Acronis will  unify its products into a single line on March 31 and roll out significant  changes to its partner program throughout 2021, the company told partners  Tuesday.
Founder Serguei Beloussov described the design goal of the  licensing changes as "one policy, one user interface, one license from one  vendor." Acronis is aiming to roll up security, e-mail security, file sync  and share, management, notarization, backup and disaster recovery under the  Acronis Cyber Protect license. 
During a virtual 2021 Acronis #CyberFit Partner Kickoff  event Tuesday, Beloussov made several commitments for the year ahead, including  roadmap transparency and increased investment in support, partner management  and joint events/marketing funding.
He also promised to extend the Acronis Cyber Cloud platform  beyond its original MSP focus. "Sometime in 2021, we will make sure that  all of our partners can use it," he said.
Under the new licensing plan, all baseline capabilities will  be provided under the Acronis Cyber Protect Cloud license. Some elements of the  license, such as backup, file sync and share, disaster recovery and notary will  be delivered in a pay-as-you-go format under the license. Other components of  the baseline product are free cyber protection packs -- security, management,  data loss prevention and e-mail security, which will launch in the second half  of the year. Additional functionality will be delivered through upgrade add-ons  known as Advanced Protection Packs. All of the Advanced Packs can be licensed  on a per-GB or per-workload licensing model.
"You basically will be able to use Advanced Packs as  Lego blocks...for every particular customer," said Yury Averkiev, vice  president of product management for apps and services at Acronis.
The initial set of five Advanced Protection Packs that will  be available on March 31 will include Advanced Security, Advanced Management,  Advanced Backup, Advanced Disaster Recovery and Advanced Files. Packs on the  roadmap for later in the year, Averkiev said, include Advanced Email Security,  Advanced Data Loss Prevention and Advanced Security.
As examples of the types of features included in the base  license versus the Advanced Packs:
  -  Security features in the base license include a #CyberFit  Score, weak password check, vulnerability assessment, active protection,  exploit prevention, anti-virus and anti-malware protection, and device control.  The Advanced Security Pack includes local signature-based detection to the AV  and anti-malware protection, URL filtering, forensic backup, backup scanning  for malware-safe recovery, a corporate allowlist and smart protection plans.
- Baseline backup features are file backup, image backup,  application backup, network shares backup, backup to cloud storage and backup  to local storage. The Advanced Backup Pack adds support for Microsoft SQL  Server and Microsoft Exchange clusters, Oracle DB, SAP HANA, Acronis' data  protection map feature and continuous data protection.
Channel Chief Alex Ruslyakov walked partners through the  specific changes to the partner program and demonstrated a new partner portal,  which he said the company is planning to launch next month.
One major introduction is an Acronis #CyberFit Score that  helps determine a partner's level in the Acronis platform. The score operates  on a scale of 0 to 33 with up to three points available in each of 11 categories.  Registered partners need no points, Authorized Partners need eight points, Gold  Partners need 15 points and Platinum partners need 22 points. Meanwhile, a recurring  revenue bar for service providers has been newly eliminated at the Gold level,  although all Platinum partners must still clear a revenue hurdle.
Other immediate changes to the program for resellers and  service providers include an updated referral program, new quarterly  performance rebates, increased market development funds, marketing account  managers for Platinum partners and enhanced technical support. 
Changes planned for later in the year include marketing  automation tools, training program enhancements, an on-demand demo lab, leads-sharing for service providers, a partner community forum and the ability to  vote to influence the product roadmap.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 02, 20210 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Microsoft experienced a lengthy technical glitch during CEO  Satya Nadella's comments to financial analysts in the quarterly investor call  on Tuesday.
A seven-minute, 40-second stretch of dead air started for at  least some users watching the session on Microsoft Teams a little over three  minutes into the call. Partway into the outage, Microsoft posted a message from  its production studios reading, "We are experiencing technical  difficulties. Please standby." 
