A major focus of this week's Live! 360 conference in Orlando, Fla., will be artificial intelligence (AI) and its impact on Microsoft-focused developers and IT professionals.
Live! 360 is hosted by Converge360, the parent company of RCPmag.com, and brings together Converge360's events for one combined conference, with each  event as a track. In addition to Visual Studio Live!, SQL Server Live!,  TechMentor, Office & SharePoint Live! and ModernApps Live!, this year the  conference is rolling out an entire Artificial Intelligence Live! track. 
"We are excited about the AI Live launch and how that  ties in nicely with our overall program of incubating new topics at Live! 360  and giving the Live! 360 attendees the opportunity to broaden their educational  reach and knowledge base by attending any sessions across the six events,"  said Brent Sutton, vice president of Converge360 Events.
Headlining the AI track is a Tuesday morning keynote from  Pranav Rastogi, a program manager at Microsoft who focuses on making developers  successful with AI. His keynote is "Enabling Enterprise Developers in AI  -- How Microsoft is Doing It." AI has been a huge messaging push for  Microsoft over the last year and a half, and Rastogi is expected to talk about  Microsoft technologies that support AI projects, as well as how Microsoft is  using the approaches internally and in customer implementations.
Andrew Brust, conference co-chair for the Artificial  Intelligence Live! track, as well as for the Visual Studio and SQL Server  tracks, says the Live! 360 AI content will reflect the conference's roots in  giving developers practical guidance.
"Most of the AI conferences out there are really like  data science conferences. We will have that content, but not only that. Because  it's VS Live!, we will have content for developers [about AI bots and features],"  Brust said. "It's AI aimed at developers rather than AI aimed at AI  specialists."
One example of the type of content that Live! 360  specializes in is being run by Brust, and will cover new AI features that  Microsoft has just integrated into Power BI and how to make use of those  capabilities. Another is a workshop by experienced BI expert Jen Stirrup on how  BI professionals can transition into AI.
The main technology keynote for all conference tracks is on  Wednesday, when Donovan Brown, the Principal DevOps Manager at Microsoft's Cloud Developer  Advocacy Team, presents on "Enterprise Transformation."  The talk will focus on the transition of Microsoft Visual Studio Team Services  from a three-year waterfall delivery cycle to three-week iterations, open  source elements and the Git Virtual File System.
Also Wednesday, James Montemagno, Microsoft Principal  Program Manager in the Mobile Developer Tools unit, is scheduled to deliver an  authoritative session on the future of .NET and Visual Studio.
Some of the other major technologies and themes being  addressed by the more than 100 expert speakers this year include containers and  the Azure Kubernetes Service, Azure Cosmos DB, PowerApps, Microsoft Flow,  Windows Server 2019, Windows 10 updates, Microsoft Graph, Internet of Things (IoT) and Office 365 security.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 03, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft is taking FastTrack on a world tour to raise the profile of  the cloud onboarding service with tech professionals and developers.
Microsoft and partners have a love-hate relationship with FastTrack.  Microsoft loves the program because it helps boost consumption of cloud  services, a key metric for the company and a critical goal for retaining  subscriptions to Office 365 and other cloud services. Partners often counter  that the program zeroes-out formerly profitable routine migration services,  while still devaluing in customers' eyes the more complicated migrations that  partners must take over when the FastTrack desk's remote and automated  capabilities fall short. 
Microsoft defines FastTrack as a "customer success service."  In three years, as of September, Microsoft claims to have onboarded 40,000  customers and migrated more than 6.5 petabytes of data through the service,  which is included in the price of Microsoft cloud subscriptions.
The company had a big presence for FastTrack at the Microsoft Ignite  show in September, with an expo presence and more than 20 FastTrack-related  sessions. Next month, Microsoft begins a 17-city tour to bring  Ignite  material to customers around the world, and the FastTrack team is among the  most enthusiastic Microsoft groups participating in the tour.
