Citrix plans to unveil a new partner portal later this week.
The "My Citrix" portal will become "Partner Central"  on Thursday. Aside from changing the name, Citrix is streamlining and  reorganizing many of its partner resources.
Partner Central will be organized into five main functional areas:  training and certification, sales, marketing, licensing and renewals, and  support. Partners will now also be able to manage their own Citrix licenses and  accounts as customers from the single partner sign-on.
According to Citrix, current My Citrix portal credentials will continue  to work on the new Partner Central portal.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 24, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Digital security vendor ESET this month launched a partner program  specifically for managed services providers.
		The ESET MSP offering covers ESET's Endpoint Security and Endpoint  Antivirus products, which provide protection against malware, phishing,  viruses, spam and other cyber-threats for companies with 25 users up to tens of  thousands of users.
		The main feature of the partner program is decreasing costs with  increasing volumes of licenses. An MSP-specific benefit is the ESET Remote  Administrator, which plugs into several types of remote monitoring and  management (RMM) tools and allows MSPs to remotely control antivirus and other  security settings.
		The program is currently available for ESET partners in North America.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 20, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Dimension Data is capitalizing on the growing demand for Microsoft Lync  with a new managed services offering.
		Dimension Data, one of Microsoft's largest global partners, announced  the new service during the Microsoft Lync conference this week in San Diego.
		The service includes application support for Lync 2010 and Lync 2013,  hardware support, patch notifications, service management and administration.  The company will leverage its access to Microsoft Premier Support for Lync  Partners to make the offering robust.
		"We have already received great interest in the [Lync] platform,"  said Peter Menadue, Dimension Data's general manager for Microsoft Solutions,   in a statement explaining the reasoning behind the new service. Menadue said  Dimension Data customers have been eager to try high-definition video  conferencing, Skype federation and overall architectural improvements in Lync  2013.
		The managed services for Lync complement several of Dimension Data's  existing managed services offerings, including Cloud Services for Lync, Managed  Services for IPT and Managed Services for Visual communications.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 20, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		IT market research firms Gartner and IDC are both out this week with  smartphone shipment estimates that show Windows Phone making significant  progress in the fourth quarter of 2012.
		The global studies contrast with studies released a week ago by Canalys  and comScore, both of which suggested Microsoft made no market share progress  in the critical Q4 period, which coincided with the release of the Windows  Phone 8 operating system and carrier devices.
		
				IDC today estimated that Microsoft and its partners sold 6 million  Windows Phones in the quarter, a 150 percent increase over Q4 2011. While  overall share remains very small at 2.6 percent, that's much larger than the  1.5 percent share in the year-ago period. IDC labeled the growth  "market-beating," as the overall market increased 42 percent. Apple  saw 29 percent growth from its very large base to 48 million units, while  Android is still experiencing very strong growth from already huge volumes --  88 percent growth to 160 million units.
		The IDC numbers are in the same ballpark as estimates released by  Gartner on Wednesday. Gartner put Windows Phone shipments for Q4 at nearly 6.2  million for 3 percent market share, a gain of 1.2 points of share compared to  Q4 2011.
		
				Canalys a week earlier had estimated Windows Phone shipments for the  quarter at 5.1 million (the company covers around 50 countries, rather than the  entire global market), and called the 2.4 percent market share "unchanged  sequentially."
		A day before that, on Feb. 6, comScore actually contended that  Microsoft's Windows Phone share dropped sequentially in the United States from  the third quarter to the fourth -- a surprising result given the Windows Phone  8 release and aggressive marketing campaigns for the platform by Microsoft,  carriers and handset makers. Based on surveys of U.S. smartphone owners,  comScore reported that Microsoft's share of smartphone subscribers had fallen  seven-tenths of a point to 2.9 percent in the fourth quarter.
		IDC and Gartner have some professional pride riding on Windows Phone's  success: Both firms predicted in 2011 that the platform's partnership with  Nokia would result in about  20 percent of smartphone market share by 2015. Nokia did make important  progress with Windows Phone in Q4. In its quarterly report to investors, Nokia  said it sold 4.4 million of its Windows Phone-based Lumia units. IDC estimates  that Nokia accounts for 76 percent of Windows Phone platform sales.
		One IDC analyst contended that the quarter represented an important  setup period for Microsoft, while the current quarter represents a similar  opportunity for BlackBerry, which just launched BB10. "With the recent  introductions of two new smartphone platforms we expect some ground to be made  by the new entrants over the coming years," Ryan Reith said in a  statement. "There is no question the road ahead is uphill for both Microsoft  and BlackBerry, but history shows us consumers are open to change. Platform  diversity is something not only the consumers have asked for, but also the  operators."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 14, 20131 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Remember Microsoft's massive datacenter build-out campaign? It's still  going on.
		