   [Click on image for larger view.] A message posted during a nearly eight-minute audio outage during the Microsoft second quarter earnings call.
 
   [Click on image for larger view.] A message posted during a nearly eight-minute audio outage during the Microsoft second quarter earnings call.
Ironically, as audio came back on around the 11:17 mark,  Nadella was highlighting the Teams platform: "...Team's calling globally to  42,000 employees in just four weeks." According to a transcript that Microsoft rushed out faster than usual due to the downtime, Nadella had  been talking about  Lumen, formerly CenturyLink, undertaking a global rollout of  Teams.
The outage came during more widespread Internet problems. Outages  across the East Coast on Tuesday morning affected Verizon, Google, Zoom,  YouTube, Slack and Amazon Web Services, according  to media reports. It was not immediately clear what caused the problem for  Microsoft Tuesday evening.
The glitch marred an otherwise very positive quarterly call  on an earnings report that saw Microsoft's stock price get a lift in after-hours  trading.
Microsoft reported revenues of $43.1 billion and earnings  per share of $2.03, for the three-month period ending Dec. 31, 2020. Compared  to the year-ago period, that represented a 17% increase in revenues, and both  revenues and earnings beat analyst expectations.
"It was a record quarter, driven by our commercial  cloud, which surpassed $16 billion in revenue, up 34 percent year over year,"  Nadella said. "What we are witnessing is the dawn of a second wave of  digital transformation sweeping every company and every industry."
Highlights among business-oriented products included a 50%  quarter-over-quarter increase in Azure revenues, a 21% increase in Office 365  commercial revenues, 39% growth in Dynamics 365 revenue and a 1% gain in  Windows OEM revenues -- a figure that doesn't sound impressive except the  comparison was against the frenzy a year ago to replace Windows 7 before the  support deadline.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 26, 20210 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Microsoft this week announced Tyler Bryson as the  replacement for the departing David Willis to run the company's U.S. channel  operations.
Bryson is officially corporate vice president of the U.S.  One Commercial Partner organization. 
"As I step into this new role, I look forward to  deepening the relationships in our ecosystem and helping us all grow together,"  Bryson said in an introductory blog post.
In a nearly 20-year career with Microsoft, Bryson has led  sales, marketing and services teams in the United States, India and Latin  America. His most recent role was as vice president of the Microsoft U.S.  Small, Medium & Corporate Segments. Bryson said he worked closely with  Willis in that role on initiatives related to digital transformation.
According to Bryson's LinkedIn profile, he graduated from  Brigham Young University in 1992 with a degree in accounting and went to the  Wharton School for an MBA in finance in the late 2000s. He also spent six  years at QuickStart Technologies in sales and marketing roles.
To U.S. partners, Microsoft's U.S. channel chief is arguably  the second-most visible role at Microsoft after the worldwide channel chief job  held by Gavriella Schuster. Due to Microsoft's organizational structure, Schuster  and Bryson report into different departments and have more of a dotted-line  relationship than at many other companies where country-level channel chiefs  report to the global channel leader.
Bryson updated his LinkedIn profile with a description of  his role and responsibilities: 
  My team is responsible for Microsoft's US  Partner business including strategy, management, and overall partner ecosystem  health. The team works with US partners to develop strong practices aligned to  Microsoft's workload and industry priorities and delivers these solutions to  customers to help them maximize business benefits from their investment in  Microsoft technology. My organization is comprised of Partner Management,  Channel Sales, Go-To-Market (GTM), and partner-facing Technical Specialists and  Architects.
Willis, a fixture of the partner community for much of his  28 years at Microsoft, announced in early December that he would be leaving Microsoft after assisting with the  transition to his replacement. While he didn't specifically say he was  retiring, Willis said he was looking forward to family time, leisure activity,  travel and volunteering.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 21, 20210 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
The PC market was on fire in the fourth quarter.
