As the economy turns, some signs of a slowdown finally touching the tech sector
are starting to emerge.
RCP Editor in Chief Scott Bekker brings us up
to date in IDC's latest semi-dire predictions
here.
Posted by Lee Pender on May 14, 20080 comments
The headlines screamed this week, as they tend to do:
Windows
Small Business Server Prices Going Up!
Prices
Increasing Up To 80 Percent!
Read past the headline, though, and you'll find -- as, to be fair, most reporters
and bloggers did -- that there's a lot more to Microsoft's SBS
2008 pricing scheme than just a price hike. A lot more. In fact, in some
cases, it might not even involve a price hike at all.
SBS 2008 pricing will be very complicated, with all sorts of possible permutations
and licensing combinations, all of which will probably lead to a lot of extra
work for partners. But we'll get to that in a minute.
First, the numbers. A Microsoft press
release this week revealed the list prices for SBS 2008 and its new mid-market
cousin, Windows
Essential Business Server, both due by the end of this year. Quoth the press
release:
"Windows Essential Server Solutions pricing is as follows:
- Windows Small Business Server 2008 Standard Edition software, including
five CALs, $1,089 (U.S.); additional CALs $77 each (U.S.)
- Windows Small Business Server 2008 Premium Edition software, including
five CALs, $1,899 (U.S.); additional CALs $189 each (U.S.)
- Windows Essential Business Server 2008 Standard Edition software,
including five CALs, $5,472 (U.S.); additional CALs $81 each (U.S.)
- Windows Essential Business Server 2008 Premium Edition software, including
five CALs, $7,163 (U.S.); additional CALs $195 each (U.S.)"
So, there you go; those are the numbers. But there's a lot more to the new
pricing scheme than just prices. Microsoft has built new flexibility into how
customers can purchase client access licenses, or CALs. Once again, because
it explains it as well as we could, we go to the Microsoft press release:
"Examples of licensing improvements over the current Windows Small
Business Server 2003 R2 product include these:
- Customers will be able to purchase single client access licenses (CALs),
so they will pay only for the exact number of employees using the product.
- Customers can cost-effectively purchase a mix of Standard or Premium
CALs, as appropriate to the technologies that individual employees are using.
- CALs now apply to other copies of Windows Server, SQL Server or Exchange
Server on the network, eliminating the need to purchase additional CALs."
All of those CAL policies are new: Customers currently have to buy five CALs
at a time, and users of SBS Premium have to buy Premium CALs. So, the price
hike isn't as stark as it might seem at first. It's more of a price shift, really.
"There are some things we've done to the product that have been reflected
in the pricing -- more cost on server software and less on CALs," said
Joel Sider, senior product manager in the Windows Server Solutions Group at
Microsoft. Sider noted that customers asked to have the cost of SBS shifted
away from licenses and to the software itself.
On top of that, SBS 2008 Premium will be a major upgrade from its predecessor.
The new Premium edition will include two servers, not just one, and will also
include SQL Server 2008.
"On the Premium side of SBS, we've made a lot of changes," Sider
told RCPU in a phone chat this week. "It's a big addition to premium, and
the price reflects that."
IDC analysts Al Gillen and Raymond Boggs summed up the changes pretty well
in a report released this week:
"As is often the case in product evolutions, the feature changes
and the related pricing changes imply higher costs for end customers. Yet
further analysis reveals cases, particularly for the standard edition, where
customers will find their costs are actually lower, or at worst, relatively
unchanged from previous price points they have paid. With the two-server format
of the premium edition, the comparison leads to generally higher prices, but
with the upside of improved functionality for customers."
More money, more server(s) -- and more functionality. That's the main theme
here, and it seems entirely sensible. But what does it mean for partners? In
a chat with RCPU this week, Boggs, vice president of small and medium business
and home office research at IDC, said that the smallest customers might shy
away from SBS.
"For the pure, basic customer just kind of starting out, it's not going
to be very attractive," Boggs said. "For the folks that are more advanced,
it's going to be more interesting. It is pretty up-market. It's not the truly
simple and affordable solution that you as a five-person company with one server
are going to be thinking about. By the same token, we are still talking list
prices. There may be some wiggle room for partners."
And Microsoft is also building in opportunities for partners to up-sell customers
to the Premium edition. Expensive though it might be, SBS 2008 Premium packs
a lot of functionality, and Boggs noted that the flexible new CAL policies can
take some of the bite out of licensing costs for customers.
"If I move from the old Premium to the new Premium, suddenly I'm getting
two servers," Boggs said. "I can extend Basic [CALs] to 80 percent
[of users]. There's something of a grow lamp encouraging you to move in that
direction."
But Boggs also noted that the pricing schemes are very complicated -- he compared
them to a Rubik's Cube,
the kind of '80s reference we just eat up here at RCPU -- and that partners
are going to have to do a lot of explaining to customers when it comes to pricing
and licensing. A lot more, possibly, than they've done in the past: "It
means that you as the channel partners are going to be obligated to have a better
understanding of the customer's business," Boggs said.
And that's what every partner is trying to achieve, anyway...right?
What's your take on Microsoft's SBS 2008 pricing scheme? Sound off at [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on May 14, 20080 comments
Redmond is hoping that its new "openness" will allow the company
to
avoid more
than a billion dollars in Eurofines. We're with you on this one, Microsoft...but
we don't like your chances.
Posted by Lee Pender on May 13, 20080 comments
The former Microsoft bigwig will
serve
as CEO of Bill and Melinda Gates' charitable foundation, and more power
to him, we say.
