Microsoft 
loses 
  another court battle as the big honchos, the Supreme Court, allow Novell 
  to go ahead with an old antitrust lawsuit. It's interesting to note that the 
  chief justice of the Supreme Court is a Microsoft shareholder, though.
 
	
Posted by Becky Nagel on March 18, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Kidaro is the latest company to be 
subsumed 
  into Redmond.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 18, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    So, here it is. Vista SP1. 
Available 
  now. Anybody interested? Anybody? Bueller? Remember when everybody anticipated 
  Vista's arrival with bated breath? Yeah, that does seem like a long time ago.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 18, 20083 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Not everybody is convinced that Microsoft's new 
commitment 
  to openness is legitimate, but it's good enough for Todd Hooper, CEO of 
  a startup called 
Napera Networks. 
"I think they've bought into it," Hooper told RCPU in a phone chat 
  recently. "I don't think it's a smokescreen or anything like that. They 
  started working on this stuff in 2006, and they were anticipating what was to 
  come."
What was to come, of course, were massive fines from the European Union, which 
  rebuked Microsoft for charging too much for server protocol licenses and basically 
  carped that the software giant was making it too hard for other vendors' wares 
  to work with Microsoft's stuff. Microsoft lost 
  a court appeal in September and had to pony up for fines levied years ago. 
  Then, in February, to 
  coincide with Microsoft's big server launch, the EU dropped another punitive 
  bomb on the company.
So, what does Hooper have to do with all of this? Well, his company sells an 
  appliance that sits on the edge of a network, monitoring network health and 
  letting businesses know just who's using their networks. The new tool is based 
  on Microsoft's Network Access Protection architecture (hence the "Nap" 
  in Napera) and, Hooper said, can actually eliminate the need to deploy Windows 
  Server 2008 -- although the appliance also works with the new server. Thus far, 
  that hasn't been a problem for Microsoft, Hooper said.
"The support from Microsoft has been great," he said. "It's 
  possible that a customer could buy our product and not buy Windows Server 2008, 
  which obviously could hit their bottom line but we've never heard anything from 
  them about that."
More to the point, the Napera appliance uses two protocols, DHCP and 8021x, 
  to communicate with Microsoft technologies. Before the EU's first fine came 
  down via the September court decision, royalty fees were heavy for protocols 
  such as those, Hooper said. But "the royalty numbers dropped dramatically 
  after the EU decision in September," Hooper said. "This year, [Microsoft 
  has] gone even further by taking out the trade secret license and making a patent 
  license."
That means that Napera has access to protocols much more cheaply and easily 
  than it did before. And for Hooper and Napera, that's been a big boost.
"It's a big deal that Microsoft offers this sort of thing at all," 
  Hooper said. And it hasn't been all about the EU, either. "You could tell 
  from 2007 that they were in the process of change, culminating in the changes 
  in September-October. The last couple of years, there's been a radical change 
  in their attitude. Microsoft has made it pretty easy to do the right thing."
You might think, then, that Hooper is a big fan of the EU and its oversight. 
  Actually, not really, as he writes 
  in his blog on the company's Web site. Yes, some of Microsoft's policy changes 
  have helped his company, but Hooper believes that the latest round of EU fines 
  -- levied conveniently on a huge launch day for Microsoft -- went too far.
"I was very cynical about it -- I was hugely cynical," Hooper said 
  of the EU's late-February bombshell. "The customer is ultimately paying 
  Microsoft's fines. The fact is, Microsoft has a large number of software patents. 
  If you're commercially implementing something Microsoft has a patent on, you 
  could argue that the right thing to do is pay a patent fee."
And then, Hooper, in our favorite part of the interview, started to sound like 
  a rant from RCPU when discussing the EU's pursuit of Microsoft: "Where 
  does that path end? Does it end with giving everything for free? That's an issue 
  of national sovereignty. I'm not really understanding why there's continuing 
  friction [between Microsoft and the EU]. I don't see big European companies 
  giving away patent licenses for free. They tend to be as bad as or worse than 
  Microsoft. It's starting to feel a lot like [the EU is] trying to take Microsoft 
  down a few pegs."