In its quarterly tracking of worldwide PC shipments, IDC  reported preliminary numbers of 26.1 percent year-over-year growth to 91.6 million  units. 
And the fire could have been hotter.
"Every segment of the supply chain was stretched to its  limits as production once again lagged behind demand during the quarter," said IDC  analyst Jitesh Ubrani  in a statement Monday. "Not only were PC makers and ODMs dealing with component and  production capacity shortages, but logistics remained an issue as vendors were  forced to resort to air freight, upping costs at the expense of reducing  delivery times."
Citing pandemic-related demand factors such as work-from-home, remote learning, gaming and monitors, IDC predicted the boom in PC sales  has a ways to go.
For the full year, market growth was 13.1 percent. The research  house said the last time PC growth was that strong was 2010, when the market  grew by 13.7 percent.
Lenovo led all vendors in worldwide PC shipments for Q4,  followed by HP Inc., Dell Technologies, Apple and Acer Group.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 11, 20210 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
In the holding pattern that is early 2021, Microsoft's  priority guidance to partners for the new year is for more of the same.
Microsoft channel chief Gavriella Schuster detailed her view  of partner priorities and opportunities this week in a blog  post that largely echoed earlier guidance from Microsoft Inspire, the  annual July partner conference that helps kick off Microsoft's fiscal year. 
As the ongoing coronavirus pandemic leads to renewed  lockdown calls around the world, sets new daily death records in the United  States and brings an uncertain vaccine rollout schedule, organizations and the  partners who serve them find themselves in a similar technology circumstance to  most of 2020. To wit, an uncertain business environment, ambiguity about when  or if all employees can go back to the office, and limitations on IT spending  driven by all that uncertainty.
Schuster, nonetheless, strikes a hopeful note about the  challenges. "While some of these factors will unavoidably carry over to  2021, I am confident things are headed in the right direction, and I see a  bright future on the horizon for our partner ecosystem," Schuster wrote.
In her post as head of the Microsoft One Commercial Partner  organization, Schuster identified four key priority areas that Microsoft hopes  its partners will focus on and succeed in during the coming year.
Remote work, unsurprisingly, leads the list. "While the  initial exodus to remote work occurred early last year, organizations of all  sizes are still evolving in response," Schuster wrote. Her post called for  additional adoption of Microsoft Teams and other Microsoft 365 components.
Schuster also pointed to new opportunities in business  continuity, noting the infrastructural changes organizations have had to make  in the last year that haven't all been followed by revised and reinforced  backup and recovery plans.
Like almost every year, security earns a place on the  opportunity list. "The mass shift to remote work has made this even more  critical for every organization worldwide," she said.
Finally, cloud migrations are another key opportunity area,  Schuster said. She highlighted the way Microsoft has been simplifying the  migration process for customers to turn to cloud adoption.
The post gives lip service to the term "digital  transformation," the major theme of the last few years from Microsoft to  its partners. However, what's called "digital transformation" now is dialed  back substantially from the heady definitions of 2019 and earlier, when it  referred to unlocking massive business potential by reinventing processes  through innovative new applications and application modernization. The term now seems to refer more to the survival-oriented  operations of supporting remote workers, reducing datacenter expenses and  rejiggering business continuity/disaster recovery coverage. 
That said, many of  these more limited projects can be a stepping stone toward more ambitious  projects in the future. When the pandemic recedes, organizations with more  robust cloud infrastructures may be more ready to invest in and execute truly  transformative projects than they had been before the crisis.
With luck, it's "digital transformation lite" in  2021, involving the types of priorities Microsoft is recommending, followed by "digital  transformation heavy" in 2022.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 07, 20210 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Microsoft U.S. Channel Chief David Willis announced Friday  that he would be leaving Microsoft in January after 28 years at the company.
He didn't use the word "retire" in a blog  post on the official U.S. Partner Blog, and some of his phrasing left open  the possibility that he might emerge as an executive somewhere in the future.  However, Willis suggested that his focus in the near future would be on family  time, leisure activity, travel and volunteering. 