Posted by Lee Pender on May 13, 20080 comments
If you can't get XP SP3 to work, at least take some solace in the fact that
it's a
light
Patch Tuesday this month.
Posted by Lee Pender on May 13, 20080 comments
The good news is that Windows XP Service Pack 3 can make your XP-loaded computer
run
faster. The bad news is...well, as many of you know by now, there's been
a lot of bad news. Or maybe you don't know, because your computer keeps
rebooting
endlessly or just blue screens when you try to install SP3. (Redmond is
deflecting
blame for the problems already.)
Yeah, we know; service packs are tricky, and we should expect some snafus with
installing them. And these problems probably aren't affecting the majority of
SP3 installs and might really not be Microsoft's fault.
But still. It's an XP service pack! XP! You know, the tried and true operating
system that we all love, the one that's been around as long as most of us care
to remember, the one that we're all hanging onto while shunning Vista. And it's
a service pack, not a new product -- and not just any service pack, but an SP
that Microsoft delayed
for what seemed like forever so that it would be just right when it came out.
Well, so much for all that. Yet again, another release from Microsoft causes
headaches for partners and customers -- and this one should've been fairly straightforward.
We're not pointing the finger of blame here, just venting a bit on behalf of
all the folks who are struggling to get SP3 to work properly, or at all. Really,
this stuff gets ridiculous after a while, doesn't it?
Of course, if we were conspiracy-minded, we might believe that Microsoft sabotages
XP SP3 in order to get users to dump XP altogether and move to Vista. But, of
course, we don't believe that because it's a completely ridiculous notion. Still,
it's fun to imagine that SP3's woes might be linked to something more sinister
than snafus with chip makers' products or some other OEM-related issue. In any
case, it can take your mind off of all those reboots, at least for a few minutes.
Have any XP SP3 horror stories? Share them at [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on May 13, 20080 comments
Gartner's U.K. operation, old chap, maintains that UC should not be about reducing
IT costs. Yes, you read that correctly. The lads (and lasses) at the big analyst
firm think that UC
should
be about "business agility" and gets into some of the capabilities
that it feels can help businesses achieve that goal.
Posted by Lee Pender on May 09, 20080 comments
Dig with us, if you will, a paragraph from
this
press release from Cisco and Nokia:
"To meet the market demands for seamless mobile convergence solutions,
more than 95 reseller partners have received dual certification from Cisco
and Nokia on the combined mobile unified communication solution. Certified
channel partners include Telindus, Computacenter, Dimension Data, E2E, Lutech
NextiraOne Italia, Touchbase, and T-systems."
What's that? Dimension Data? We know that Dimension Data is a big-shot in the
Microsoft partner program...and here it is turning up in a Cisco press release.
It just goes to show that UC vendors are battling now for great partners, and
that great partners should be able to figure out a way to take advantage of
vendors' -- possibly multiple vendors' -- overtures.
UC is one of the few categories of technology that still has a Wild West feel.
Let's enjoy it (and profit from it) while it lasts.
Posted by Lee Pender on May 09, 20081 comments
In case you're wondering what's going on here, welcome to a special edition
of RCPU dedicated to unified communications. UC is one of those categories everybody
loves to talk (and write) about, but the truth is that there still seems to
be a lot of confusion about what exactly it is and who's doing what in it.
We're not here to explain all that -- not today, anyway -- but simply to point
out that for all the hype it gets, UC is still very much an emerging space with
a jumble of vendors, many very large, competing for both partners and customers.
Strictly speaking, we're not even the ones pointing that out; analyst firm Infonetics
Research is, with a survey of customers that shows that no
vendor has stepped up as a UC leader...yet.
Who will grab the brass ring? It's way too early to say for a lot of reasons.
Microsoft and Cisco seem like the two most likely candidates for market domination,
but each is taking a technological approach that's very
different from the other's, so there's the strong possibility that somebody
could lose big time. More likely, though, they'll carve up the market and edge
out (or absorb) lesser competitors the way big vendors usually do.
Before any of that happens, though, companies (and partners) are going to have
to figure out exactly what they're going to do with UC. IDC says that UC
is still misunderstood, like a surly teen or a tortured artist...or, more
likely, like a technology that hasn't been around that long and doesn't yet
entirely make sense to its market.
The big analyst firm (and RCPU's neighbor in suburban Boston) is going to have
a conference in New York in June to try to sort out this UC thing, but we're
guessing that we're at least a couple of years away from UC shaking out as a
market and even as a clear value proposition to most companies. In the meantime,
the best partners can do is probably to watch trends in the technology, follow
what vendors are coming out with and, of course, talk to their customers about
what they need as far as communications capabilities go.
In other words, if you don't know exactly what you're doing with UC right now,
don't panic...yet. Things are still shaking out, and you haven't yet been lost
in the shuffle. The whole thing is still a little bit of a mess.
What's your UC strategy? Do you have one yet? Have you bought into a vendor's
world view? Send your answers to [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on May 09, 20080 comments
The VMware program just keeps getting better. Check out the press release
here.
Posted by Lee Pender on May 08, 20080 comments
Really, the title of this entry says it all, but you can read more
here.
Posted by Lee Pender on May 08, 20080 comments
So, supposedly this Xobni company has a tool that improves Outlook. We're listening
-- as are a lot of other people, including the austere
New York Times,
which gives Xobni and its young founders the
full
feature-story treatment.
Posted by Lee Pender on May 07, 20080 comments