In case there was any lingering doubt, we can confirm this week that
Microsoft is serious about this SaaS -- or even Software Plus Services -- stuff
after all. And despite some early concerns, it's becoming clearer that partners
won't be as shut out as they might have thought.
This week, Microsoft and HP revealed an initiative aimed at preparing
VARs to undertake what's called private-label hosting. Basically, VARs resell
applications hosted in datacenters by Microsoft-approved managed service
providers (or MSPs, of course); HP and Microsoft provide some technical
infrastructure and handy tips for getting started.
The nice thing here for VARs, other than getting some assistance in moving
into a hot, new technology model, is that they can put their names on these
hosted services. That's the nature of private label -- VARs brand hosted
offerings as their own rather than selling a product with somebody else's name
on it and just settling for a referral fee. With private label, VARs don't have
to give up their identities as trusted advisers to customers.
For MSPs, too, there are advantages. Despite considerable efforts from the
good folks at the MSP Alliance, managed service providers still face a bit
of an uphill battle overcoming the bad impressions a few of
the bad apples in their industry have left with customers. HP and Microsoft,
with this new program, are giving MSPs a little endorsement in selling to VARs.
Private-label sales to VARs already is and should continue to be a nice revenue
stream for many MSPs; a positive word and some technical help from Microsoft
and HP should only help service providers' cause in attracting VARs as
customers.
Of course, this new initiative doesn't make everything OK. Microsoft is
still planning to host its own applications and therefore compete pretty directly with MSPs, as well as with VARs.
And unless Steve Ballmer has changed his mind since July, Redmond doesn't plan on giving a competitive inch to its
partners-slash-competitors.
Still, if anything, the Microsoft-HP initiative has the look of a bit of an
olive branch to the channel at a time when a lot of partners are still not
totally sure how cloud computing will affect their businesses or how, exactly,
they should participate in it. And that doesn't seem like a bad thing.
Will you take advantage of the Microsoft-HP hosting offer? How are you
preparing your business to deal with cloud computing? Let us know at [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on December 11, 20081 comments
It's apparently -- chemistry majors we were not -- the symbol on the
periodic table of for sodium chloride. In any case,
NaCl, or Native Client, is Google's effort
to bring Web applications up to the same level of performance as desktop apps.
And already ink-stained (if we can still be called that in the Web era)
journalists are predicting that it could someday spell doom for Microsoft. From
the
InformationWeek article linked above:
"NaCl, the chemical formula for sodium chloride [See, we told you.
--LP], can be seen as salt in Microsoft's wounds. If Google's Native Client
becomes a robust system, the performance gap between desktop and Web
applications could all but vanish.
"For companies that continue to rely on revenue from desktop software,
such as Microsoft and Adobe, that would further undermine the value
proposition of their costly software products. That possibility has long been
foreseen, however, and both Adobe (NSDQ: ADBE) and Microsoft are moving their
applications online in ways that make the browser less relevant."
OK, so improving performance of Web apps would go a long way toward bringing
Web applications to parity with desktop apps. (We like to call it bridging the
app gap.) But performance isn't the only issue SaaS, Web 2.0, cloud computing
or whatever you want to call it faces. There's also the issue of uptime, the
problem of ownership of applications (some companies just like to run stuff
in-house) and even a few potential regulatory hurdles with HIPAA laws and the
like.
We're believers in Web-based applications, SaaS and all the rest of it, but
we're also not ready to declare the desktop dead yet. And with Windows Azure,
Microsoft is at least acknowledging that it needs to be a player in the cloud.
So we're not ready to see NaCl as salt in anybody's wound -- more like a new
ingredient to spice up competition a little bit.
Posted by Lee Pender on December 10, 20080 comments
UC still remains (mostly) a mystery to us, but the price tag on
this new effort at least makes it
interesting.
Posted by Lee Pender on December 10, 20080 comments
And so we come back to this because it just won't go away. Despite a recent
improvement in the performance of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, there's
still a
global economic freak-out in full swing...and journalists
and newsletter writers (ahem) aren't exactly keeping a balanced perspective
about it. It's time for a little
mea culpa.
Wrote reader Dennis back in November in response to RCPU's most grievous freak-out:
"I've been more than aware of the economic problems facing this nation
for the last couple of months, as well as the failures in the housing
industry that seem to have precipitated the whole thing.
"However, one thing that I've been seeing lately has me wondering if
we're making things worse by the way in which we describe the situation.
Words like 'cratered,' which you used in your article, seem to be a bit
melodramatic to describe a growth rate of only 10 percent in Dynamics
billings. Billings 'fell off a cliff' is used to describe the same
situation.
