System Center: It's Not Just for Windows Anymore

If you're one of those vendors that make extensions for Systems Center so that the Microsoft management suite can monitor more than just Windows, you'll have some new competition soon...from Microsoft.

System Center isn't just for Windows anymore, Microsoft revealed this week. By the second quarter of next year -- yes, that's a year from now, when Operations Manager SP1 comes out -- it'll manage Linux and Unix environments, as well as VMware's ESX Server virtualization application. It'll also interoperate with other management platforms such as HP's OpenView and IBM's Tivoli suite. The forthcoming management extensions are available in beta now.

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Posted by Lee Pender on April 30, 20080 comments


Microsoft Outsources SMB Financing Decisions

We've told you in the past in RCP the magazine about Microsoft Financing and what it can do for partners, especially those that work with SMBs. Well, FYI, there's a new wrinkle in Microsoft's financing story. Redmond now has an independent financial-services group More

Posted by Lee Pender on April 30, 20080 comments


Earnings Redux: Microsoft Makes Less Money, But Why?

It's the incontrovertible rule of RCPU: No matter what happens, Microsoft makes more...Wait, what's this? Microsoft didn't make more money in its most recent fiscal quarter? Well, not compared to the year-ago quarter, it didn't -- but you know that by now. More

Posted by Lee Pender on April 29, 20081 comments


Dell and HP: '¡Viva XP!'

The PC makers are finding ways to keep selling XP , and, yes, we'll use any excuse we can to work an upside-down exclamation point into RCPU.

Posted by Lee Pender on April 29, 20080 comments


IIS and SQL Servers Under Attack

Ugh, this sounds like a nasty mess. If you want to take out your frustrations about the IIS and SQL attacks that have hit about half-a-million Microsoft-supported Web sites (so far), though, More

Posted by Lee Pender on April 29, 20082 comments


Yahoo Deadline Passes, Nothing Happens

The non-news news of the day is that Microsoft still doesn't own Yahoo . We'll keep you posted on other things that aren't happening.

Posted by Lee Pender on April 29, 20080 comments


Reader Potpourri: Google, Salesforce.com and Vista

Today just seems like the kind of day made for reader feedback in RCPU, so here goes.

Our e-mail of the week comes from Jim, a previous contributor whose area code correlates to good ol' Fort Worth, Texas, home of your editor's alma mater. Jim weighs in -- thoughtfully, we find -- on the Google-Salesforce.com hookup and the impact it might have on Microsoft:

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Posted by Lee Pender on April 24, 20080 comments


Microsoft To Host Apps for Partners

Partners worried about competing with Microsoft in the SaaS space have a little less to worry about this week. The story's still a little light on details, but Microsoft is saying now that it'll host third-party (read: partner) apps along with Exchange and SharePoint.

Posted by Lee Pender on April 24, 20080 comments


groupSPARK Goes Seismic

groupSPARK, recently snapped up by mindSHIFT , will offer its private-label SaaS services through Ingram Micro's ever-expanding Seismic program . The press release More

Posted by Lee Pender on April 24, 20080 comments


A Review of Microsoft's Leasing Program

While we're on the topic of SMBs, as we are today, now seems like a good time to refresh your memory of an article that ran in the March issue of RCP . It was on a Microsoft program that allows customers to essentially rent Microsoft applications. Curious? Nostalgic? Click here

Posted by Lee Pender on April 23, 20080 comments


Partners Ramp Up for SBS, EBS Launches

In the second half of this year -- which is, after all, rapidly approaching -- Microsoft will roll out a couple of major products for partners in the SMB space. Windows Small Business Server 2008 and Windows Essential Business Sever 2008 are the cornerstones of Redmond's revamped server strategy More

Posted by Lee Pender on April 23, 20080 comments


Dynamics CRM Online Hits the Streets

Microsoft's not un-hyped hybrid customer relationship management offering is generally available...right now . Dynamics CRM Online -- which offers customers an on-premises deployment, a Microsoft-hosted option or both -- hits the streets with a cheaper price tag and considerably more storage capability than those of its biggest rival, Salesforce.com. More

Posted by Lee Pender on April 23, 20080 comments