A couple of months ago, RCPU brought you 
the 
  tale of Avistar
, a maker of video-conferencing software that was facing 
  potentially fatal challenges of 29 of its U.S. patents from none other than 
  Redmond itself. 
Back then, we held -- as we do now -- that Microsoft was just trying to put 
  a struggling company out of business and snake its stuff in order to bolster 
  Redmond's own growing unified communications capabilities. Of course, not 
  everybody shared our take, but we've stuck with it.
 More
	Posted by Lee Pender on June 03, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Along with pretty much everybody else in the world, your editor got a live 
  demo last week of Microsoft AX 2009, one of Redmond's Dynamics Enterprise Resource 
  Planning suites, which is 
generally 
  available this week
. 
Other bloggers and commentators have mentioned how the latest version of AX 
  looks like a showcase for the Microsoft technology stack (which it 
  does indeed, Mary Jo Foley) and how AX might be moving Dynamics closer 
  to SAP's market territory -- something we've suspected and written about 
  for a while now. 
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	Posted by Lee Pender on June 03, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    RCP
 Editor in Chief Scott Bekker says that Dell's latest earnings release 
  shows that the one-time direct-sales stalwart is still approaching the channel 
  
with hat in hand
.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on June 03, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    It seems as though the acceptance of Office Open XML as a standard isn't a 
  done deal yet -- at least, not if South Africa has anything to say about it. Excellent 
  write-up on this topic 
here
.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 29, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Apparently he'll still 
spend 
  20 percent of his time
 working for Microsoft. No doubt he'll schedule everything 
  in Outlook, or maybe even Microsoft Project. Wouldn't it be funny if he carried 
  nothing but a paper calendar, though? Well, we think it would be.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on May 29, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    So, we 
asked you recently
 
  what you were doing with virtualization...and you responded! Let's not waste 
  any time on this one. Here are a couple of your e-mails:
Jack writes to us from your editor's home state of Texas:
  "We here at Clarendon College campuses in Clarendon, Pampa and Childress, 
    Texas are using it on every system in our IT lab. We are looking into running 
    a server-distributed solution for a virtual machine image for each of about 
    15 separate courses with all pertinent OSes included. Classes such as A+ classes 
    would have availability to Linux and Mac VMs as well as Win9x, 2K, XP and 
    Vista to compare during lab work and instruction. I haven't found an Ubuntu 
    image workaround for VMware on XP Pro host yet, but I think I will by mid-July 
    when we need it. I haven't been successful with Virtual PC and Ubuntu, either. 
    I also need a cheap version of Mac OS X to study, as well. Our networking 
    and infrastructure class images need to use MS Server 2008 and 2003, as well 
    as AS400, NetWare and Apple. As we are still in the development stage, I do 
    not have enough licenses except for Microsoft OSes (MS has been VERY good 
    to us here -- think Dreamspark and MSDNAA). We have decent host hardware, 
    but the challenges seem to be in the software realm. If we stay with Microsoft 
    products, this is EASY, though we are hoping for some cross-platform operation 
    as well.
  "As we work through these lab settings, we are also setting the stage 
    for our Enterprise as well, but that is another story. Dummy terminals and 
    'virtual bubbles' appear to be in our near future across the organization."
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	Posted by Lee Pender on May 29, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    A few years ago, soccer legend Diego Maradona, seen 
here
 
  scoring the infamous "Hand of God" goal in the 1986 World Cup (sorry, 
  English readers), was in ill health -- gravely ill, many reports said. As he 
  lay in a hospital bed in Buenos Aires (as best we can remember; it was in Argentina 
  somewhere, anyway), huge crowds held a vigil outside the building and waited 
  for any scrap of news that supposedly came from Maradona's bedside. 
 
More
	Posted by Lee Pender on May 28, 20080 comments