				Wired has a piece this morning putting the running total of Microsoft's spending on building out  datacenters for Internet services such as Bing, Skype and Windows Azure at $15  billion.
		The article mentions Microsoft's well-known datacenters in Quincy,  Wash.; Chicago; Dublin; San Antonio, Texas; and Boydton, Va. The datacenter in  Chicago was a flagship for a modular design that allowed Microsoft to drop in  more containers whenever it needed extra capacity -- meaning the company can  increase capacity at a site on an ongoing basis or swap a module out to another  datacenter.
		Microsoft is still expanding its datacenter footprint with new  locations, as well. According to Wired, Microsoft will open a new $112 million,  Cheyenne, Wyo. datacenter, complete with a methane-powered portable unit called  a Data Plant, in a few months.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 11, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Condusiv  Technologies is pretty confident its new virtual machine acceleration software  will work.
		The software  optimization vendor formerly known as Diskeeper Corp. on Monday will announce a  performance guarantee promising channel partners a complete refund if their  customers don't realize a 25 percent performance improvement in of deployed  VMs.
		 "We are putting our money where our mouth  is," Condusiv CEO Jerry Baldwin said.
		The  guarantee covers V-locity 4 VM Accelerator, which Condusiv released in  December. The tool works with VMware ESX/ESXi and Microsoft Hyper-V and is  designed to reduce I/O bottlenecks at the server level in storage area network  and network-attached storage environments.
		At a high  level, the software addresses two core problems, according to Condusiv  documentation. A feature called IntelliMemory caches active data in RAM to  reduce unnecessary I/O traffic, while another feature, IntelliWrite, prevents  Windows from automatically breaking files into pieces that use up I/O bandwidth  unnecessarily. Supported virtual machine operating systems include Windows XP  SP2 or higher, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Server 2003,  Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2 and Windows Server 2012.
		The  performance guarantee comes in at less than half of what Condusiv is claiming  as a typical performance gain from the software, giving the Burbank,  Calif.-based company some wiggle room. While the 25 percent guarantee represents  a solid performance improvement, Condusiv released third-party benchmarks  performed by Westborough, Mass.-based openBench Labs in December showing  performance gains of better than 50 percent.
		The guarantee  uses an embedded benchmarking tool called the Benefit Analyzer, which measures  before and after throughput. The tool was originally included to give IT  customers a way to measure the effectiveness of V-locity and to provide  documentation for IT management.
		Should the  tool show performance gains of less than 25 percent, Condusiv says it will  issue a full refund to the customer for all licenses stipulated in the purchase  order, even if the product is purchased through a reseller.
		Condusiv  will also announce Monday that Ingram Micro is adding V-locity 4 to its catalog  and offering joint partner incentives in the United States.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 08, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Ah, chaos. It's when all the best business opportunities emerge.
		Dell created some chaos this week with the announcement that it would  go private in a huge deal valued at $24 billion. (Well, intensified the chaos  is probably a more accurate way to put it. Dell admitted in its official  statement on the deal that rumors of the joint Michael Dell/Silver Lake merger  agreement were first published on Jan. 11.)
		Rumors and uncertainty are the lifeblood of any good channel and  customer poaching effort.
		Dell for years played successfully on the ongoing chaos among top  management and the board of HP to bolster its partner efforts.
		Returning the favor, HP pounced immediately on Dell's news. "Dell  has a very rough road ahead. The company faces an extended period of  uncertainty and transition that will not be good for its customers. And with a  significant debt load, Dell's ability to invest in new products and services  will be extremely limited. Leveraged buyouts tend to leave existing customers  and innovation at the curb," HP asserted in a formal statement.
		
