Recent technology spending (and economic forecasts in  general) for 2020 have been bleak.
 But couched in IDC's latest forecast for  smartphone spending is an interesting side effect, the current pandemic-induced  economic crisis could mean 5G technology arrives faster than previous forecast models  indicated.
 First, the predictable near-term bad news for anyone in the  business of smartphone shipments. IDC predicts a 2020 year-over-year decline in  smartphone shipments of nearly 12% to 1.2 billion units. That's a drop in the  forecast from earlier this year as a supply-side problem due to the supply  chain shutting down as China fought to contain the coronavirus morphed into a  demand-side problem due to economic effects as the pandemic spread around the  world.
 Now IDC is looking for 5G technology to lead the way back to  smartphone growth in 2021.
 "On the brighter side, 5G is expected to be a catalyst  throughout the forecast period, which will play a vital role in worldwide  smartphone market recovery in 2021," Sangeetika Srivastava, senior  research analyst with IDC, said in a statement. 
 Another IDC analyst, Ryan Reith, laid out IDC's case for a  5G surge. "The surge in consumer spending around devices that are less  mobile than smartphones (PCs, monitors, video game consoles, etc.) will  undoubtedly take a share of the consumer wallet that would have been put  towards smartphone upgrades and 5G. We believe this will result in even more  aggressively priced 5G smartphones than expected prior to the pandemic. This  could result in some share wins for the vendors that position their portfolios  to capitalize on this change," Reith said.
 If this scenario plays out, the industry could  bypass the usual cycle of a price premium on  a hot new feature that slows down initial adoption. In short, cheaper 5G phones  could mean 5G technology in more hands sooner than originally expected.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 03, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    A new study puts the hourly cost of downtime for high-priority applications at $67,651 per hour.
The survey of 1,550 business leaders and IT decision makers in 22 countries was conducted  earlier this year on behalf of data management specialist  Veeam  Software.
One question asked respondents to estimate their downtime  costs per hour for high-priority applications and for normal applications. The  cost for normal applications came to $61,642. Although in our  all-data-all-the-time world, the amount of applications that respondents rated  as high-priority was a whopping 51 percent.
Alongside those costs, the survey also tried to nail down  the prevalence of data outages and reached some high numbers on that front as  well. Nearly all organizations (95 percent) reported unexpected downtime, with one  server in 10 having at least one outage per year.
When it comes to time, the average outage is 117 minutes,  just a few minutes short of two hours.
As a company specializing in cloud-focused and virtualization-centric  methods for backing up data and moving around workloads on the fly, Veeam posed  a number of questions about where organizations were in their journey to having  their business continuity infrastructure modernized.
For the purpose of the survey, Veeam defined legacy as tools  designed to back up on-premises file shares and applications. The survey found  that 40 percent of organizations were relying on legacy systems to protect their data.
Asked to pick defining aspects of a modern data management  solution, respondents put Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) first. DRaaS  was followed in descending order by the ability to move workloads from  on-premises to cloud, the ability to move workloads from one cloud to another  and the ability to automate recovery workflows/orchestration.
Lack of staff and lack of budget each counted as inhibitors  to new initiatives for about 40 percent of respondents.
As for the factors that would drive organizations to change  their primary backup solution, respondents most often cited the ability to  improve the reliability of backups (39 percent) and reduced software or hardware costs  (38 percent).
About two in five respondents reported that they planned to  leverage cloud-based backup managed by a backup-as-a-service provider within  the next two years.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 02, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    It's time to let the security machine learning (ML) models  punch it out.
Microsoft on Monday unveiled an ML contest to run later this summer that will pit security defenders against  attackers. With the "Machine Learning Security Evasion Competition,"  Microsoft is hoping to engage both ML researchers and security professionals to  develop cutting edge machine learning models related to security.
The idea builds on a contest held last summer at DEF CON 27,  where contestants attacked a white box containing static malware ML models.