The free, two-day Microsoft Ignite | The Tour sessions kick off in  December in Berlin and São Paulo. Next year, the tour will hit Toronto;  Singapore; Tel Aviv; Johannesburg; Milan; Washington, D.C.; Sydney; Hong Kong;  London; Amsterdam; Dubai; Seoul; Mexico City; and Stockholm before wrapping up  in Mumbai in late May.
In the condensed context of Microsoft Ignite | The Tour, the FastTrack  elements will include 15-minute theater sessions and breakout sessions with an  emphasis on deploying Microsoft 365 products, and details about the app  remediation services of Desktop App Assure.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 26, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    When stocks in the tech sector were rising, Apple and Amazon both drove  the trend and benefited from it, reaching market caps over $1 trillion, with Microsoft  and Alphabet close behind. 
Now that the tech sector is falling along with  markets overall, Microsoft is falling less quickly. 
In mid-day trading Monday, Microsoft surpassed Apple as the most valuable company in the United States. Microsoft's market  capitalization was $812 billion, about $1 billion higher than Apple's.
News has been rough for Apple over the last few weeks, with the stock  losing nearly a quarter of its value since a September high on reports of drops  in smartphone demand. Microsoft, on the other hand, continues to deliver on its  pivot from a Windows-first to a cloud-first business.
Even though Microsoft seems to have regained supremacy from Apple on  this one business measure (for the moment, at least), Microsoft stock is nearly  9 percent off its record high from early October.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 26, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    An acquisition this week by Microsoft should result in new  resources for partners interested in building conversational artificial intelligence (AI) experiences.
Microsoft on Wednesday announced it had signed an agreement  to acquire XOXCO, based in Austin, Texas. Like most of the dozen-plus  acquisitions Microsoft makes each year, terms weren't disclosed, which usually  indicates a fairly small company and a small team. 
In a blog post about the deal, Lili Cheng, Microsoft  corporate vice president for Conversational AI at Microsoft, described XOXCO as "a  software product design and development studio known for its conversational AI  and bot development capabilities." Cheng cited examples of XOXCO's  previous work, including Howdy, a meeting scheduling bot for Slack; and Botkit,  a set of development tools that is popular on GitHub.
"We have shared goals to foster a community of startups  and innovators, share best practices and continue to amplify our focus on  conversational AI, as well as to develop tools for empowering people to create  experiences that do more with speech and language," Cheng wrote.
Given Microsoft's sizable internal investments over the last  few years on the digital personal assistant Cortana, the Microsoft Bot  Framework, natural language processing and other AI-related services, it's unclear from the brief blog post how much  new capability XOXCO brings to the company. However, Cheng notes that Microsoft  has partnered with XOXCO on projects over the last few years.
One area that will be interesting to watch is how XOXCO  plays into Microsoft's ongoing effort to push Teams as a competitor to Slack.  The XOXCO Web site is currently replete with references to Slack, and a $1.5  million funding round three years ago was all about developing for Slack. 
As  one of the early movers in the Slack commercial ecosystem, will XOXCO become a  Microsoft effort to have a presence on that platform, or will the team's expertise  be redirected to building bots, tools and add-ons for Teams exclusively?
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 14, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    SherWeb is bundling some add-on solutions for Office 365 at  the same base price as the underlying Microsoft cloud service to give managed  service providers (MSPs) a more complete offering for customers out of the gate.
SherWeb is one of the Indirect Providers in the Microsoft  Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) program, sitting between Microsoft and CSP  Indirect Resellers, who sell Microsoft cloud products to customers. 
The Sherbrooke, Quebec-based company unveiled the new Office  365 bundle on Wednesday, which adds security, backup and e-learning components  to base Microsoft offerings, such as Office 365 or Microsoft 365. 
The products  include Office Protect, a one-click threat protection solution using best  practice security settings; Online Backup, a backup service of 1GB per user for  data and Office 365 mailboxes; and QuickHelp, which is a personalized  e-learning platform designed to increase Office 365 user adoption and  productivity for customers.
Plans that the Office 365 bundle comes with include Office  365 Business Premium, Office 365 Business Essentials, Office 365 Enterprise  E1/E3/E5, Microsoft 365 Business and Microsoft 365 E1/E3.
