The 3-D-printed bust at Jon Roskill's house is an example of the uneven  distribution of the future.
		Created last summer for the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference, the  tiny likeness of Microsoft's channel chief was part of a presentation on near-future  technologies. The session, designed to inspire the thousands of partners in the  Toronto arena, included a camera/projector combination that allowed pen and  paper sketches on one desk to be displayed on another and the 3-D printer that  produced the mini-Roskill from a Kinect scan of his head and shoulders.
		      |  | 
      | Image courtesy of Olivia Roskill. | 
		Because forms of 3-D printing emerged in the 1970s and most devices in subsequent  decades were large and expensive with limited capabilities and lots of hype, it  might not be apparent how close the technology is and how cheap it is getting.
		That Microsoft could produce a demo in July 2012 didn't shed much more  light on the price-performance progress, given the company's  multibillion-dollar research budget.
		A Gartner report this week, however, spotlights the rapid spread of the  technology and the rapid fall in prices of 3-D, or additive, printers.
		Gartner research director Pete Basiliere argues the technology is  accelerating from niche to mainstream adoption in his report, "How 3D  Printing Disrupts Business and Creates New Opportunities." The technology  is already entrenched in automotive and other manufacturing, consumer goods,  the military, medical equipment and the pharmaceutical industry, Gartner notes  in a news release about its $195, six-page report.
		Basiliere encourages enterprises of almost all types to buy 3-D printers  now and start experimenting with personalized products, components, working prototypes  and architectural models. The exercise is partly for immediate business benefit  and partly to build a better institutional understanding of the technology and  its possibilities. He says the printers are affordable now for any size  business but predicts that what he calls "enterprise-class" 3-D  printers will cost less than $2,000 by 2016.
		As with drones and robots, a vibrant hobbyist community exists around  3-D printing. Looking at what hobbyists pay for  do-it-yourself kits and fully assembled systems, it's easy to see that Gartner's  price targets seem reasonable, maybe even a bit conservative.
		Gartner's Basiliere points to the disruptive opportunities businesses  could realize through 3-D printing, and highlights some positive social  potential. He notes, for example, life-changing parts and products for  struggling countries, ways to help rebuild crisis-hit areas and a  democratization of manufacturing. 
		There's a darker side to 3-D printing, too. Individuals and  organizations are already working on manufacturing printed firearms. Success  would provide a way to pass metal detectors and to circumvent gun laws and  international arms bans. Even without malice, sufficient progress on the speed  and capability of 3-D printing might one day present a serious threat to the  millions of jobs in transportation if local manufacturing through 3-D printing  takes off.
		For now, 3-D-printed objects like the Roskill bust are mostly scattered  and widely separated. Soon they'll be everywhere. Time to get ready for 3-D  printing in your face.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 28, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Veeam Software is promising to release software that will make it  possible to quickly recover individual items from Microsoft SharePoint backups.
		Other tools exist to do the similar things, but Veeam's plan is to  release its tool, Veeam Explorer for Microsoft SharePoint, for free.
		The SharePoint Explorer comes at the problem from Veeam's corner of the  market. Veeam specializes in virtualization solutions and will offer the  Explorer as a free add-on in the next editions of Veeam Backup Free Edition and  Veeam Backup & Replication v7. That means the product works only if  SharePoint is running on top of a virtual machine.
		The many limitations of the free version of Veeam Backup make the  possibility of running the SharePoint Explorer for free a caveat-filled affair.  But for those customers backing up their virtual environments with the full  product, granular SharePoint file recovery comes without additional cost.
