Longtime Microsoft channel executive Josh Waldo has joined  Nintex as vice president of channel strategy and channel programs.
 Nintex is a Bellevue, Wash.-based workflow automation  platform provider. "With his passion for partners and extensive management  and technology industry expertise, Josh is well-qualified to drive our channel  marketing strategy and programs and help our channel partners experience  success within the new cloud environment," Nintex CEO John Burton said in  a statement.
 Waldo was most recently senior director of cloud partner  strategy in the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group, where he was responsible for  developing programs to help partners sell Microsoft's public cloud services.
 According to Nintex's statement, Waldo's charter includes  drawing new partners into its current stable of more than 1,000 partners and  service providers worldwide.
 
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 12, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The drumbeat over the end of support for Windows Server 2003 is getting  louder and more insistent.
On Monday, US-CERT issued an alert titled "Microsoft Ending Support for Windows Server 2003 Operating System"  to warn subscribers about the risk that the deadline next summer represents for  organizations' security postures. 
US-CERT is part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and CERT  stands for Computer Emergency Readiness Team.
Much as it ended support for Windows XP on April 8, 2014, Microsoft  will stop supporting Windows Server 2003 on July 14, 2015. At that time,  Microsoft will no longer provide free security patches for newly discovered  vulnerabilities, assisted technical support for the product or software  updates.
"Using unsupported software may increase the risks of viruses and  other security threats," CERT warns in the alert. "Negative  consequences could include loss of confidentiality, integrity and or  availability of data, system resources and business assets."
US-CERT's recommendations include looking for software vendors and  service providers who offer assistance in migrating from Windows Server 2003 to  a supported operating system or a cloud-based service.
The advisory follows recent announcements by several major partners,  including Insight  Enterprises, that they are rolling out major Windows Server 2003 migration  initiatives.
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 10, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Six months after the end of support for Windows XP, the user base is  finally responding.
Operating system market share figures released over the weekend by Net Applications show the kind of dramatic month-over-month  drop in Windows XP's share that seemed like it should have come right around  the end of support on April 8, 2014. 
Windows XP fell from 23.87 percent of worldwide operating system usage  in September to 17.18 percent in October. That 6.7 percentage point drop is a  bigger decline in one month than the operating system's usage had fallen  previously in the entire year.  Windows XP was at 29.3 percent in January and had only fallen 5.43 percentage  points through September. That period covered the April support deadline, and  Microsoft had loudly and regularly been warning organizations, partners and  users that the OS would be completely unpatched against newly discovered  vulnerabilities and was therefore a serious security risk.
	
     [Click on image for larger view.]	
		Desktop OS market shares. (Source: Net Applications)
    
	
		[Click on image for larger view.]	
		Desktop OS market shares. (Source: Net Applications)
	
Windows 8 appears to be the prime beneficiary of users abandoning  Windows XP. While Windows 7 gained about a third of a percentage point of share  from September to October to top 53 percent share, and Mac OS platforms picked up about three-quarters of point to edge over 7 percent, the real gainer was the combination  of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1.
Windows 8/8.1 jumped 4.54 percentage points to reach 16.8 percentage  usage, good for second-most-used operating system version after Windows 7.
Net Applications puts together its rankings based on data collected  from the browsers of site visitors to a network of clients that includes more  than 40,000 websites worldwide.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on November 03, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft's elite hosting program quadrupled to 100 partners in the  year since its launch, with new partners fueling a 40 percent expansion in the number  of service provider datacenters and contributing to a 20 percent boost in customers.
Microsoft unveiled the new enrollment number for the Cloud OS Program  as part of its TechEd Europe 2014 event in Barcelona. 
The Cloud OS Network consists of service providers that offer hybrid  cloud solutions encompassing private clouds, service provider clouds and  Microsoft Azure. The network, rolled out in October 2013, is an effort to build  an elite community of partners around the Cloud OS that Microsoft rolled out in  September 2012.
Cloud OS Network partners are an elite group   among Microsoft's tens of thousands of hosting partners, rarer even than   the 2,500 partners in the Gold Hosting Competency.