In a statement, Jason Brown, vice president of products for  SherWeb, declared the new offering the core Office 365 bundle from SherWeb.
"We see this as an evolution of Office 365 for partners  in adding more value and providing them with the opportunity to create new  products and services, and complement their managed services business,"  Brown said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 07, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Sometimes a customer is so big, and the engagement so broad,  that Microsoft refers to the customer and the deal as a partnership. One such  case is the Walmart deal unveiled over the summer, and details of the arrangement  are starting to come into focus.
The companies announced a five-year agreement in July that  included Walmart engaging in digital transformation projects with Microsoft and  committing to enterprisewide use of Microsoft Azure cloud services and  Microsoft 365, the end user package that includes Office 365, Windows 10 and  Enterprise Mobility + Security (EMS) functionality. 
As one of the first steps in the agreement, the companies on  Monday unveiled that they would be jointly staffing a "cloud factory,"  basically an expansion of Walmart's existing technology center in Austin,  Texas, early next year. In all there will be 30 technologists in the office,  which will include an undisclosed number of Microsoft engineers mixed in with  the Walmart technology specialists. Walmart is headquartered 550 miles away in  Bentonville, Ark., but maintains the technology center in Texas to tap into  Austin's vibrant tech community.
"With this partnership with Microsoft, we started  talking, 'Hey, what's the best way to accelerate all the stuff we're doing  here? We need help and expertise. We want to move fast. How do we partner our  smart people with Microsoft's smart people?'" said Clay Johnson, Walmart  executive vice president and enterprise chief information officer, in a Q&A  that posted on Microsoft's site on Monday.
"Then it was obvious: 'Why don't we just co-locate the  teams together.' We haven't done something like this before with co-location,  but I think the outcomes are going to be huge and strengthen our partnership  even more. You're going to see a lot more co-innovation around IoT, computer  vision, big data and real-time analytics," Johnson said. "We're going  to learn a lot from each other. We're going to learn a lot from Microsoft  -- which apps make sense to get to the  cloud quickly and which don't."
The cloud factory's assignment includes a lot of the types  of projects Microsoft has been routinely encouraging customers to undertake. In  the lift-and-shift category, they'll be migrating thousands of internal Walmart  business applications to Azure. The team will also be building new,  cloud-native applications.
Beyond modernizing applications into the Azure cloud  platform, the collaboration will include work on emerging technologies. For one  thing, Walmart already has Internet of Things (IoT) sensors in a lot of locations.
"With our IoT work and sensor enablement, we're looking  at our energy consumption and other factors to predict equipment failures  before they happen. Improving equipment performance can result in enhanced  energy efficiency, which lowers costs and our carbon footprint," Johnson  said. "Putting IoT data into edge analytics lets us look at data at a  store level and backhaul it to Azure to look at it across a region or the whole  U.S. We started talking to Microsoft about this concept of a set of stores  being a 'micro-cloud,' and you roll them into Azure for data analytics and  insights."
Artificial intelligence (AI), chatbots and natural language  processing -- three more hot areas of digital transformation -- will also get  tested at a massive scale in the Walmart environment, spearheaded by the  Austin-based joint team.
Projects will include internal chatbots designed to help  Walmart's 2.2 million employees navigate benefits, chatbots for managing  supplier interactions, and natural language processing of terabytes of  unstructured text to improve business operations.
"Microsoft's going to get to see stuff at a scale they've  never seen before," Johnson said of the Walmart environment. The retailer  had $500 billion in revenues in fiscal 2018 and operates 11,200 stores  worldwide. "I think they'll learn a lot from our footprint. Co-locating  top engineers from both companies will deepen the technical brainpower for creating  disruptive, large-scale enterprise solutions for Walmart."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 05, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    During the special RCP editorial webcast Wednesday on "What's Next  for Microsoft CSPs: Partners' Top Moves for 2019," the attendees had more  great questions than we could answer during the session. I want to hit on a few  of them here, as well as provide some better answers for some of the questions  we did address.