For its part, Microsoft, along with partners CUJO AI, VMRay  and MRG Effitas, will run a two-stage contest with ML playing a part in each  stage. First comes a Defender Challenge running from June 15 through July 23.  Participants must provide novel countermeasures that will be judged based on  their ability to detect real-world malware without triggering too many false  positives.
A few weeks later is an Attacker Challenge. Unlike the DEF  CON competition, the Attacker Challenge will be a black-box model. Attackers  will have API access to hosted antimalware models, including models developed  in the Defender Challenge. That part of the competition will go from Aug. 6 to  Sept. 18.
Winners of each challenge will get $2,500 in Azure credits  with a runner up earning $500 in Azure credits.
By combining defense and attack and bringing together  different groups of experts, Microsoft hopes to improve the maturity of machine  learning in security and make security professionals more aware of the  potential, and threat, of machine learning.
"One desired outcome of this competition is to  encourage ML researchers who have experience in evading image recognition  systems, for example, to be introduced to a threat model common to information  security," Hyrum Anderson, principal architect for Enterprise Protection  and Detection wrote in an entry on the Microsoft Security Research Center blog.  "Concurrently, security practitioners can gain deeper insights into what  it means to secure ML systems in the context of a domain they are already know."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 01, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Successful Microsoft products tend to follow a certain path. There's the splashy introduction, followed by a rapid adoption gold rush, where Microsoft and its partners work flat out to enable deployments at unparalleled scale.
In the middle stages of that gold rush, even as most of the focus is on onboarding new seats, second-order problems start to emerge. One of the biggest of those second-order problems is that some early adopter customers need to migrate their deployment for various reasons, such as mergers and acquisition.
That's where we are with Microsoft Teams -- Microsoft's three-year-old collaboration platform. With a huge assist from the global shift with coronavirus to working from home, Teams daily active users (DAU) has soared to 75 million, as of April, and Microsoft claimed more than 200 million meeting participants in a single day in April.
ShareGate, a Montreal-based company with a decade of experience in SharePoint migrations and other Microsoft cloud tools, jumped into the mix this week.
Benjamin Niaulin, who runs strategy and roadmap for all ShareGate products as head of product, this week announced the addition of a Microsoft Teams migration feature to ShareGate Desktop in the 13.0 version of the company's migration tool.
The tool allows organizations to migrate teams to a new tenant in a process that includes retaining conversation history, channels, team settings and files.
The problem was getting significant attention from vendors well before the current remote work surge.
In May 2018, Teams was about a year old and many companies were uncertain where the tool would fit with Microsoft's many collaboration technologies, including SharePoint, Yammer and Office 365 Groups. AvePoint Inc. took the new tool seriously enough to  add support for migrating Teams from one tenant to another in its FLY tool for cloud and SharePoint migrations.
In July 2019, as Teams was getting some traction with around 13 million DAU, BitTitan introduced Teams migration capabilities by folding the functionality into its MigrationWiz product for broader Office 365 migrations.
As demand for Teams was building last November, a time when Microsoft claimed about 20 million DAU, Quest Software was also addressing the issue of Teams migrations. The company updated its Quest On Demand Migration tool that added Microsoft Teams migration support to tenant migration support for Exchange, OneDrive and SharePoint.
Following the usual Microsoft product rollout playbook, there is plenty that Microsoft still needs to do to make migration a more seamless transition, even with third-party tools and community-created PowerShell scripts. In a November post, Mike Campbell, a senior solutions architect with Perficient, discussed some of the common gaps in the Teams migration experience, mostly due to underlying limitations in Microsoft's APIs.
"Teams provides the integration glue that holds together so much collaborative goodness, but the result is a complex Teams Tenant migration story," Campbell wrote. "The nature of Teams integrations and extension means that there are likely to be gaps in the migration experience for the foreseeable future, especially for extensively used Teams that take advantage of a full range of Teams capabilities. That's understandable, but we should also collectively encourage Microsoft to provide better tenant portability for the core Teams workloads."