"Personally, I've always lived life with a 'work hard,  play hard' mentality, and I'll be shifting my balance from less work to more  play, as I spend much more of my time on passions that include snowboarding,  playing hockey, my guitars, spending more quality time with family &  friends, and eventually some fun travel experiences once COVID-19 eases up. I'm  also looking forward to participating in more volunteer opportunities and  giving back to the community. I thank Microsoft for making it possible for me  to be in this position," Willis wrote.
Willis said that it wasn't an easy decision to leave  Microsoft, and that he was proud to have spent most of his career there.
Willis joined Microsoft in Canada in 1992 and held a number  of marketing and sales roles in his first decade with the company, according to  his LinkedIn profile.
He's been a fixture of the partner community since becoming  the vice president for Small and Midmarket Solutions & Partners (SMS&P)  in Canada in 2003. Later he held the positions of VP of U.S. East Region for  SMS&P and VP of U.S. Dynamics.
In 2013, Willis became Microsoft's U.S. Channel Chief, when  the full title of the role was corporate vice president of U.S. SMS&P. In the  major reorganization of 2017, when the partner organization became One  Commercial Partner (OCP), Willis essentially maintained the same function as  CVP of U.S. OCP.
A successor has not been named. Willis plans to stay through  January to assist with the transition.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 04, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Sirius Computer Solutions snapped up Boca Raton, Fla.-based solution  provider Champion Solutions Group and Champion's cloud practice, MessageOps, which  was one of the pioneering toolsets for Office 365.
With the acquisition, Sirius expands its national IT  solutions integration business into the southeastern United States and  strengthens its Microsoft cloud capabilities in both Microsoft/Office 365 and  Microsoft Azure. 
Sirius is a privately held company with 2,600 employees based  in San Antonio, Texas. Terms were not disclosed for the deal, which closed on  Monday and was announced Tuesday.
Joe Mertens, president and CEO of Sirius, described the  MessageOps unit with its intellectual property around the Microsoft cloud as a  competitive advantage for Sirius, which also has cloud partnerships with Amazon Web Services (AWS),  Google Cloud, IBM and VMware.
"Joining forces with Champion provides an opportunity  for Sirius to gain valuable intellectual property assets and expertise related  to Microsoft Azure cloud services and Microsoft 365 productivity and  collaboration tools, which will add value for our clients," Mertens said  in a statement.
MessageOps solutions handle functions within Microsoft 365  environments such as monitoring, managing, reporting, synchronizing passwords  and migrating data across environments. Originally a private company that was later  acquired by Champion, MessageOps was among the first ISVs automating migrations  and other tasks related to the Office 365 predecessor, Microsoft Business  Productivity Online Suite (BPOS).
Mertens added that Sirius plans to offer expanded services and  solutions to Champion's client base in Florida and the southeastern United  States. Champion has also been part of Microsoft's National Systems Integrator  (NSI) program and was a Tier-1 Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) for Microsoft.
Sirius planned to immediately integrate Champion's employees  into the Sirius organization, which includes a Cloud Center of Excellence  (CCoE) model that brings together cloud solutions practices with consulting and  services that include migration, data analytics, security and compliance.
Champion President and CEO Chris Pyle called Sirius a great  fit for Champion's employees and clients, and added that he was excited about  new investments in MessageOps and Inscape.
"We will also have the ability to invest more resources  into the ongoing development of our IP, enabling us to deliver leading-edge  cloud monitoring, management and security tools," Pyle said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on December 02, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Microsoft released its first  quarter earnings on Tuesday afternoon, reporting revenues of  $37.2 billion and earnings of $1.82 per share. The company beat analyst expectations on the back of strong cloud growth.
However, the centerpiece of the Satya Nadella-led earnings call on Tuesday evening was the Microsoft Teams collaboration platform, which keeps surging to new highs due to COVID-19-related  remote work.