Yes, Todd Hooper, it is. And you're proof that it's not just folks inside the 
  walls of Redmond who are defending Microsoft's openness. 
How convinced are you by Microsoft's new openness? Let us know at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 18, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    A surprisingly high -- we think, anyway -- 20 percent of GP customers have 
  moved to the Dynamics ERP suite from Intuit's small-business accounting package, 
  QuickBooks. Or, at least, that's what Microsoft found in doing GP customer research, 
  said Jon Pratt, senior director at Microsoft and GP guru.
Redmond sees an opportunity in companies growing out of QuickBooks, Pratt said. 
  "We looked very clearly at the size of when they did move. Many of them 
  moved much later in the cycle than we thought they should have. Many of them 
  said we didn't start thinking about it until get got to 20" million dollars 
  in annual revenue, he said, adding that one customer was still on QuickBooks 
  despite raking in $100 million in annual revenue. "We'd like to move that 
  line back." Pratt's thinking that $5 million to $10 million sounds better. 
So, Microsoft has three migration plans -- sold through partners of course 
  -- that will run customers about $11,500, $20,000 or $35,000, depending on which 
  plan the customer wants. The basic and cheapest plan includes two seats of GP, 
  implementation, a year of support and an estimate of partner costs (that's where 
  the "about" comes in.)
Added Pratt: "We think our job is to make people aware of what the base 
  system functionality can do, make them aware that putting a base implementation 
  is not as expensive as they perceived." Partners, take note -- there are 
  still QuickBooks heathens to be converted. Go forth and spread the Dynamics 
  gospel.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 13, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Remember Microsoft's plan to converge its four ERP suites into one mega-product? 
  It was 
still causing 
  confusion at last year's Convergence. 
Not anymore. Or not really, anyway. Why? "We concluded Project Green," 
  said Mogens Elsberg, general manager of Microsoft Dynamics ERP, not leaving 
  a lot of room for ambiguity. 
And there's not much ambiguity anymore about how Dynamics works. Steve Ballmer 
  mentioned it again this week: The four-suite strategy is alive and well on the 
  ERP side and will continue to be. (Oh, sure the suites all have pretty much 
  the same interfaces now, and, as far as we know, they're still on the way to 
  having the same code base, but the mega-suite idea, at least as a branding and 
  marketing concept, is dead.)
ePartners President Michael McCarthy said that partners, not Microsoft, were 
  responsible for a lot of confusion to begin with: "You've got to do your 
  homework before you go into an account. You're not pushing GP in a global manufacturer; 
  that's just stupid. The sophistication of the VAR and the understanding of the 
  applications in the market are absolutely critical."
However, Michael Merfeld, customer director, Microsoft Dynamics, for Avanade, 
  has a simpler take on why the Project Green kafuffle is no longer a sales barrier 
  for partners. Nothing has changed, he said, except Microsoft's attitude. "There's 
  no new message. [Microsoft] just stopped talking about it. They shut up. That's 
  all they needed to do," Merfeld said.
And with Microsoft's big mouth shut, at least on this issue, partners are finding 
  Dynamics easier to sell, which is a good thing. Sometimes, silence is golden 
  -- or, in this case, green.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 13, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    While Dynamics CRM Live, the forthcoming SaaS version of Microsoft's CRM suite, 
  has sparked a few conversations at Convergence, rarely does anybody breathe 
  a word about hosted Dynamics ERP. 
RCP looked 
  into hosted ERP in our March issue, and there are a lot of reasons why critical 
  back-end software and the SaaS model don't always mix. Plus, and probably as 
  a result, there doesn't seem to be a huge market for it. 
