Microsoft is as serious about business intelligence (BI) as Einstein was about 
  relativity. Not only does SQL Server 2005 have a heap of BI features, but the 
  company is also building an array of separate tools such as the 
Office 
  PerformancePoint Server 2007, now in beta test
 (oh, I mean in CTP, which 
  is a fancy term for a specific type of beta, though I can't quite remember the 
  difference). The new tool does business score-carding, and can work with an 
  array of structured and unstructured data types. 
 
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	Posted by Doug Barney on December 11, 20060 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft has been on a product shipping tear. Going after the Web development 
  market (where Redmond essentially failed with FrontPage and Macromedia cleaned 
  up with Dreamweaver), Microsoft 
just 
  starting shipping pieces of its Expression Studio line
 of products. 
First up is a tool that lets developers build sites that work with key standards 
  (or at least Microsoft's take on what key standards are). Later, tools will 
  let developers fancy up these sites and protect proprietary content.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on December 11, 20060 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Exchange 2007 didn't exactly live up to its name -- 
the 
  darn thing just shipped
 and last time I checked, it's still 2006. To be 
  fair, it was just released to manufacturing, which means it has to work its 
  way through this process before you can actually start installing the finished 
  goods. 
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Posted by Doug Barney on December 11, 20060 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    E-mail used to be an ephemeral thing. Then archival storage came along and 
  we couldn't get rid of it. Now, 
new 
  rules from the Supreme Court
 mandate that companies store, and prove they 
  can retrieve, e-mail so they can be used as evidence in a lawsuit. 
Storing is the easy part. Disks are cheap and getting cheaper all the time. 
  But knowing what message is where and how to get it back -- now, there's 
  the rub. Fortunately, the rules apply to messages and data that could be relevant 
  to the lawsuit, so nonrelated archives can still be purged.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on December 06, 20060 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    In the old days, AT&T (Ma Bell) dominated the U.S. telco market. After the 
  Telecommunications Act of 1996 there was real competition, and AT&T almost 
  entirely collapsed under its own monopolistic weight. The act, though far from 
  perfect, ushered in new companies and new services. With VoIP (once we can get 
  it to work) and the upcoming iPhone, we are on the verge of another revolution 
  -- and Microsoft wants its fair share. The company this week wrangled together 
  eight telcos and developers to support the 
 
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	Posted by Doug Barney on December 06, 20060 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Remember the brouhaha over Microsoft Office and whether it would or would not 
  support the OpenDocument format, which would allow files to be easily interchanged 
  with the open source OpenOffice and StarOffice? 
Microsoft didn't take the OpenDoc bait and instead promoted a new file format, 
  OpenXML. Like stubborn kids fighting, someone eventually had to give in and, 
  in this case, 
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Posted by Doug Barney on December 06, 20060 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The SCO Group (now based in Utah, not Santa Cruz) just had the bulk of its lawsuit 
  against IBM 
tossed 
  out
. SCO claims that IBM took SCO's proprietary Linux code and simply gave 
  it to the open source community. 
Here's where it gets weird: SCO wants IBM to show what code it supposedly stole 
  (I guess that's "innocent until you prove yourself guilty"). Also, 
  there's a question as to whether SCO gained any copyrights when it bought the 
  rights to Unix from Novell.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on December 06, 20060 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    A year ago, I ran across whosarat.com, a site where snitches and informants 
  are exposed. I didn't quite know what to think. 
Some of the profiles indicated that the informants were bigger dirt bags than 
  the folks they finked on. But it seemed a rather dangerous undertaking. Bikers, 
  the mob and gang members aren't always shy when it comes to revenge, and having 
  your name, photo and address plastered on a Web site about rats isn't the healthiest 
  thing in the world.
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	Posted by Doug Barney on December 05, 20062 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Apple had an Ivan Putski-class lock on the education market in the 1980s -- 
  that is, until Microsoft started giving away and steeply discounting software 
  for schools. The Apple II and Mac may have been cute, but free is free, and 
  cheap is cheap. 
Google is now trying to do the same thing to Microsoft. The company is not 
  just giving away spreadsheets and word processors (these Google apps are, after 
  all, already free), but is 
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Posted by Doug Barney on December 05, 20060 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Novell exec Susan Heystee has been picked to 
oversee 
  the patent and interoperability deal with Microsoft
. Sometimes, these deals 
  are window dressing and PR, in which case Heystee's job will be as easy as that 
  of a security guard at a convent. But with Microsoft and Novell already quibbling 
  over patents, Heystee could be burning the midnight oil.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on December 05, 20060 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation focuses far more on tough issues, like 
  malaria, than high-tech ones, but that didn't stop it from giving 
$17.5 
  million to fund Internet access
 in libraries in Botswana, Latvia and Lithuania. 
This is an attempt to let these countries catch up, at least a little bit, 
  to the U.S., where nearly all libraries are connected. Wonder how many users 
  will be Googling versus. using MSN or Live Search?
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on December 05, 20060 comments