		At this point, the product is little more than vaporware. Veeam this  week announced only that it was taking signups for a free public beta, which  isn't available yet. The final version will ship with Backup & Replication  v7 in the second half of this year.
		Nonetheless, Veeam has delivered similar products before in the Veeam  Explorer for Microsoft Exchange. The company's management has a solid track  record of identifying important problems for IT administrators and coming up  with solutions.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 27, 20131 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		In the coverage of T-Mobile's plans to blow up the wireless industry, most  of the focus, rightly, is on a handful of things. The company is adding the  Apple iPhone to its lineup, eliminating contracts, rolling out an LTE network  and revealing the true consumer cost of devices. (CEO John Legere's potty  mouth also achieved some notice.)
		Windows Phone got zero attention in the announcements (less than  BlackBerry even), but the changes have interesting implications for current and  future Windows Phone customers.
		The self-branded "un-carrier" is offering phones without  contracts. Customers can pay for the phone upfront or pay some or no money  down and pay out the rest over two years. Meanwhile, the cancel-anytime,  unlimited phone, unlimited text and data plan costs $50, $60 or $70 a month for  500 MB, 2 GB or unlimited data, respectively.
		For the iPhone 5 coming April 12, the phone cost is $100 down and $20 a  month for 24 months.
		T-Mobile immediately updated its Web site prices yesterday, and the  carrier's two Windows Phones reflected the new pricing. The flagship Windows  Phone is the HTC 8X. Buying one of those now will cost $0 up front and $18 a  month for two years, with the option to pay the full $432 up front.
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      | HTC 8X | 
		The other phone, the Nokia Lumia 810 sells for $0 down and $15 a month  for two years or $360 at checkout.
		Here's where things get, um, surprising for customers who paid more for  that HTC device. The 8X by HTC will not support T-Mobile's new LTE network,  even though other carriers' HTC 8X devices are LTE-capable. (To make things more confusing,  T-Mobile does show a 4G badge next to the HTC phone in its online store. Maybe  T-Mobile isn't such an "un-carrier" after all.) The less expensive Lumia  810, however, will support LTE soon.
		Windows Phone Daily tracked  down a statement from T-Mobile:
		  "The Lumia 810 is the only other LTE-capable device on T-Mobile  aside from the [Samsung Galaxy] Note II, and we will share timing of that LTE [maintenance  release] at a later time. Please stay tuned."
		In the near term, the difference will only matter in a handful of  places as T-Mobile upgrades its infrastructure. Sprint launched its LTE network  in seven metro areas Tuesday: Baltimore, Houston, Kansas City, Las Vegas,  Phoenix, San Jose and Washington, D.C. The company is promising to cover 100  million Americans by the middle of the year, including New York in June. By the  end of the year, T-Mobile's network is supposed to cover 200 million Americans.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 27, 20131 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		In an effort to expand SMB sales, Citrix Solutions is introducing two  new SMB editions that it will sell primarily through partners.
		Mike Fouts, Citrix Americas channel chief, announced the editions in a blog post Tuesday:
		  "It bundles VDI-in-a-Box, XenDesktop, NetScaler, ShareFile and  support for companies with 25+ and 50+ users.  For those who purchase the bundle designated for more than 25 but fewer  than 50 users, XenDesktop will be replaced by the simpler to manage  VDI-in-a-Box solution. The price for each package is $6,600 for the 25-user  bundle and $21,000 for the 50-user bundle."
		At the same time as the product releases, Citrix is introducing two  changes to partner margins and incentives to make selling the packages more  attractive. Fouts says the SMB suite will carry additional margin for partners  and the Citrix Advisor Rewards threshold will fall from $10,000 to $2,500.
		The product bundles and program changes follow Fouts' effort last July  to reduce concerns about channel conflict in the SMB business by making clear  that no Citrix field employees would be compensated for SMB sales.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 26, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
				