"When   you look at the Cloud OS Network, you're looking really at the premier   service provider player. The datacenter is their business," said Marco   Limena, vice president of Hosting Service Providers at Microsoft.
While the 75 new service provider partners are a big addition in terms  of raw enrollment numbers, their contribution to the overall datacenter and  customer footprint is incremental compared with the two dozen large service  providers Microsoft launched with a year ago.
With the first 25 Cloud OS Network partners, Microsoft claimed 425  datacenters and more than 3 million customers. Now, with 100 partners, those  numbers slide up to 600 datacenters and 3.7 million customers.
Meanwhile, Microsoft's overall hosting business has been growing  strongly since Microsoft redefined its previously core Windows Server operating  system as only one component of a Cloud OS that also includes Azure and service  provider clouds.
"We've had 11 consecutive quarters of double-digit growth,"  Limena said. "The overall ecosystem has 26,000 hosting partners. We added  5,000 in the past 12 months."
That broader ecosystem is getting interesting, as well. "The  definition of a channel partner and a customer is really blurry," Limena  explained. "When I look at the 26,000 partners, we are looking at a very  diverse and agile ecosystem of players. Many of them are the traditional Web  hosters that have been with us for a long time or the Exchange hosters who have  been with us for a long time. But more and more in recent times, we are adding  players like solutions integrators, ISVs or enterprise companies that see  hosting not as their business but as more of a means to an end. For example,  some enterprises are using hosting to extend capabilities to the supply chain."
Limena promises more activity in the coming months in this strategic  area for Microsoft. We'll keep you posted on the news.
Update: In the original version of   this blog entry, I implied via an indirect quote that Marco Limena said   Cloud OS Network partners are a step above Gold Hosting Competency   partners. That assertion was mine not Marco's and incorrectly compared   two related, but not directly comparable, partner groups.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 29, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Fresh off a recent round of investment, channel-focused Office 365  migration project automation specialist SkyKick is expanding its management  team to accelerate North American growth and drive into new markets  internationally.
The Seattle-based startup and a 2013 Microsoft Partner of the Year  winner is adding three senior executives -- Steve Bonilla as COO, Peter Labes  as vice president of business development and Eric Jewett as vice president of  international operations. The executive additions, being announced Monday, follow a $3  million round of private equity and angel investor funding announced in late  July. 
"We have a strong bench around product development," said Todd  Schwartz, co-CEO of SkyKick, in an interview. "By adding some industry  veterans, this will help us in some areas that up until this point we haven't  invested in."
Bonilla most recently was COO at Spiraledge and also held senior  positions at Accenture and Digital Impact. "What we thought was very  important as we build this company for the long term is we wanted to hire a COO  with hardcore operational experience and experience in building companies from  small to big," Schwartz said.
SkyKick picked up Labes and Jewett from Microsoft, where SkyKick  co-founders Schwartz and co-CEO Evan Richman came from.
Labes was most recently senior cloud strategy lead for the Microsoft  U.S. SMB Channel Group. Richman said Labes' experience with building the Office  365 business through the U.S. channel and previous channel-based business  development experience with Sage Software make him a strong fit for SkyKick's  ongoing channel-centric ambitions.
"There's a lot of change happening in the channel as the cloud is  coming. [He's going to help] us work with those different partners and continue  to support the channel in the best way possible," Richman said.
   Eric Jewett, one of three new senior executives at SkyKick, is tasked with driving a new international expansion initiative for the Office 365 migration project automation specialist.
	
		Eric Jewett, one of three new senior executives at SkyKick, is tasked with driving a new international expansion initiative for the Office 365 migration project automation specialist. 
	
Jewett had several international roles at Microsoft, including  worldwide director for Microsoft Azure Enterprise Sales Strategy, senior  director of Microsoft Azure for Western Europe and worldwide director of  Windows Server and Virtualization Marketing.
SkyKick's international strategy is to build the business first in  other English speaking countries, like the United Kingdom, Australia and New  Zealand, and branch out from there, Schwartz and Richman said.
