Ever since you all told me how much you like Windows 7, I've  been predicting healthy holiday PC sales and an overall market resurgence. The  highly paid eggheads at Gartner now apparently agree, but see the comeback  starting early next year, not at the end of this one.
At first, Gartner gurus predicted a dismal first part of  this year, which was actually pretty good. So if they were wrong on this,  perhaps they should take a closer look at their projections for 2010. 
A big driver for the uptick? Inexpensive netbooks. I expect  to be in on this action and hope to snap up a Windows 7 netbook as soon as one's  available!
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on July 01, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft has a pretty attractive Windows 7 upgrade plan:  Buy a Vista machine now and move to Windows 7  for free in the fall. The plan is aimed at small businesses and consumers, and  Microsoft hopes to keep it that way by limiting upgrades to purchases of no  more than 25 PCs.
I'm wondering if Microsoft really has to do this. Do any  real enterprises opt for cheaper consumer versions of Windows? You tell me.  What makes high-end versions of XP or Vista  better for big shops, or can one really get away with large volumes of consumer  machines? Your expert opinion always welcome at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on July 01, 20097 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Doug used to dig Digg, but don't dig Digg no more. Doug used  to dig Digg because his boy David dialed Doug in. Dang, but didn't Dave diss  Digg's new move and douse his dad's delight. 
OK, no more "d"-based alliteration. Here's the  deal: Digg is an interesting site that gathers stories from other sources, and  I've spotted a few that I've highlighted in this here newsletter. The main Digg  site is just like our own RedmondReport.com; it highlights  links and clicking on them takes you to the source site -- no scraping and no  stealing.
The same David that got me into Digg told me about the new  Digg toolbar, which is more of a closed system. When you click on a story -- it  may even be written by me -- it opens in a window within Digg itself. 
I know how my company's contracts work and I don't remember myself  giving my employer all rights, and then doing the same for Digg. Trade  publishers already provide free content. But when did this extend to  competitors who turn our stories into free cash?
Google is still making billions from others' content. For  example, let's say you search on "Active Directory." Even though  hundreds of results are from Microsoft, it's Google that takes the ad money  from the search pages. Even if you did an AD search after getting excited about  stories from the Web site of my magazine. The parasites make the easy dough.
What do you make of all this, and what's your favorite  aggregation site? My favorite destination site is RedmondReport.com. Check it out and  let me know what you think! Send thoughts and URLs to [email protected]. 
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on June 29, 20094 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Recently, we told you about an unpatched SharePoint 2007 SP2  problem.  The Microsoft patch army took the field and there's now a fix. 
Here's what I find odd about SharePoint. The product is  presumably hot; I believe Microsoft has sold over 100 million licenses and cool  third parties are coming out of the woodwork. But I've asked several times how  you use SharePoint and what you like or don't like, and while I got 40 e-mails  about Robert Clary from "Hogan's Heroes,"   I don't think I've gotten any on SharePoint.
Is SharePoint the big deal I think it is, or am I a victim  of Microsoft's cruelly efficient marketing machine? You tell me at  [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on June 29, 20096 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft loves when you upgrade. Salespeople are constantly  pushing the latest (which hopefully is the greatest); volume licenses,  especially Software Assurance, are designed to drive migration; and Microsoft  has the Infrastructure Optimization Model, a framework that justifies the  adoption of lots of new software.
But upgrading isn't as simple as cranking up a few Windows  installers. You have to make sure the new stuff really works. That's where the  Microsoft Assessment and Planning Toolkit Version 4.0, now in beta, comes in.  The new kit focuses on Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2, and helps IT see  if existing hardware, peripherals and applications will still work. Sounds like  it's worth a look.
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on June 29, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		On Wednesday, I wrote a note about a French lottery scam that told me I "won" a goodly amount of Francs (Euros now, I  guess) and should contact Robert Clary to collect my winnings. 
I asked you all who Robert Clary is, and I think we set a  record with the number of responses -- 40 so far! You'll find a couple of them  in today's Mailbag. Of course, as many of you pointed out, Clary played  Corporal Louis LeBeau on "Hogan's Heroes," a show I try to watch at  least once a day.
What's interesting about the show is that many of the  Germans -- Klink, Schultz and Burkhalter, to name a few -- were played by  Germans of Jewish descent who escaped the Nazis. What's even more interesting  is how convincing they are as German officers. Makes you wonder how different  these races really are and exposes the idiocy and evil of the Holocaust. 
