wreck from the traffic jam on the (hello, early '90s phrase)
information superhighway.
Suggestions to Microsoft, which finally (mostly) killed XP yesterday: Bring
back XP, get Windows 7 down to being manageable, and let us all forget about
Vista. In other words, listen to most of your customers and partners. Please.
Posted by Lee Pender on July 02, 20080 comments
It's the biggest show of the year for Microsoft Partners and the biggest event
of the year for
Redmond Channel Partner magazine and RCPU alike: It's
the
Microsoft
Worldwide Partner Conference, and it kicks off next week in Houston.
Before you go, you simply must check out RCP's
preview video, starring your editor and RCP Editor in Chief Scott
Bekker (although not necessarily in that order -- you might say that this video
has no lone star).
We'll be at the WPC in a big way; you might even say that we're going to cover
this event Texas-style, pardners. Yee-haw! (OK, we promise not to bombard you
with too much Texas shtick over the next two weeks. Then again, just how much
Texas shtick is too much? Remember, your editor is a native.)
Anyway, we'll have a special portal just gushing information (like Spindletop)
at RCPmag.com/wpc, and we'll be blogging
our fingers to the bone, so check in frequently for updates. (You can even get
a headstart right now by checking out Scott's entries on the speaker
lineup and attendance
numbers. In fact, you might just want to sit at your laptop and reload the
portal all day.) Also, check your inbox for show-themed issues of RCPU written
by your editor and by Mr. Bekker -- starting with a special edition this Sunday
penned by the EIC his own self.
We're also going to have a wrap-up video online at some point during the week
of the show, which you won't want to miss, especially if you saw the preview
video (which, if you haven't, you should now).
So, we'll see you in Houston -- or online -- next week. Oh, and by the way,
there won't be an RCPU on Thursday. Happy July 4, everybody! (And, for our fellow
Americans specifically, happy Independence Day!)
Posted by Lee Pender on July 02, 20081 comments
Yes, this should make things much...easier? Microsoft this week introduced
Select Plus
Volume Licensing, a program intended to simplify and reduce the cost of
licensing for larger organizations. (We'll forgive Microsoft for giving this
program a name that sounds more like the name of a frequent flyer scheme: "We'd
like to board our Select Plus passengers at this timeā¦")
Anyway, there's a pretty good synopsis of Select Plus here,
and, of course, there's Microsoft's
press release on the plan. Now, maybe we're just obtuse, but none of this
actually seems very simple. In fact, it seems pretty darn complicated and dense.
Regardless, Wall Street-types are concerned that the discounts in the plan
will hurt
Redmond's profit margins, while somebody at Forrester, at least, thinks
that the plan will be mostly good
for bigger companies.
Here at RCPU, we're...well, we're not really sure yet what this means for partners,
but we'd love for you to clue us in at [email protected].
So, uh, go ahead and do that. Thanks.
Posted by Lee Pender on July 02, 20080 comments
Your editor is writing this entry from his childhood home outside of Dallas,
a place that always brings back memories of, well, childhood. Now that we're
stretching into the third or fourth inning of summer, a lot of those memories
are of playing baseball and soccer in the backyard and then weaving into the
house completely dehydrated (hey, it gets hot in Texas) and gulping gallons
of water. But one piece of news this week stirred our recollection of another
summer standard: the summer reading list.
At the end of every school year, some well-intentioned teacher would give her
students a list of books to read over the summer -- without the power of actually
being able to "assign" them. The more intellectual kids probably read
them, but your editor never did, preferring instead to devour Sports Illustrated
and the Dallas Morning News (yes, even as a kid) and then participate
in the aforementioned outdoor sporting activities.
Well, this summer, Microsoft has its own suggested reading, which should prove
more popular among certain audiences than the old summer reading list did in
this house: Redmond has released
"Version 1.0" of documentation on some of the protocols in its
most important products.
This is the stuff that Bill Gates -- you
might remember him as Microsoft's former CEO -- never wanted to publish.
But antitrust suits forced Microsoft's hand, and now the company's all
about interoperability and openness. This week's dump includes information
on protocols used in Exchange Server 2007, SharePoint Server 2007 and Office
2007, among other big-name Microsoft offerings.
So, who's hauling this tome to the beach or skipping a pick-up soccer game
to stay inside and read? Well, the European Union's competition cranks, for
sure, given that the existence of this documentation is as much their doing
as anybody else's, and given that they're
still not convinced that Microsoft is interested in interoperability. (Ha!
Just try to take the whole month of August off and still finish reading this
stuff by fall, Eurocrats.) But other audiences of immediate interest to Microsoft
will be turning pages, as well.
Specifically, the Office stuff will appeal to the nations
and organizations
that contend that Office Open XML, currently
an industry standard with a big asterisk on it (as in *pending
appeal), shouldn't be a standard at all. Plus, we imagine that some
Microsoft competitors might be a little bit curious about the new documentation.
Will Microsoft's summer reader be enough to assuage those hostile audiences?
We doubt it -- after all, this is really just an update of documentation released
in April -- but for Redmond, it's another step on the path to working more readily
with other vendors and with the industry as a whole.
And while we've defended here Microsoft's right to keep proprietary things
private, we also can't see all that much of a downside in Microsoft explaining
how its stuff works and making it easier for other vendors to work with it.
In other words, we have a feeling that divulging these precious trade secrets
won't put Microsoft out of business.
As for us, though, we'll be skipping Microsoft's summer page-turner. Next week's
Worldwide
Partner Conference and other events (along with a complete lack of skill
in both sports) will probably cut down severely on the baseball- and soccer-playing,
but we're pretty confident that we can still find better things to do this summer
than read 50,000 pages of protocol documentation -- like, for instance, anything.
What's your take on Microsoft's new "openness"? Will you be reading
all 50,000 pages this summer? Sound off at [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on July 01, 20081 comments
We say
"finally"
because apparently Symantec was all over it weeks ago.
By the way, should we read anything at all into the fact that Microsoft, which
is now more than a year into its effort to be a security vendor, had a "bug"
that messed up certain Symantec applications? Hmm, should we? Probably not,
but we do like to cause trouble when we can.
Posted by Lee Pender on July 01, 20080 comments
You might say that Microsoft's record on getting fixes out to its users is
becoming a little, uh,
patchy.
Posted by Lee Pender on July 01, 20080 comments
It's "Fiji," for heaven's sake. This is a family newsletter! Anyway,
apparently, Microsoft's codename of Fiji -- which the company is using for a
forthcoming edition of Windows Media Center -- isn't actually going down all
that well in...Fiji. Mary Jo Foley
explains.
Posted by Lee Pender on July 01, 20080 comments
All that noise MSPs have been making about how complicated unified communications can be? Apparently
it was more than just noise...
Posted by Lee Pender on June 30, 20080 comments
What do companies look for when searching for an MSP? This fairly
comprehensive article gives us an idea -- which could be useful both for MSPs and the companies searching for them.
Posted by Lee Pender on June 30, 20080 comments