(Editor's Note: This article was updated on June 3 to include AvePoint Inc.'s support for Teams migrations.)
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on May 29, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Azure Lighthouse, Microsoft's most ambitious managed service  provider tooling effort in years, is now sporting important new features and  integrations with Microsoft's main partner portal.
Microsoft released Azure Lighthouse last July during the Microsoft Inspire partner conference. It  represents a way for MSPs to manage Microsoft Azure tenants for many customers  using technology that provides visibility and control to both the partner and  the customer. Azure Lighthouse is free for partners to use on top of their  existing Azure subscriptions. 
Microsoft Azure Chief Technology Officer Mark Russinovich  provided an update on Azure Lighthouse progress in a blog  post in the wake of Build, Microsoft's biggest annual conference for  developers.
Without getting into specific numbers, Russinovich hinted at  adoption momentum behind Lighthouse and emphasized the scalability of the  platform. "Thousands of partners and enterprises use Azure Lighthouse to  manage services across Azure tenants, representing tens of thousands of  subscriptions and more than one million Azure resources from Azure Resource  Manager -- a unified control plane," Russinovich said.
Early adopters of Azure Lighthouse from the July 2019 launch  included DXC Technology, Nordcloud, Rackspace, Sentia, Dynatrace, Ingram Micro  and Veeam. In his post, Russinovich highlighted new partners, including  ClearDATA, Yorktel and Vandis.
Azure Lighthouse is primarily about Azure delegated resource  management. It's designed to overcome many of the challenges from one of the  Azure management methods MSPs have needed to use in the past -- having the  customer create accounts on their Azure tenant for the partner to use to manage  that tenant. With Azure Lighthouse, the partner uses their own Azure account to  manage the customers' Azure tenants. With the system designed for multi-tenant  management by partners from the start, both customers and their partners have  more visibility and control over what the other can see and do.
Other than management at scale, benefits for Microsoft  partners include being able to view and manage all their customers' tenants  from one interface, the ability to support multiple licensing models and the  protection of their intellectual property. That last point results from the way  Azure Lighthouse allows the partner to run their proprietary automation scripts  from their own tenant. With other management methods, partners would have to  run their proprietary scripts from within the customers' tenants, putting that  IP out of partners' control and making it harder to safeguard.
Russinovich summarized a series of updates to Azure  Lighthouse that Microsoft has been rolling out over the last few months.
Among the most significant is the ability for partners to  monitor the status of backup jobs across their customer base. One element is  Backup Explorer, an Azure Monitor Workbook for single pane-of-glass monitoring  of an entire Azure backup estate. Backup Explorer went into preview in  February, and one of the key use cases is for MSPs running Azure Lighthouse to  monitor multiple tenants. Similarly, new Azure Backup reports also support  Azure Lighthouse. These additions add backup monitoring to the compliance and  security monitoring that partners can already perform for customers from within  Azure Lighthouse.
Another recent capability allows service providers with  Azure Lighthouse to use Azure Monitor Logs across their customer tenants to  trigger notification and onboarding workflows for their teams.
As part of Microsoft's broad effort to transition more of  its partner functionality to the central portal of Microsoft Partner Center,  certain Azure Lighthouse functionality is being swept up in that migration. For  MSPs who want to use the Azure Marketplace to create either public or private  Azure Lighthouse offers for customers, they now draft and publish those from  within Partner Center. Previously they needed to create the offers from the separate  Cloud Partner Portal.
Among other changes and improvements, Azure Lighthouse is  now a FEDRAMP High certified service, the help and support experiences have  been improved and customers have more self-service options.
Recognizing that few customers are entirely in the cloud,  Microsoft is also starting to explore ways to help MSPs extend Azure Lighthouse  for hybrid management.
"Many MSP partners rely on Azure Lighthouse, and now  Azure Arc, to achieve a unified management solution in these advanced  scenarios. MSPs can extend their service offerings to manage their customers'  on-premises environments through Azure Resource Manager, managing resources at  scale and governing compliance using Azure policy," Russinovich said.