For those of you who didn't attend the live event, the presentation centered  on 11 key decisions that Microsoft partners need to make in 2019 and early 2020  around their participation in the Microsoft Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) program. A few  highlights involved making the Direct Bill versus Indirect Reseller decision  based on the new support plan purchase requirement, selecting among Indirect  Providers if you go that route, whether to chase certain incentive,s and how  much to emphasize developing your own intellectual property (hint: a lot). A  replay of the session is now available here. 
First, let's look at a few questions that we covered in the session, but  that I have a little more detail about.
Do you know how a partner can switch  easily from being a Direct provider to being an Indirect Provider?
  Since much of the session focused on the new expenses around being a  Direct Bill CSP partner, and whether it's time to consider switching to being  an Indirect Reseller, one really good question that came up was about how  difficult it would be to switch. I have a consultant's answer on this one: It  depends. 
Mainly, it has to do with how much the partner already invested in the  infrastructure required to become a direct partner, the ongoing expenses of  being a direct partner, how many customers the partner has under the model and  how their contracts are structured. All that aside, all of the Indirect  Providers are extremely aware of this opportunity and many have competitive  programs to help Direct partners make the switch into their Indirect programs.  
One thing that I didn't mention Wednesday that was brought up by an Indirect  Provider participant in an e-mail exchange after the call is to think of it as a  process. Expect that customers will move from one model to the other at  different rates.
Can you do Indirect for Azure  and Direct for everything else?
  A related question was about mixing and matching the CSP business  models. I wasn't entirely sure until pretty late in the callĀ about the answer to this question. A  Microsoft rep attending the call kindly confirmed that partners can be both Direct  and Indirect. To clarify, it's not just Azure for Indirect and everything else  for Direct. You can do Dynamics, Azure, Office 365 or any of the CSP products  in whichever model suits your business.
Do you have rough figures for the  price of ASfP or PSfP?
  The new requirement that Direct Bill CSPs pay for a support package  involves an annual expense, either for Advanced Support for Partners (ASfP) or for  Premier Support for Partners (PSfP). There was a question about how much each package  costs. ASfP is the less expensive option at about $15,000 a year in the United  States. It costs less in some geographies. PSfP is much more customizable, but  Microsoft documentation shows it starting at nearly twice the price, about  $28,000 in the United States. The Microsoft rep also provided this link to a  partner comparison page for the service plans.
Next, there were a few questions that I completely missed in the  Q&A session.
Can you describe what makes up  the investment costs for Direct CSP? I've seen this ROI slide before, but what exactly  are partners spending $50,000 to $1 million on?
The reference to the ROI slide was a Microsoft slide that shows how the  time to profitability for Direct averages about 22 months, while Indirect is  about five months. The question is about an estimated cost that Direct partners  tend to spend $50,000 to $1 million. As far as I know, the source for those  investment figures is an IDC e-book sponsored by Microsoft called "Partner  Choice for Cloud Success: What IT Solution Providers Need to Know about the Value  of Microsoft's CSP Licensing Program and the Choice of Relationship Models."  
The IDC e-book describes the investments as consisting of several things. One is  building a billing and provisioning model using the Microsoft APIs or paying a  third-party platform for a white-label version. Another is building first-level  customer support capabilities, including hiring support professionals. It can  also include either building out a customer-facing cloud marketplace or paying  a third-party provider to use a marketplace platform. The range is so large  because it goes from managed service providers who may already have some of  those capabilities in place to distribution partners who are setting themselves  up to be Indirect Providers with their own networks of Indirect Resellers. 
Note  that the e-book predates the requirement for Direct CSPs to buy support  packages.
Which margins are moving from 8 percent to 6 percent?
My slide deck focused a little too much on using the Halloween-related  Chiller font in an effort to be entertaining and not enough on the relevant  details. Sorry about that. I was talking in that slide about the change coming  to the incentive rates for Core Office 365 for Indirect Resellers, starting in  January. That rate was 8 percent paid on billed revenue from July through December. It  will be 6 percent from January 2019 to June 2019.
Finally, there were a handful of questions that came in through the  console that I didn't tackle because I didn't know the answer. I'll be looking  into these over the next few weeks. If you have any thoughts or information  about them, let me know at [email protected].