Microsoft Teams now has 115 million daily active users (DAU),  Nadella  told analysts during the call. That's a  475 percent increase over the 20 million DAU that Microsoft reported for Teams in  November 2019, before a huge portion of the global workforce started logging in  from home offices rather than their companies' office space. It's also a 53 percent jump over the last number Microsoft released -- 75  million DAU in April.
Unlike some metrics that Microsoft reports consistently, the  Teams DAU figure is revealed sporadically and only when the company has a  milestone that fits a positive growth story. For example, Microsoft reported  DAU in March of 44 million, and then a month later released the 75 million DAU  figure for April to show the 70 percent growth of users in about a month of  global work-from-home decisions. Since then, growth has slowed and the company went  quiet for six months.
"We are seeing increased usage intensity as people  communicate, collaborate and co-author content across work, life and learning,"  Nadella said before tossing out a few more momentum metrics:
  -  Referencing Teams as a part of the larger Microsoft 365  suite, Microsoft reported that Microsoft 365 users generated more than 30  billion collaboration minutes in a single day in the quarter.
-  Nearly 270,000 educational institutions are using Teams.
-  A large deal with PepsiCo will include a rollout of  Microsoft 365 and Teams to 270,000 employees worldwide.
During a question portion of the call with analysts, Nadella  answered an inquiry about the Teams opportunity by describing how he views  Teams. "Teams is very exciting to us because, unlike anything else that we  have done at the application layer, it's literally like a shell. It has a  platform effect because meetings, chat, collaboration, as well as business  process applications, integrate into Teams so that scaffolding richness makes  it a very robust platform," Nadella said.
  
  Nadella also highlighted for analysts the pace at which Microsoft is adding new features to Teams. He claimed more than 100 new capabilities in the last six months, and  specifically called out breakout rooms, meeting recaps, shift scheduling and  events with up to 20,000 participants. 
During a separate question about  artificial intelligence, he called out how heavily Teams is drawing upon  Microsoft's AI research and development. "Every Teams session is full of  AI because of the transcription services, the speech recognition services and  so on that it incorporates," Nadella said.
Other positives in the quarter for Microsoft were Azure growth of 48 percent and 20 percent growth of the larger Intelligence Cloud segment generally, which includes  Azure. Negatives included a 5 percent drop in licensing revenues from Windows OEMs and  a 10 percent drop in search advertising business compared to the year-ago quarter.  Contributing to the Windows decline is a comparable against a quarter that  benefited from the end of support for Windows 7, but it also comes in a quarter  that Canalys, Gartner and IDC all reported as a boom  time for PCs.
Microsoft stock rose by about 1 percent in after-hours trading on the earnings news but  moved 2 percent lower after Microsoft shared second-quarter guidance that was more  conservative than analysts expected.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 28, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
The PC market boomed in the third quarter, with  pandemic-related buying producing growth rates at levels not seen for a decade.
Market researchers from IDC, Gartner and Canalys all released their growth estimates this week. The three firms told similar  stories -- heavy purchasing on the consumer side, robust activity around  Chromebooks and education, and very strong growth in the United States. 
For the third quarter, the growth reports were 12.7 percent from  Canalys, 14.6 percent from IDC and 9 percent from Gartner. (Gartner's headline number was  lower, 3.6 percent, but that figure didn't include Chromebooks.)
   [Click on image for larger view.] Source: Canalys
 
   [Click on image for larger view.] Source: Canalys 
In fact, the numbers could have been better if it weren't  for component shortages, according to Jitesh Ubrani, research manager for IDC's  Mobile Device Trackers.
"Consumer demand and institutional demand approached  record levels in some cases. Gaming, Chromebooks, and in some cases  cellular-enabled notebooks were all bright spots during the quarter. Had the  market not been hampered by component shortages, notebook shipments would have  soared even higher during the third quarter as market appetite was yet  unsatiated," Ubrani said in a statement.