The executive expansion reflects overall employee growth at SkyKick.  When announcing the $3 million in new funding over the summer, SkyKick unveiled  plans to double the company's headcount from 40 people to 80 employees over the  next year.
Schwartz says SkyKick's buildout is only beginning. "Only 7  percent of SMBs have moved to the cloud over the last three years. We're still  very much in the early days. This is only year three of probably a  10-to-15-year journey."
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 20, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Wireless standard upgrades often meet with a  collective yawn by customers. If the wireless network is getting the job done,  a speed increase often won't do enough to improve performance to justify the  cost.
But Jamie Stark, senior product manager with Microsoft  Lync, is evangelizing a recent wireless standard as a big opportunity to  dramatically improve unified communications performance on mobile networks. 
The opportunity, which for partners extends beyond those who specialize  in Lync, is related to the new 802.11ac wireless standard. The standard was  approved in January, and it turbocharges wireless bandwidth to single-link  throughput of at least 500MBps.
"The promise of mobility with Lync is really strong. Customers  think, 'Not only can I save a lot of money, not having this really extensive  wired plant would be great,'" Stark told me. He says expense savings could  go as far as removing a standard requirement to have air conditioning on every  floor's equipment closet to keep existing switches for old telephone handsets  cool. 
"If I have a cell phone, tablet and a workstation with a headset, I  don't need to be tethered down by a wire," Stark said.
An obstacle has been wireless bandwidth. "If a dozen people are in  the conference room looking at a Lync meeting, it's easy to saturate an access  point," Stark said.
The 802.11ac equipment removes the bandwidth barrier affecting current  traffic levels. "It's absolutely an opportunity now. 802.11ac is now to  the point in the market where folks are going to be buying that," Stark  said. "The single biggest thing that I bring up to every one of the  customers that I talk to is around Wi-Fi."
For more on emerging opportunities around  Lync, see the  recent RCP Partner Guide to Microsoft Lync here (registration required).
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 07, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The rumors over the weekend were correct, and Hewlett-Packard revealed Monday morning that it will split into two roughly equal-sized entities -- Hewlett-Packard  Enterprise and HP Inc. 
The move creates two massive new, if familiar, players  in the tech industry -- Hewlett-Packard Enterprise's annual revenues for a  recently concluded period would have been $58 billion, HP Inc.'s $57 billion. The  new arrangement has implications across the IT industry, including for the many  Microsoft partners who are also HP partners. Here are a few of the main  takeaways that are visible at first blush. 
A New Poster Child for Spinoffs
The IT industry commonly veers between two business poles -- mergers  and acquisitions or spinoffs and sell-offs. Big events give us a shorthand to  understand trends and HP's new decision is one of the biggest. As a symbol of  old Silicon Valley, the PC industry, the printer industry or the new cloud+services world, HP's decision will become a major data point in all kinds of  discussions about whether spinning off business divisions makes sense.
HP Chairman, CEO and President Meg Whitman was touting a strategy of "One  HP" -- in other words, not splitting up -- recently enough that she needed  to do some tap dancing about it on Monday morning in a call for investment analysts.
"Let me be clear, One HP was the right approach. During the fix-and-rebuild phase of our turnaround plan, we used the strength found in being  together to become stronger throughout. But of course, the marketplace never  stands still, and in our industry today more than ever, you have to compete  harder and faster every single day. Being nimble is the only path to winning,"  Whitman said.
Already, HP's move is resparking conversations about EMC and VMware, as  well as renewing calls for Microsoft to look into breaking up. Whether HP's  spinoff is a success or a failure, it is high-profile enough that it will  become shorthand for the one or the other.
A Star Is Born
  Dion Weisler earned a level of industry renown with his elevation to  the position of HP's executive vice president of Printing and Personal  Systems Group in the summer of 2013. But the Australian-born tech industry veteran,  who joined HP in January 2012, goes from being well-known by tech industry  insiders to the type of business superstar who appears on CNBC with his  elevation to CEO of the newly formed independent company, HP Inc.