  - How are CSPs managing cash flow  risk? I.e., end client does not pay, Microsoft is still owed?
- I thought the 10 percent incentive on  Azure RI has gone. Can you provide the Microsoft reference doc around that?
- Our company has ASfP. It's been very difficult opening tickets that are  routed to the right support engineers at Microsoft. Does anyone have the  proper way to open advance or premium support tickets?
Thanks to SherWeb for sponsoring Wednesday's session  and to everyone  who participated! Again, check it out here if you missed it. Looking forward to keeping the conversation going about this  critical and evolving partner program.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 01, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    IBM may be a distant third place in the cloud market, but its executives are betting that there's still room in the cloud gold rush for Big Blue. 
Case in point: IBM's plan to spend a whopping $34 billion to acquire Red  Hat, which it unveiled this past Sunday. That bid represents a 63 percent premium over Red Hat's share price. 
Calling the acquisition a cloud market game-changer, IBM  Chairman, President and CEO Ginni Rometty predicted that with the deal, "IBM  will become the world's #1 hybrid cloud provider, offering companies the only  open cloud solution that will unlock the full value of the cloud for their  businesses."
With earnings season winding down, analysts at Synergy  Research just detailed market share estimates for spending on cloud  infrastructure services late last week. As with every other quarter for as long  as the market has been tracked, Amazon Web Services (AWS) is the clear No. 1, with Microsoft at a  distant but strong No. 2. According to Synergy, the market share numbers are  AWS 34 percent, Microsoft 14 percent, IBM 7 percent, Google 7 percent and Alibaba 4 percent.
Rometty laid out IBM's view of the state of the cloud  market, specifically that it's not too late for a big move. "Most  companies today are only 20 percent along their cloud journey, renting compute  power to cut costs," she said in the company's acquisition announcement. "The  next 80 percent is about unlocking real business value and driving growth. This  is the next chapter of the cloud. It requires shifting business applications to  hybrid cloud, extracting more data and optimizing every part of the business,  from supply chains to sales."
Such descriptions of the opportunity are similar to the "digital  transformation" rhetoric coming out of Microsoft over the last year.
How Red Hat changes the game for IBM isn't completely clear.
Much of the current market share position has to do with the  massive datacenter buildouts of the last decade. Red Hat has been an open  source software provider for several of the public cloud players, rather than a  front-running datacenter infrastructure player. And IBM says the company  remains committed to building and enhancing the partnerships Red Hat has with  major cloud providers, going on to cite existing arrangements with AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud and Alibaba.
"IBM is committed to being an authentic multi-cloud  provider, and we will prioritize the use of Red Hat technology across multiple  clouds," said Arvind Krishna, senior vice president of IBM Hybrid Cloud,  in  a statement. "In doing so, IBM will support open source technology  wherever it runs, allowing it to scale significantly within commercial settings  around the world."
That there is still room for innovation and competitive  shakeups in the cloud is undoubtedly true. As Microsoft's and Google's ongoing  investments show, none of the main cloud players is willing to cede the market  to AWS. Whether IBM's acquisition of Red Hat changes its positioning in that  market, however, remains to be seen.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 29, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The revenue growth for Microsoft Azure year in and year out  is nothing short of stunning.
Microsoft logged yet another quarter of very high  double-digit growth for Azure revenues in the earnings report that was released  Wednesday for the first quarter of its July-to-June fiscal year. 
The figure is a 76% gain over the year-ago quarter. That's impressive,  especially considering Microsoft is starting from a relatively high number as  the No. 2 public cloud provider after Amazon Web Services (AWS).
Yet the number is slightly worrying to financial analysts,  who note that the Azure growth rate figure has been marching steadily downward  over the last few years. By comparison, the growth rate for the same quarter a  year ago was 90%; two years ago it was 116% for the quarter.
While analysts on the earnings call Wednesday evening were  complimentary overall about the quarter, which beat expectations on both  profits and revenues, they asked CEO Satya Nadella and CFO Amy Hood repeatedly  about Azure and came at it from many different angles.
