With authorSTREAM's 
new 
  product, you can do it...if you really want to. 
But we bet this 
  will still get more hits, mainly because your editor has already watched it 
  about 400 times. (Who can resist Butch Johnson's catch in Super Bowl XII and 
  a plug for "Tuborg, the golden beer of Danish kings" all in less than 
  a minute-and-a-half?)
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 26, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Redmond aims to boost Forefront and OneCare 
with 
  the purchase of pleasingly named Komoku. It's sort of too bad, though, that 
  Komoku couldn't have hooked up with Ubuntu Linux somehow, because "Komoku 
  Ubuntu" kind of sounds as though it could be the name of a guy who might 
  be a favorite to win the Olympic marathon this year. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 25, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Yes! 
Service 
  Pack 1 has given us here at RCPU an opportunity to revive one of our favorite 
  activities: bashing Vista! Microsoft's ne'er-do-well operating system finally 
  got the update that Redmond hoped would push it into the enterprise, and guess 
  what? SP1 is deeply flawed -- so much so that Microsoft is 
offering 
  free support to all Vista users, no matter 
how 
  they ended up with the OS. 
Or, at least, that's what the trade press has been saying. And maybe it's true. 
  Or -- and to be fair, the InformationWeek 
  story linked in this entry mentions this -- maybe service packs are always 
  a bit of a bear to roll out, and maybe they've caused problems in the past, 
  too. Actually, there shouldn't be a "maybe" on either of those last 
  two statements, as they're just true. All kinds of service packs have caused 
  problems before; this is, after all, complicated stuff to manage.
And, if you go back and take a look at the comments in the InformationWeek 
  story, you'll find at least a few users who had no trouble running the first 
  Vista service pack -- and even a few who seem to actually like Vista.
 
Yeah, 
  Vista's still a dog for the most part, and it still hasn't really cracked the 
  enterprise in a serious way (although we still maintain that it 
  will...eventually). But, in RCPU's view, most of the dire SP1 news has had 
  more to do with a slow-ish news time surrounding a holiday weekend than with 
  the demise of Vista and/or Microsoft.
Still, it's kind of fun to be Vista-bashing again, even if we aren't quite 
  so serious this time.
Have you had a traumatic experience with Vista SP1? Or a good one? Or none 
  at all because you wouldn't install Vista even if your life depended on it? 
  Open up at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 25, 200813 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft is mulling over a 
special 
  patch for a security vulnerability in Word. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 25, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Another of those brand-strength surveys came out recently (faithful readers 
  of 
RCP the magazine will remember that we've tackled the 
topic 
  of Microsoft's brand before) and said that Redmond's mark is 
way 
  down the list -- 59th, behind Fruit of the Loom -- in terms of brand 
  strength. 
The bad news is that represents a fall of more than 20 places from 2006. The 
  good news? Google ranks 195th. At least in this survey, anyway -- and count 
  us as a bit skeptical of the results, frankly.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 25, 20082 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Dynamics AX is one of John Elmer's favorite things. Elmer is vice president 
  of IS and controller for the 
Rodgers 
  & Hammerstein Organization, which, believe it or not, is an outfit that 
  owns the intellectual property created by, well, 
Rodgers 
  and Hammerstein, the famous Broadway songwriters. 
Prior to implementing AX 3 in 2005, R&H was trapped in a web of proprietary 
  ERP-like applications, which were expensive to develop and maintain. Then, along 
  came Dave Weiner (like, perhaps, a wind sweeping down the plain), at the time 
  the practice manager for Cole Systems, 
  a New York-based Dynamics partner. (Weiner is now transitioning into a position 
  with Dynamics consultancy Kineticsware.) By now, you know the end of the story: 
  Cole and Dynamics AX stole the show at R&H. But it wasn't a sure thing from 
  the outset.
R&H, a privately held -- still owned, in fact, by the families of the composers 
  -- company based in (where else?) NYC, has an unusual business model. It owns 
  intellectual property, not actual property. So while organizations that want 
  to perform, say, Carousel, will buy the rights to it well in advance 
  of a performance, the sale doesn't really "happen" until the lights 
  come on.
"We've got some odd metrics in our business," Elmer told RCPU. "We'll 
  book business today, and it's actual booked business, but the recognition isn't 
  tied to the order, it's tied to a specific set of criteria around dates, the 
  actual dates of performances people put on."
Weiner and Cole Systems, in a story probably more Hollywood than Broadway, 
  entered the R&H derby as an underdog to mighty SAP in 2004. But when SAP 
  wanted to explode R&H's budget, Weiner stepped in with AX and a note of 
  simplicity -- music, incidentally, to Microsoft's ears.
"We did a simple analysis of the business," Weiner said at Convergence. 
