Microsoft partner Phase 2 International, sensibly based in Hawaii, is all over
Redmond's SaaS (or, we suppose, S+S) play. Kurt Mackie has more about Phase
2's SaaS-y goings-on
here.
Posted by Lee Pender on January 17, 20080 comments
Whatever Larry wants, Larry gets...and BEA, Larry Ellison wants you. Actually,
the free-spending Oracle honcho has
wanted
BEA for a while, and this week, he finally got it -- for
almost
$8 billion (or for
$8.5
billion, depending on whose story you read).
The multibillion-dollar price tag, which represents more than $19 per share,
is a nice bump up from the $17 per share that Oracle offered -- and BEA rejected
-- in October. What amazes RCPU, though, isn't so much the money but the notion
that Oracle is bringing yet another vendor into the fold. Dig this paragraph
from the RCPmag.com
story on the acquisition:
"Ellison has already spent more than $25 billion during the past
three years buying a long list of competitors, including PeopleSoft, Siebel
Systems and Hyperion Solutions."
Sheesh! Put the price tags aside for a second, and think about this: How on
earth is Oracle integrating all of those companies -- with all of their technology,
cultures, partner bases and the like -- under its immense and very expensive
umbrella? Integration is going pretty well, at least according to financial
results, which have
been fantastic lately.
But what's the secret? Acquisitions can be pretty rough for everybody involved
-- except the folks at the top and some major shareholders who clean up money-wise.
In the rank and file, they take a lot of work and can cause a lot of clashes.
Yet, here's Oracle, spending like a contestant on the old "Wheel of Fortune,"
picking
out prizes from the corner of the screen, and somehow making it all work.
Color us impressed...and maybe a little frightened.
What's Oracle's secret to integration success? Do you have any tales to share
of working with Oracle? Share them at [email protected].
Incidentally, Oracle wasn't the only big spender this week -- Sun splashed
out a cool billion
for MySQL.
And, if you were wondering about this week's reader feedback, we're saving
it for next week. So, stay tuned, take a look at the latest
entries (but ignore the photo -- it's two years old, and your editor has
hair now), and send your thoughts on anything and everything to [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on January 17, 20080 comments
It's Product News Wednesday, so we're stretching
VMware's
acquisition of Thinstall from a financial story into a product story, as
Thinstall's stuff will eventually make it into VMware's desktop virtualization
offering.
Posted by Lee Pender on January 16, 20080 comments
Here in panic nation, with the sub-prime mortgage fiasco and the resulting
credit crunch leaving blocks of houses empty, and the stock market tanking like
the Cowboys in a playoff game, all the talk is starting to boil down to one
word: recession.
The signs
of an economic slowdown are everywhere, and presidential candidates are
starting to address the issue -- and when politicians wake up and realize that
something's going on, that's when you know that whatever it is they're talking
about is at an advanced stage and is very much upon us.
We don't often venture outside the realm of Microsoft and industry news here
at RCPU -- and we're hardly economists, although we sometimes read The Economist
-- but the "r" word, should it come to pass, would have implications
for everybody reading (and writing) this newsletter. The question is whether
you're prepared for a recession, or at least for some tough times ahead.
Now, as Microsoft partners, maybe you're not in panic mode, and maybe you shouldn't
be. After all, one of RCPU's principal laws of the universe is that no matter
what happens, Microsoft just keeps making money. But the credit crunch might
already have your business in a bit of a bind, and any sort of economic downturn
that eventually affects IT spending could make the sledding all that much tougher.
So, as we sometimes like to do here, we're turning the floor over to you on
this one. Tell us: Are you preparing for a recession, or at least for tough
times ahead? What are you doing to prepare? How much would a recession affect
your business?
As always, direct your answers to [email protected].
If we get any in time, we'll run some tomorrow. Otherwise, look for responses
in this space next week.
Oh, and totally off-topic for this entry but very much on-topic for RCPU, the
Microsoft
executive exodus continued this week with the departure
of Rob Short, an important guy from the Core Operating System Division .
And one departing Microsoft exec might literally
buy the farm.
Posted by Lee Pender on January 16, 20080 comments
In case you missed it, a
public
beta of Vista SP1 has been out there since late last week. For those of
you actually running Vista, that is.
Posted by Lee Pender on January 16, 20080 comments
Microsoft
took
the wraps off of a retail component of the Dynamics suite of business applications
this week.
Perhaps hoping for better things from America's Team, Microsoft included in
its press
release a Dallas Cowboys customer reference that ended up being somewhat
poorly timed. No doubt Jerry Jones installed the Dynamics retail app himself
and does all the maintenance on it, such is his obsession with controlling every
detail of his football team, including fourth-quarter coaching. Apparently,
not even Microsoft Dynamics can deliver a playoff victory.
Posted by Lee Pender on January 16, 20081 comments
International Business Machines -- we just love full names like that -- gave
Wall Street a much-needed jolt this week with
earnings
that beat expectations.