Nadella and Hood together conjured an extremely positive  story about Azure's future built on three major elements.
One element is that Microsoft's hybrid approach to the cloud  is not only a strategic advantage, but that analysts should be thinking about  it as effectively hiding some Azure revenues. Microsoft's unique attribute,  compared to major public cloud competitors AWS or Google Cloud Platform, is  that the company has a huge installed base of on-premises server software  customers. That legacy encouraged Microsoft to focus more on hybrid solutions  that allow customers to move workloads to the cloud at their own pace and to  integrate all kinds of services between the on-premises servers and the cloud  platform. Over the last year, Microsoft has moved to bring its licensing model  in line with that hybrid approach, especially via Azure hybrid benefits.
Hood made that case in an answer to one analyst. "I  tend to focus...on the 'all up' server and product [Key Performance Indicator]  because the Azure hybrid benefits that exist with Windows Server and SQL Server  are really valuable to customers if they want to move to Azure on their own  terms," Hood said. "If we start to focus on one number or the other,  I think we're missing the fact that our customer method and go-to-market is  actually through the overall product portfolio."
Nadella hammered the theme home in response to a different  question. "We don't think of hybrid as some stopgap in a move to the cloud,"  he said. "[It's] not just the old workloads but most importantly for new  workloads, and that's where we're seeing some very significant good feedback  loops in shaping even our future roadmap. And this is a place where we are  leading."
Another basic element of Microsoft's Azure story is one of  driving cost out of the platform. Hood said commercial cloud gross margin  percentage increased 4 points to 62%, driven by significant improvement  in Azure gross margin. Nadella added that the margin improvements are crossing  Microsoft's product boundaries as more of the infrastructure is unified. "For  the first time, what you see across Microsoft is really one platform, which  spans all of these businesses and all of the margin structures that are there  represented in it," he said.
The other element is Microsoft's rapid buildout of Azure  services. Nadella enumerated some of what he described as 100 new Azure  capabilities introduced in the previous quarter (mostly at Microsoft Ignite),  including Azure Confidential Computing, Azure Sphere and Azure Digital Twins.  He pointed out that new and higher-level services should generate higher  margins over time.
Several key Microsoft partners didn't need convincing that  Azure has a lot of growth ahead of it.
"It's no surprise that this quarter was another strong  one for Microsoft, given its recent push to expand Azure's features and its  hybrid cloud capabilities," said Dux Raymond Sy, CMO of AvePoint,  in a  statement about Microsoft's earnings. "Over the past five years, the cloud  industry has become the most competitive IT marketplace we have ever seen, but  one of the most exciting things that we have seen from Microsoft is that it has  managed to stay unique among its many competitors in the space."
Ryan Duguid, chief evangelist at Nintex, a process  automation and management platform provider and Microsoft partner, also feels  Microsoft's competitive position with Azure is strong after seeing the  quarterly results.
"Azure was always going to be at the heart of Microsoft's  transformation and while it got off to a rocky start by focusing on platform versus  infrastructure services, it is now clear that it was a winning strategy, and  that they're doing a great job of making up lost time against Amazon when it  comes to hosting VMs," Duguid said in an e-mail. "Nintex bet heavily on  Azure from the onset, and the platform continues to enable us to drive a rapid  pace of innovation while the experts at Microsoft focus on delivering scalable,  reliable, cost-effective infrastructure."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 25, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    When Microsoft elevated Satya Nadella to CEO in 2014, the  company simultaneously announced that co-founder and chairman Bill Gates would  be stepping down to a regular seat on the board but taking on a bigger tech  advisory role for Nadella.
"I'm thrilled that Satya has asked me to step up,  substantially increasing the time that I spend at the company," Gates said  in a welcome video accompanying Nadella's promotion to CEO in February 2014. "I'll  have over a third of my time available to meet with product groups, and it will  be fun to define this next round of products, working together." 