Clary, himself a French Jew, survived Buchenwald  and remains a fine actor and hero to this day. 
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on June 26, 20093 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Bill Gates is known for his minor love of cars. There's a  fairly famous story from the late '80s when Gates bought a Porsche 959, at the  time the most sophisticated Porsche on the market. These cars were so rare and  so expensive that Porsche had to sacrifice one to a U.S. crash test, which meant that  Bill couldn't register his quarter-million-dollar machine. 
Bill's new love is even more high-tech, and it hasn't even  been built yet. Gates, along with partners, has a patent for an electromagnetic  engine driven by particle beams. The engine has pistons just like the six in  his Porsche 959, but the pistons create electrical energy rather than directly  driving a crank. 
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on June 26, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft's new search engine, Bing, is off to a rousing  start, at least according to one measure: paid clicks. Paid clicks are up some  13 percent compared to the old MSN Live Search. (Now, doesn't Bing sound a whole  lot better?)
Not only that, but Microsoft's share of search moved from an  embarrassing 9.1 percent into the double digits at 12.1 percent. The share is  still small, but is moving in the right direction.
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on June 26, 20095 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Just as we expected, the release of a beta for Microsoft's free  anti-virus tool caused a firestorm, with vendors such as Symantec complaining  that Microsoft has no real right to be in this market -- and that the product  stinks to boot! 
This argument defies logic. If the product stinks, why do  you care that it exists? Meanwhile, the patch-meisters from Shavlik argue that  the big security suites are big on costs and small in agility. So a small tool  like the new MS anti-virus package ain't such a bad thang.
I clearly see Symantec's anger; Microsoft is trying to take  over a market others pioneered. On the other hand, this move has been coming  for years, giving security vendors plenty of time to react. Do I sound conflicted?  You bet. Where do you come down? Send your thoughts to [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on June 26, 200924 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		I have to admire Diskeeper. This company thinks of one thing  and one thing only: defragging hard drives. 
It took me a while to understand just how important it is to  organize bits and bytes on our hard drives; for our PCs, defragging gives back  a little oomph. But on servers, the difference is more dramatic. And now we're  asking our servers to do even more, to perform cartwheels as we virtualize the  heck out of these things. 
Diskeeper believes that server disks that support a bunch of  VMs should be as efficient as possible, and has a new tool, V-locity, that helps  do just that for Hyper-V.
Is defragging important? Do the built-in Windows tools do a  good enough job? Render your verdicts at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on June 24, 20098 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Money may not buy happiness, but it can buy freedom. And for  Bill Gates, having billions means the freedom to invest in wild ideas that may  or may not work. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is known for its  disciplined approach to investing. It researches the area and puts money where  it will do most good. (I'd love for the Foundation to manage our massive  federal stimulus program!) I don't think we can praise Bill enough for these  works.
  
  But Gates also likes to take a risk or two, and is funding  programs that most others turned down. Examples include "a magnet that can  detect malaria" and "giving mosquitoes a head cold to prevent them  from detecting and biting humans." 
Speaking of the Foundation, 20 minutes after finishing this  item, I got an e-mail message in French from "The Bill Gates Foundation."  I called upon all my high school French skills and was able to determine that I  won 250,000 Euros from a Foundation lottery. Tres bien! 
I have 48 hours to e-mail one of the lottery officials. His  name? Robert Clary. Now, that name sounds familiar. Can anyone tell me who  Robert Clary is and why he's famous? Or do you know nothing, nothing! Send your  answers to [email protected].
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on June 24, 20093 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		As a kid, I loved Spam. In the second grade, I nicked a tin  of Spam from the cupboard and put it under my pillow so it would be close all  night. Of course, I'm taking about the processed pork product. Junk e-mail is a  whole other story.
I know all about junk e-mail. I publish my real e-mail  address in each newsletter so your mail gets to me fast and direct. That's the  best part of my job. But because my address is out there, I get spam -- lots of  spam. And for me, in fact for all of us, the spam just keeps on a-coming. Despite  the CAN-SPAM Act, junk mail is still on the rise, and May was one of the worst  months ever, according to research from Symantec.
The culprit? Botnets that deliver this garbage, often from  our very own PCs! The only thing missing from the research? A solution! 
 
	Posted by Doug Barney on June 24, 20096 comments