Russinovich promised more Azure Lighthouse-related detail  would come out of Inspire 2020 in July.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on May 27, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
The Microsoft Build conference was virtual this year, but  many of the product and platform revelations coming out of the show were  concrete. 
Let's look at 10 interesting technologies that hit general  availability (or at least got GA timeframes) at the developer-centric event  that kicked off on Tuesday.  
1. Project Cortex
While Build was filled with mostly small  bore announcements, one of the larger ones was Project Cortex. Billed as the  first new service in Microsoft 365 since the launch of Microsoft Teams, Project  Cortex involves applying artificial intelligence to the Microsoft Graph. The  new service is intended to surface knowledge and information from within the  apps that workers use daily. While still in private preview, Project Cortex  makes this GA list because general availability has now been promised for "early  summer."
2. Azure Spatial Anchors
Graduating from preview to GA are  Azure Spatial Anchors. Developers can use the anchors for mixed-reality apps  that "map, persist and share 3D content," according to a Microsoft  description. Intended for gaming, social networking, networking, manufacturing  and retail, Azure Spatial Anchors are designed to share persisting 3-D content  for HoloLens, iOS and Android devices.
3. IoT Hub Support for Virtual Networks 
IoT Hub is Microsoft's  cloud gateway for collecting telemetry data from IoT devices. What's becoming  generally available is virtual network (VNET) support. That way customers can  set up a more secure connection through Azure VNETs that they own.
4. Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) Support 
Microsoft's  capabilities for orchestrating and managing containers matured considerably at  Build with a handful of announcements involving GA of support  around AKS. For one, AKS now supports Windows Server containers, allowing  Windows and Linux applications to run within a single AKS cluster. AKS also  newly supports private clusters and best-practice recommendations on  performance, availability and security.
5. Responsible ML Workflow Documentation Capabilities
Not  exactly a technology, but heavily intertwined with and informed by one, is some  documentation capability for developers. A major theme out of Microsoft the  last few years has been socially responsible use of emerging technologies. In  line with that effort are new workflow documentation capabilities being made  available to customers shortly after Build. The capabilities to enforce  accountability cover Azure Machine Learning.
6. Azure Peering Service
This enterprise-focused networking  service involving Microsoft partnerships with telecoms and carriers allows  companies that are heavy users of Office 365, Dynamics 365 and Azure to ensure  more reliable and higher-performance public connectivity and optimal routing.
7. Bookings App in Teams
The Bookings app allows scheduling,  managing and conducting business-to-consumer meetings. Microsoft announced the  integration of the app into Teams in March, and Build marks its general  availability. Microsoft says the Bookings app in Teams allows organizations to  consolidate management of meetings for multiple departments in one scheduling  tool.
8. Azure Secure Score API
An API for the Azure Secure Score  service is generally available for those who might want to incorporate the security  benchmarking/snapshot tool into other applications. The API covers the enhanced  version of  Secure Score, which is still in preview. The new version is  designed to be more meaningful to users and to group the scores and  recommendations by their associated attack surfaces.
9. Windows Terminal
I guess this Microsoft statement  qualifies as general availability: "The Windows Terminal is now out of  preview and stable for enterprise use." Windows Terminal is an open source  project available from the Microsoft Store and designed for command-line tool  users. Power users can run things like Command Prompt, PowerShell and WSL from  an interface with tabs, panes, custom themes and a GPU-accelerated text  rendering engine. 
10. Azure Cosmos DB Autoscale Provisioned Throughput
Like  Project Cortex, this is another one that's not quite ready, but that makes the  list because Microsoft is now talking about a GA date, in this case summer.  Azure Cosmos DB autoscale provisioned throughput, a mouthful that Microsoft  used to call "autopilot," handles planning and management of throughput capacity.  Microsoft says it's suited for large, unpredictable workloads.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on May 19, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Longtime senior Microsoft partner and sales executive Phil  Sorgen has moved to RingCentral Inc.
