With the aftermath of the U.S. election in full bloom (by the time you read 
  this), NFL playoff races heating up and much of the country basking in unusually 
  warm fall weather, we're going to head back a few months and make...an Olympics 
  reference! Or, at least, a track and field reference, which might as well be 
  an Olympic reference. (Seriously, though, doesn't it seem as though the 2008 
  Olympics happened about 17 years ago? The shelf life for an event is short in 
  our YouTube culture.) 
Anyway, did you ever watch one of those middle-distance races in which one 
  runner would dart way out ahead of everybody else, only to get caught about 
  three-quarters of the way through the race and finish fifth? We're fairly sure 
  that this runner is called the rabbit -- he or she sets the pace early in 
  a race but never really has a chance to win it. 
We're wondering here at RCPU whether Marc Benioff and Salesforce.com -- pioneers 
  in Software as a Service -- are starting to grow floppy ears and a fluffy tail. 
  Salesforce.com has done a pretty solid job of leading the SaaS-based customer 
  relationship management race, but a few big-name competitors are starting to 
  catch up. Microsoft, of course, is among them, not only with Dynamics CRM online 
  -- a direct competitor to Benioff's company -- but also with the whole Azure 
  S+S platform. 
And there are others starting to leg it forward in the SaaS scramble. SAP, 
  Oracle -- they should have Salesforce.com looking over its shoulder at least 
  a little bit. But this week, at the company's Dreamforce show in San Francisco, 
  Benioff spoke 
  with the confidence of a runner who'd already lapped his foes. He took more 
  shots than Sarah Palin in a forest full of moose -- at Oracle, at SAP...but 
  less so at Microsoft, which he (for once) treated with a bit more caution.
We like Benioff and Salesforce.com here at RCPU because the CEO is a quote 
  machine and because the company is a pretty genuine pioneer in what could eventually 
  become a pervasive computing model. But we can also see this trailblazer going 
  the way of Netscape...or, more likely, Lotus: snapped up eventually (although 
  probably not in this economy) by a larger competitor but still continuing to 
  produce innovative technology. That second scenario doesn't seem so bad, actually, 
  at least for customers and Salesforce.com partners. 
But Benioff won't hear of it. Salesforce.com is building or planning to build 
  datacenters worldwide and ramping up its offerings to compete with the other 
  runners in the race. Benioff's got bluster, and he's got a lead. But does his 
  company have the kick to finish off the race? We'll see. 
What has your experience been with Salesforce.com? Have you worked with the 
  company as a partner or customers? Let us know at [email protected].  
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on November 05, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Andrew McLennan finally got tired of being ripped off, so he started a security 
  company. 
Well, it didn't happen exactly like that, but McLennan's experience as a video 
  game developer did eventually lead to his founding of Metaforic, 
  a maker of anti-tamper software. During his time at Steel Monkeys, a Belarus-based 
  game developer, McLennan saw the company's products hacked, cracked and available 
  for illicit sale literally before Steel Monkeys had released them in some markets. 
"We had so much stuff pirated, it was ridiculous," McLennan said 
  in a robust Scottish brogue. "We had stuff available in Russia before it 
  was available in the U.K. We did get kind of fed up -- you'd spend nearly two 
  years working on something and then see it stolen from you."
So, with funding from the Scottish government, McLennan founded Glasgow-based 
  Metaforic, which launched in the U.S. in late October and has an office in San 
  Jose, Calif. McLennan, the company's CEO, said that MetaFortress, the company's 
  flagship product, can "stop any hack in its tracks." 
But there's more to MetaFortress than just the fact that it prevents hacking, 
  piracy, theft and reverse-engineering, McLennan said. Not only does MetaFortress 
  do all of those things, but it does them in a way that's easy to deploy and 
  doesn't significantly affect application performance. 
Instead of requiring eight weeks to six months, as some other applications 
  do, MetaFortress adds protection to an application in an hour by automating 
  the process of adding protection, McLennan said. "Because we're so easy 
  to use, we've become easy to adopt." 
Beyond that, McLennan added, while most anti-tamper tools reduce the performance 
  of the applications they protect by anywhere from 5 to 20 percent, MetaFortress 
  clocks in at a 0.2 percent performance downgrade. And, he said, while competitors 
  protect an application for anywhere from a week to a month, Metaforic's product 
  offers three to 18 months of protection.
