It's the last RCPU of the year... Well, actually, it's not. There will  be (at least) two more in December. But this is the last RCPU that I'm going to  write in 2010, so let's crank up the greatest Christmas song ever (everybody  can enjoy this one) and get to doing what we do at the end of every year: passing out holiday  thanks. I'll even do this in first person, just because I care.  
First and foremost, a big thank you to our readers. You are the reason  RCPU exists. To those who e-mail, who comment on the blogs online, who click on  links or who just read the newsletter when it hits your inbox, my sincere thanks  for your thoughtfulness, your interest, your participation and your  contribution to what we do here. You are the best. Really, you are. I've  written for a lot of audiences in more than one language, and I've never  enjoyed a group as much as I enjoy you. Thank you.
Now for the folks who dutifully work with me as I ramble and roam over  the keyboard all year long. To Doug Barney,  editor-in-chief of Redmond magazine, thank you for all your support this year and for getting this  newsletter off the ground nearly five years ago. Without your guidance, I was  lost. But with your suggestions and influence, RCPU has become not only a lot  of fun but (I hope) genuinely worth reading.
To Scott Bekker, editor-in-chief  of RCP the magazine, many thanks for  your continued friendship and for the numerous times you've filled in writing  this newsletter for me at the last minute. (Also, uh, thanks for writing the  two editions that will come out over the next couple of weeks.) You are a  consummate professional and a great guy, and it's a privilege to know and work  with you. 
To Chris Paoli, thank you for actually combing through every word of  these ramblings before sending them out for public consumption. You make me  look smarter and more coherent than I really am. To Becky   Nagel, Mike Domingo and Kurt Mackie,  denizens of our Web team here at the Redmond Media Group, thank you for your  constant support, your willingness to shoe-horn in last-minute updates and  corrections and your general good sense of humor about everything. I'll see you  all soon (more on that in a minute). 
To the great Jeffrey Schwartz,  who consistently pulls me out of the fire on the print side of things, thank  you for your constant stream of articles that provide so much of the content I  refer to here. And I don't just mean the ones you write, although they're great  -- I also mean the ones you find online and send almost every day. You make my  job easier. 
To Wendy Gonchar and Katrina Carrasco, our managing editors on the  print side who keep the whole operation running, thank you for your patience  and understanding when I, uh, extend the occasional deadline. (It's all in the  name of quality reporting, you know.) And thank you for acknowledging that I  write RCPU while you're yelling at me to get a feature story filed. Just  kidding...mostly. Seriously, though, you're the best. It's a privilege to work  with you. 
To my office mates in Framingham,  of whom I've seen little since my son was born in September, thanks for your  continued friendship and camaraderie. Scott Shultz,  Lafe Low, Matt Morollo, Brad Zerbel and Kathleen   Richards, the Framingham  crew, you really are the best people I've ever shared a floor full of cubicles  with. And Kate -- thanks for all of your chats with me about your newsletters.  You're doing fantastic work over at Redmond  Developer News. Brad, keep up the good work designing Redmond.  Also, keep cracking me up in art meetings...
To our columnists and freelance writers for Redmond -- Mary Jo Foley, Greg Shields, Don Jones, Brien Posey,  Peter Bruzzese, Paul Korzeniowski, Gary Olsen, Jeff Hicks and many others -- thank  you for your patience (writing RCPU takes a fair amount of my time...) and for  your continued excellent contributions to the publication. And to all the  flacks -- nah, PR professionals -- out there, thank you for your help with  stories, interviews, contacts and all the other stuff I'm constantly bugging  you about.
Finally, thank you to my beloved TCU Horned Frogs for finally making my  ultimate sports fantasy come true and making it to the Rose Bowl. We've come a  long way from 1-10 in 1997, Frog fans. The Rose Bowl! Win or lose, it'll be a  party. California office folks, the family and  I are headed to the game (of course), so I'll see you in the Irvine office at some point after New Year's.   
I'm sure that I've left somebody out, and for that I'm sorry. But let  me wish all of you a happy, healthy and blessed holiday season. We'll see you  in 2011.
Lee
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on December 16, 20103 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Apparently Larry Ellison docked his sailboat for long enough to create  an open-source, cloud-based (or on-premises...) office suite. Actually, it's  mainly a result of the Sun acquisition (which Larry probably completed while  manning the helm, or whatever sailors do), but nevertheless Oracle does have a  competitor to Microsoft and Google now. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on December 16, 20103 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		 Sometimes, it just stinks to be Microsoft. Oh, sure, there are the  billions in revenues, the embarrassingly dominant market share in huge sectors  like operating systems and the picturesque surroundings of Greater Seattle  around the company's headquarters. 
Still, though, it's not easy being...whatever color Microsoft is. Maybe  electric blue like its executives' dress shirts, as opposed to that navy IBM  blue. But we digress. This week, rumors leaked that Microsoft will be introducing  a tablet computer, a competitor to the iPad, at the Consumer Electronics Show  next week. 
Now, these are rumors. Microsoft has confirmed nothing. Only The New York Times is talking about this  device in definite terms, and even its details are sketchy. Officially, this  tablet doesn't exist. Nevertheless, everybody hates it.
Well, maybe not everybody -- but some critics already do, based on  sketchy details and what might or might not be an image of the device (made, in  this case, by Samsung).  Now, we're not saying that the Windows tablet is going to set the world on  fire. It might be awful. It might be mediocre. It might be brilliant.
What it won't be, though, is the iPad, and it seems as though that's  what critics want it to be. But Microsoft doesn't need to try to reinvent the  iPad. In fact, that would be an embarrassment and a market disaster (hello,  Zune). No, there are things Microsoft can do with tablet computers that could  actually bring value to the space.
If this device really does have a slip-out keyboard, we already like it  better than the iPad. If it's cheaper than the Apple device, we like it even  more. And does the iPad run Flash yet? Maybe it does by now (we can't remember...),  but if we remember correctly it didn't for a while. Compatibility shouldn't be  a problem with a Windows tablet. We say shouldn't remembering cautiously the Vista debacle, but surely Microsoft has learned its  lesson. 
So, could we all hold off on trashing Microsoft for a product it hasn't  even released yet? The anti-Microsoft cabal in the pundisphere simply cannot  wait to jump on Redmond  at every opportunity. Here at RCPU, we're going to make sure that the Microsoft  tablet is lousy before we start mocking it relentlessly. 
Do you have any early impressions of the leaked Microsoft tablet? Send  them to [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on December 15, 20103 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		'Tis the season for short RCPUs with news in short supply and your  editor eat-up (as we'd say in Texas)  with other projects. So, we're just dropping an entry in here to say that a  major Microsoft product hit metal this week.
Wait, did someone say metal?  (Oh, yeah. We just went full power ballad all over this entry. Careful clicking  on that link, though -- it's nothing serious, but Bret Michaels has something  of an aversion to shirts in this clip. He may be blond, but he is nevertheless  hirsute.)
Anyway... Windows Small Business Server 2011 "hit metal" (got  released to hardware manufacturers, but you knew that) this week.  By now, you should be playing air guitar on the solo, so maybe you're hitting  metal, too. Righteous. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on December 13, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Hello, dear readers. I'm working on a story for Redmond magazine about recent executive moves at Microsoft (think Ray Ozzie, Jeff  Raikes and Stephen Elop all leaving) and how those changes might affect  Microsoft's product strategy as well as your business and purchasing choices.  If you have any thoughts on this matter, I'd be much obliged if you sent them  to [email protected]. Thanks.
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on December 13, 20102 comments