Good overview
here
on the state of Voice over IP, including how the technology fits into the bigger
picture of UC.
Posted by Lee Pender on June 23, 20080 comments
Microsoft's
UC
mega-partner is getting around with other vendors, as well.
Nortel
and IBM have just released some Lotus-specific UC stuff that's sure to make
folks in Redmond grit their teeth just a bit.
Posted by Lee Pender on June 23, 20080 comments
Hello, again. Why are you hearing from us on a Monday? Well, we're back with
another UC special edition of RCPU.
If you've figured out exactly what UC is, then you're already way
ahead of a lot of people. So, now it's time to figure out how big the UC
market is -- something analysts have discussed without really reaching any
kind of consensus.
Last week, though, a few more hints came out. No lesser a light than the
mighty IDC is fairly bullish on UC, and why shouldn't it be? The category
makes tons of headlines (and gets covered fairly extensively in RCPU special
editions) and has huge mega-vendors such as Microsoft and Cisco rushing to be
part of it.
But the fairly well-kept secret about the UC market, at
least one analyst says, is that it's really not very big right now -- and
even with predicted rapid growth, it'll still be relatively small in 2012. Still,
everybody agrees that it's got potential, and one blogger posits that UC will
gobble away at the traditional telecommunications and messaging markets rather
than swallowing them whole. From the blog entry linked above, we quote:
"Which leads to the second point: The UC market, today, is tiny:
$200 million is a pittance in absolute terms, and it's a very small share
-- just 2 percent -- of the total 'UC-capable' market. Blair's projection
calls for the net UC share to increase to 15 percent by 2012.
"Still, even at that point, you're talking about a $2.433 billion
market, which isn't gigantic. To me, it's more impressive that the 'gross'
market -- all the communications gear that's eligible for UC but may not be
implemented in a UC way -- is projected to grow at more than 50% annually
and reach almost $16 billion by 2012.
"Partly, I imagine that's because as we go forward, essentially every
addition to the installed base of communications gear will be UC capable,
and will most likely be replacing a piece of TDM equipment that isn't UC capable,
or at least isn't a very good candidate for UC-enabling."
Well, that makes a lot of sense to us, anyway, which is why we afforded a longer-than-usual
quote space to another blogger. UC might be one of those categories for which
the headlines are currently outpacing actual adoption, but it's poised to grow
-- if a bit methodically. That is, of course, if people can actually figure
out what it is.
Posted by Lee Pender on June 23, 20080 comments
Shirley, you're joking. No, it's true! It's all over for Jon Shirley at Microsoft,
as the venerable Redmonder is
leaving
the company's board of directors.
Staying on the Microsoft board, however, is Texas Christian University basketball
legend Dr.
James Cash, who also happens to be a former Harvard Business School bigwig
and is part of the team that owns...the World Champion Boston Celtics! And if
you're thinking that we threw this Shirley entry in just as an excuse for a
gratuitous TCU reference and another chance to mention the Celtics, well, you're
right. But we really do love James Cash.
Posted by Lee Pender on June 19, 20080 comments
By now, you all know that the Boston Celtics have won the NBA championship
-- sometimes called the NBA "World" Championship, so take that, Europe
-- for the first time in 22 years. To celebrate the return of the legendary
franchise to greatness, and because your editor was out a bit late last night
celebrating, we're going to bring back Reader Feedback and feature messages
from some of RCPU's legendary e-mailers.
We love all of the reader feedback you send us, but some folks have shouted
out to us often enough to become bona fide RCPU legends. We have thoughts from
two of them today, along with a funny e-mail from a less prolific but no less
loved reader. So, we're pretty close to having a Paul Pierce-Ray Allen-Kevin
Garnett-style trio.
Anyway, to start us off, we have an e-mail from Jon, who actually signed his
message thusly: "The serial e-mailer, using my personal address this time."
Yes, Jon, we know you well. And now, here are some of your thoughts on Windows
7's touch screen interface (yes, we're going a bit retro here):
"Touch would be great for moving windows. But at this resolution,
a lot of buttons are pretty tiny, and I'm not sure how accurately I could
click with a touch screen. And I am NOT willing to give up a single pixel
for giant buttons! Office 2007 has already begun the migration away from menus
to a dazzling array of screen-consuming buttons -- which would really use
a lot of pixels if they were all enlarged. (And frankly, I'm having trouble
adjusting to the loss of menus as it is.)
