RCPU's thoughts and prayers are with the Microsoft co-founder and Pacific Northwest sports investor, who got some bad news this week.  We've had enough of bad news and don't want to hear any more for a while after  this, thank you.
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 18, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Already? It's been not quite a month since Microsoft finally let  Windows 7 into the wild, and wouldn't you know that hunters are already taking  shots at it.
Or, at least, they can see the targets on its back. This week,  Microsoft offered advice on how to deal with a zero-day vulnerability  that appears to be the new operating system's first post-release flaw. 
The problem, as you surely know by now, is with the SMB networking  protocol in Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2. Microsoft says that anybody  who knows how to put up a decent firewall shouldn't feel the effects of the  flaw, which could include denial-of-service attacks. (Hey, where were those  denial-of-service attacks on Vista when we  needed them? Heh heh. OK, that's the last one. We promise. Probably.)
Perhaps more worrying, though, is the potential for Trojan attacks to  follow a Windows 7 activation hack that somebody came up with last week.  The idea is -- as it usually is with a Trojan attack -- that Trojans could disguise  themselves as Windows 7 activation hacks and fool users. However, Microsoft has  said that if the Windows 7 activation Trojans are as harmless as the current  USC Trojans,  users should have no reason to worry. (OK, Microsoft didn't really say that.  But it's kind of true.) 
All of this is, of course, pretty much par for the course when it comes  to Windows, and nothing here seems serious enough to warrant panic. But these  stories are just an example of how complex an OS really is and how quickly and  easily ne'er-do-wells can find a way to ruin it. 
And they do makes us wonder whether the risks of cloud computing -- so  well-documented here and elsewhere over the last couple of years -- are really that  big of a deal after all. And it makes us wonder how much longer the huge,  complex OS as a concept has to live...but that's another entry for another time. 
What's your take on Windows 7 security? Have you had any serious  problems with it yet? Send your stories to [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 18, 20092 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Remember the old Prudential Insurance ads that encouraged customers to "get  a piece of the rock"?  (Yes, we just spent about 20 minutes watching old '70s commercials. It's all in  a day's work.) Well, the cloud is the new rock, and everybody wants a piece of  it.
No stranger to the cloud,  IBM enhanced its hosted offerings this week with the introduction of Smart  Analytics Cloud, a business intelligence-heavy play that features technology  acquired by Big Blue from former BI vendor Cognos. 
Armonk (hey, we're always calling Microsoft "Redmond,"  right?) is setting up Smart Analytics Cloud as being available either in a pure  hosted model or as an on-premises "private" cloud with hardware  housed inside a company's walls and software distributed to users as a service.  Not unlike...well, a mainframe, in some ways.
We're not surprised, of course, that IBM is upping its cloud ante. But  this cloud stuff isn't just for traditional technology vendors. Amazon is a  major player, and now AT&T, one of the most venerable names in American  business (not unlike IBM, of course, except that AT&T isn't really a tech  vendor per se) is expanding its cloud products. 
Despite battling a cloud-services outage this week, AT&T is touting  its relationships with VMware and Sun and moving from cloud-storage offerings  to cloud computing; its new product carries the catchy name Synaptic Compute as  a Service (SCaaS, we suppose). SCaaS uses Sun hardware and virtualization  software from the market giant, VMware.
For Microsoft partners, as if this wasn't obvious enough already, the beefing  up of one company's cloud offering (IBM) and the serious entry of another (AT&T)  into the game shows that the cloud is going to be a battleground (battle-air?)  the likes of which Redmond has not encountered before. This race is wide open,  and the old Microsoft pitch of Windows ubiquity and everything working better  together won't hold much water (air?) in the cloud. 
Redmond,  of course, is all over this stuff these days, although it's still working out  (and not without controversy) how it's going to share the cloud wealth with  partners.  Still, though, Azure is no sure thing -- not with everybody trying to get a piece  of the cloud.
Who's your choice for the front-runner in cloud computing? What do you  think of Microsoft's strategy? Sound off at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 16, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft has paid a fair amount of lip service over the years to  opening up to open source, while at the same time making patent threats and  generally mixing its messages. Well, evidently, Microsoft is more interested in  open source than anybody at the company realized.
Apparently, a Windows 7 download utility contains code protected by the  open source General Public License version 2, meaning Microsoft can modify the  code -- which Redmond says came from a third-party -- but then has to release the  modified code to the open source community. Amazingly, that's what Microsoft  plans to do. 
For more on how this happened and how somebody sniffed it out, check  out the Q&A here. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 16, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		We all knew that Microsoft has been systematically getting rid of 5,000  or so employees (while hiring others at the same time). Well, what might be the  last of the bloodletting seems to be taking place now. What's interesting about  that is, apparently, the total number of layoffs will actually exceed 5,000.
Should we take this as some sort of sign? Or is this just Microsoft carrying  out the last phase of its plan to kind of, sort of slim down? The company's  latest earnings report pleased Wall Street but still showed (not unexpected)  declines in revenues and profits. 