According to Weisler's bio from the HP site, prior to his EVP role, he  was senior vice president and managing director of Printing and Personal Systems for the Asia Pacific and Japan regions. He came to HP from Lenovo, where his top role was vice  president and COO of Lenovo's Product and Mobile Internet Digital Home groups.  He also worked at Telstra Corp., an Australian telecommunications company, and  spent 11 years at Acer.
In a statement, Whitman gave this assessment of Weisler's performance  as EVP, a job that precisely parallels what he'll be working on as CEO of HP  Inc.: "Since assuming responsibility for the Printing and Personal Systems  Group, Dion and his leadership team have done an excellent job of building our  relationships with customers and channel partners, segmenting the market and  driving product innovation."
Whitman Bets on Hewlett-Packard Enterprise?
  Is Meg Whitman tipping her hand as to which of the two businesses has more  potential?
"The board and the management are convinced that by separating HP  into two new, independent companies, we will be able to accelerate the  performance of both more rapidly than we could as currently configured,"  Whitman explained on the investor call.
Whitman will serve as CEO of Hewlett-Packard Enterprise, while serving  as non-executive chairman for HP Inc.
She's chosen to focus her day-to-day attention on the business that  moves forward with HP's lines of servers, storage, networking, services,  software, cloud and converged systems. That's as opposed to the business built  on notebooks, desktops, mobility, printing, managed print services and  graphics.
Whitman will be the executive on the side of the business with larger  expected profit margins and the side that includes the booming cloud market.  That said, both businesses currently carry similar operating margins, according  to a slide deck for investment analysts (10.2 percent for Hewlett-Packard  Enterprise and 9.4 percent for HP Inc.).
More Layoffs Coming
  HP has always done things in a big way because of its scale. While  Microsoft makes headlines for layoffs in the 18,000-employee range, HP was  already committed to laying off between 45,000 and 50,000 people.
During the call about the spinoff, an HP slide revealed that "incremental  opportunities for reductions have been identified...independent of the  separation transaction." The latest figure is that the entity once known  as HP has need of 55,000 fewer employees. The elimination of 5,000 or 10,000  people from the payroll beyond the company's previous guidance means additional  money for R&D and sales, according to an HP slide. 
The layoffs and other  job eliminations are proceeding, with about 36,000 jobs already eliminated. Expect uncertainty and trepidation from HP contacts until they're certain what  the other 19,000 eliminated jobs will be.
Spotlight on Future Products
HP executives provided hints on Monday about what product lines they're  most excited about for future growth.
On the Hewlett-Packard Enterprise side, it's Apollo, Gen 9 and Moonshot  servers, the 3PAR storage platform, the HP OneView management platform and the  HP Helion Cloud. For HP Inc., mobility is an area where the company is looking  to gain traction, while the spinoff is also looking to build a business in 3-D  printing.
HP Financial Services
  There wasn't a lot of detail about partners on Monday, but one area where  channel partners did get mentioned involved financing. Going forward, both companies  appear to view HP Financial Services as a strategic capability for partners and  customers.
"By leveraging its HP Financial Services capability, the company  will be well positioned to create unique technology deployment models for  customers and partner partners based on their specific business needs,"  the company said in a statement about the Hewlett-Packard Enterprise side. "Additionally,  the company intends for HP Financial Services to continue to provide financing  and business model innovation for customers and partners of HP Inc."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 06, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The security professional's toolbox is fairly mature, with ethical  hackers commonly using familiar and powerful tools such as Metasploit, Nmap,  Wireshark and dozens of others, many of them conveniently wrapped up for free in  the security-focused Kali Linux distribution.
Still, in the fast-moving field of IT security, new threats and tools  are constantly emerging. In a standing-room-only session at Interop New York  this week, David Rhoades of Maven Security Consulting recommended five  up-and-coming tools that can help penetration testers do their jobs better. 
