Before we get to Ballmer's mafia handle, let's look at a few reader e-mails 
  on other topics. 
Colin quite rightly called your editor out for having been too lazy to look 
  up the old magazine cover with Apple's logo and the word "Pray" on 
  it that we 
  referenced last week. Turns out it was Wired, not Upside, 
  that ran the cover -- and it turns out that the cover's quite famous, as you'll 
  see from Colin's note:
  "I have to say, you were almost asking for this...I put 'apple pray' 
    (without the quotation marks) into Google, and return No. 5 was: http://www.wired.com/gadgets/mac/news/2006/03/70538.
  "Which led me to http://www.magazine.org/Editorial/Top_40_Covers/ 
    [#33] and http://www.magazine.org/Editorial/40-40-covers/33b.jpg."
Well done, Colin, and thanks.
On Vista activation, suddenly an important 
  topic in Redmond, apparently, Mark says that he's had just about enough 
  -- and he thinks that others might have, too:
  "Having been a mostly loyal Windows shop since Windows 3.11, before 
    that DOS going back to version 3.2, I am happy that each version of Windows 
    subsequently released gets better and more stable (with the exception of Millennium 
    Edition; that was a complete disaster!).
  "Starting with Windows XP the activation issues have been forcing 
    me to look into the viability of Linux as opposed to Windows. The latest changes 
    in Vista, both OS features/enhancements and increased WGA requirements are 
    actively accelerating my movement away from Microsoft and to the alternatives, 
    which are becoming more viable with each passing day.
  "I believe that as soon as Linux can be installed and used as 'easily' 
    as Windows, that will mark the first serious landmark in the downfall of MS 
    Windows. Techies deal with 'stuff' every day; for us, install problems are 
    not insurmountable. Windows has fewer and fewer install issues as time progresses, 
    but Linux is catching up. That day is coming, and I believe sooner rather 
    than later. Driver issues, lack of compatibility with existing software, annoying 
    pop-ups asking to confirm everything one does -- these are all factors that 
    will quietly cause the trickle of defectors to become a roaring tsunami."
We wonder, Mark, whether Redmond hears the waves starting to pound on the shore.
OK, enough of the serious stuff. We told you this week that Microsoft's Wiseguys 
  are about to face a RICO 
  charge (well, lawsuit) and wondered what you thought Steve Ballmer's mafia 
  name might be -- if the mafia actually existed the way it does in "The 
  Sopranos."
We got some great suggestions, the first from Tom: "La Cosa Visto, 
  and his name is 'Balls.' Or shall we just call him 'Big Cahones'?"
Jon, who's in serious danger of becoming a serial e-mailer, chimed in with: 
  "How about 'The emBallmer'?"
  
  Pretty good, both of them. William went with something that makes Ballmer sound 
  a bit more like a '50s rock star than a mafioso, but it certainly fits: "How 
  about 'Screamin' Stevie Ballmer,' for his onstage antics?"
And Chris went with a more violent theme: "Steve 'The Crusher' Ballmer 
  or Steve 'IronFist' or 'The Fist' Ballmer." 
Good entries all. But our winner this week comes from Joel, who plays Ballmer's 
  job title off nicely with a Bobby 
  Knight-esque rampage for which the Microsoft chief has become dubiously 
  famous: "Doesn't it have to be 'The Chair-Man'?"
You know, Joel, it really does. 
Thanks to everybody for your e-mails on all sorts of topics. Keep them coming 
  to [email protected], 
  and don't forget to get in arguments and call each other names (hey, I know 
  how this Internet stuff works) in the comments section of each 
  entry on the blog site at RCPmag.com. I 
  might even join in from time to time. 
Spring is here...have a great weekend!
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 11, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    As we do sometimes here at RCPU, we're going to throw a topic completely open 
  to you, the faithful reader. In other words, we'll give you a bit of news and 
  just let you run with it in e-mail form or as commentary on the blog. (Yes, 
  this means that we're going to mainly keep our mouths shut on this issue -- 
  for now.) 
We did this last summer with Windows 
  Genuine Advantage and got tremendous 
  feedback. So here we go again. This week, it's time to Get 
  Smart, as the topic is business intelligence (clever, huh?).
Here are your bits of news: Microsoft and SAP both made small BI acquisitions 
  this week, with Redmond buying 
  a Java reporting tool called OfficeWriter and SAP snapping 
  up OutlookSoft, which makes applications for budgeting and financial forecasts. 