Gartner research director Mikako Kitagawa suggests that it's  time to start thinking about the consumer PC market differently, and in a way  that could point to strong future growth: "The market is no longer being  measured in the number of PCs per household; rather, the dynamics have shifted  to account for one PC per person."
The business PC market was a different, not as strong, story  in the third quarter, illustrated by Dell's performance. Among major PC  vendors, Dell was the only one to decline, seeing shipments fall by a little  less than 1 percent for the quarter, according to IDC's numbers. By comparison, Lenovo  and HP were both up about 11 percent, Apple was up 39 percent and Acer was up 29 percent.
   [Click on image for larger view.] Source: IDC
 
   [Click on image for larger view.] Source: IDC 
Gartner's news release on the numbers noted that Dell broke  a streak of 17 consecutive quarters of year-over-year growth. "Dell's  decline is one indicator of cautious spending by business buyers as a reaction  to the current weak economies in most developed nations," the market  research firm said in its statement.
Canalys Research Director Rushabh Doshi picked up on a  nuance of the remote work reality that complicates the separation of the  business and consumer PC markets.
"As the line between work and home lives is  increasingly blurred, it becomes important to position devices towards a wide  array of use cases, with a focus on mobility, connectivity, battery life, and  display and audio quality," Doshi said in a statement. "Differentiation  in product portfolios to capture key segments such as education and mainstream  gaming will also provide pockets of growth. And beyond the PC itself, there  will be an increased need for collaboration accessories, new services,  subscription packages and a strong focus on endpoint security. These trends  will most benefit vendors who provide holistic solutions that enable their  customers to make structural changes to their operations."
In the near term, Doshi said the consumer-driven holiday  season should make for a strong Q4 for PCs. But the Canalys analyst was bullish  for the longer term, as well.
  
"The lasting effects of this pandemic on the way people  work, learn and collaborate will create significant opportunities for PC  vendors in the coming years," Doshi said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 14, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Microsoft declared about two dozen products ready for  general availability (GA) -- and thus production deployment -- this week during the  Microsoft Ignite conference. The products ranged from elements of the  high-profile Project Cortex to Azure SQL for edge deployments to major and  minor components of Microsoft's three clouds.
A virtual event this year, Ignite kicked off on Tuesday  morning with a keynote from CEO Satya Nadella and was scheduled to run through  Thursday. Microsoft typically treats Ignite as a major launchpad for IT pro-  and IT management-focused products and services across its enterprise portfolio  with some developer, education and government tools and products thrown into  the mix. 
Delivering 'Content  Management Superpowers' with SharePoint Syntex
One of the highest-profile announcements involved Project  Cortex, a set of new services in Microsoft 365 involving the use of artificial  intelligence. While Microsoft had said at Build in May that Project Cortex  would be generally available in early summer, the project has been expanded  with a first element now promised for purchase for Microsoft 365 commercial  customers on Oct. 1. That Project Cortex-based product is called SharePoint  Syntex.
What SharePoint Syntex is supposed to do is use AI to "automate  the capture, ingestion and categorization of content to accelerate processes,  improve compliance, and facilitate knowledge discovery and reuse,"  according to Microsoft documentation. Colorfully, the documentation describes  SharePoint Syntex as giving SharePoint "content management superpowers."
Bringing SQL to IoT
Microsoft is pushing the SQL data engine to the edge with  general availability of Azure SQL Edge. Designed for Internet of Things (IoT)  gateways and edge devices, Azure SQL Edge is built on the same code base as  Microsoft SQL Server and runs in a container of less than 500MB.
A Cloud for Health Care
Certain industries have specific regulatory requirements or  privacy concerns that make the general-purpose public cloud a harder sell. With  an eye to serving the specific needs of vertical industries, Microsoft plans to  roll out several industry-specific clouds, and the company is starting with  health care.