"Monitor prices have been dropping. But do I really want to replace
two perfectly good 1600 x 1200 monitors, one of which has lived long enough
to have been attached to four or five generations of computers? Or even if
I just had one monitor? If this takes off, it's an e-waste disaster waiting
to happen. Just like all those analog TVs that are going to get tossed next
February by folks who don't want to be bothered with a government-subsidized
converter box. I hope that some sort of recycling program can be set up to
harvest the screens from all those discarded monitors so that they can be
reprocessed into new touch screens."
If those two paragraphs seem a little disjointed, it's because we plucked them
from different places out of Jon's, uh, thorough e-mail. But we like both of
these points -- and, really, we don't like the idea of a touch screen for the
same reasons that Jon mentions. Besides, touch screens to us just seem like
a greasy screen waiting to happen, and the thought of that is kind of nasty.
Our next RCPU legend to weigh in is Mike, who gets a few shots in at our favorite
punching bag, Vista:
"I think part of the problem is Microsoft did a poor (marginal, at
best) job of convincing people that they needed Vista. You have a solidly
functioning OS with XP and then they come along basically saying, 'New and
Improved.' That may work for a $2 bottle of dish soap, but not so much for
a several-hundred-dollar OS.
"Then folks start hearing about upgrade issues, which is the category
most business users fall into because who the heck wants to buy a new PC (or
hundreds or thousands depending on the size of your business)? The company
I work for has about 23,000 employees across the country; many of the machines
(clients and servers) we use are leased. These leases are on a rolling three-year
basis. So then you start introducing compatibility issues (potential or real)
if some were Vista and others were XP. We also have a number of employees
who remote in, so then there are issues with supporting that.
"XP is working -- and just fine, at that -- so why risk Vista for
a marginal net gain? If we lose functionality or have downtime due to these
issues, then we start dramatically affecting our ability to work, which hits
the company in the pocket a second time (first being the cost for the upgrade
or replacement machines, etc.). We're in the service industry, and if customers
can't be served by us, then they'll go elsewhere. Who can afford that?"
Nobody, Mike, or at least not many people, as yet another
study has confirmed. You might as well get your fingers limbered up for
that Windows 7 touch screen. Oh, and lay off the potato chips.
Our third contributor, Doug, has only e-mailed us a couple of times, so he
technically shouldn't have "legend" status. But we'll let it go this
time, as we really enjoyed his timely contribution about Europe
being a Microsoft shop despite Neelie Kroes crying in her Heineken about
Microsoft's market dominance:
"That story about the EU using Microsoft products reminds me of when
I worked at UUnet from 1999 to 2002. The UNIX SAs talked trash about Microsoft
all the time. Joe Blow staff person got a SendMail mailbox. Senior management
got Exchange mailboxes because they liked shared calendaring and OWA. Of course,
since my team was the Microsoft tier 3 support group, we got Exchange mailboxes
also. We also ran several multimillion dollar applications on Windows servers."
We love it, Doug. We like our irony thick and fat like a Red Auerbach cigar
(although we don't actually smoke). Good stuff.
Got anything else to add? Want to step up to RCPU legend status? Want to celebrate
the Celtics or grieve for the Lakers? Send your thoughts to [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on June 19, 20080 comments
We couldn't make this up: Microsoft might be
facing
antitrust action in China.
Um, what now? China? We know that the Chinese economy is pretty wide open these
days, but aren't we still talking about a communist country here with a one-party
government? And Microsoft might be in trouble for being too powerful? Again,
irony...we
love it.
Apparently, though, Chinese officials are denying
that there will be an investigation. We'll see.
Posted by Lee Pender on June 19, 20080 comments
A backup application for SQL Server or Exchange Server
for
just $1,000 bucks? Believe it -- and it's sold 100 percent through the channel.
Plus, the company is only one letter away from sharing a name with a large Dutch
bank.
Posted by Lee Pender on June 18, 20080 comments
When most people think of summer, they think sunshine and blue skies. But the
folks at Salesforce.com think about clouds --
cloud
computing, that is. There you go, Salesforce.com, we've just given you a
super-cheesy line for your Summer '08 demo. You're welcome.
Posted by Lee Pender on June 18, 20080 comments
We really only put
this
in here because we love the word "array."
Posted by Lee Pender on June 18, 20080 comments
"For the moment, we are working in a Microsoft environment."