Sorgen took on the role of Chief Revenue Officer at Belmont,  Calif.-based RingCentral earlier this month. 
The publicly traded company specializes in cloud-based  communications and collaboration solutions with an emphasis on the voice end  of the space. The company's flagship product, RingCentral Office, is a  cloud-based PBX system. The company also offers products for meetings and  webinars. Integrations with Microsoft Office products and collaboration  services have made Microsoft a key longtime technology partner for RingCentral.
That partnership was somewhat complicated in April when  RingCentral launched RingCentral Video, a voice, video, screen sharing and team  messaging platform that coincides with the COVID-19-related global surge in  remote work. However, with launch integrations with Microsoft Teams and Office  365, the move was more of a direct shot across the bow of Zoom, which had  previously provided the video technology for RingCentral Meetings.
In roughly two decades at Microsoft, Sorgen's highest-profile role was as global channel chief -- formally the corporate vice  president of the Worldwide Partner Group -- between 2013 and 2016. He shifted  laterally to the U.S. subsidiary, where he was most recently CVP for the  Microsoft Enterprise Commercial Group, a key sales management role encompassing  both internal teams and partner engagement. Previous roles at Microsoft  included CVP for the U.S. Small and Mid-market Solutions and Partner  (SMS&P), President for Microsoft Canada and General Manager of Enterprise  Partner Group National Sales.
"Phil's leadership is defined by his deep customer and  partner relationships, a customer-first mindset and a track record of building  sustainable growth businesses at [global] scale," said Anand Eswaran, president  and COO at RingCentral,  in a statement. "As we continue to enable our  customers to thrive during these unprecedented times, Phil will lead the way in  driving a powerful partner and customer ecosystem and take us through our next  growth phase."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on May 13, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Microsoft on Wednesday launched two new advanced  specializations that allow partners to highlight their capabilities around  remote work with Microsoft Teams and related teamwork platforms.
A specialization focused on using the Office 365 platform  for distributed collaborative work is called Teamwork Deployment. The other  specialization, Calling for Microsoft Teams, is for partners who can deploy and  support voice calling capabilities within Teams. 
Both advanced specializations are for partners who already  have a gold competency in Cloud Productivity.
The move reinforces Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella's comment last week that COVID-19 had driven "two years' worth of digital  transformation in two months" through a massive, global push to remote  work. Microsoft last week also revealed that Teams usage had soared to 75  million daily active users, a jump of 70 percent in a little over a month.
In announcing the new designations for partners, Dan Truax,  general manager for Microsoft One Commercial Partner, positioned the  specializations and move to remote-enabled work as a long-term shift rather  than a short-term opportunity to meet a unique set of historical circumstances.
"For some, it may feel like the nudge they needed to  fast-track existing plans; for others, a necessary but difficult transition  into uncharted territory. But one thing is clear: the cost of failing to adapt  to this new way of working and the technologies required to power it will be  far greater than the investment of time and resources of implementation. As  referenced in so much of the news coverage on this topic, the change has happened  and there's no going back," Truax said in a blog post.
Both advanced specializations are available immediately.
Teamwork Deployment covers various Office 365 technologies  dubbed the Teamwork services. They include  Teams, SharePoint Online,  Exchange Online and Yammer. Requirements across those Teamwork services for a  12-month period include a minimum threshold for growth in Active Entitlements,  an average of 20 percent active usage and a minimum number of new customer tenants.  Partners must also provide three customer references and have four individuals  pass Teamwork-related exams.
Calling for Microsoft Teams is designed for partners  implementing calling solutions for customers. It has a growth threshold for  active entitlement of  Teams, requires four individuals to pass  certain technical exams and calls for three customer references.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on May 06, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Microsoft's annual partner conference, Microsoft Inspire,  will be packed into two online-only days this July with registration opening  next month.