"I think it's actually a reflection of market demand," said Brad 
  Wilson, general manager for Microsoft Dynamics CRM, who definitely sees the 
  upside for hosted CRM but comes off as more skeptical about the immediate future, 
  anyway, of hosted ERP. "Companies have shown themselves willing to take 
  marketing, sales and service online, less so supply chain, less so financials."
Partners agree, for the most part. "Software as a Service has been around 
  for 12 years. It was going to take over everything," said Michael McCarthy, 
  president of ePartners. "Have you seen it? I haven't seen people clamoring 
  for it."
McCarthy also allows that CRM, which seems especially suited for the SaaS model, 
  has found a niche as a set of hosted applications. But, on the whole, his sentiments 
  echo those of most partners and even Microsoft folks we've talked to on the 
  issue recently. SaaS ERP, they say, just isn't that big of a deal.
Except that it is, for some. Michael Merfeld, Avanade's director of customer 
  systems for Microsoft Dynamics, is struggling to battle Plexus, a provider of 
  hosted manufacturing applications that's especially strong in auto-parts manufacturing. 
"I'm losing to them," said Merfeld, who's always good for a frank 
  and informative interview. "There is a segment of the market out there 
  that views ERP as a necessary evil. They want to buy it like a utility. They 
  don't conceive of it as a strategic weapon. Those customers are very contrary 
  to the whole Dynamics message."
But they're still customers, and Avanade, with Dynamics, still competes for 
  their business. Yes, there's a hosted version of AX, Avanade's preferred ERP 
  suite -- not hosted by Microsoft (Microsoft doesn't host its ERP suites the 
  way it will CRM) or by Avanade, but by a hosting partner. Still, it's not getting 
  through to companies that don't want ERP on premises, mainly because deep industry 
  expertise -- usually provided by partners, not by Microsoft -- is harder to 
  achieve in a hosted application using the Microsoft model, according to Merfeld, 
  and because competitors' products, while offering fewer functions, are just 
  so darn cheap.
"The real problem that Microsoft has in the ERP space is Microsoft doesn't 
  think product-wise in industry focuses," Merfeld said. "They position 
  a lot of the products as fit for a broad range of industry, partner communities 
  out there talking it the last mile. You have to be 1,000 feet deep into a particular 
  industry vertical to work. Making AX Live isn't going to fix anything. The real 
  issue and the real value these SaaS guys are playing is their implementation 
  is, 'We're going to send you some access codes for a Web site; tell us when 
  you're done.'" (See, we told you that he was good interview.)
So, what is Microsoft doing about Avanade's situation? Not much, as far as 
  Merfeld can tell ("We hear rumors that there's a think tank somewhere and 
  there's big thoughts, but they don't have anything published"), or as far 
  as RCPU can tell, either. And, really, it's easy enough to understand why. As 
  we've said before, SaaS ERP just doesn't seem to carry a broad market right 
  now. So, for those partners running up against specialized vendors of hosted 
  ERP apps, the battle will probably continue to be a tough one -- and maybe even 
  a losing one -- for a while longer.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 13, 20083 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    We -- or, more specifically, former Dynamics honcho Tami Reller -- 
told 
  you about this last year. Within a year, Reller said (that's right now, 
  if you're keeping score at home), Dynamics partners will have to have a SharePoint 
  competency in order to sell Microsoft's ERP and CRM suites.
Are we there yet? Not quite...but we're close. SharePoint is big business now 
  for Microsoft (a billion 
  dollars a year worth of big), but questions remain -- don't they always? 
  -- as to whether companies are just buying it or actually using it.
"There's lots of interest in it; take-up is a different story," said 
  Joe Cassidy, director of TeamKnowledge, 
  a British company that makes nifty tools that automate the development and deployment 
  of scripts for Dynamics CRM. 