Nevertheless, Microsoft is still a big company. Take a look at the  chart in this TechFlash article; it indicates that Redmond  had not quite 20,000 employees back in 1995 and now has more than 90,000. We at  RCPU hate to see people lose their jobs and would never advocate that Microsoft  get rid of any more employees. The truth is, though, that Microsoft is still a  bloated company, weighed down by its desire to dominate every category in the  software industry (and a few others) all the time. 
Cutting a little fat in terms of product lines probably wouldn't be the  worst thing for Microsoft. And we hope that the new folks who are coming in are  at least moving into roles with Azure or something related either to the cloud  or to Microsoft's flailing mobile efforts. 
We've long heard here and there that Microsoft doesn't recruit the  quality of employee it used to get because the company's once-lucrative stock  options -- apparently a big chunk of an employee's compensation in Redmond -- aren't so  lucrative anymore. The company's stock has been largely flat for years now.
One way to boost a stock price is to cut costs, of course, and that's  exactly what Microsoft is trying to do with these layoffs. Again, we hate  layoffs, but if there's any silver lining to this scenario, it's that Microsoft  might just be able to shrink itself enough to become more focused, more  efficient and less bloated and to get its stock price moving up again. That  could lead to improved recruitment and ultimately to more innovation and better  management. And all of that could lead to bigger profits for Microsoft  partners.
Anyway, that's a very long-term take on a tiny news story. But it'll be  worth watching Microsoft's personnel moves in the months and years to come as  the company seeks to establish a desired level of staff and expenditures. This  is new territory for Microsoft. Until now, the company had been all about  growth. How Redmond  navigates these choppy new waters will have a lot to do with its future and  those of its partners.
What's your take on Microsoft's financial condition? How does it affect  you? Sound off at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 05, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		After the Sidekick fiasco, beleaguered T-Mobile had to deal with  another pack of angry users this week, although it does seem to have resolved a  service outage that affected about 5 percent of its customers. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 05, 20092 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		In case you missed the earnings announcement late last week, Ingram  Micro reported -- like just about everybody else -- quarterly revenue and profit  shortfalls, but the big distributor managed to beat Wall Street expectations.  So we'll take that as mostly good news. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 05, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		OK, so the news here is that Microsoft has decided to make its  discount on the Business Productivity Online Suite, or BPOS (catchy), permanent.  Henceforth, the price of BPOS will be $10 per user per month rather than $15  per user per month. 
Hey, if it works, it works, although partners might not be thrilled by  this cloud pricing strategy if it ultimately causes their referral fees to  shrink. The main point here, though, is that the timing of the permanent price  cut is likely not incidental. 
As we've been telling you for a while now, Microsoft recently lost a  bid to provide e-mail service for the city of Los Angeles.  Google and its pure-cloud play beat Microsoft, which spent perhaps too much  time (at least publicly) railing against the security and reliability of Google's  cloud-based applications -- and, we submit, doing too much bashing of the whole  idea of the cloud in general. 
Well, today, we read this from a Seattle  PI article: 
  "The Business Productivity Online Suite was one of the Microsoft  options that the Los Angeles  city government considered while searching for a new e-mail and collaboration  system..."
Oh, really? Well, that's even more interesting. So Microsoft comes in,  bashes Google (fair enough; that's competition), casts doubt upon the cloud  model (not a good idea), talks (from what we can gather) about the advantages  of old-school Exchange and Outlook, and then says, "But, hey, our cloud  stuff is really great! Even though we're actually behind Google in terms of  cloud computing! And we're trying to walk a tightrope between protecting  revenues from our traditional products and moving toward a new model! A model  that, by the way, we want you to think is insecure and unreliable unless it's  coming from us...in which case it's not really, entirely complete yet!"
Granted, it's doubtful that anybody from Redmond used those exact words, but that's  probably about how the pitch sounded to the fine elected officials of L.A. It's  no wonder Google won the contract. It came in with a clear message, an  inexpensive new platform and some sort of vision for the future. Microsoft came  in with all sorts of baggage and likely left some decision makers a bit  confused.
It's not that BPOS is a bad product. It doesn't seem to be; it's growing  in terms of user numbers and capabilities all the time, from what we've seen.  And we're sure that Microsoft can and will eventually be a big player in the  cloud. It just needs a better game plan right now. 
Any more comments to make on this story? Or on the cloud in general, or  on Microsoft's cloud strategy? We'd love to hear them at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 04, 20092 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Now, here's a Microsoft cloud play that could produce some thunder.  Microsoft is offering Dynamics CRM Online, its hosted customer relationship  management suite, free for seven months to customers of Oracle's and  Salesforce.com's competing products. 
We've long held that Dynamics is a powerhouse-in-waiting in enterprise  software, and we think that's especially true for Dynamics CRM, both  on-premises and in a hosted model. So, Microsoft partners, set those wavering  Oracle and Salesforce.com customers up with a little try-before-you-buy and see  whether they get hooked.  (Incidentally,  Microsoft is now saying that Dynamics CRM Online turns out to be the cheapest  of the three options, anyway). 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 04, 20090 comments