  Incidentally, we're pleased to see that both giants bought companies that use 
  SmashedTogether words with a capital letter in the middle as their names. We 
  ReallyLike CompanyNames like that. WellDone, Microsoft and SAP. 
And lest we forget, last month, BI player Business Objects (two separate words) 
  announced that it would buy OutlookSoft competitor Cartesis (and its somewhat 
  disappointing one-word name). 
These smaller acquisitions come in the wake of a really big one, Oracle's 
  multibillion buyout of Hyperion. Obviously the big guys in BI -- Cognos 
  also comes to mind in that category along with the aforementioned players -- 
  are snapping up smaller vendors in a pretty textbook case of market consolidation. 
  And, obviously, somebody thinks that there's money and opportunity in bringing 
  corporate information to the desktops of nontechnical people, especially executives, 
  in a clean and simple way -- which is what BI is supposed to do.
Microsoft is, not surprisingly, becoming a very 
  serious BI player, although reviews of Redmond's effort in the area are 
  a bit mixed thus far. Check out RCP magazine columnist Joshua 
  Greenbaum's comprehensive take here. 
What I want to know, though, is what BI is doing for you. If you're selling 
  it (especially from Microsoft), how's it going? How's demand? Do customers understand 
  the benefits of BI, and are you profiting from selling and deploying it? If 
  you're using it (as we have a lot of nonpartner IT folks who read the newsletter), 
  is it delivering everything you expected? Do you consider it a critical part 
  of your enterprise technology strategy? 
Send me your thoughts at [email protected]. 
  We'll take the best of your e-mails this week and the next and run them a week 
  from Friday (on May 18). And thanks in advance for your thoughts.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 10, 20071 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Here come those third parties Microsoft has been waiting for on Vista. Virtualization 
  kingpin 
VMware 
  has released Workstation 6, the first of its virtualization products to 
  support Vista.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 10, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    OK, so we already snuck a few in on you with the last entry. Well, here are 
  some more. RCPU got an absolute bumper crop this week, so we'll run a few now 
  and save the rest for next week. To those who took time to write, we offer our 
  thanks, as always. 
On Microsoft's offer of $3 
  Windows to students in developing nations, Mackey says it's a great idea:
  "I host foreign exchange students, and they tell me that most of 
    the OSes are pirated and cost very little (the cost that malware brings with 
    it does not matter to them). If they have a chance to get a legitimate copy, 
    they would pay the $3 even though they can get Linux free. Hopefully, this 
    will put some of the pirates out of business and slow the malware."
And Nafees writes to us from Pakistan, where he says folks will be thrilled 
  to get their hands on legitimate software almost for free:
  "I am a student and also working in a textile firm. Most of the people 
    in Pakistan use pirated copies of Windows and every other software like Microsoft 
    Office because, as you know, it's a poor country, so people can't afford $150 
    Windows or more costly office software. It will be a great step for Microsoft 
    to help and motivate people to use legal and genuine software for just $3. 
    It will help to create awareness and give confidence to a lot of young future 
    IT professionals. You ask how people can buy $300 computers for $3 Windows. 
    Let me inform you that most of the people in our country use old branded computers, 
    which are imported to most of the European countries in containers. You can 
    buy these computers for only $50, and most of the students use these computers. 
    So I am glad that Microsoft is giving us an opportunity to use legal software 
    and we'll not have to bear the shame of piracy and illegal software anymore."
And we're glad that you took the time to write, Nafees. This is the first e-mail 
  we can remember getting from Asia, so it's good to see that our global influence 
  is growing. As is Microsoft's, we suppose.
We got a couple of rapid-fire e-mails (seriously, minutes after the newsletter 
  went out and not more than a couple of hours after the blog post went up) about 
  Apple's juicy little 
  stock scandal. 
Brad suspects that former CFO Fred Anderson might have turned state's evidence 
  on Steve Jobs:
  "Suppose Fred Anderson was looking to make a deal, and offered to 
    implicate Steve Jobs."
Brad, anything is possible, and nothing would surprise us. Of course, just 
  as they were on "Dragnet," 
  all suspects are innocent until proven guilty. (And, in this case, Jobs isn't 
  even a "suspect," and Anderson slipped quietly into that fold between 
  guilt and innocence by "settling" with the SEC. Ah, corporate justice.)
