Nobody has yet warmed to our suggestion to call System Center Operations Manager 
  2007 "OpMan" (hey, it's 
better 
  than SCOM), but at least the product now has its 
first 
  service pack.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on February 27, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Another week, another update on Microsoft's attempt to spend every bit of the 
  cash it has in its coffers (and more). 
Even if Yahoo isn't ready to accept Redmond's overtures, Microsoft employees 
  will be, or should be, ready for what seems to be an inevitable consumption 
  of the Internet pioneer. Microsoft executives e-mailed 
  the company's employees last week a guide to swallowing Yahoo, laying out 
  how an acquisition would affect Redmond's rank and file. 
Meanwhile, Yahoo shareholders are getting more and more nervous about the company's 
  rebuffing of Microsoft. One group has sued 
  Yahoo, charging that the company's executives shouldn't be trying to get 
  that scary biker dude to take them to the prom when the quarterback of the football 
  team has a limo and a corsage waiting and ready to go. (Or something like that 
  -- basically, the shareholders want Yahoo to sell out to Microsoft rather than 
  shop around for another acquirer.)
Even if a deal is inevitable -- and we have no idea whether it'll happen -- 
  these delays and Yahoo's apparent revulsion at the site of Microsoft don't make 
  anybody look very good. In fact, at this point, both companies look kind of 
  desperate, and Google -- the reason all of this is happening -- must be sitting 
  back and enjoying the drama over a big box of popcorn, or maybe sushi, or kelp, 
  or whatever people in San Francisco are eating these days.
This story is sure to continue unfolding, so check RCPU for more updates and 
  witty commentary (ahem), and keep sending your thoughts on the matter (or anything 
  else) to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on February 26, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Last week's big to-do about Microsoft 
offering 
  up some of its protocols and otherwise paying EU-mandated lip service to 
  "openness" drew a surprisingly mixed reaction from the open source 
  community -- surprising because it wasn't entirely negative.
Linux guru Linus Torvalds, in fact, seemed downright 
  pleased with Microsoft, if still a little skeptical of the company's motives. 
  Other folks took more of a wait-and-see 
  attitude, with some complaining that Microsoft isn't releasing code to open 
  source and is still going to charge license fees for some patents. 
Here's something the open source folks might want to consider: Microsoft isn't 
  an open source company and isn't going to be any time soon. So don't hold your 
  breath for Steve Ballmer and company to throw open the gates (um, no pun intended, 
  but you can read one there if you want to) any more than they have to. 
And Microsoft: Again, please stop with the whole Magnanimous Microsoft act. 
  We all know that you're responding to the EU, and that's OK.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on February 26, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Well, that's what "
people 
  say," anyway, according to the Bloomberg headline.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on February 26, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Next time you get a traffic ticket, take the money to pay your fine, place 
  it lovingly in a cheery greeting card, deliver it to city hall and declare in 
  the most grandiose manner possible that you're "making a donation to the 
  city." Then, you'll know exactly what it's like to be Microsoft.
Heck, you could even hold a press conference. That's what Microsoft did yesterday 
  to announce its new 
  openness initiatives, the basics of which RCPU managed to sneak into yesterday's 
  issue. The conference call, which evidently required a "War Declared"-level 
  media alert on Thursday morning, started brilliantly -- after waiting about 
  15 minutes past the start time, reporters finally heard some Microsoft official 
  apologize for the late start and explain that it had been caused in part by 
  "technical problems we had to solve." What, did Ballmer's PC blue-screen 
  when he tried to open PowerPoint, or something?
Anyway, the crux of the story remains that Microsoft is publishing some 30,000 
  pages of documentation -- don't try to take that tome on your next flight -- 
  revealing APIs, software protocols and heretofore concealed trade secrets. Of 
  course, that's part of what the European Union has been demanding that Microsoft 
  do for a while now -- and, as you might imagine, the EU still 
  doesn't think that Microsoft is doing enough. After all, Microsoft has talked 
  openness before but thus far hasn't really seemed to make it a corporate 
  priority (understandably enough, given that the interaction between Microsoft 
  applications is one of the company's key selling points). Now, with the EU's 
  constant prodding, Microsoft is all about sharing...again.