The Microsoft Cloud for Healthcare has been in public  preview since May, but Microsoft now is promising a firm date for general  availability within the month -- Oct. 20. At a high level, the cloud is architected  to comply with regulatory frameworks like GDPR, HIPAA and HITRUST and includes  capabilities from Microsoft Azure, Microsoft 365, Microsoft Dynamics 365 and  the Microsoft Power Platform, as well as partner solutions.
Upgrading the  Compliance Manager
Recognizing the complexity and volume of compliance  considerations that IT organizations of all kinds must deal with, Microsoft is  making generally available immediately a new Compliance Manager for Microsoft  365 customers.
The new Compliance Manager is a superset of its existing Compliance Manager and the Compliance Score. Microsoft's design goal for  Compliance Manager is to turn complex regulatory requirements into specific  controls and help organizations measure their progress through scores.
Putting Windows and  Linux Servers Under Azure Arc
Customers managing Azure services use Azure Resource  Manager. For those who like the model and want to use similar tools and  capabilities to manage more of their infrastructure, there's Azure Arc, which  extends the model to other clouds, Kubernetes clusters and on-premises servers.
As of Ignite, Microsoft made Azure Arc-enabled servers  generally available for Windows and Linux servers. From a single control plane,  customers can now manage their servers with Azure Policy and use Azure Security  Center, Azure Monitor or Update Management on them.
Dynamics 365 Project  Operations Goes Live
Microsoft spun off a new solution out of Dynamics 365, this  time for services businesses. Now generally available is Dynamics 365 Project  Operations. The solution is designed to integrate sales, project management and  accounting teams and cover parts of the process from quotes to invoices to  business intelligence.
Microsoft Teams Activity
All the remote work going on in the world has Microsoft  Teams as a critical product for Microsoft in the near-term and potentially in  the long-term, as well. Microsoft has a few big initiatives going on here. One  of them is a new category of all-in-one dedicated Teams devices. In Microsoft  videos, the devices are small desktop devices with screens that work as a  complement to a PC and allow a user to do things like launch a meeting and see  other participants on the device while controlling a screen share for the  meeting from the PC.
 
 
While not quite ready as of Ignite, Microsoft now says to  expect general availability for the devices in the "coming weeks."  Initial hardware partners include Lenovo and Yealink. For the record, Microsoft  is also working with AudioCodes, Poly and Yealink on less expensive   Teams phones for common areas and has some Teams-related USB peripherals in the  works.
Also for Teams, Microsoft announced that live captions with  speaker attribution is now generally available. Also, the Teams displays will  include Cortana voice assistance. The functionality is generally available but  depends on delivery of the devices. Meanwhile, Cortana's Amazon peer Alexa also  had GA news at Ignite: The Alexa channel is now generally available within the  Azure Bot Service.
What's Your Productivity  Score?
The novel coronavirus pandemic has also initiated a push by  organizations to figure out how to track and improve worker productivity from  remote locations. Microsoft is taking a crack at it with the Microsoft  Productivity Score, which is partly about those questions and partly about  monitoring how much employees and organizations are taking advantage of  capabilities in Microsoft 365. While, again, not generally available  immediately, Microsoft committed at Ignite to an end-of-October GA for  Productivity Score. The score is broken into Employee Experience and Technology  Experience.
Other GA Services and  Products
Highlights of the other generally available services and  products in Microsoft's Ignite announcements included:
  - Additional features for Azure Cognitive Search called  Private Endpoints and Managed Identities.
-  An Anomaly Detector in Azure Cognitive Services, Metric  Advisor.
-  A new Designer capability for Azure Machine Learning  featuring drag-and-drop modules for things such as data prep, model training  and evaluation.
-  New Azure Migrate features for datacenter-to-cloud  migrations.
-  A next generation version of Azure VMware Solution (AVS)  in US East, US West, West Europe and Australia.