Colin, though, says that Apple might have much bigger problems than just looming 
  scandals:
  "More important than issues of fiscal oversight, you raise (once 
    again, for Apple fans) the question of succession planning. Who can replace 
    Jobs, and sustain Apple's mastery of the consumer IT market and, maybe more 
    importantly, the public markets? 
  "Ever since U.S. v. Microsoft from '98-2000, the mother ship has 
    had Ballmer as successor. Jack Welch made succession planning a very public 
    process at GE, well before it was necessary. Most major corporations, and 
    even some sovereign nations (in place of democratic elections, mind you) exercise 
    succession planning well before the need hits them in the face. 
  "Except Apple (and Oracle, of course). Maybe this options mini-crisis 
    is no more a threat to Jobs' tenure than his cancer. But as time ticks on, 
    you have to wonder if Apple will weather a leadership storm -- and it will 
    come -- with the same dexterity and class they have wielded in consumer tech 
    and electronics market over the last 10 years."
We do wonder, Colin, and we thank you for your thoughts. Thanks again to all 
  who took time to write. Keep those e-mails on just about any topic pouring in 
  to [email protected]. And enjoy your 
  weekend!
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on April 27, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    We kick off this week's Friday reader feedback with a message from frequent 
  contributor Robin about Microsoft's 
pending 
  legal problems in Japan and, more specifically, about how companies should 
  protect their intellectual property from the hungry beast that Redmond can be. 
  Robin has some tips for partners 
on 
  his Web site, and here's a taste of what he has to say:
  "General policy: Focus on the 'what' your product does, rather than 
    the 'how' it does it. Don't be flattered or bullied into over-broad disclosure, 
    even if they say they are talking to the competition. Stick to the business 
    value of your product and how the features support that business value.
  "Don't let your engineers talk to their engineers by themselves -- 
    engineers love to brag about how smart they are while encouraging brainstorming 
    on creative ways the larger company could monetize an investment in the product. 
    You may still get screwed, but at least you'll have the satisfaction of knowing 
    you made them work."
Mike, another friend of RCPU, weighed in this week on Microsoft's 
  misguided search efforts. It appears as though Mike really has been reading 
  RCPU:
  "A simple question (perhaps) on MS's bid for DoubleClick: If they 
    truly wanted it, why would they merely match Google's offer? If I'm selling 
    anything, a product or a service, I will go with the first of equal bids or 
    to the highest bid. Matching Google's offer basically ensured they wouldn't 
    win the offer. So, now the complicated question: What was their true motivation? 
    If it was to be used as support for their antitrust suit, give them a box 
    of tissues and be done with it. Google kicked their tail on search -- accept 
    it and move on. 
   "Maybe Microsoft ought to give up the pursuit of world domination 
    -- it didn't work for Genghis Kahn, Napoleon, Hitler or Caesar -- and focus 
    on their core business. They should make sure any new operating systems have 
    value to the consumer as well as businesses (big and small), integrate well 
    with third-party software – including, and perhaps especially, security 
    -- and are genuinely needed. The more Microsoft tries to be all things to 
    all people, the more people will resist. Not to impugn Vista, but most people 
    simply don't need it. I don't want it at home and I work for a company with 
    more than 20,000 employees nationally; Vista isn't a blip on the radar screen. 
    And they've already announced its alleged successor. One sure way to open 
    the door for customers to start considering other alternatives is to keep 
    trying to give them something they don't need or that lacks inherent value. 
    If that's not a red light in Redmond, it sure ought to be."
Speaking of Vista, which we always 
  seem to be doing here, we got a few more e-mails this week that tipped the 
  scale even further toward the negative side of things regarding the new operating 
  system. Theresa writes:
  "I cannot recommend Vista to my clients as their third-party line 
    of business applications have not certified their apps to run on Vista. The 
    only hard date I have gotten from any of these vendors is first quarter 2008. 
    I am still dealing with software vendors that are preventing me from upgrading 
    my clients to IE7. Microsoft would do better to spend some effort on seeing 
    why the software vendors are having so much difficulty making their applications 
    work on Vista."
William is becoming fed-up with Microsoft altogether:
  "As a former mainframe software specialist and now just a retired 
    end user, my attitude is moving toward giving up on Windows. If I have to 
    buy new hardware, now may be the time to try Apple. The learning curve from 
    XP to Apple can't be that different than from XP to Vista. Microsoft may drive 
    the end user community into Apple's camp."