-- Christos Ellinides, the director of corporate IT solutions and services
at the European Commission
If you love irony, you have to love that quote. After years of hacking away
at Microsoft by imposing fines and generally being a nuisance, the European
Commission is looking at itself to find that it's still, at least in part, a
Microsoft shop.
Oh, sure. The EC's been talking about moving to open source applications and
using open standards -- competition czar and Microsoft hater Neelie Kroes harps
on that stuff repeatedly -- and it seems to be happening to some extent.
But there's still a lot of Microsoft applications in the EC's shop. And while
it's not news for a government entity to have a big investment in Microsoft,
it's funny that the EC itself -- tormentor of Redmond for so long -- is still
heavily Microsoft.
Another quote from the same story that struck us came from a guy with the best
title we've run across so far this year: Francisco Garcia Moran, director general
of directorate general (informatics). Apparently Francisco is an EU official,
although it's hard to tell whether he's EU, EC specifically or both.
Whatever. Director general of directorate general (informatics) -- and, yes,
we love the parentheses -- is simply bureaucra-tastic, and it makes your editor
want to change his (unofficial) title to something like editor of editing (newsletter)
or maybe senior editor of the editors senior (magazine). At the very least,
we demand parentheses for all titles in Redmond Media Group.
Anyway, Moran's quote reads thusly: "The European Commission not only
uses Microsoft products...It uses many other products from both commercial suppliers
and from the open source world."
Huh. So the EC has a hybrid atmosphere, then, kind of like thousands (millions?)
of other governments and enterprises around the world. Well, what do you know?
Apparently Microsoft hasn't crushed its competitors altogether. And, apparently,
despite Neelie's most stinging one-liners, Europe hasn't rid itself of Microsoft,
either. We love irony.
Have a thought on Europe, the EC and Microsoft? Send it to [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on June 18, 20081 comments
"I always feel like somebody's watching me
And I have no privacy"
-- from "Somebody's Watching Me" by Rockwell
If you remember the song from which we took today's opening quote, then you're
probably a pretty big '80s music nerd. And that's a good thing because it's
the nerds we're talking to today -- not so much the '80s music nerds but open
source nerds, although we figure the groups might overlap pretty heavily.
We don't know whether Rockwell was into open source software back in the day,
but the paranoia expressed in "Somebody's Watching Me" wouldn't be
out of place for open source folks today. Big brother is out there, people...and
its name is Microsoft.
This week, Microsoft announced that it's
going to co-sponsor something called the Open
Source Census, a project open source folks have undertaken to figure out
exactly how much of their software is in use in enterprises and encourage folks
to adopt even more of it. Not
exactly a blockbuster thus far in terms of enterprise penetration, the Census
could nevertheless ultimately serve as Microsoft's window (um, no pun intended)
on what is probably its biggest competitor these days.
The folks in Redmond are talking up their census participation in interoperability
terms, saying that it'll be helpful to know where open source software is and
how people are using it so that Microsoft can better fit its applications to
work with open source apps. Of course, there might be just a little bit more
to Microsoft's participation, as this
article keenly suggests (and we quote):
"Of course, the sponsorship can't be entirely altruistic. Hard data
on the shape of open source software usage is difficult to come by since it
can often be downloaded, shared and used at will. With more data, Microsoft
would undoubtedly be able to better understand its open source competitors
and where exactly their weaknesses lie."
Ah-ha! So, Redmond does have a sinister motive! Well, of course it does, and
why shouldn't it? Open source folks are always saying that their applications
are hard to compete with because they're, well, open, and because it's hard
for a proprietary developer to innovate at the speed of the rest of the world.
But there's another side to openness, and this is it -- Microsoft can just waltz
right into the type of market research project that no proprietary competitor
would dream of letting Redmond get near.
In the long run, Microsoft's participation probably won't make a huge amount
of difference to the Census, other than to actually get it up and running in
a serious way. And we wonder, really, to what extent Microsoft will just take
over the whole thing and sort of ditch the "encouraging-the-use-of-open-source"
stuff in favor of pure competitive research. Heck, a real conspiracy theorist
-- although we're not in that category -- might suggest that Microsoft would
fudge the numbers to make open source look less important in the enterprise
than it really is.
In any case, the proprietary monster is on board, open source folks. Microsoft
really is watching you now. You've got something in common with an '80s flash-in-the-pan
pop act after all.
What's your take on the relationship between Microsoft and open source? Open
up at [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on June 17, 20080 comments