And MetaFortress isn't just for game developers. Metaforic is targeting the 
  enterprise with its product, selling not only to ISVs but also to companies 
  that do internal app development or want to protect critical elements of their 
  infrastructures. The company is looking for partners, too -- both for traditional 
  partners and for companies that might want to OEM MetaFortress. Channel members 
  in the financial and government fields are of particular interest, McLennan 
  said, because "they're difficult industries to get into."
Still, McLennan admitted that nobody's perfect. MetaFortress isn't un-crackable, 
  he said -- it just provides better protection for longer than competing products 
  do. "We're not claiming we're uncrackable," he said. "The hacker 
  has to do everything manually. All we're trying to do is bore the attacker to 
  death."     
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on November 04, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Identity and security might sound like topics to discuss with a therapist, 
  but at Microsoft they're key components in a burgeoning product line. Redmond 
  this week announced that it's adding some capabilities to a couple of identity 
  and security applications. 
First off, there's Identity Lifecycle Manager, which combines identification 
  management and certificate management -- sort of the chocolate and peanut butter 
  of security, as we once 
  called them, much to the amusement, apparently, of some folks in Redmond. 
Anyway, ILM2 -- the "2" part is just a code name for now -- is 
  in release-candidate mode as of this week. Scheduled for general availability 
  in the first half of 2009, ILM2 will include a nifty integration with Microsoft 
  Office that will expand ID and certificate capabilities outside the bounds of 
  IT to regular folks. 
For example, a "knowledge worker" (as in a non-IT person, as if IT 
  people have no knowledge) will be able to grant or deny an employee permission 
  to use a network or application via, say, an automatically generated e-mail 
  in Outlook. In other words, an IT person won't have to do it -- a non-IT manager 
  will have simple, Office-based control over who gets to do what, and IT will 
  have control in turn over what the manager gets to do.
"One of the greatest security risks enterprises have is loss of identity," 
  John Chirapurath, director of marketing for the Identity and Security Division 
  at Microsoft, told RCPU in a phone chat late last week. "When somebody 
  leaves an organization, how does IT know? It's really the knowledge worker who 
  knows."
There's a customization opportunity there for the channel, Chirapurath, better 
  known as J.G., said. "ISVs can expand and extend our solution," he 
  said. "At the same time, there is also a very powerful services story. 
  Partners can look at the problem of identity management in a holistic fashion 
  and design the right processes and self-service capabilities so you do identity 
  management right from day one."
Microsoft's also updating another product, Intelligent Application Gateway, 
  with Service Pack 2 for the application. "ILM is really all about identity 
  and certificate management and self service," J.G. said. "IAG is about 
  using those identities and governing access."
IAG SP2 adds virtualization to the mix, as it'll run as a virtual machine on 
  Microsoft's Hyper-V hypervisor. It'll also grant partial access to certain applications, 
  alleviating the "all-or-nothing" nature of access that exists today, 
  J.G. said.
"Today, access is all or nothing," J.G. (and yes, we like calling 
  him that) said. "It becomes a very complex problem because either you have 
  to give [users] all access or no access [to an application]. IAG provides intelligence 
  to that access -- very fine-grained access." A customer could, for instance, 
  access an order-fulfillment part of an application but nothing else, J.G. said. 
With SP2, IAG will also support Firefox, as well as Linux and the Mac OS. "Access 
  is not a Microsoft-centric problem," J.G. said. With IAG SP2, hopefully 
  it won't be a problem at all -- or certainly not one worth talking to a therapist 
  about. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on November 04, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Partners, take note: As if you didn't know this already, a new CDW survey has 
  found that confidence in IT spending is 
on 
  the decline. It looks as though that nasty old economic downturn is hitting 
  IT...but the numbers really aren't that bad. Look at it this way: You could 
  be an investment banker. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on October 30, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    There sure have been a lot of announcements at Microsoft's Professional Developers 
  Conference this week. We say that with a touch of incredulity because the PDC 
  always struck us as being a tad esoteric and not having the broad-based appeal 
  of, say, Tech-Ed. 
OK, granted, Azure 
  is more of a development platform than anything else, so it makes sense to announce 
  it to developers. But it's also a critical part of an overall SaaS -- sorry, 
  S+S -- strategy, so we might have expected an unveiling at a different, somewhat 
  more inclusive conference. (And that goes double for Windows 
  7, even though developers will take some interest in it, as well.) Oh, well...it 
  all ends up on the Internet, anyway, right?
Anyway, between Azure and Windows 7, PDC has been the most eventful Microsoft 
  show for quite a while. We've commented ourselves into carpal tunnel syndrome 
  this week writing about it, so for the last RCPU of the week, we're just serving 
  up links to stories you might have missed:
There was a Windows 
  Server 2008 R2 preview.
