Deconstructing Microsoft's Earnings for the Channel

RCP Editor in Chief Scott Bekker digs deep into Microsoft's most recent earnings statement and uncovers some things that the rest of us hadn't yet discovered.

Posted by Lee Pender on January 31, 20080 comments


Oh La La! French Police Go Open Source

Despite what you might have heard, nobody in France actually says "Sacre bleu!" as an expression of surprise. Maybe people did at one time, but they don't anymore. These days, "oh la la!" (yes, just like in the old Sassoon commercials) is the expression of choice. So, if you're going to react with shock to the fact that the French national police force has dumped Microsoft for Ubuntu Linux, please, use the proper French expression.

Over the next few years, the gendarmerie -- remember, there's a national police force in France, not a collection of local police entities like what we have in the U.S. -- is going to shift its 70,000 desktops from Windows to Ubuntu, which, incidentally, is far and away the operating system with the name that's most fun to say.

Les flics ("the cops" in French) say that they'll save more than $10 million a year in license fees. And they're already using OpenOffice and Firefox, so there shouldn't be too much of an open source culture shock inside the organization. What we're wondering, then, is whether it's really true -- as Microsoft claims -- that running Windows is actually cheaper than running Linux despite the cost of Windows license fees. Sure, there might be some issues with integration somewhere, and there aren't as many experts trained to service open source applications as there are to service Windows, but still...$10 million a year? Oh la la, that's a lot of money.

We kind of wonder, too, whether, the European Union's regulatory war on Microsoft might be having a ripple effect on government IT departments overseas. (Oh, by the way, the U.S. will keep an eye on Microsoft for another 18 months, too.) We've read that some major European cities have also started to ditch Redmond's wares, and Europeans -- especially those who work in the public sector -- are sometimes more prone to listen to their governments than Americans are. (Actually, that's also true for people who don't work in the public sector. Your editor distinctly remembers reading and hearing during his time in France about how public service announcements about safe driving actually worked over there -- and fairly quickly and impressively, too. Then again, some of them were pretty disturbing.)

In any case, we're not going to jump on the alarmist, Microsoft-is-dying bandwagon that probably has one or two fewer seats today. Remember RCPU's rule: No matter what happens, Microsoft makes more money. But, the more Linux penetrates enterprise and government settings on the desktop, the more Microsoft had better think long and hard about what its partners and customers need Windows to be -- maybe, to start with, lighter, cheaper, more flexible and less like Vista.

Do you run into competition from open source on the desktop? Is running Windows really cheaper than going with Linux in the long run? Let me know at [email protected].

Posted by Lee Pender on January 31, 20081 comments


Tech Data To Distribute Fujitsu Servers

Another Bekker creation for your channel enlightenment.

Posted by Lee Pender on January 31, 20080 comments


HP Unveils Mobile Thin Client

That's right -- a mobile thin client.

Well, sort of mobile. It's not for the road warrior with millions of frequent flyer miles, Tad Bodeman, director of blade PC and thin client solutions for the HP Personal Systems Group, told RCPU. It's more for folks jumping from meeting to meeting.

"Folks that are working in a wireless campus environment -- this is targeted at them," Bodeman said. "They want to have a mobile device because they want to work at their desks, go from conference room to conference room for their meetings."

Sounds useful. Tad adds: "When you're not connected, there's nothing running on this mobile thin client," so a machine that's lost or stolen won't end up giving, say, thousands of Social Security numbers to somebody who really shouldn't have them.

All very good. But then, Bodeman said this of the new mobile thin client's users: "They want to go home, have dinner, log back in and do some more work at night or on the weekend."

Grr. Well, thank you very much, HP, for making that easier and safer to do. There go our weekends -- and weeknights!

Posted by Lee Pender on January 30, 20080 comments


Microsoft To Push Office SP3

Check your Microsoft Update status if you don't want it.

Posted by Lee Pender on January 30, 20080 comments


Cisco Trots Out Data-Center Switch

Dig the lead of this story:

"Cisco Systems Inc. introduced on Monday a new data-center switch that the company says can copy all the searchable data on the Internet in less than eight minutes, or run 5 million concurrent high-quality videoconferences between New York and San Francisco."

Wow. That actually sounds...pretty impressive.

Posted by Lee Pender on January 30, 20080 comments


VMware Comes Down to Earth

There are, to be sure, at least a couple of good reasons why virtualization pioneer VMware lost about a third of the value of its stock price on Tuesday following its Monday afternoon fourth quarter earnings report.

First of all, VMware's quarterly revenue number and its projections of revenue growth for 2008 both missed analysts' estimates. And, even though everything else for Q4 and 2007 actually looked pretty good, those two numbers coming up short was enough to scare off investors.