Microsoft Channel Chief Gavriella Schuster provided a video  and blog  update on Friday about Inspire, which Microsoft had already  announced in late March would be changed to a virtual event due to  COVID-19. 
The official dates for Inspire are Tuesday,  July 21, and Wednesday, July 22. The schedule of events has not yet been  released.
Normally the conference consists of senior executive  keynotes, networking events, parties, award ceremonies and hundreds of  individual sessions covering technologies, partner programs and business  practices. Originally,  Inspire had been set for five days from July  19 to 23. Regularly held in Las Vegas for the last few years, the event routinely  draws more than 10,000 attendees.
Schuster, whose official title is corporate vice president  of One Commercial Partner, emphasized that as a free and virtual event, many  more people at individual Microsoft partner companies could attend. Normally,  Microsoft partners would only be able to send one or two employees, if any, to  the event.
"That means you can invite as many people from your  organization as you'd like so they can be a part of this very special  experience," Schuster said in a video recorded at her house in Washington  state.
Meanwhile, companies hoping to be recognized at Inspire with  a Microsoft Partner of the Year award got an extension recently to submit their applications. The deadline moved from April 21 to May 12, and  Microsoft also introduced a new Community Response award.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on May 01, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Microsoft Teams usage has surged more than 70 percent in a little  over a month as the massive shift to remote work makes online collaboration and  video conferencing platforms essential.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella revealed an updated figure for  daily active users (DAU) on Wednesday of 75 million. Nadella announced the  daily active users number during a call on Microsoft's  quarterly earnings, which grew double digits in revenues and earnings per  share even as business activity worldwide has plummeted. 
The 75 million DAU follows a 44 million figure for the same  metric as of March 18. The pandemic has been a driver of Teams, which saw 120 percent growth from November 2019 (20 million DAU) to March 18. As recently as last  July, Teams DAU was lingering in the 13 million range.
"As work norms evolve, organizations are realizing they  need a comprehensive solution that brings together communications,  collaboration and business process -- built on a foundation of security and  privacy," Nadella said.
The new metrics look even stronger for Microsoft and Teams  on Thursday than they did on Wednesday evening relative to the competition. On  April 22, Zoom had claimed a daily user count of 300 million, an eye-popping  number. Eagle-eyed reporters at The  Verge noted that the blog had been edited a few days later to change that  metric to "300 million meeting participants." Zoom acknowledged the significant  change in a statement to the news site Wednesday and Zoom shares fell sharply on Thursday.
When it comes to meeting participants, which can be the same  person in multiple meetings over the course of a day, Microsoft is getting much  closer to Zoom's scale with Teams. Nadella said Wednesday that Teams had more  than 200 million meeting participants in a single day in April. He also said  those same participants racked up more than 4.1 billion meeting minutes.
Microsoft is competing on multiple fronts with Teams. In  addition to Zoom, other high-profile competitors include Slack and Google.  Nadella positioned Teams' breadth as a strength.
"Microsoft Teams supports multiple communications  modalities in a shared workspace. It is the only solution with meetings, calls,  chat, collaboration with the power of Office, and business process workflows --  in a single, integrated user experience -- with the highest security, as well as  compliance. Teams keeps all your work and communication -- conversations,  documents, whiteboards, and meeting notes -- in context. It helps people  collaborate inside and outside meetings, making them more efficient and  effective while reducing fatigue," he said. 
Nadella told investors that  adding capabilities to Teams each week remains a strategic priority for the  company.
On the enterprise side, Microsoft is also continuing to make  progress with massive deployments of Teams in recent months. "Twenty  organizations with more than 100,000 employees are now using Teams, including  Continental AG, Ernst & Young, Pfizer and SAP. Just last week, Accenture  became the first organization to surpass half a million users," Nadella  said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on April 30, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Before Microsoft reported its quarterly earnings on Wednesday, analysts weren't sure how  COVID-19 would affect different parts of its diverse portfolio of  businesses. 