1. XSScrapy
Rhoades' presentation followed one on vulnerability management by John  P. Pironti, president of IP Architects LLC, in which Pironti noted that  two  of the most significant classes of vulnerabilities remain cross-site scripting  and SQL injection. Addressing the cross-site scripting problem is a relatively  new tool called XSScrapy by security researcher Dan McInerney, Rhoades noted.  The description of XSScrapy on GitHub Inc. is a "Fast, thorough, XSS spider. Give it a URL and it'll  test every link it finds for cross-site scripting vulnerabilities."
2. Gauntlt
Designed for devops, the team behind Gauntlt aimed to help make development  of new code more secure by creating a tool that makes checking for  vulnerabilities repeatable, reliable, reviewable, rapid and resilient with a reduced  attack surface. The tool launches other attack tools at a target and reports  the results. 
One of the Gauntlt developers, Mani Tadayon, described it as the  opposite of static code analysis in a presentation announcing the tool in 2012.  "We're looking at the system as, kind of, not a black box but a grey box.  We're looking at the running instance. The difficulty with code analysis is  like, what is it? Is it Java, is it Ruby? Is it this framework? That framework?"  Tadayon said. "[With Gauntlt] it's like, we don't [need to] know what's  going on inside your app."
3. Minion
Another relatively recently released platform for performing security  tests on Web applications is Minion from the  Mozilla Project (the team behind the Firefox browser).
4. BadUSB
A USB hack presented by SR Labs at BlackHat 2014 in August and called BadUSB introduced a new form of malware  that reprograms the controller chips inside USB devices. "USB sticks, as  an example, can be reprogrammed to spoof various other device types in order to  take control of a computer, exfiltrate data, or spy on the user," SR Labs  explained in a description of the session.
5. NetHunter
Finally, Rhoades pointed his audience to Kali Linux Nexus NetHunter.  Developed by Offensive Security, the company behind Kali Linux, and Kali  community member "BinkyBear," NetHunter takes the idea of a  penetration platform and essentially puts that particular hell on wheels.  
NetHunter is designed as an open source penetration testing platform for an  Android OS tablet (Nexus 10), mini-tablet (Nexus 7) or smartphone (Nexus 5).  Some of the tools include wireless 802.11 frame injection, one-click MANA Evil  Access Point setups, HID keyboard and even BadUSB-based "man-in-the-middle"  attacks.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 02, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Kaseya  this week issued another core platform release and this month will open a beta  program for some additional functionality.
"With  8, we have shifted the focus to security," said Yogesh Gupta, CEO of Kaseya, in a telephone interview. 
Release  8, which became generally available on Tuesday, is the latest of Kaseya's  regularly scheduled releases. Since joining the MSP remote monitoring and management (RMM) and IT systems  management tool vendor in the summer of 2013, Gupta has kept Kaseya to a development  cycle built around releases every January, May and September.
The  Kaseya 8 release comes on the heels of the company's acquisition of Scorpion  Software, a security company focused on two-factor authentication, password  management and single sign-on.
For  now MSPs and other customers looking to use the Scorpion technology alongside  the core Release 8 must license AuthAnvil separately. Integration is scheduled  for a future release. Nonetheless, Kaseya is simultaneously shipping  new releases of all three AuthAnvil products  -- Single Sign On, Two-Factor Authentication and Password Server.
A  major new security feature in Kaseya's core management platform comes in an  enhancement to Kaseya Remote Control. The component now allows administrators  to work privately on remote servers and workstations so that people near the  target machine can't see what is being done.
Other  new features include the ability for administrators to isolate and view  individual Terminal Server sessions, improvements to Office 365 management and  tighter integration between the main dashboard and Kaseya Traverse Service  Level Management.
The  beta launching this month is for integrated enterprise mobile management (EMM). The design goal for Kaseya's  EMM is combined mobile device management and bring your own device features  within Kaseya's core management platform.
According  to Kaseya's roadmap, the company intends to be able to roll the EMM  functionality into Release 9 of the platform in January 2015.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 30, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Hitting a delivery date promised in July, Microsoft on Monday launched  three new cloud competencies for partners. 
At the same time, Microsoft drastically  reduced the number of customers a partner is required to have to achieve the  SMB competency's silver tier, and announced improvements to Pinpoint, the  partner directory for customers. 