Beyond that, with a recession possibly looming -- and maybe even already upon us -- it doesn't take much to spook investors these days. Just ask Apple and Google. So, despite the fact that VMware continues to rake in the dough, its stock price is taking a hit.

Here at RCPU, we get all that, and we don't want to jump to conclusions. But, we do sometimes speculate a bit, and we wonder whether maybe, just maybe, Microsoft's concretization of its own virtualization strategy might have played in the backs of investors' minds this week. Oh, sure, Redmond has a long way to go to catch VMware technology-wise, and VMware itself is no sputtering start up -- it's 10 years old, majority owned by tech titan EMC and, stock-price catastrophe aside, still very, very profitable.

Still, we all know that unless it's consumer search or personal music players -- neither of which represents an enterprise-focused market -- Microsoft, when it gets good and ready, tends to make room for itself in new markets at the expense of incumbents. Obviously, that's not happening in virtualization...yet. It's the "yet," though, that intrigues us and might have given investors pause, as well, this week.

Or maybe not. In the current parlance of America's youth, we're not sayin' anything...we're just sayin'.

What's your take on VMware's stock-price tank? Let 'er rip at [email protected].

Posted by Lee Pender on January 30, 20080 comments


SQL Server 2008 Delayed

It's looking more like late-2008 than mid-2008 for SQL Server 2008, which might have a branding crisis if it actually manages to slip to 2009 (which, of course, we're not saying that it will).

Posted by Lee Pender on January 29, 20080 comments


Microsoft Makes More Money

RCPU's incontrovertible rule of the technology industry passed another test last week. The rule, of course, is that no matter what happens -- with the economy, with the industry or within the hallowed walls of Redmond itself -- Microsoft makes more money.

And so it came to pass last week, as you probably know by now, that MSFT (cool financial writers love to refer to companies by their ticker symbols) tore through Wall Street expectations again and reported another blockbuster quarter for the period ended Dec. 31, 2007. Plus, the company said that fiscal 2008 will also beat the Street's expectations. Microsoft makes more money. And, hey, for partners, that's a good thing.

(By the way, a parenthetical note here not specific to Microsoft or its earnings release: Don't be too impressed when companies -- and most of them do this -- talk about reporting "record revenues" for a quarter. All growing companies should report higher revenues for their most recent quarters than they did for the quarter before or for the year-ago quarter. If they don't, that's a sign that the company is shrinking, not growing -- and that's usually a very, very big problem. Record revenues just means that a company is still growing -- which is totally normal and healthy, but not always terribly impressive.)

In case you missed them, there were a few interesting little tidbits from last week's earnings report. First of all, SharePoint is now a $1 billion earner for Redmond, which goes some way toward muting claims from competitors (hello, Salesforce.com) that nobody really wants it or likes it. (We always suspected that the folks at Salesfoce.com were engaging in a little hyperbole when they said that, anyway -- although, to be fair, the exact phrase we heard was that SharePoint was "owned by millions, used by few and loved by none," which could still be true, although we kind of doubt it.)

Also, the Entertainment and Devices division -- the much-maligned (sometimes in this space) folks who bring you the Xbox and Zune -- finally came up profitable for a quarter, and Microsoft says that the division will turn a profit for the fiscal year. The one technology division that's still in the red is the infamous Online Services Business, which actually lost more money in the last quarter than it did in the same quarter a year ago. Yes, that's the stuff that competes with Google.

Perhaps the most interesting feature of the earnings news -- and it hasn't escaped the notice of the press -- is that Microsoft brought in $77 million through anti-piracy activities. It's a drop in the revenue bucket, but it's some quantification of how much piracy actually costs Microsoft (and partners) and how much the company can regain by fighting it.

So, Microsoft's making more money, but are you, partners? Are you reaping any of Microsoft's windfall? Sound off at [email protected].

Posted by Lee Pender on January 29, 20080 comments


Vista SP1 on the Way, XP on the Way Out

If rumors are true, Vista Service Pack 1 could arrive by mid-February. Already, Microsoft claims that Vista's first year was the safest ever for a new OS, but that hasn't stopped some users from pining ahead of time for XP, which Microsoft plans to start putting out to pasture in June.

Posted by Lee Pender on January 29, 20081 comments


So, Just How Evil Is Microsoft?

Sometimes, we like to make these arguments ourselves...and sometimes we let the former chief economist for the FCC make them for us. The crux of the argument: Evil Microsoft didn't turn out to be that evil after all.

Posted by Lee Pender on January 29, 20080 comments


Infusion Starts Channel Program

CRM provider Infusion Software has a surprisingly entertaining Web site, and, more to the point, a new Certified Consultant program for partners.

Posted by Lee Pender on January 24, 20080 comments