And Bryan minces no words:
  "I had Window 95, 98, 2000 and now XP. Each was a great improvement 
    and I knew that going from what I had to what I was getting made the upgrades 
    well worthwhile. I don't see that now. My copy of XP runs great. The only 
    times I get blue screens (actually my PC just reboots, then explains the error 
    once booted) is when I have a bad piece of hardware. When a piece of software 
    crashes, I can use 'ctrl-alt-del' and get that app closed, then continue with 
    my work.
  "I can run for days under heavy load without rebooting. An example 
    of what I'll have as a heavy load might be like this: doing Web design, I'll 
    have Photoshop, FrontPage, Adobe Audition, Firefox, Internet Explorer, Opera 
    Browser, SnagIt, Windows Media Player, MS Word, Adobe Acrobat and maybe a 
    couple others, sometimes while downloading with Newsbin Pro at a rate of 4.5MBPS. 
    Then, about once a day, I'll close all of them to burn what I've downloaded 
    to a DVD; then open everything back up and continue to work. I reboot maybe 
    twice a week.
  "What I'm saying is that I have no reason to upgrade to Vista. I'll 
    hold off until I can't get any support for XP. Even then, I'll look for an 
    alternative to Vista, maybe Linux."
Bryan, you're obviously not alone.
My thanks, as always, goes to everybody who wrote this week. Please keep sending 
  any thoughts you have about anything in the newsletter to [email protected], 
  and enjoy your weekend. 
Oh, and Boston-area readers, please don't forget about our upcoming 
  reader breakfast. This is your chance to see your editor with hair (as the 
  picture on the RCPmag.com Web site is more 
  than a year old -- and possibly the worst ever taken of me). We'll get back 
  to you on a location, but the date is set for June 19. We hope to see you there! 
  As for everybody else, please keep an eye out -- we might just be coming to 
  your town in the future.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on April 20, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Somebody -- this time, 
Fortune magazine -- has trotted out the old 
Microsoft-is-becoming-IBM 
  line again, suggesting that Google is rapidly making Redmond look like a 
  dinosaur (or a chicken, 
depending 
  on your views on evolution). 
While it's true that Google 
  is running rings around its more elderly competitor in the search business, 
  and that Steve Ballmer and friends don't always seem entirely sure of what to 
  do with this new-fangled 
  Software as a Service thing, at least the aging heavyweight in Redmond isn't 
  standing still in the face of its younger challengers. (Microsoft did recently 
  offer 
  to help ISVs with their SaaS apps, though).
  
  Witness this week's opening of the company's 
  largest server farm yet, a massive complex spanning the size of seven soccer 
  fields that will hold the geek gear that will provide the back-end for all sorts 
  of Web-based services, from (according to the article linked) Xbox Live to Dynamics 
  CRM Live. (One would hope that there would be little chance of mixing those 
  two applications up, thereby sending the Teenage 
  Mutant Ninja Turtles game 
  to befuddled sales reps and throwing order-tracking capabilities to frustrated 
  gamers. But we digress.) 
There's another massive center in the works near San Antonio that will cost 
  Redmond a half-a-billion dollars. Actually, that's approximately the same amount 
  of money that Microsoft 
  spent to advertise Vista. Let's hope the data center turns out to be a better 
  investment.
Whatever Microsoft's ultimate SaaS strategy is, it's clear that the company 
  is spending some serious money to implement it. Whether it can execute on successfully 
  providing "live," non-packaged applications is another question -- 
  one we won't be able to answer until we see the crops these new server farms 
  yield. 
We're still happily taking your thoughts on Microsoft's SaaS strategy. Keep 
  sending 'em our way at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on April 18, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    If your 
weekend 
  was a washout, just keep in mind that it could have been worse. You could 
  work for the search team at Microsoft.
Redmond's flailing search ambitions took a major hit late last week when Google 
  announced that it intended to spend $3.1 
  billion to buy DoubleClick, the provider of online advertising-management 
  technology that Microsoft also coveted. (The worst part about the whole deal 
  for Microsoft seems to be that, according to the Times of London, old 
  bean, Microsoft matched Google's offer -- but DoubleClick 
  turned Redmond down. Ouch.) 