Microsoft nabbed the face of the Oracle channel.
		
Judson Althoff will become Microsoft's president of North America Sales  and Marketing on March 29, Microsoft announced Monday.
		For the last few years, Althoff was Oracle's senior vice president of  Worldwide Alliances and Channels. He had been at Oracle for 14 years. Althoff played  a high-profile channel role for Oracle, including as the master of ceremonies  at partner  events and as a spokesman to the media. He was named to the prestigious CRN  Channel Chiefs list for five years running through this year.
		Althoff had reported to Mark Hurd, president of Worldwide Sales,  Consulting, Marketing and Support at Oracle. At Microsoft he will report to COO  Kevin Turner.
		While Althoff's position is not within Microsoft's Worldwide Partner  Group, any field role involves significant interaction with the channel, which  accounts for 95 percent of Microsoft's sales. The North America president-level  role at Microsoft was most recently held by Robert Youngjohns, who left  Microsoft in September 2012 to take over HP's Autonomy unit.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 26, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Hosted Exchange giant Intermedia is releasing a proprietary mailbox  migration tool for its partners.
		Intermedia calls the tool the Cloud Concierge Onboarding Tool. The  company says it has been using the tool internally since 2010 to migrate more  than 300,000 users onto its Hosted Exchange platform. (In all, Intermedia  currently claims about 550,000 premium Hosted Exchange mailboxes.)
		The tool is designed for Hosted Exchange setup and migration from  in-house systems, third-party systems and IMAP. According to Intermedia's  description, the onboarding tool can export Exchange Global Address Lists or  Active Directory objects, fix e-mail addresses, migrate data and execute the  cutover to Hosted Exchange, among other functions. Partners who use the tool  will also be able to tap Intermedia for free, round-the-clock support.
		Along with Hosted Exchange, Intermedia offers Hosted PBX and Cloud  Server, a hosted application infrastructure packaged for small businesses. For  now, the tool only works for Hosted Exchange.
		The company has several thousand reseller partners, who can white-label  Intermedia's offering and build in their own margin when they bill the  customer, resell the products and receive an advisor fee from Intermedia or  switch between the two models on a customer-by-customer basis.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 26, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The latest open secret in the Microsoft ecosystem was "Windows  Blue," the alleged code name for a series of relatively rapid releases of  Windows, Windows Server and Windows Phone.
		Now Microsoft has given its first  public confirmation of the code name this week in a state-of-the-company blog  post by top Microsoft spokesman Frank X. Shaw. "With a remarkable  foundation of products in market and a clear view of how we will evolve the  company, product leaders across Microsoft are working together on plans to  advance our devices and services, a set of plans referred to internally as 'Blue,'"  Shaw wrote.
		He called the "continuous development cycle" and "ongoing  rhythm of updates" the "new normal" at Microsoft. As we've said here recently, a quicker release cadence from Microsoft is a good thing for all  concerned.
		Partners, especially those with development shops, looking to find out  more about Blue should mark June 26-28 on their calendars. Microsoft's Chief  Evangelist Steve Guggenheimer announced during a Visual Studio Live! keynote that Microsoft will hold its next BUILD  conference then in San Francisco.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 26, 20131 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The go-shop period on Michael Dell's bid to take Dell private ended  quietly on Friday. Turns out the drama wasn't over, and probably won't be for a  long time.
		This morning, the special committee of Dell's board of directors  announced that there are two new offers to compete with Michael Dell's proposal (in partnership with Silver Lake Partners and with Microsoft's backing) to pay  $13.65 a share, valuing the company at $24.4 billion.
		The Blackstone Group is behind one new proposal that would offer $14.25  a share. Activist investor Carl Icahn, who had already publicly complained  about Michael Dell's original offer, is behind the other offer. Icahn's  proposal is a complex arrangement involving his current 4.6 percent stake in  Dell, equity commitments, an offer of $15 a share up to $2 billion, cash equity  financing and other elements.
		According to Dell's special committee, either of the proposals could be  superior to Michael Dell's offer, but it's too soon to tell. "The Special  Committee has not determined that either the Blackstone proposal or the Icahn  proposal in fact constitutes a superior proposal under the existing merger  agreement and neither is at this stage sufficiently detailed or definitive for  such a determination to be appropriate," the committee noted in a statement this morning.
		Given the amount of money involved, and the participation of the  tactically vocal Carl Icahn, we could be looking at a long period of  uncertainty around Dell.
		