"I suppose that to add some punch to their columns, writers seek for
the most dramatic phrase to describe the Dow's loss for the day, or the
number of home foreclosures in a month. However, when those phrases pass
through the mind of the average person, I wonder if they don't have a
cumulatively depressing effect. If there's any way to be optimistic in
today's market, it's made harder by continually hearing about cratering and
falling off a cliff.
"What I'm suggesting as a remedy isn't to paint everything as rosy, but
to use less emotionally powerful words to describe, as rationally as
possible, the events of the day, and then to give some context for them. To
refer to the Great Depression as something which could happen only once isn't
enough. We've got to refer to events more recent than the 1929 Crash or the
'30s and try to do it in a less hysterical way."
Dadgummit (as we'd say in Texas), Dennis, your brand of thoughtful,
sensible, rational e-mails is just not welcome around here. Just kidding.
Actually, we really like what you had to say.
While we do think that we're all in for some rough times ahead (and in the
midst of rough times now), we did try to qualify that Dynamics revenues being
off isn't exactly tantamount to the coming of another depression. We were
hoping that our readers would be savvy enough to see how silly it is to
juxtapose the two, and we think that most were. You certainly were.
However, when it comes to mainstream coverage of the economy (and, uh, maybe
some of the coverage here, too), we totally agree with you. There are a lot of
alarmist writers out there who've bought into using scare tactics to get people
to read articles. We've tried to subtly parody that just a bit, but it's
entirely possible that we're being way too subtle. And, outside of attempted
parodies, we've also bought too much into the same tactic ourselves -- it's
just so hard to resist!
Really, the conditions of the early '90s and certainly of the late '70s
(especially the late '70s) were arguably worse than anything we're
seeing now, although the potential for total collapse seems much worse today.
Nevertheless, some, maybe a lot, of the doomsday talk -- which has yet to die
down after it was spurred partly by both presidential candidates during their
campaigns -- is way out of line.
As for Dynamics revenues falling off a cliff, they might have by Microsoft's
standards...but they certainly didn't by the standards of, say, AIG or GM. So,
you make a very good point. We should be more careful about using language like
that, and we will try to be in the future.
How panicked are you about the economy? Get your thoughts on that or
anything else that's on your mind in to [email protected]. Next week we'll
release our last batch of RCPUs until the new year, so hurry!
Posted by Lee Pender on December 10, 20080 comments
So, the beta version of Vista SP2 is
now
available, which is only important if you bothered with Vista or Vista SP1.
Already, the reviews for SP2 beta
lack
enthusiasm but, hey, it's only a beta version, right? And Vista's only two
years old -- it could still catch on. Right? Right?
Well, just in case it doesn't -- where's that "rolling eyes" emoticon
when we need it? -- Windows 7 is well on its way. We asked you last week what
you wanted from Windows 7, and some of you answered, in great detail, in
the comments section of the RCPU blog online (and thank you for that). Some
of you took the other route, though, and e-mailed your editor directly. We like
both forms of feedback, so let's get to those e-mails:
Keith starts us off:
"The IT department here has been using Vista in case we decided to
roll it out to the whole company, and I can definitely state that I have no
intentions of doing so. I will use XP on my network as long as I possibly
can. If Windows 7 is just a glorified version of Vista, then it may be time
to migrate to Macs. It's obvious that Microsoft has lost its edge. But it
remains to be seen if Apple, which has historically failed to capture the
mainstream market, can use the Vista debacle to make strong gains on corporate
America. I believe losing market share is the only way Microsoft will wake
up and realize that Vista is a flop. It should have built Windows 7 on the
XP core instead of the Vista core, in my opinion."
Keith, that whole message makes a lot of sense, especially the last bit. Why
Microsoft insists that Vista's core is the way forward is as baffling to us
as it is to you. (Then again, we here at RCPU don't build operating systems,
so...) It certainly feels as though Redmond is trying to force the Vista-Windows
7 model down our throats, but we wonder how much leverage Microsoft still has
to do that sort of thing these days. A lot, maybe, but it would be nice if Microsoft
would listen to its customers and accept that Vista is largely a flop. Maybe
Windows 7 will be much, much better than Vista -- but it'll have to be a massive
improvement if Microsoft wants to win back the hearts and minds of a lot of
users and partners.
Dave offers a similar perspective:
"IMO, Microsoft has three blind spots it will need to face before
the rest of us will take a look at a new OS:
- Legacy applications. Vista won't run them, and all security issues
aside, there has to be a way. If I wanted to re-buy all my applications,
I'd switch to Mac.