So Microsoft, having lost what many observers considered to be its final opportunity 
  to make up ground on Google in search -- unless you believe, as Mary Jo Foley 
  suggests, that this whole thing is playing 
  right into Microsoft's hands -- is turning to the last refuge of the desperate 
  company: the antitrust complaint. 
Oh, yes. Drink in the irony. Microsoft and friends -- including AT&T, AOL 
  and Yahoo! -- want antitrust regulators to look 
  into the Google-DoubleClick deal. (Microsoft's own official statement is 
  here.) 
  Check out what oft-quoted Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith had to say about 
  the whole thing in this 
  Seattle Times article:
  "By putting together a single company that will control virtually 
    the entire market...Google will control the economic fuel of the Internet." 
     
Uh, Brad, are you sure you want to be the one to bring this up? Do we even 
  have to point out the attendant irony here, especially in 
  light of current events? Probably not. But we will say this: We spend a 
  lot of time here at RCPU defending Microsoft from Europe's 
  voracious antitrust regulators, and we're very disappointed to see Microsoft 
  taking the same sad tack that so many of its competitors have taken: running 
  to the government when it gets beaten in a market. To paraphrase Anthony Michael 
  Hall's line in Pirates 
  of Silicon Valley, Google got the loot, Steve. (In this case, of course, 
  the "Steve" is Ballmer, not Jobs...but we digress.) You bid for DoubleClick, 
  and you lost. Heck, if the Times of London has its story straight, old 
  chap, DoubleClick turned you down. 
It's time to reevaluate Microsoft search -- and, actually, it has been for 
  a while. Redmond needs to scale 
  back on the search effort, develop technology internally or find some other 
  way to compete. But please, Microsoft, don't go running to the government for 
  protection. You, of all companies, should know better. 
What do you think of Microsoft's search business now that Google has bought 
  DoubleClick? Are you worried about the resources Redmond is sinking into search? 
  Let me know at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on April 17, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Maybe it's a little funny to see both messages at the same time. On one hand, 
  there've been numerous news stories the past two weeks about Microsoft 
patching 
  several critical security flaws in Windows and now looking into 
potential 
  vulnerabilities in Office. At the same time, the company just announced 
  a 
new 
  enterprise marketing campaign for Forefront. (In this case, Redmond is 
using 
  the "geek" factor to try to sell businesses on its new Forefront 
  suite.)
 We've talked 
  about this before in RCP magazine, and the issue lives on: It has 
  to be hard for Microsoft partners to sell Redmond's security applications when 
  the company's reputation for securing its own products is so...well, let's say 
  "mixed." And beyond that, Forefront actually takes the mound a few 
  runs down in this situation: Already, on the anti-virus side, Windows Live OneCare 
  has made a less-than-stellar debut, even 
  by Redmond's own admission. We're not questioning Forefront's capabilities 
  on the enterprise side, just Microsoft's credibility in launching itself as 
  a security vendor.
After all, the best way for Microsoft to build credibility as a provider of 
  security applications would be for it to better secure (primarily) Windows and 
  Office. That's something it has, in general, not really done that bad a job 
  of doing lately, especially considering the large number of attacks that focus 
  on those products -- both of which are easy targets with their 90-plus percent 
  market share. But, of course, the better Microsoft secures its own stuff, the 
  more businesses (and consumers, for that matter) will wonder why Redmond is 
  charging them extra for security applications rather than just making security 
  more of a built-in part of the deal with the Microsoft stack than it already 
  is. It's a nasty little Catch-22 that partners are going to have to face when 
  selling Forefront. But you probably know that by now. 
So, on the other hand, think about this: Security makes a lot more sense as 
  a business for Microsoft to get into than, say, search. It's directly tied to 
  Microsoft's bread and butter, Windows and Office, and despite the presence of 
  fierce competition in the form of (former partners, and now "coopetitors") 
  Symantec, Trend Micro, McAfee and others, there is no "security Google" 
  that has a mortal lock on mindshare in the market. There's revenue there for 
  the taking -- if Microsoft can find a way to not trip over its own reputation 
  and leave customers feeling as though they're paying protection money. We suppose 
  that's why marketing folks get paid the big bucks.
What has been your experience with selling or using Forefront so far? What 
  do you think of Microsoft's position in the security market? Tell me at [email protected].
P.S.: Keep those e-mails rolling in. Friday is reader feedback day here at 
  RCPU. And thanks to those who have already written about a variety of topics.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on April 12, 20070 comments