				
				Assuming HP would rush the same message to Dell partners, Dell's  channel chief Greg Davis issued his own statement to reporters: "As Dell  enters this exciting new chapter, our commitment to channel partners does not  waiver. As a private enterprise, we will continue to execute our strategy of  delivering best-in-class solutions and growing our channel relationships."
		Dell's positioning of the potential effects of privatization paints a  very different picture from HP's. Talking about the deal, CEO Michael Dell implies  that moving away from the quarterly reporting pressures and subsequent stock  market rewards and punishments will free Dell to pursue strategic objectives  more nimbly.
		"We can deliver immediate value to stockholders, while we continue  the execution of our long-term strategy and focus on delivering best-in-class  solutions to our customers as a private enterprise," Michael Dell said  in statement. "Dell has made solid  progress executing this strategy over the past four years, but we recognize  that it will still take more time, investment and patience, and I believe our  efforts will be better supported by partnering with Silver Lake in our shared  vision."
		For those partners reliant on the PC business, meanwhile, there is a  new obstacle in place in the private deal to keep Dell from rushing for the  exits too quickly. Now that stockholders can't punish Dell for taking a  short-term revenue hit for dramatically reducing its declining PC business in  order to focus on better growth opportunities, Microsoft could serve to slow  Dell's potential transition.
		Microsoft loaned $2 billion to the Dell-Silver Lake group for the deal.  Microsoft's stated aim? "Microsoft is committed to the long term success  of the entire PC ecosystem and invests heavily in a variety of ways to build  that ecosystem for the future," the company said in a statement.
		HP is coming after Dell's customers and partners, Dell is assuring its  channel that there's a place for them in Dell's new private world, and  Microsoft is there to make sure Dell remains a pillar of the PC ecosystem. What's  a channel partner to do? Play HP and Dell off each other ruthlessly to secure  the best terms for yourself, of course.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 07, 20133 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Tami Reller released some  official statements on the state of Windows 8 at 90 days in the form of a Q&A posted on Microsoft's Web site earlier this week.  While the Windows CMO/CFO repeated a lot of data points Microsoft had previously  shared -- 60 million licenses, 100 million apps downloaded, etc. -- she did have  some interesting things to say about the learning curve.
		Windows 8 is essentially two  operating systems. One OS is the Windows 7 desktop minus the Start button,  while the other OS is the new touch-centric, tile-and-app-filled,  next-generation interface. Especially on the tile side, navigating the  operating system requires intricate gestures and mouse movements that are not  intuitive.
		As we've said here at RCP in  reviews and blogs, the payoff is high but the learning curve is steep. In the  Q&A, Reller's questioner, Brandon LeBlanc, asked about the "learning  curve" (quotation mark emphasis Microsoft's).
		After talking about all the  pre-release usage time and testing, Reller got into some interesting data  points based on Microsoft's post-release collection of usage data.
		Reller said:
		  - "Fifty  percent of users get through the out of box experience in less than 5 minutes."
- "On  the very first day, virtually everyone launches an app from the Start screen,  finds the desktop, and finds the charms."
- "Almost  half of users go to the Windows Store on that first day." 
- "After  two weeks, the average person doubles the number of tiles on Start."
- "People  find the new features in the context of what they are trying to do, and  incorporate them into their everyday use after finding them."
Those numbers seem reasonable. Some of the basics of  using the operating system that Reller covers aren't difficult. A two-week  learning curve also seems like a plausible amount of time for people to get  comfortable with an operating system that is substantially different from a  paradigm they've used since Windows 95.
		There's something to be said for giving Windows 8 a couple  weeks before passing judgment on it. (We based our review on a month of usage.)  That said, there are plenty of vocal users who have given it that long, gotten  over the learning curve and still don't like it. What remains baffling is why  the Start button needed to go -- former Windows chief Steven Sinofsky's lengthy  explanations notwithstanding. The Desktop gives users a way to not only run  legacy apps but to run the OS the way they want. 
		Maybe in the process of the  ongoing updates to the OS that Reller refers to vaguely later in the Q&A,  Microsoft could provide a formally sanctioned option for restoring the Start  button and launching into Desktop mode. It would give users who don't like the  new interface a way to feel like they haven't wasted their money, and it would  give Microsoft more time to turn current haters into future converts to the new  interface.
		