It's a different story, indeed, and one worth telling. Because, while a lot 
  of companies are still in an experimental stage of sorts with SharePoint -- 
  the server that aggregates and actually makes useful ad hoc and unstructured 
  data and processes -- use of the product is growing as sales grow. SharePoint 
  handles the unstructured stuff, and Dynamics ERP and CRM deal with structured 
  data and processes. The combo is working -- and partners are cashing in.
"It is literally part of every deal we do," said John Yaggie, director 
  of enterprise business solutions for Microsoft Dynamics CRM at Avanade, a consulting 
  joint venture of Accenture and Microsoft. 
In fact, SharePoint is getting so big for Dynamics partners that Reller's prophesy 
  seems on its way to coming true. "One of the big shortages is SharePoint 
  resource development," said Michael McCarthy, president of Dynamics uber-partner 
  ePartners. "I'm cross-training my dot-net developers" to develop for 
  SharePoint, McCarthy said. 
Microsoft folks echo partners' sentiments -- not surprisingly, but still. "SharePoint 
  goes into a ton of our engagements. We're seeing a lot of SharePoint and CRM 
  integration," said Brad Wilson, general manager for Microsoft Dynamics 
  CRM. 
And it's not all on the CRM side, either. "There's a lot more adoption 
  coming," said Jon Pratt, senior director at Microsoft and general honcho 
  of the GP product line. Pratt added that SharePoint is now a SKU on the Dynamics 
  price list, meaning customers can pick it up when they're buying into Dynamics. 
So, partners, grab those SharePoint experts while you can because they're only 
  going to be more valuable as SharePoint and Dynamics grow together. And if you 
  think at this point we sound like some sort of Microsoft marketing spiel, we're 
  not trying to -- we're just telling you what we've been hearing at Convergence 
  this week. 
Even Cassidy, perhaps the most skeptical of the bunch we spoke to, is confident 
  that SharePoint will have a bright future integrated with Dynamics. Said the 
  affable Irishman: "It'll happen because Microsoft will make it happen." 
  And it's happening now.
What has been your experience with selling SharePoint to your customers? Are 
  they using it? Are you? Drop a line to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 13, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Ask Steve Ballmer, as somebody did -- via e-mail, as there was no "live" 
  Q&A with Ballmer at Convergence this year -- what Dynamics CRM's main selling 
  points are in competition with online CRM titan Salesforce.com, and here's what 
  he'll say: "We really are well-integrated with Outlook, Word and Excel. 
  Your users will appreciate our interface."
OK, so he said a bunch of other stuff, too -- that Dynamics CRM Live (the hosted 
  version of the software) is half the price of Salesforce.com, that Microsoft 
  gives users a choice of whether to implement it with a strictly SaaS model or 
  whether to install something on-premises, and that Dynamics CRM Live is (or 
  will be when it comes out, which Ballmer says will be by the end of June) easier 
  to customize than Salesforce.com.
But, throughout his keynote at Convergence this morning in cloudy Orlando, 
  Fla., Ballmer kept going back to the old workhorse, Microsoft Office. Oh, he 
  wasn't as explicit as we're being here, but he did describe the future of computing 
  as the convergence (heh heh) of four models of computing: the Web, devices, 
  servers...and the desktop. As in desktop software, installed on the client. 
  As in Office, Microsoft's moneymaker.
"The future of computing is to bring together these four models," 
  Ballmer told a Convergence crowd that looked, at least, smaller than the one 
  that Microsoft attracted to San Diego for last year's show. "As you think 
  about applications like Dynamics...or whatever the case may be, you don't have 
  to think about these distinctions."
Software Plus Services, Microsoft's vision (such as it is) for SaaS, is the 
  real star of this year's show. (Sorry, AX 2009, but you know it's true.) And 
  the first word in Microsoft's catchphrase, software -- desktop software, specifically 
  -- remains critical. Dynamics is supposed to be all about ease of use, which 
  Microsoft touts as a major advantage over SAP, Siebel and other products with 
  sometimes Byzantine interfaces. And there's nothing easier to use -- mainly 
  due to user familiarity, not because the interfaces are actually all that great 
  -- than Office. (Dynamics doesn't necessarily use Office interfaces per se, 
  but the look and feel of Dynamics is very Office-like, and the integration between 
  Dynamics applications and Office software is, as far as we can tell from demos, 
  smooth and seamless.) 