Posted by Lee Pender on January 15, 20080 comments
Bill Gates, you knew about. The press has written stories, sonatas and sagas
(well, stories, anyway, and lots of them) about the departure of Microsoft's
legendary leader. Redmond has worked to ensure his line of succession, with
Steve Ballmer continuing as CEO mostly for the business side of things and Ray
Ozzie taking over the technology reins.
But there's a lot more to Microsoft's transition than just Gates' departure.
Bruce Jaffe, architect of some of Microsoft's biggest acquisitions -- including
the massive
aQuantive buyout -- will be gone
by the end of February. And, perhaps more critically, Jeff Raikes, president
of the Microsoft Business Division, the group responsible for a little product
called Office, will
be gone -- "retired" -- by the end of the summer of 2008.
Raikes' replacement, Stephen Elop, formerly of Juniper Networks and Adobe,
is already in Redmond preparing to take over one of the company's biggest roles.
But Elop isn't the only new arrival in Microsoft's executive cabinet. In fact,
there's been so much executive shuffling in the Pacific Northwest lately that
even those who are trying to keep score are having
trouble just keeping up.
The question, of course, is what all of this means for Microsoft, its partners
and its customers. What's happening looks to RCPU (and to others, surely) like
the exodus of old-school Microsoft and the birth of a new generation in Redmond
-- one that could steer the company toward Web-based applications and Software-as-a-Service,
and (gently) away from the old Windows-Office juggernaut.
We're not suggesting that anybody's being put out to pasture here. We are noting,
though, that the new generation coming in looks very Web-focused and that a
lot of the new-ish arrivals are outsiders, not Microsoft veterans moving into
new roles. Ozzie, Elop and COO Kevin Turner have all joined from other companies
within the last few years, and former aQuantive CEO Brian McAndrews has taken
control of a big chunk (understandably) of Microsoft's high-priority advertising
business.
We're also not suggesting that Microsoft is going to stop selling Windows,
Office, Windows Server, Exchange or any of its other moneymakers any time soon.
Microsoft's new executive hires, however, do seem to reveal a corporate commitment
to become more "Web 2.0" and less desktop and fat client. Raikes is
hardly a luddite -- after all, he did add SharePoint capabilities to Office
and is still a driver of Microsoft's unified communications initiative -- but
his years of experience in Redmond and desktop-heavy résumé do
look a little old-school in comparison to Elop's Adobe pedigree.
Observers these days, sometimes in this newsletter, love to say that Microsoft
is going to have to scramble to keep up with more Web-savvy competition from
companies like Google (and Adobe, for that matter). After further review --
yes, we've been watching football again -- RCPU is not so sure about that. Microsoft
is still the giant of the software industry in terms of market share and influence
on users and the channel. Our take isn't that Microsoft, with its fresh faces
and new categories of technology, is scrambling to keep up with competitors,
but rather that it has decided to move corporate IT investment in a new direction
-- one that will have progressively less to do with Windows and Office -- at
its own speed. Call it a soft landing for the desktop-heavy Microsoft economy,
engineered and controlled by Redmond.
Oh, sure, Microsoft is way behind in some key areas -- consumer search, for
instance -- and unlikely to make up the gap, but there's really no other company
in the industry outside of maybe Cisco that wields the power over corporate
money that Microsoft does. Microsoft sees the demand for SaaS, for virtualization,
for managed services, and it's reacting to it without killing its own current
cash cows of Windows and Office. It might not be the leader in those new categories
-- in terms of either market share or innovation -- but it's there, and our
guess is that Microsoft will be powerful enough to move its customers to Web-based
business models at its pace rather than have to chase after a customer base
fleeing to other vendors.
And the competition? Oh, it'll be there -- it is there, and it's strong --
but it won't be able to just run away with an installed base that includes pretty
much every company in the world and has such a massive financial commitment
to Microsoft already in place. Some companies -- think IBM -- fail to see technological
and generational shifts coming and miss them altogether. Microsoft is taking
steps now not to make that mistake -- and to take control of its own destiny
as businesses gradually shift away from the desktop.
Usually, markets move companies, but sometimes companies move markets. Microsoft
wants to be in the latter category, not the former.
What's your take on Microsoft's new blood and on the departure of bigwigs like
Jeff Raikes? Send it to [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on January 15, 20081 comments
Perhaps flush with the victory they scored in court last fall, European regulators
are
on
Microsoft's back again -- this time, in part, because of (you guessed it)
the Internet Explorer browser! Couldn't they just Goog...uh, we mean Live Search
the U.S. antitrust settlement and figure something out?
Microsoft isn't the only one in trouble, though; New
York is after Intel.
Posted by Lee Pender on January 15, 20080 comments
The word "malware," which we assume has its
roots
in Baudelaire, has always sort of made us snicker. But this
new
malware toolkit (whatever that is) that's making an end run around anti-virus
applications doesn't sound too funny at all.
Posted by Lee Pender on January 15, 20080 comments
The big distributor has some interesting leasing finance options for partners
that work with SMBs. Launch yourself into the press release
here.
Posted by Lee Pender on January 10, 20080 comments