The New York Times Approves of Office Live

Our old buddy David Pogue (OK, OK, we've never met him, but it sounds so classy to know someone who writes for The New York Times) says that Office Live Small Business is actually pretty cool.

Posted by Lee Pender on February 15, 20080 comments


Microsoft E-Mails: PCs Were Not So Vista-Ready After All

You might remember a lawsuit filed claiming that Microsoft labeled PCs as Windows Vista capable when they were only really capable of running one version of Vista, the low-level Vista Home Basic.

Well, this week, we found out as part of the suit's legal proceedings that there was more to the story than just a bit of allegedly misleading marketing. Apparently, there was something resembling mass confusion inside Microsoft, including fairly high-ranking executives -- Mike Nash and Jim Allchin among them -- questioning what on earth was going on with the whole Vista labeling campaign. One employee even said in an e-mail that a "piece of junk" PC could still qualify for a Vista Ready label.

Now, companies screw stuff up all the time, sometimes unintentionally and sometimes somewhat more intentionally. What seems to have happened at Microsoft sounds like confusion and disorganization, which, again, isn't unusual in companies of 70,000 people.

But, it does seem unfortunate that Microsoft apparently did such a poor job of managing a not-unimportant aspect of the biggest release in years of its flagship product. The result was, at the very least, confusion among consumers -- and maybe even (we're speculating here) some confusion among and ill will from customers toward Microsoft partners as well (if, that is, any customers have actually decided to deploy Vista).

This little story just makes us wonder what else Microsoft is capable of botching. In business, especially the software business, the devil is always in the details, and Microsoft folks should know that by now. We're also not thrilled with the tone execs took in their e-mails -- check the RCP story linked above (and here again). They seem to, first off, not entirely know what's going on, and secondly, point fingers at underlings for screwing up. Of course, we're just getting tiny samples here.

In the long run, this little Vista labeling debacle isn't that big of a deal -- and, of course, no matter what happens, according to RCPU's incontrovertible law, Microsoft will make more money. But if you're wondering why Vista has been a mitigated success at best, maybe it's time to start asking questions about whether Redmond has lost some of its focus, especially on core products. And maybe it's time to wonder just how capable Microsoft would be of absorbing a monster like Yahoo after all.

What's your take on Microsoft's Vista labeling fiasco? Do you find that the company is losing focus? Let me know at [email protected].

Posted by Lee Pender on February 14, 20081 comments


NetApp Expands Channel Program

Well, hello, RCP Editor in Chief Scott Bekker. Perhaps you have some news about NetApp for us:

Network storage vendor NetApp this week launched an expansion of its channel program in a bid to expand its market share against EMC and other storage vendors by giving its partners the tools to deliver more profitable services surrounding NetApp's storage devices and software. Of the four initial service focus areas for NetApp partners in the program, one is specifically for Microsoft applications.

The new NetApp channel program is called the Authorized Professional Service Partner Program. The Sunnyvale, Calif.-based company, which on Wednesday announced 21 percent revenue growth for the quarter, claims about 1,000 partners worldwide in its long-standing channel program, with indirect sales accounting for about 70 percent of the company's revenues.

Rick DeTurck, senior director of services marketing for NetApp, said that NetApp hopes to bring about a quarter of its channel partners into the Authorized Professional Service network in the first year, and up to half of its partners into the program eventually.

At the same time, the company is trying to bring in systems integrators who haven't worked with NetApp. "We absolutely expect that this will attract partners from other vendors into the NetApp ecosphere," DeTurck said.

DeTurck estimated that a third to a half of existing NetApp partners also belong to the Microsoft Partner Program. "There's a fairly good overlap," he said. "The thing about NetApp is that the Microsoft applications really do well on NetApp storage. We've customized our software to take advantage of [Microsoft] operating system and the applications, so they can do snapshots and backup recovery and instantaneous recovery of mailboxes for Exchange or Web sites for SharePoint."