Beyond all that, there's no reason why Ballmer shouldn't tout Office and its 
  familiar interfaces -- and their tight integration with the "role-based" 
  interfaces of Dynamics -- as competitive advantages for Dynamics. SAP saw so 
  much value in the Office look and feel that it worked with Microsoft to create 
  the Duet product, which is pretty much an SAP back-end viewed through an Office 
  front-end. Office sells; Office works -- Ballmer knows this, and users and partners 
  know this. It's a great selling point for Dynamics. 
There's just one thing: Convergence, Dynamics CRM Live and, to some extent, 
  even the Dynamics 
  ERP suites are all about SaaS, or at least being SaaS-capable in the case 
  of ERP. Office, though, isn't a SaaS product. Oh, sure, there's Office Live 
  Workspace, which sort of extends Office applications to the Web. But, if you 
  really want Office, you've still got to load it on your PC (or, uh, Mac, we 
  suppose).
For now, that's no big deal. Everybody has Office. Nobody minds installing 
  it. Maybe it'll be that way forever. Or maybe this Web 2.0, all-hosted, Google 
  Apps model really will catch on, and the model itself will be even more important 
  than the familiarity of the user interface. If that happens, will Microsoft 
  be ready? Will Microsoft figure out how to retool its moneymaker and shift its 
  revenue model? What will Ballmer tout when talking about how wonderful Dynamics 
  is? 
Perhaps the shadow knows -- but Ballmer doesn't seem to. For now, though, it 
  doesn't matter. Dynamics is a billion-dollar business, and user numbers 
  are climbing (thanks to our old friend Josh Greenbaum of Enterprise Applications 
  Consulting for those tidbits of information). And a major reason for that success 
  is that Dynamics looks good and feels good to Office users. For now, that's 
  good enough.
What's your take on Microsoft's S+S strategy? Is it too heavy on the first 
  "S"? Sound of at [email protected].
Ballmer dropped a few other notable quotes during his speech. For one, he pledged 
  continued support for all four of Microsoft's ERP suites as separate entities, 
  a pledge that threw a little more dirt on the erstwhile Project Green, Microsoft's 
  now-dead(ish) plan to converge (there's that word again) all four suites into 
  one mega-product. 
"We have a long-term view for every one of these products," the Microsoft 
  poobah said. "We're going to adopt the same smart approaches in each of 
  the product lines -- role-based interface, business intelligence, reporting. 
  In terms of the specific allocation functionality of each product, they will 
  all continue to be enhanced many years into the future." 
Ballmer also threw out a few stats: more than 200 partners hosting Dynamics 
  solutions, a growth rate for Dynamics of 20 percent per year (higher, he says, 
  than the market in general), 4,000 users at Microsoft itself moved off of Siebel 
  and Clarify and on to Dynamics CRM. (That last figure was accompanied by a coy 
  quote: "Usually our people love our products in the hands of our customers 
  more than in their own hands," followed by reassurance from Ballmer that 
  Microsoft folks just love Dynamics CRM.)
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 12, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft gets it. One of the main roadblocks -- probably the main roadblock 
  -- to a successful ERP implementation is usability, or, more specifically, users 
  simply refusing to navigate the eye-glazing, brain-scrambling screens in front 
  of them.
Knowing that, Microsoft is hammering the message at Convergence that Dynamics 
  applications are easy on the eyes, and, by extension, on the brain. In his keynote 
  today, Microsoft corporate vice president and still new Dynamics honcho Kirill 
  Tatarinov spent the bulk of his stage time showing screen shots and getting 
  into the nuts and bolts of how easy Dynamics is to use. His speech was short-ish 
  on talking about new functionality and very long on waxing about the apps' user-friendliness. 