- Testing. I purchased a brand-new HP with brand-new Vista Ultimate,
and it's had unresolved problems since Day 1. I STILL have to reboot every
day. I want an OS that is tested before I buy it.
- Parity. My Vista computer refuses to install updates, even after a
complete re-install of Vista. XP gives me no trouble, so why change? I want
to go beyond parity.
"The bottom line is: What am I going through this kind of pain for?
The Aero interface? If that's the big attraction, then who cares? Microsoft
assumes we find value in Vista but fails to convince us that Vista has more
to offer than XP when, in fact, we find Vista to offer us less. What do I
want? In a word, MORE."
We hear you, Dave. We feel sure that Keith hears you as well. The question
is whether Microsoft hears you. Stay tuned.
Thanks to Keith and Dave for their thoughts on Vista. We'll be running more
reader feedback this week, so get your thoughts in on anything and everything
to [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on December 09, 20084 comments
Microsoft is
integrating
RSA's Data Loss Prevention into the Windows infrastructure. RSA, of course,
is now part of EMC. So that's EMC's RSA's DLP being integrated into Windows.
Got that?
Posted by Lee Pender on December 09, 20080 comments
That's right -- Microsoft has started a clothing line. No, really! And it's
called..."Softwear"! Just remember that the marketing guru who dreamed
this up probably makes well into six figures, if not more. Check out
this
story from
Macworld, but be ready for a snark attack in the comments
section.
Posted by Lee Pender on December 09, 20080 comments
For those who have bothered to deploy Vista,
SP2
is already in beta. The Windows Server 2008 beta is available, too.
Posted by Lee Pender on December 04, 20081 comments
A quick note before we start: Your editor didn't realize until it was too late
that there would be no RCPUs the week of Thanksgiving, otherwise known as last
week. We had planned to run a barrage of reader feedback that week, but instead
we went dark. So, as the holidays near and news inevitably slows over the next
couple of weeks, expect some reader feedback from pretty deep in the archives
to appear in this space. Your weeks-old e-mail might show up here yet. Don't
give up hope!
Now, back to business. Not that Microsoft is trying to push Vista into the
retirement home early or anything, but there could be a Windows
7 beta available as early as next month. In any case, folks who attend the
upcoming MSDN Developer Conferences will get
Windows 7 DVDs at some point, and that point might be as early as mid-January.
At least Redmond has stopped pretending that companies are going to suddenly
wake up to the beauty of Vista and adopt it en masse. Microsoft hardly talks
about Vista anymore -- the last hardcore marketing of it we heard came at the
Worldwide Partner Conference in July, and all talk of Vista seemed to stop dead
after that -- and Windows 7 has been the primary buzz generator in Redmond for
a few months now.
We'd all be wise, though, not to view Windows 7 as some sort of operating-system
messiah that's going to save us from Vista. It'll actually be a lot like Vista,
as we all now know, and even Microsoft is starting
the spin on differentiating Windows 7 from -- oh, dear -- a Vista service
pack. If Redmond's already telling people that Windows 7 isn't just a glorified
Vista service pack, well... We'll let you draw your own conclusions.
The real question will be whether people just didn't like Vista and therefore
rejected it or whether they really, really like XP and don't want to move. If
the former is true, Windows 7 will hopefully fix some of the issues that made
Vista so annoying and get the Microsoft OS roadmap back on, um, track (there's
a mixed metaphor in there somewhere -- sorry). However, if users stick with
XP just because they like it and don't want to move away from it, Microsoft
will face the much more daunting challenge of convincing customers that they
really will need to upgrade to a new OS at some point -- or Redmond could
just speed the end of XP support, we suppose, and force everybody's hand.
Either way, Windows 7 is as much of a watershed OS as a company with 90-plus
percent market share can release. And it's already stealing the headlines from
Vista -- which seems to be just what Microsoft wants.
What do you want from Windows 7? What will it take functionality-wise to pull
you away from XP? Sound off at [email protected].
Posted by Lee Pender on December 04, 20082 comments
Wondering how the channel is going to participate in this whole cloud computing
thing? Well, Ingram Micro is now offering Microsoft Service Provider License
Agreement to its partners. There's more detail in Ingram's entirely comprehensible
(and thank you for that, Ingram)
press
release.
Posted by Lee Pender on December 04, 20081 comments
We suppose you could call
these
the sky in cloud computing...or something like that.
Posted by Lee Pender on December 04, 20080 comments