But as CFO Amy  Hood told investors during the Wednesday afternoon earnings call, there was a minimal net impact to the total company. A slide presented during the call broke down the impact of the coronavirus at length for Microsoft's third quarter, which ended March 31: 
   [Click on image for larger view.] Source: Microsoft
 
   [Click on image for larger view.] Source: Microsoft 
In one of the toughest financial quarters in decades, Microsoft managed  once again to beat analyst expectations and post double-digit increases on  revenue and earnings. Revenues were $35 billion, an increase of 15% and diluted earnings per share  hit $1.40, a 23% jump. Company shares were up by 5% in after-hours trading.
CEO Satya Nadella put the results into the context of the  times. "As COVID-19 impacts every aspect of our work and life, we have  seen two years' worth of digital transformation in two months," Nadella  said during the earnings call in a reference to customers'  scramble to set up remote teamwork, sales and customer service, while setting  up cloud infrastructure and security for their altered environments.
"Our durable business model, diversified portfolio and  differentiated technology stack position us well for what's ahead,"  Nadella predicted.
One of the biggest COVID-19 positives for Microsoft was a  huge jump in usage of the Teams collaboration platform. Microsoft had already  teased strong Teams usage in late March, when it announced that daily active  users had jumped to 44 million from 20 million in November. On Wednesday,  Nadella announced that Teams daily active users had exploded to 75 million.  
Other big jumps in cloud usage occurred with Azure, Windows Virtual Desktop,  advanced security solutions and Power Platform. Azure revenues increased 59%  year-over-year for the quarter, while the broad Commercial Cloud category was  up 39%.
A slight surprise was increased demand to support remote  work for Windows OEM and the Surface line of hardware, which was helped when  China-related supply chain constraints eased late in the quarter. Microsoft also noted increased engagement in its gaming  business, due to stay-at-home guidelines.
Drops occurred in transactional licensing, especially for  the small and medium-sized business segment, which has been particularly hard-hit by the coronavirus-related downturn. Similarly, Microsoft saw declines in  advertising spending both for search and for the career-related LinkedIn social  media network.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on April 29, 20200 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
If you thought you blew the deadline for the Microsoft  Partner of the Year Awards amid the chaos of applying with banks for Paycheck  Protection Program loans, pivoting the business, setting up your workforce and  customers for remote work, et cetera...think again.
The original deadline was this week -- April 21, to be exact.  But Microsoft earlier this month extended the deadline until May 12. 
"In response to COVID-19 and the impact it's having on  our global partners, we are extending the nomination submission deadline for  all of our awards to 11:59 pm Pacific Time (PT), on Tuesday, May 12, 2020,"  announced Tracey Pretorius, senior director of Global Partner Business Strategy,   in a blog post.
Microsoft partners know the value that winning or being  named a finalist for a global Microsoft Partner of the Year award can have.  While it's hard to pin a revenue value to an award, partners have told  RCP that it's a differentiator that helps command attention from customers,  from other ecosystem companies and from within Microsoft.
The coronavirus situation has also prompted Microsoft to  introduce a new global award category, announced at the same time as the  deadline extension -- the Community Response award. "This new award  recognizes a partner organization that has made a great difference, providing  innovative and unique services or solutions to help solve problems for our  customers and community during these unprecedented times," Pretorius said.
The Community Response award brings to 50 the number of  awards categories this  year. Those awards broadly fall into the buckets of Azure, business  applications, industry verticals, modern workplace and a group of "other"  awards. There will also be more than 100 individual winners of country or  region Partner of the Year awards.
Traditionally, winners have been announced in June and the partners would be recognized the next month from the main stage at  Microsoft's annual Inspire conference, as well as at special events at Inspire  for the winners. However, due to COVID-19, Microsoft this year canceled the in-person components of Inspire so any winner gatherings or events will be  virtual.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on April 23, 20200 comments