At the time, partners told RCP in a quick, informal poll  that they really liked that idea. As we noted in our March 2014 cover story, "CEO 3.0":
  A majority felt Bill Gates' decision to spend more time at  Microsoft helping Nadella would be a positive, and half described themselves as  "reinvigorated about Microsoft" as a result of the C-level and  boardroom changes, which also included Gates being replaced by former Symantec  Corp. CEO John Thompson as chairman.
Although you don't hear about the tech advisory role very  often anymore, partners who approved of Gates getting more technically involved  in Redmond should be happy to hear that he's still at it.
Most of the headlines Gates makes these days relate to his philanthropic  work with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation or to his default role as a  public intellectual. He's frequently quoted on topics ranging from technology  trends to global health to economics to environmental issues to his current  reading list. Only rarely is Gates deployed by Microsoft as an intentional  public spokesman. Usually any Microsoft-related comments he makes come up in  the context of interviews about the Foundation.
Nonetheless, in a pre-recorded Wired video segment about key  moments in Gates' life and career that was posted last week, Gates  confirmed that he's still putting in time with engineers and technical  strategists in Redmond.
"Even to this day I do some architecture things on the  various products," Gates said during the segment.
Microsoft hasn't been secretive about Gates' continuing  technical involvement. In an early 2017 interview,  Gates revealed that his attention within Microsoft was focused on natural  language, virtual assistants and various ways to be more contextual about user  information. Rather, it's been more 
  of an issue of emphasis.
When Nadella took over as CEO, Microsoft made a point to communicate  that Gates would be getting more involved on a week-to-week basis with the  company than he had been during the latter part of Steve Ballmer's tenure as  CEO.
At the time, Gates' technical advisor role was widely viewed  as a critical step to reassure investors that Nadella, who was less well-known  on Wall Street than he was in Silicon Valley, would be able to handle the CEO job.
Most of those concerns have evaporated as Microsoft stayed  near the forefront of a historic run in tech stocks over the last few years.  Microsoft's stock value has roughly tripled on Nadella's watch. "He's done  a good job of repositioning the company in investors' minds," Ballmer said  of Nadella during an interview with Bloomberg in July.
Microsoft's unstated reason for involving Gates -- to calm  investors -- is no longer as important. On the other hand, the surface-level  reason -- leveraging one of the sharpest minds in the business of technology --  is as strong as ever.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 22, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Paul Allen went on to do many significant things in his  life, but the achievement that provided the springboard for so many of the rest  of his activities was the fortune he amassed as the co-founder of Microsoft.
Primarily, Microsoft is associated with the other co-founder,  Bill Gates, whose personality, drive and talents formed the company's identity,  and who remains involved in the company's direction on a part-time basis. 
On the other hand, Allen, who died of complications of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma at age 65 this week, has been out of day-to-day activity at Microsoft  since 1983, and off the board since 1986. His time at the company ended before  Windows became a dominant product, before the Internet emerged as an  opportunity for the tech industry and a threat to Microsoft's central position  in PC computing, before the public ugliness of the antitrust case, before  Microsoft's rise as a major enterprise software player and before the company  emerged as one of the handful of cloud megavendors.
That said, the 43-year-old company still bears a few  important markers left by Allen himself.
 Paul Allen (source: Microsoft)
  Paul Allen (source: Microsoft) 
One is the name. Calling the company "Micro-Soft"  was Allen's idea. The hyphen was later dropped, but four decades later, the  company still goes by a name reminiscent of a different era in tech. In 1975, "microcomputers"  and "micro" were sexy terms in computing. Software remains an element  of the name, as well, even in an age in which Microsoft has become more about  the cloud and hardware has also become a significant piece of the business.
A bigger legacy of Allen's is his role as a catalyst for  getting the slightly younger Gates focused full-time on the computer business.  They spent countless hours together at the private Lakeside School Ā in Seattle working on a teletype terminal connected  over a phone line to a time-share computer. In the small scrum of like-minded Lakeside  students spurring on each other's enthusiasms for the technical possibilities  of the systems, Gates and Allen were especially close. 
Living in Boston a few  years later, Allen grabbed his friend Gates from his college dorm at Harvard to  show him the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics with its Altair 8800 on  the cover. "This is happening without us!" Gates recalls Allen  declaring in a successful effort to rally Gates to prioritize seizing the  moment over getting a college degree.