Live Mesh 
  and Live Framework got some air time.
Redmond Developer News's Kathleen Richards brings us a story on cloud-based 
  SQL services.
And here's 
  something about Visual Studio for the Skittles and Mountain Dew crowd (the PDC 
  target audience, after all).
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on October 30, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    It's getting serious now, this cloud computing stuff. It's not just the up-and-coming 
  vendors or the Web-era giants (think Google and Amazon) that are offering some 
  sort of Software-as-a-Service model. Oh, no. 
As 
  of this week, there's an old-school player in this game in a serious way: 
  Microsoft.
Microsoft is investing 
  heavily in the cloud with Windows Azure. And some observers, at least, including 
  one at analyst firm Forrester, 
  believe that enterprises are ready to get serious about SaaS and start using 
  it for critical applications rather than just messing around and experimenting 
  with it. SMBs, presumably, are way ahead of their enterprise counterparts in 
  terms of SaaS adoption, mainly because the cloud is a good model for modest 
  SMB budgets.
So, there's money to be made in the cloud, right? Well, Microsoft thinks that 
  there is -- or will 
  be, anyway. And what's good for Microsoft is good for Microsoft partners, 
  right? Well, maybe. It depends, really, on the type of partner we're talking 
  about.
Pure hosting partners, if there are that many of them left out there, will 
  probably need to diversify their business pretty quickly or find another line 
  of work. Microsoft is in the hosting business now in a big way, and you know 
  what that'll probably mean: impossibly low pricing from Redmond that no partner 
  could ever match, at least not on an ongoing basis. Steve Ballmer said way back 
  at the Partner Conference that the partner-hosting model had a future...but 
  not as lucrative a future as Microsoft's 
  own hosting business will have. Hint, hint.
But if hosting partners didn't know by now that they needed to diversify their 
  offerings, they're probably not in business anymore, anyway, or won't be for 
  much longer. The question, really, is how much partners should invest in datacenters 
  and how much they should focus on hosting -- or whether they should continue 
  to do it at all. In any case, as with everything else these days, the cloud 
  is going to be all about services. 
Well, of course it will be. But that brings up another question -- which 
  services will those be? Microsoft is in that business, too, to some extent, 
  with Azure. Companies can develop using tools in Azure and then have Microsoft 
  host their applications -- all of which sounds great for customers and for 
  Microsoft. But whither partners? 
Oh, sure, there'll be opportunities to create custom applications, consult 
  on SaaS strategies and develop specific vertical functions. But how much of 
  those opportunities does Azure actually take away by giving customers more opportunity 
  to work directly with Microsoft? And what exactly will those custom apps and 
  vertical functions involve if SMBs prefer pre-packaged, minimally customized 
  applications and enterprises are doing the development themselves with Azure? 
  Will partners have to be content with referral fees and whatever consulting 
  they can manage to squeeze out of accounts? 
All of these questions, of course, seem to point to a worst-case scenario of 
  Microsoft horning in on partners' turf and claiming the cloud for itself while 
  leaving the channel high and dry. But we should remember that Microsoft has 
  always relied on the channel to serve as its sales force and has, for the most 
  part, been good to partners over the years. And, traditionally, what's been 
  a moneymaker for Microsoft -- and Redmond clearly thinks it has a revenue 
  driver in the cloud -- has also been a cash machine for partners. So, there's 
  reason for optimism. In fact, there's probably more reason for optimism than 
  for pessimism. 
But there's also reason for concern, as there always is when a new model of 
  computing emerges. It's time for partners to engage with Microsoft, to air their 
  concerns and demand answers to tough questions. But it's also time for partners 
  to get creative -- to develop business strategies that will complement Azure 
  rather than work at cross purposes with the Redmond giant and its ambitious 
  cloud plans. 
The cloud is here -- whether it'll bring sunshine or rain for partners, 
  though, remains to be seen. 
How do you plan to make money in the cloud? How will you interact with Microsoft 
  regarding Azure and cloud computing? Sound off at [email protected]. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on October 29, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft seems ready to stop pretending that Vista will ever gain wide acceptance. 
  Just take a gander at 
this 
  story's headline: "Microsoft vows Windows 7 will fix Vista mistakes."
Mistakes? Vista? Anyway, Microsoft did demo 
  Windows 7 at PDC this week, and it does seem kind of cool. 