According to NetApp's announcement, partners who meet the authorization requirements can sell partner-branded professional services of NetApp technologies; specialize in a NetApp solution area; and gain access to training, methodologies and best practices. The solution areas are based on practice areas that NetApp's internal professional services team has already implemented with customers.

The first set of specialty solution areas for partners are:

  • storage system design and implementation
  • network storage for virtualized infrastructure
  • virtual tape library design and implementation
  • Microsoft applications

Later, NetApp plans to roll out specialty solutions for the channel in disaster recovery, backup and recovery, metrocluster, security encryption, and data assessment.

Posted by Lee Pender on February 14, 20080 comments


Oracle Partners Mad for VAD

Oracle's Value Added Distributor re-marketer program, launched last year, has picked up the business of more than 250 new resellers doing business through 25 VADs, the company said. Oracle's 1-Click ordering process has also taken more than 1,000 orders for Oracle software in less than a year.

Posted by Lee Pender on February 14, 20080 comments


VMware Revises Channel Program

Virtualization titan VMware has sweetened the incentive pot for some of its smaller partners with revisions to its channel program. Specifically, partners at its program's Professional level (basically its entry level) now have access to the "advantage +" incentive program for the first time.

"We're seeing a growth in all of our partner tiers," Julie Eades, VMware's director of worldwide channel marketing, told RCPU. "We really felt that [Professional partners] are very open to needing the same kind of benefits as the other tiers of the program." VMware now has nearly 10,000 partners worldwide, Eades said.

There are also enhanced training programs and new marketing programs and tools in VMware's program upgrade. All the gritty details are here.

Posted by Lee Pender on February 14, 20080 comments


Vista SP1 Early for Technical Customers

If you're an IT pro, you might be able to get Vista SP1 early.

Posted by Lee Pender on February 13, 20080 comments


Sun Snaps Up Virtualization Product in Acquisition

By buying Innotek (wait -- seriously, didn't the guys from Office Space work there?), Sun is picking up the VirtualBox product, a desktop virtualization tool.

Posted by Lee Pender on February 13, 20080 comments


More Microsoft-Yahoo Maneuvering

Keeping in mind, as always, that very few people actually know what's going on with this deal, Microsoft and Yahoo continued their awkward courtship this week after Yahoo's rejection of Microsoft's first buyout overture.

With Valentine's Day approaching, this story has all the makings of a romance that wobbles at first but then blossoms, like something out of a lame but popular romantic comedy (actually, is there any other kind?). With a major Yahoo investor telling Microsoft to up the ante a bit, we basically have the female lead's (Yahoo's) eccentric but influential best friend encouraging a potential beau (Microsoft) to keep calling and sending flowers -- or something like that. We can hear it now: "She's very independent! You've got to win her love!" (Um, we're not screenwriters, OK?)

The only question is whether Yahoo will eventually fall for the multibillion-dollar gleam in Microsoft's eyes or whether some quirky-but-cool guy will slide in at the last minute, expose Microsoft as a big jerk, and make off with Yahoo's affections for himself. (The role of the quirky guy -- another buyer -- is still very much open at this point.)

Most pundits seem to point to an eventual Microsoft-Yahoo kiss under a white gazebo at sunset followed by a blissful wedding (then, possibly, years of acrimony -- stop us if you've heard this before), but then again, nobody really knows what's going to happen. That's what makes the story so exciting!

We haven't had too much reaction to Microsoft-Yahoo so far. Let us know what you think at [email protected].

Posted by Lee Pender on February 13, 20081 comments


Microsoft in Danger Deal

Danger! Danger, Steve Ballmer! Microsoft is buying the company that makes the T-Mobile Sidekick phone.

Posted by Lee Pender on February 12, 20080 comments


Redmond Spruces Up Office Live

Microsoft's Office Live product, which isn't really a Live version of Office, has some new features and support options.

Posted by Lee Pender on February 12, 20080 comments


Sony Ericsson Opens Up Windows

Microsoft has a deal with the phone maker, which will use Microsoft's Windows Mobile operating system in a device for the first time.