"Microsoft would never have happened without Paul,"  Gates said in a statement earlier this week. Counterfactuals are difficult to  prove. It's hard to imagine that given his interests, Gates would not have seen  the magazine himself or seized the moment in some other way. But without the  timing enabled by the personal history and chemistry between those two  individuals, who knows?
Another Allen imprint on Microsoft's culture is his role in  one of the most famous coding death marches in technology. After spotting that  article about the Altair, Gates and Allen called the maker of the device and  told him they were essentially finished with a version of Basic for it. They  hadn't started. 
They spent the next few weeks working around the clock. Allen,  who was to do the demo, realized on the plane to Albuquerque that they hadn't  written a loader, a requirement for their demo, and whipped one up on theĀ  plane. At the time, they were calling their  company "Traf-o-Data," but the core of Microsoft was there. As Stephen Manes and  Paul Andrew wrote in their biography of Gates, "The development tools  Allen put together in this era would serve as the core of Microsoft's language  efforts for years."
Finally, what Allen realized was "happening without"  them was the democratization of computing that drove Microsoft's growth  strategy -- enabling a PC on every desktop -- for most of its corporate  history.
Outside of Microsoft, Allen lived the dreams enabled by an  early fortune for a technology titan. He invested in successful commercial  space flight ventures, bought professional sports franchises, commissioned  massive yachts, founded newsworthy companies and backed scientific research  projects. Ultimately, he may be more widely remembered for his role in sports or  those other activities, but whatever Microsoft wouldĀ have been called without Paul Allen, it  certainly would have been a different company.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 18, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    It's time to start talking about the Microsoft Surface in  discussions about top-selling PCs.
Gartner this week published its preliminary quarterly  results for PC unit shipments in the third quarter of 2018. On the U.S. list,  Microsoft ranked fifth for the quarter, with a 4.1 percent share of the market. 
It's a long way from No. 5 to No. 4. According  to Gartner, Microsoft shipped 602,000 units in the quarter. Apple, by contrast,  moved more than 2 million units in the quarter for fourth place and a 13.7 percent   share. The top vendor for the quarter, HP Inc., sold more than 4.5 million  units and held a 30.7 percent  share in the U.S. market.
In terms of movement, Microsoft is heading in the right  direction, with 1.9 percent  year-over-year growth for the quarter, a period when Apple  dropped by 7.6 percent.
Lenovo, powered by its joint venture with Fujitsu, vaulted  22 percent  in the United States, and a 10.7 percent  gain worldwide put the computer maker in  first place on Gartner's global list for the quarter. Dell rounds out the U.S.  top five in second place.
While Microsoft may be a somewhat distant fifth, the results  suggest that individual Surface models would rank among the most popular Windows  devices. Microsoft has only a few types of Surface -- mainly the Surface Pro,  Surface Book, Surface Laptop and Surface Go -- compared to dozens of lines from  its established PC OEM partner/competitors.
The backdrop is a relatively flat U.S. PC market, where  overall shipments dropped 0.4 percent, with business PC demand nearly offsetting  declines in mobile PC shipments. Because Gartner defines Google Chromebooks as  outside the PC market, its figures don't include the double-digit growth of  those devices in the United States.
The Surface is gaining ground at a good time for Windows PCs  in the commercial sector. Gartner expects business demand for Windows PCs to  remain strong. Referring to the global market, analyst Mikako Kitagawa said in  a statement, "The PC market continued to be driven by steady corporate PC  demand, which was driven by Windows 10 PC hardware upgrades. We expect the  Windows 10 upgrade cycle to continue through 2020 at which point the upgrade  demand will diminish."
Extended support for Windows 7 formally ends on Jan. 14,  2020. That operating system retained a narrow lead over Windows 10 for the most  popular operating system in September, according to Net Applications. That  measure and recent Microsoft statements suggesting enterprises were about  halfway through their Windows 10 migrations both indicate that there is a lot  of remaining potential for Windows 10-based hardware upgrades.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 12, 20180 comments