				
						Related:
				
		
		
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 06, 20135 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Sophos on Monday updated its mobile  device management (MDM) software to expand support to Android devices in the BYOD  mix.
The latest release is Sophos Mobile  Control 3.0, and it is available on-premise and as a service.
In addition to the Android device  support, the new version supports Samsung SAFE (Samsung for Enterprises)  devices, new protections against malicious apps and extended URL filtering.
Core capabilities of Sophos Mobile  Control include management of Apple iOS, BlackBerry and now Android devices;  compliance enforcement such as remote lock and wipe and the ability to block  e-mail access; whitelisting, blacklisting and distribution of apps; and user  self-service.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 04, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft has officially opened registration for the Microsoft  Worldwide Partner Conference, its huge annual gathering of partners every July.
		This year's event in Houston has four big themes: big data, cloud,  social and mobility.
		In a blog entry announcing the start of registration, Microsoft's WPC  Experience Ambassador Kati Quigley detailed other themes:
		  - "The role of  leadership can play in the success of your organization.
 
 
- "Best practices,  business success stories, partners' engagement model, and recommendations.
 
 
- "All things  cloud. Find out how you can transform your business model to pursue this  rapidly changing IT market shift. We'll cover everything -- from fundamental  differences in marketing, selling, and delivering solutions, to internal  differences such as HR, training, and compensation."
Microsoft has been promoting this WPC non-stop almost from the moment  the 2012 WPC wrapped up in Toronto. It will be interesting to see how many partners  join them in steamy Houston this summer. I'll be there to keep up on the news.  Let me know if you're going and what you hope to gain from WPC this year at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 04, 20130 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft U.S. channel chief Jenni Flinders has an interesting recent blog  post about redefining your role in your business.
Acknowledging that most partners had an entrepreneurial start, she  calls on partners to avoid the comfortable rut of day-to-day business post  start-up:
  "I encourage each of  you to consider how you can be your own company's Entrepreneur in Chief, bring  a sense of energy and urgency to your daily work, even if you're well past true  start-up stage."
Given that companies in the  channel need to reinvent themselves on a constant basis, it's timely advice.  Flinders' call may be even more appropriate now in this time of broad industry  shifts to mobile and cloud.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on February 04, 20131 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft shed some light last week on the state of the "great  migration" -- the Herculean effort by enterprises worldwide to get their  desktops on Windows 7 before Windows XP support officially expires in April  2014.
		During an earnings call Thursday, CFO Peter Klein said that more than  60 percent of enterprise desktops worldwide are now on Windows 7.
		Asked by a financial analyst for a forecast on the pace of the  migration, Klein offered this: 
		  "The one thing I would say is, not only are over 60 percent on  Windows 7, but about 90 percent have expressed that they have a plan to do  that. So, I expect to see sort of a steady drumbeat between now and the end of  life for XP support in April 2014 for that to continue, because the incentive  is there and the desire to do that has been expressed by our customers. So, I  would expect to see that continue over the next year, year and a quarter."
		Here's a question. Where does Windows 8 fit into that picture?
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 28, 20131 comments