  The new Pinpoint homepage. (Source: Microsoft)
  The new Pinpoint homepage. (Source: Microsoft)
The three new competencies that went live on Monday were Small and  Midmarket Cloud Solutions, Cloud Productivity and Cloud Platform. They are the  first cloud-specific  competencies Microsoft has launched in the Microsoft Partner Network (MPN).
Gavriella Schuster, general manager of the Microsoft Worldwide Partner  Group, announced a change to the SMB competency in a blog  post. 
"Based on insight and input from the partner community, we have  determined that the appropriate threshold for the Small and Midmarket Cloud  Solutions competency is 10 new customers over the last 12 months, down from the  15 customer limit we announced in July. The other eligibility components remain  the same at 150 net new seats and three customer references," Schuster  wrote.
Schuster also said an updated Pinpoint directory was going live on  Monday and that Microsoft had released new materials to help partners optimize  their Pinpoint listings. According to a Microsoft spokesperson, changes include  better access and more tailored search.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 29, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Details are starting to emerge about Cloud Solution Provider (CSP), a  promising partner program that Microsoft previewed at its Worldwide Partner  Conference (WPC) in July.
The CSP program is designed to accommodate the requests by partners to  be able to bundle Microsoft services and own the customer billing, a  requirement that was partly but not fully addressed with the Office 365 Open  program. 
"Partners in this [Cloud Solution Provider] program will be able  to directly provision customer subscriptions and provide one monthly bill for  both Partner and Microsoft services. They will also directly manage their  customer subscriptions with in-product tools in the Partner Admin Center and  own the technical support relationship," wrote John Case, corporate vice  president of Microsoft Office,  in a blog entry announcing the program on July 14.
Calling CSP "a true cloud reseller program" during a WPC keynote that same day, Case also said the program would create opportunities for  distributors, MSPs, ISVs and hosting providers. Those are very different types  of partners, however, and as Microsoft begins to sign up partners and get  feedback, the CSP is evolving.
In a blog post Wednesday, Gavriella Schuster, general manager of the Microsoft Worldwide  Partner Group, revealed that CSP will now have two levels, and she provided a  loose rollout schedule.
"After speaking with partners of all types and sizes, we've made  the decision to rollout the CSP with two business model options for partners to  participate. In the first business model, partners will sell Microsoft Cloud  Services directly to customers (1-Tier). These are partners that typically have  existing broad market reach, a 24/7 technical support relationship with their  customers as well as direct ownership of the billing -- a feature that was the  most requested from partners,"   Schuster wrote. "The second business model consists of resellers  who sell Microsoft Cloud Services through distribution partners (2-Tier)."
Over the summer, Case said the program would be rolled out to select  partners in 48 countries. Schuster said onboarding for the 1-Tier is happening  now, but implied that the main rollout would happen after the full  documentation of partner requirements is posted to the Partner Portal in  mid-October.
Partners interested in the 2-Tier will need to wait a little longer. "We  expect most partners to participate through the 2-Tier model, and we'll have  more information to share about that program later this calendar year,"  Schuster said.
By product, Microsoft has said CSP would start with Office 365 and  Windows Intune, and Microsoft Azure, Dynamics CRM Online and other products  will follow.
The CSP is in addition to three new cloud  competencies that Microsoft planned to take live next week.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 24, 20140 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Although it's gotten far less attention than the recent Windows XP  deadline, the retirement of support for Windows Server 2003 will be one of the  most important of the predictable security issues of 2015.
Microsoft officially ends support for Windows Server 2003 on July 14,  2015. The deadline has some of the same ramifications that the Windows XP  deadline had: Microsoft will no longer patch Windows Server 2003 for new  security vulnerabilities. Presumably, Microsoft will offer expensive Custom  Support Agreements for enterprises to continue getting patch support after that  date, but there's been no official announcement yet. In the meantime, new security  vulnerabilities keep cropping up for the aging OS. During the last full year,  2013, Microsoft released 37 critical updates for Windows Server 2003. 