This time, though, it's different. This time, Steve Ballmer was doing the talking. 
  And Ray Ozzie. And the top lawyer, Brad Smith. This time, the announcement merited 
  a "Victory in Europe"-style media alert. This time, Microsoft is serious...right? 
  Well, more serious, anyway. Some of the documentation posted will let open source 
  developers go beyond just creating programs that will work with Microsoft applications 
  to actually extending some of the functionality of Microsoft's wares. 
  
  As long as it's not done for commercial purposes, of course. As far as software 
  for sales goes, the open source folks are ostensibly under the same patent pressure 
  that they've always been under -- except that now, Microsoft says that it's 
  going to reveal exactly what patents it has and license that intellectual property 
  for low fees. The company's promise not to sue developers working for non-commercial 
  purposes also seems to open the door to let customers (and partners) use open 
  source apps in their Microsoft shops without fear of recrimination. 
For partners, the announcement is likely to have relatively little impact, 
  except for those partners who now have access to APIs they might have needed 
  in order to develop for or extend Microsoft applications and previously didn't 
  have. Other than that, the announcement will probably serve to make Microsoft 
  look a little less proprietary and a little more open than it has looked in 
  the past, and with open source applications spreading in corporate IT departments 
  -- especially in data centers -- that can't be a bad thing. 
We've said many times before in this space that the EU should just leave Microsoft 
  alone, and we suspect that EU regulators aren't finished with Redmond yet. But 
  if pressure from the EU led Microsoft to open up a bit (and, apparently, it 
  did), and if Microsoft's opening is positive for customers and partners, let's 
  call yesterday's announcement a little bit of good news and wait and see what 
  happens from there. This story is still far from being over. 
One thing we could do without, though, is the faux self-sacrifice on Microsoft's 
  part. Listening to Ballmer and Co. yesterday morning, we half expected a fake 
  crying jag (not unlike the one Will Ferrell's character delivers at the end 
  of Blades of Glory) and an emotional speech about the lengths Microsoft 
  will go to in order to please its customers. Whatever. Just pay your EU traffic 
  fine, Redmond, and don't pretend that you're publishing your APIs out of concern 
  for your customers, support for open source or the goodness of your heart. Please. 
  It's just kind of embarrassing. We all know the real story. 
What's your take on Microsoft's new openness? Drop a line to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on February 22, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    It turns out that a bunch of stuff 
isn't 
  working with Vista's first service pack -- which seems appropriate given 
  how much stuff never worked with Vista in the first place. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on February 22, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Recession? What recession? Strictly speaking, this isn't channel news (for 
  Channel News Thursday), but it is interesting. HP had a blowout quarter in its 
  last quarter, and things are 
looking 
  positive going forward. Let's have more news like this, please.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on February 21, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The provider of wireless LAN infrastructure systems has a new partner program. 
  Check out all the details 
here.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on February 21, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft made a big kafuffle today to announce yet another "openness" 
  initiative. This time, it involves 
publishing 
  tens of thousands of pages of software protocols, something European Union 
  regulators 
have 
  been demanding for some time now. Not surprisingly, the EU -- so far, at 
  least -- 
still 
  isn't happy. 
Redmond also pledged not to sue for patent infringement open source developers 
  who develop software for "non-commercial distribution." (So, that 
  includes Microsoft's own customers...right?) Microsoft is also going to let 
  us know once and for all which of its protocols are patented, and then license 
  those patents at what it calls low rates. 
The whole Microsoft spiel is here. 
  Also, look for more coverage of this announcement -- and maybe a snarky comment 
  or two -- in Friday's RCPU.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on February 21, 20080 comments