And that's as it should be. Sure, ERP and CRM applications have to be useful, 
  providing all the requisite functionality that companies need and what not, 
  but they're fairly useless if, well, nobody uses them. Nobody in the ERP market 
  understands that quite like Microsoft, what with Redmond's many years of experience 
  in designing and selling broad-use applications such as Microsoft Office.
"What we're delivering here is a very rich visualization technology that 
  allows you to view very complex data," Tatarinov said in his speech. "Just 
  like people love their Zune, they love their smart phone, we want people to 
  say, 'I love Dynamics!'"
Hmm. (Pause for laughter -- well, your editor laughed, anyway.) Uh, Kirill, 
  are you sure that you wanted to use the Zune as an example of something people 
  love? Well, anyway, we understand what he means: Enterprise software should 
  be something that's pleasurable -- or at least not torturous, as we doubt that 
  too many people actually enjoy using ERP applications -- to use. It's a strong 
  message for Microsoft and one that should continue to carry Dynamics into more 
  and more companies. 
Tatarinov also talked about Microsoft Connect, the portal through which users 
  can suggest changes to Dynamics interfaces and vote on favorite or least-favorite 
  features. Further to the theme of connecting with users, Tatarinov reinforced 
  that Microsoft is now publishing the "direction" of forthcoming Dynamics 
  suites -- as in, what they're going to do -- 12 to 18 months before the suites' 
  release dates.
The Dynamics dynamo also went over the roadmap for the years to come. He said 
  that AX 2009 would be available by the end of the year -- although Microsoft 
  has also told us first half 2008. (A PowerPoint slide also listed the date as 
  Q2 2008, so we're guessing that Kirill made a small mistake in his speech.) 
  Beyond that, expect this release schedule:
  AX 2009, Q2 2008
    NAV 2009, second half of 2008
  2009-2010:
    POS (Point of Sale) 2009
    GP 11
    SL 8 
    CRM 5
Not to be forgotten, Tatarinov also mentioned that all Dynamics suites now 
  include support for Windows Essential Business Server, the version of Windows 
  Server 2008 for midsize businesses.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 12, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The whole press release, including some useful information on the new features 
  in AX 2009 (the latest update of AX, announced today and obtusely "code-named" 
  AX 5.0), which should arrive by the end of June, is 
here. 
  There's also "news" about how Microsoft designed some of its "role-tailored" 
  Dynamics interfaces by using research conducted with something called the IT 
  University of Copenhagen -- what, we wonder, is the school's mascot? -- on how 
  users respond emotionally to software screens. 
Probably the biggest news for partners is that EDS will offer Dynamics CRM 
  to its customers. Ronald A. Rittenmeyer, chairman, president and CEO (is there 
  anything this guy doesn't do?) of EDS, showed up onstage with Steve Ballmer 
  this morning to discuss the announcement. 
"We see the entire Dynamics thing as definitely an enterprise-grade solution. 
  CRM is something we see as our fabric," said Rittenmeyer, chairman, president, 
  CEO and, apparently, tailor. The titled one also said that EDS could train and 
  deploy as many as 300 Dynamics consultants in the next several years.
For his part, Ballmer used the EDS deal to take a shot at rival IBM: "None 
  of their product lines today is that strong. IBM is really more of an enterprise 
  services player that really doesn't love our software very much. That's why 
  we love EDS a lot," Ballmer cackled. 
Microsoft also has some SaaS-y additions to its Dynamics suites, including 
  online payment, "marketplace" (think integration with eBay) and keyword 
  marketing services. Plus, not so much on the SaaS-y side, there's a new set 
  of tools to help users of Intuit's QuickBooks move to Dynamics GP.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on March 12, 20080 comments