Posted by Lee Pender on February 12, 20080 comments


Microsoft and Yahoo: Only the Shadow (and Maybe Ballmer) Knows

Some years ago, in the World's Most Exciting City (New York, in case you were wondering), your editor worked briefly and mostly unsuccessfully in the dark arts of public relations. (Journalism has turned out to be a much better gig, fortunately.) Much of what came out of the PR experience was negative, honestly -- but there were a few positives, such as a lasting friendship or two and a greater understanding of just how the "business world" really works.

Now, some of you might have been involved in mergers and acquisitions already -- and, by involved, we mean actually sitting at the table at which decisions are made, not just waiting to hear whether you still have a job after a new owner comes in. For everybody else, though, this short story might be of interest.

Our little team worked in the financial wing of a small but determined PR agency that served clients in a few select verticals (including technology). One of our clients, a trust company, was selling a local bank in upstate New York to another, much larger financial institution. It was our job, as representatives of the seller, to coordinate with the buyer and make sure that press- and employee-directed communications made sense and sounded as sensitive and caring as "most of you will probably be fired" can possibly sound.

Anyway, this was a deal involving public companies on the buying and selling sides, so we all signed documents in which we swore ourselves to secrecy and promised not to use our insider knowledge to make a bundle in the stock market. Then, we had a few meetings with our client and the buyer, came up with a very basic, essentially textbook communications strategy, wrote a draft press release and...waited. And waited. And waited.

See, we couldn't do anything until the deal was final, and it wasn't final when we started our planning. In fact, we didn't know when it would be final -- but we knew that as soon as it was, we'd have to blast out a press release, quickly find a space for a press conference and prepare to start telling employees of the bank that they might want to explore exciting new career opportunities...like, right now. We were basically on-call -- nights, weekends; kind of like a lot of IT people, really -- waiting for the other shoe to drop. We knew more than 99.9 percent of people in the corporate world knew about the deal at the time -- namely, that it was going to happen -- and yet we didn't know when the big wigs in the conference room where the deal was going down would pull the trigger and finalize everything. It was a fairly tense time, actually.

There's a whole long ending to the story that we won't get into because we at RCPU have already made our point, which is this: Almost nobody knows what's going to happen now that Yahoo has rejected Microsoft's initial takeover offer. Oh, there's plenty of speculation, namely that Microsoft will go for a hostile takeover, or that Yahoo will look for some other company to bail it out.

There are even shareholder groups trying to sway the deal (one group of Yahoo investors would welcome Microsoft with open arms, while another thinks that Yahoo's just holding out for more dough), and there's talk that Microsoft might have stepped on somebody else's private-equity bid for Yahoo.

In the days to come, we'll hear analysts, pundits and other experts telling us what they think is likely to happen, many of whom will have an air of certainty about their predictions. Some of them, of course, will end up being right. But, as anybody who has been through this sort of thing knows, no deal is done until all parties involved have signed it on the bottom line. And in this proposed-and-then-rejected deal, nobody has come close to signing anything yet.

So enjoy the speculation, but keep in mind that aside from the executive teams at Microsoft and Yahoo and a few of their advisors -- all of whom will keep their lips zipped under penalty of law -- nobody even knows what the companies' next moves will be, much less whether Redmond will end up with its prize. Remember, the Patriots were supposed to win the Super Bowl by a couple of touchdowns (and, no, we're not over it yet here in Boston), and we all saw how that turned out.

Sometimes, somebody has to state the obvious just as a gentle reminder, and that's what we at RCPU are here to do. You know as much as we do about this deal, and we know about as much as most analysts, experts and pundits know -- which is nothing, or at least nothing concrete beyond what's already come out in the press. As is always the case with this sort of thing, we're all just waiting. Some of us just have a better idea than others of what that's like.

Have a take on Microsoft-Yahoo? Shoot it to [email protected], and look for it in a special Friday edition of RCPU this week.

Posted by Lee Pender on February 12, 20080 comments