-  Two new Azure Stack Edge appliances, including one  designed to be carried in a backpack.
-  Azure Virtual Machines featuring Intel Cascade Lake  processors.
-  Azure Disk Storage updates, including Azure Private Link  integration and support for 512E on Azure Ultra Disks.
-  ServiceNow integration with Azure AD.
-  Microsoft Edge DevTools extension for Visual Studio Code.
-  An Azure Policy add-on for Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS).
Posted by Scott Bekker on September 22, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Microsoft on Tuesday launched an advanced specialization for  Windows Virtual Desktop (WVD), giving partners access to a new badge that highlights  expertise in the newly essential area of supporting remote workers.
Advanced specializations layer on top of competencies within  the Microsoft Partner Network (MPN) as a way for partners to demonstrate  Microsoft-sanctioned certification of their specialized skills. 
Competencies are a baseline element of the MPN and Microsoft  partners have used them for decades as a way to show expertise. There are  currently about 19 competencies in the MPN.
Advanced specializations are newer and can only be attained  after a partner already has a prerequisite competency. Microsoft currently  lists 11 of the specializations, including Microsoft Windows Virtual Desktop.
To attain the new Microsoft  Windows Virtual Desktop advanced specialization, a partner must first have  a gold competency in Cloud Platform. The partner must also clear a revenue bar,  document that five individuals have earned specific certifications and pass a  third-party audit, which costs $2,000.
"Our newest advanced specialization will showcase your  experience with implementing Windows Virtual Desktop, including deploying,  optimizing, and securing virtual desktop infrastructure on Azure. This will  ensure you’re prepared to meet the needs of your customers as they continue to  evolve their remote work approach," said Dan Truax, general manager of Partner  Digital Experiences and Programs in Microsoft One Commercial Partner,  in a  blog post announcing the advanced specialization.
Earlier this year, Microsoft released some Microsoft Teams-related advanced specializations, also related to the  shift to remote work caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
WVD is Microsoft's virtual desktop infrastructure service for  remote access to Windows 7 or Windows 10 desktops and applications. The virtual  desktops are hosted in Microsoft datacenters.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 15, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Quest Software this week added to its already full quiver of  Microsoft modernization tools with the acquisition of Binary Tree.
While Quest already had capabilities for migrating to Office  365 within its broad existing toolset, Binary Tree brings sophisticated tooling  for second-generation cloud migrations -- handling the complex requirements of  enterprise cloud-to-cloud migrations necessitated by M&A and other concerns  in a maturing market. 
Quest, based in Aliso Viejo, Calif., positioned the  acquisition as combining two companies with strengths in on-premises, hybrid  and cloud migrations.
"I see tremendous opportunity by uniting two market  leaders, each with strong capabilities that -- when brought together -- will offer  best-in-breed solutions for customers modernizing their Microsoft environment.  With the integration of our technologies and vast experience with their  Power365 Active Directory and Power365 Tenant-to-Tenant solutions we are able to  deliver more value faster to our customers and partners which is increasingly  important as the market and business continues to evolve," said Patrick  Nichols, who took over as CEO of Quest in April, in a statement about the  deal.
While Binary Tree has focused lately on Office 365-to-Office  365 migrations and Active Directory migration work, it's been around since 1993  and has long experience and continuing business in Lotus Domino/Notes and other  legacy migrations.
Quest, meanwhile, boasts dozens of products and its major  brands include KACE, Foglight, Metalogix and One Identity. The company's  products cover data protection, database management, identity and access  management,  Microsoft platform  management, performance monitoring and unified endpoint management.
In the statement announcing the deal, Quest committed to  continue selling and supporting Kendall Park, N.J.-based Binary Tree's products  "as the company works through the integration."
Partners of both companies can expect to see upsell opportunities  where the two organizations' products are complementary, with an initial  emphasis on Quest Change Auditor and Quest on Demand.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 03, 20200 comments