  "We spent a couple of hours onsite. John said a canned application is not 
  going to do what [R&H] needed to do. We crunched through it and piled on 
  a little bit of code and showed them the business working on the system."
"They pulled an all-nighter," Elmer recalled. "After two meetings 
  with our user groups, they threw together a working model of our process. AX 
  out of the box -- it was just amazing. It blew everybody away."
Probably not unlike Debbie Reynolds on Broadway in Oklahoma! (Um, right? 
  OK, now's the time to confess that we don't really know much about musicals 
  here at RCPU. It's too bad R&H couldn't have owned the rights to, say, '70s 
  and '80s sitcoms -- then we could've dropped in some serious references. As 
  it is, your editor sort of remembers seeing The Sound of Music on TV 
  as a kid, but that's about it. It had something to do with Germans, or possibly 
  Austrians, or both. Anyway, we digress.) 
After a five-month implementation, AX was up and running. Elmer liked it so 
  much that he signed up to roll out the forthcoming AX 2009 (due by the end of 
  June) early as part of the Technology Adoption Program (or TAP, which also seems 
  fitting for Broadway). He's a fan of 2009, too -- especially the BI capabilities 
  ("Executives are not good at working too hard to get to anything; we can 
  show them the pretty charts and graphs," he said) and the Office 2007-based 
  AX 2009 interface. The latter took a bit of getting used to, but Elmer says 
  that he and the R&H staff -- it's a company of about 50 people -- have embraced 
  it. 
Elmer's also pleased to know that Microsoft -- which has started publishing 
  information on forthcoming versions of Dynamics suites 18 to 24 months in advance 
  of their release -- is keeping him updated on what's happening next with AX. 
"You know that down the road there's something coming," he said. 
  "We won't have to sit here waiting." 
What that says, of course, is that Microsoft is following the first rule of 
  show business (whether it knows it or not): Always leave them wanting more.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 20, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    What? Something's coming out of Redmond not just on time, but early? 
Apparently 
  so.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 20, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Hey, Aspire Technologies, we don't mean to alarm you or anything, but you seem 
  to have misspelled the last half of your product's name. Next time, do a spell 
  check before going live. Anyway, info on updated QuoteWerks is 
here 
  (PDF).
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 19, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The word 
"ecosystem" 
  might have a distinctly flora-and-fauna feel about it, but in the software game 
  it means something entirely different. For Microsoft, as for most big vendors, 
  the ecosystem is a universe of partners, customers and other friendly entities 
  that facilitate sales and implementation of applications. Or something like 
  that.
This week, Microsoft has been growing its ecosystem -- feeding a plant here, 
  breeding some animals there, if it were in the natural world -- for unified 
  communications. Following on the heels of UC deals with Polycom and Tandberg 
  is this week's announcement with Aspect 
  Software, which makes technology for contact centers (otherwise known, as 
  far as we can tell, as call centers).
Aspect will build its unified IP application for contact centers -- already 
  built on the .NET platform -- to integrate with Microsoft's UC offerings. Microsoft, 
  in turn, made an "equity 
  investment" in Aspect. While Aspect won't stop working with other vendors, 
  it will lead with Microsoft UC apps in selling an integrated package with its 
  Unified IP offering.
"When it comes to UC platforms, our lead will be Microsoft," Mike 
  Sheridan, Aspect's senior vice president of strategy and marketing, told RCPU. 
  "We'll only be reactive with other UC platforms customers might ask for."
For Microsoft, the idea is to be ubiquitous (hey, it's worked for Redmond before), 
  working with a variety of partners to become everybody's UC software platform, 
  no matter what or whose application is sitting on top of it or is integrated 
  with it. Apparently, the folks in Redmond have found their competitors in the 
  UC space (think Cisco and IBM, for starters) to be a little inflexible on that 
  front and think that they can cash in.
"We're changing the number of options that customers have traditionally 
  been able to work from when it comes to telecommunications investments," 
  said Zig Serafin, general manager of Microsoft unified communications, in a 
  phone chat with RCPU today. 
At the heart of Microsoft's UC offering is Office Communications Server, which 
  the company says is now deployed in 35 percent of the Fortune 500 (that's "about" 
  174 companies, according to Serafin, who didn't offer a more precise number). 
  But, really, the key to UC for Microsoft is partnerships and having established 
  UC partners whose own partners will sell Microsoft's UC platform into their 
  client bases. It's pretty classic Redmond strategy, and Serafin's pretty sure 
  that it'll work.
"Microsoft's offering in the voice space will be in the top three voice 
  providers within the next few years," Serafin said.
In the meantime, though, this week presented another opportunity to add a new 
  beast -- in this case, Aspect -- to the Redmond UC ecosystem. 
Are you interested in partnering with Microsoft for UC? What do you see as 
  the potential for unified communications? Give us a shout at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 19, 20080 comments