The total installed base of Windows Server 2003 remains massive,  making migrations an important security issue for the entire industry. As of  July, Microsoft reported that globally there are 24 million instances -- half  physical, half virtual -- of Windows Server 2003 running on 12 million physical  servers. There are 9.4 million Windows Server 2003 instances in North America. Worldwide,  Windows Server 2003 accounted for 39 percent of the Windows Server installed  base, according to Microsoft data.
Among the many Microsoft partners focused on initiating conversations  with customers about preparing for the deadline and migrating servers off  Windows Server 2003 is Insight Enterprises, a $5.1 billion technology sales  company that is also a Microsoft Licensing Solutions Provider with a large  Microsoft systems integration practice.
On Wednesday, Insight publicly announced a Windows Server 2003 migration  practice that's been up and running since June. RCP caught up with David Mayer,  practice director of Microsoft Solutions for Insight Enterprises, in a phone  interview. (Questions and answers have been edited for clarity and flow.)
RCP: How prepared are your customers for Windows Server 2003 end of  support compared with the end of support for Windows XP?
Mayer: They are aware of the situation. They understand the deadline  that's approaching. They have a good sense of what they're up against in terms  of how many servers they have and the major workloads that they're running on  it. What they don't have is a sense of is how complicated this is, and they're  underestimating what they're up against. Of a couple dozen customers we're  working with, none have a migration timeline that will get every single server  migrated by July 14.
What are some of the problems that have hit customers who used  Windows XP past the end of support that might also be an issue for Windows  Server 2003 users?
The biggest piece of the puzzle that organizations don't account  for is the increase in support costs. A PC is one thing. You can harden a PC by  just unplugging it from the network. That's a little bit harder to do in the  server world. The big lesson learned is all the additional steps, such as  adding intrusion detection systems, more advanced firewalls and network  segmentation. They're going to have to take extra steps if they're planning to  keep that server after support goes away. Gartner put out a brief a few months  back and they said that organizations that plan to continue to run [Windows Server] 2003 past  the deadline should budget $1,500 per year per server. That would be kind of a  catch-all budgetary number.
With Windows XP, a lot of the organizations still using the  out-of-support OS were smaller or less technically sophisticated customers. Is  that the case with Windows Server 2003?
It's an inverse correlation. You actually see more Server 2003  as a percentage within very large, higher-end customers than we do at the lower  end. The people who are actually in a better position to remediate the problem  are the ones who have it. There are a lot of valid reasons -- application  dependency, where an industry-specific application hasn't been updated, or an  ISV went out of business, or some of it is that the thing works well and has  been cheap to maintain and manage.
Your process for customers includes discovery and analysis  followed by migrations -- software, hardware and cloud. What's the comparative  size of each of those opportunities for Insight?
The majority are doing either a virtual-to virtual or a  physical-to-virtual scenario, which we really think is the best first step.  Once we've got them virtualized, then we can get them deployed in the cloud.  Some customers are going straight to the cloud -- with one, we took the entire  infrastructure over to the Azure IaaS environment. Some of them are doing a  component of physical-to-physical because the application migration is not  going to happen. They can still upgrade to Windows Server 2008, which will  support a 32-bit application. 
Ideally, we'll get the application up to either  Server 2008 R2 or 2012. In doing so, we'll take that stack and we'll virtualize  that. Instead of one physical server for one 2003 OS, we'll move to four or  eight. You could look at it as a server consolidation project along with a  server migration project -- those are happening in tandem.
Where are most customers in their migration process?
Right now, it's a lot of initial planning and initial discovery.  I think the peak in terms of when the work is really going to start to hit is  in the Q1 timeframe. A lot of the preliminary work is happening right now. There's  still a lot of pipeline-building happening right now.
How long are the migrations expected to take?
For a customer with 100 or more servers, we're looking at a  project that will go anywhere from a minimum of three months to some that will  be in the 18-month timeframe. For those that aren't going to make the deadline,  we start to segregate their server environment -- these are the high-risk  servers, then medium and below.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 17, 20140 comments