				
						Related:
				
		
		
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 25, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
  "Begin to explore the potential benefits and risks that [Software-Defined  Networking] will bring to your organization, but beware of SDN-washing which  simply re-labels legacy approaches with the latest buzzwords." 
  --
    Joe  Skorupa, vice president and distinguished analyst, Gartner, in a Gartner Q&A about  SDN.
Replace "SDN" in the concept "SDN-washing" and you've  got a good framework for critically evaluating any buzz-heavy technology.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 25, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Leaked screenshots of "Windows Blue" suggest the update to  Windows 8 could include new snap-view sizing options, new tile sizes, a browser  update, more personalization colors and settings changes.
		
				Windows  Blue is a rumored coming wave of updates to Windows 8 and Windows RT, as  well as Window Phone and Windows Server. Some elements of Blue could arrive as  early as this summer.
		The 20 screenshots posted on Sunday by The  Verge focused on the Windows 8/RT client interface, exclusively showing the  modern UI. The Verge characterized the leaked version as an early build that  was released on March 15 for partners only.
		      |  | 
      | Image source: Winforum, via The Verge. | 
		Windows 8/RT currently allows two tile sizes on its Start screen. The  small type is a square and the large type is a rectangle two squares wide. The  leaked screenshots show two new tile sizes. A new tiny square fits four into a  current square. A new large square is the size of two current rectangles  stacked on top of each other. In the screenshots, the only large square is the  Desktop icon. It's unclear whether the Desktop will be the only icon that can  display at that size.
		The screenshots also show new options for snapping apps. In the current  Windows 8/RT interface, you can view two apps at once, with one taking up  two-thirds of the screen and the other taking up one-third. The Blue version  apparently will allow apps to each take up half of the screen, or for apps to  take up as many as four side-by-side positions.
		Other views in the screenshots show an Internet Explorer 11 "About"  page, multiple settings and Charms changes and more personalization colors.
		Check out The Verge's gallery here.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 25, 20131 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		While a big  update for Windows may be coming this summer, small-bore improvements for  Windows 8/RT are coming tomorrow.
		Brandon LeBlanc posted Monday in the Windows Experience Blog about changes coming to the Mail,  Calendar and People apps. The updates to the apps will be available for free  from the Microsoft Store.
		One element in the Mail app I'm eager to try is the ability to search  the server, not just the default two-week local cache, for an item.
		Other changes  LeBlanc describes include:
		  - Users can flag e-mails and find the items in a new  "Flagged" folder.
 
 
- Draft e-mails show up automatically at the top of  the Inbox.
 
 
- It's possible to add, edit and delete hyperlinks  when composing messages.
 
 
- Editing and deleting bulleted and numbered lists  are supposed to be easier.
 
 
- Effort has been put into maintaining formatting  for content posted into Mail from Word or other sources.
 
 
- Solid blocks of colors have been removed to make  the Calendar app more readable.
 
 
- There's a new "work week" view in the  Calendar.
 
 
- Appointment scheduling is getting more robust.
 
 
- The People app "What's New" feed can  be filtered by social network.
These aren't groundbreaking changes by any means, but it's good to see  Microsoft attempting a faster cadence of improvements to the built-in apps.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 25, 20131 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
		Longtime readers of RCP will remember Lee Pender, our inimitable and  polemically-inclined original blogger. Lee's since moved on to a custom  publishing role in the company, by way of our sister publication Redmond magazine. But many of his posts live on.
		He wrote one in 2011 called "5  Reasons Why I Hate Twitter," which still attracts visitors. One recent  reader was a BBC radio producer working on a segment about the seventh  anniversary of Twitter. BBC reached out to Lee, and he got on Skype to join a  panel discussing Twitter.
		The archive of the BBC program is here. The part about  Twitter starts at about 37:10, and Lee starts bringing it at about 44 minutes.  It's worth a listen. In case you were wondering, he still hates Twitter.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on March 24, 20130 comments