Vista, we hardly knew ye...and we didn't really want to. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on October 29, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Finally! Microsoft Office is going Live...for real this time. Microsoft announced 
  this week at the PDC in L.A. that there will be 
browser-based 
  versions of Word, Excel and PowerPoint, with a beta probably available sometime 
  in 2009. 
But let's read the fine print from the CNET article linked above:
  "Microsoft will offer browser-based Word, Excel, and PowerPoint in 
    two ways. For consumers, they will be offered via Microsoft's Office Live 
    Web site, while businesses will be able to offer browser-based Office capabilities 
    through Microsoft's SharePoint Server product."
Hmm...so the business offering is really more of a distributed, on-premises 
  model running on SharePoint as opposed to a pure SaaS offering with Office running 
  in a datacenter. OK. Then, there's this:
  "Elop said that not all of the editing capabilities of the desktop 
    products are in the browser versions. 'The editing we are characterizing as 
    lightweight editing,' he said."
Ahh...OK. So, browser-based Office will be a scaled-down version of the (very 
  bloated, we must say) original. 
All of this gets back to what we've said here before -- for all its talk 
  about and investment in cloud computing, Microsoft still sees the cloud as being 
  very much tethered to on-premises deployments. That's a model that might work -- but 
  what we still haven't seen from Microsoft is a true, un-tethered, Salesforce.com-style, 
  pure SaaS model. 
And we all know why: Office is a big moneymaker, and giving up those license 
  sales and replacing them with monthly subscription fees would be a shock to 
  Redmond's system. Hey, we're not saying that browser-based Office isn't welcome 
  or isn't a good model -- only that it's clear that Microsoft is having trouble 
  letting go of its desktop roots. That's what Redmond really means by Software 
  plus Services -- services plus the software revenue the company can't live without. 
  Hey, it could work, but it won't really be SaaS. Not really.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on October 29, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Well, they're 
sort 
  of talking about it...mostly in press releases and earnings conference calls. 
  Still interesting, though.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on October 28, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    So that's what Ray Ozzie was working on all this time. At its Professional 
  Developer Conference in L.A. this week, Ozzie and Microsoft took the wraps off 
  of Azure, which Redmond calls an 
operating 
  system for the cloud. 
A what? Yeah, we weren't too sure what that meant, either...and we 
  weren't alone. But the basic idea is that this cloud OS -- of which Steve 
  Ballmer has spoken a few times recently -- will provide a platform for developers 
  who want to create hosted applications. (Really, it seems more like a development 
  platform than an OS...but we digress.) Microsoft will then conveniently host 
  for customers those very applications in its datacenters. 
There's more to it than that, of course. Azure also appears to be an attempt 
  to bring on-premises systems into harmony 
  with the cloud, something that tells us two things. First, Microsoft is 
  pragmatic and understands that most companies now have -- and will have for 
  at least a few years to come -- an investment in in-house Microsoft technology. 
  If companies want to dabble in cloud computing now, they're going to do just 
  that -- dabble, rather than shift everything outside of their walls and into 
  the cloud. 
Second, though, it tells us that Microsoft doesn't seem quite ready to offer 
  a pure-cloud platform. There seems to be a sense with Azure of cloud-based applications 
  being tethered to traditional, in-house apps, which, again, makes sense because 
  that'll probably be the scenario in which the vast majority of customers will 
  use cloud computing. But the Salesforce.com, pure-SaaS, "no-software" 
  model doesn't appear to be part of Azure or of Microsoft's immediate plans. 
  Now, we could be reading that entirely incorrectly, as we'll admit that this 
  Azure stuff is kind of vague and a bit difficult to understand. From here, though, 
  we don't see Microsoft cutting the cord between cloud and on-premises applications. 
What we do see, though, is more potential trouble for Microsoft's hosting partners. 
  RCP the magazine covered 
  this back in September, and today's announcement takes it a step further: 
  It's pretty clear that Microsoft wants to get into the hosting business in a 
  big way. Now, with Azure, it's not just about hosting partner-built apps; it's 
  about bringing customer-developed apps into the equation, as well. 
So, again, if you're a hosting partner, now is the time to develop a revenue 
  stream or services business outside of pure application hosting...because Microsoft 
  is all over that market. Azure itself might be kind of confusing, but that point 
  is crystal-clear. 
What's your take on Azure? Have you figured out what it is and how it will 
  work? If you decide to play around with it a bit -- it's available in CTP as 
  of today -- please let us know. You know the place: [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on October 28, 20080 comments