We wanted to know last week whether and 
how 
  you were preparing for an economic slowdown. Well, you are. Joseph, though, 
  hopes that his business has things pretty much under control:
  "We are definitely preparing. Many of our customers appear at the 
    moment to be scaling back on new purchases; luckily we provide managed services 
    to many of our customers, which will allow us to maintain a steady revenue 
    flow, since it would be difficult for those customers to do without our support 
    services as we basically are their IT department. However, the scaling back 
    of the purchases of new machines and other equipment does also hurt our bottom 
    line."
That's the beauty of managed services -- that steady revenue stream. Perhaps 
  feeling a tad less confident than Joseph, James proposes some more radical suggestions:
  "As the economy slows down, people are not going to be able to pay 
    for legal software and the high costs of IT repair, nor do constant changing 
    of operating systems. We need to take a step back so that we may go forward 
    again. I feel that we should continue to run Windows XP and that Microsoft 
    should produce plug-in modules for Windows for people to try out. These modules 
    should be free and not on a trial basis only. These modules should have the 
    ability to be uninstalled. 
  "I say make Win XP run more stable and make XP Pro the standard. 
    This will remove issues between the home and office worker and the driver 
    being written for the OS. Once we have reached a plateau, then we take on 
    a new operating system with the new improvements that consumers like the most 
    and need the most. Too many options of operating systems have caused an industry-wide 
    lack of drivers and usable application software. We are trying to drive forward 
    too fast. Today's operating system uses far too many system resources, causing 
    a major lack of speed."
So, James says, as the economy slows down, maybe we should, too. Or maybe we'll 
  have to. We'll see. 
While we're here with reader feedback, let's throw in a response from Michael 
  in Australia, mate, who writes about Microsoft's shifting 
  executive roster and the shifting strategy that seems to be going with it:
  "I personally went through some of what you are describing with Microsoft, 
    though on an infinitely smaller scale. I purchased and built up a small, regional 
    IT shop and opened a second shop in another thriving regional centre. Then 
    there were some changes in my life that required me to scale down my business 
    interests, so I sold the business. I worked with the new owners for six months; 
    the business was healthy and profitable for those six months. Then the new 
    owners made the decision to chase the consumer market at the expense of their 
    corporate clients, and within 18 months the business was gone.
  "Now, one of the points that I'm going to make with this story (be 
    it far removed from the scale of Microsoft) is that there was absolutely nothing 
    wrong with the business skills of the new owners. One of the new owners was 
    a regional manager for a financial company with many years of experience in 
    various small businesses in his past. The other was a seasoned IT manager. 
    The parallel I'm trying to draw here is that regardless of the experience 
    and skills of the management and the health of the business now, if your business 
    gets too focused on pursuing a particular market you may end up in a dry creek 
    (isn't Microsoft currently trying to woo the small business market?).
    
    "Before anyone replies and says, 'Microsoft has sufficient resources 
    to ride out such a mistake,' you've got to ask yourself the question: 'Would 
    you invest in a hydroelectric power station that has cracks in its dam wall 
    and gets its water from a desert catchments area?' Yeah, sure, they've got 
    a diverse portfolio of electricity (read: OS), water (read: Office), shares 
    (read: shares), etc., but..."
Michael, that's why we suspect that Microsoft is trying to move the market 
  rather than be moved by it. Chasing the rabbits of SaaS could end up being costly 
  and counterproductive. But developing your own (or, in this case, Microsoft's 
  own) strategy and using your considerable size and influence to "help" 
  customers conform to it on your schedule could be a successful blueprint for 
  riding out the eventual decline of fat-client, on-premise computing. It's all 
  about using influence rather than being influenced. 
Oh, and while we're here, there was one more reader comment we enjoyed this 
  week. Pete took issue with our reference to the "perfect" 
  New England Patriots: 
  "Don't you mean the CHEATERS from New England?  I wonder 
    if there will be an episode of that late-night TV show, 'Cheaters,' with Bill 
    Belichick being surveilled and confronted by Joey Greco and his band of investigative 
    thugs with video cameras?!"
If anybody's going to do any surveillance, Pete, it'll be Belichick himself. 
  And, as LaDainian Tomlinson (RCPU's favorite player and fellow TCU alumnus) 
  said -- about the Patriots -- not so long ago: "If you ain't cheatin', 
  you ain't tryin'."
Thanks to all who took the time to write. The mailbag is always open: [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 24, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    And it's a big hello from 
RCP Editor Scott Bekker, who checks in with 
  channel news: 
Keeping track of the customer promotions and partner subsidies on the Microsoft 
  Incentives page used to be a full-time job for Microsoft partners. Maybe not 
  anymore. Next month, Microsoft is launching a single partner subsidy program 
  called the Big Easy Offer. Microsoft is putting $10 million behind the program, 
  which offers partner subsidies for customer purchases of nearly all of Microsoft's 
  main SMB-targeted products, with the exception of Windows Vista. Partners who 
  can upsell, cross-sell or sell more expensive licensing options see the subsidy 
  go up on a sliding scale. 
According to Microsoft, the subsidy checks, which are sent to the customer 
  but made out to the partner of the customer's choice, often lead to secondary 
  purchases of hardware, services, training or additional software from partner 
  companies ranging from five to eight times the value of the subsidy itself. 
  Granted, a program with sliding benefits covering dozens of SKUs against a handful 
  of licensing options is, itself, fiendishly complicated, but Microsoft is providing 
  an online calculator so partners can just enter the numbers rather than learn 
  all the rules. 
Bekker talked to Christopher Large -- who should be a rapper of some sort with 
  a name like that but is, in fact, Microsoft's group manager for U.S. Sales Programs 
  -- to get all the details on the Big Easy promotion. They are here.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 24, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    So far this week, foreign stock markets have tanked, the U.S. markets have 
  continued to be skittish at best, the Federal Reserve has cut interest rates 
  in a Hail Mary-pass-like move to save the economy from recession (which we might 
  already be in) and President Bush has talked up an economic stimulus package 
  of tax rebates. 
Times look tough, financially, and they might be getting tougher soon. So you 
  know what that means: As always, Microsoft makes more money. Redmond is due 
  to reveal its financial results on Thursday, and already the press and Wall 
  Street watchers are using phrases like "sharp 
  rise in profits."
Now, as the Reuters story linked explains, part of that "sharp rise" 
  stems from Microsoft's deferral last year of more than $1 billion in revenue. 
  Still, while the rise might not be as sharp as it first appears, it's still 
  a (potential) rise, and a pretty impressive one at that. Hopefully it bodes 
  well for Microsoft partners, too, who should, in theory, benefit from Redmond's 
  success. 
Last week, we asked you what you're doing -- if anything -- to prepare 
  for a recession. We'll have your responses in RCPU tomorrow. Since Microsoft 
  won't announce earnings until Thursday, and since we no longer have a regular 
  Friday edition, we'll have to save analysis of Microsoft's earnings for next 
  Tuesday's edition. 
There's still time to send us your thoughts on how a recession would affect 
  you. The address, as always, is [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 23, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    There's a 
new 
  version of the authentication application out. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 23, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The 
MozyEnterprise 
  backup application, a prize bit of booty from the acquisition of Berkeley 
  Data Systems, will soon be available with the EMC Fortress data-storage platform.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 23, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The former Disney CIO is Microsoft's 
new 
  head techie. And talk about a small world after all -- his last name is 
  Scott, which was the same last name the old CIO had. Now, that's just goofy.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 22, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    To hear Microsoft tell it -- and there's no spin here at all, we're sure -- 
  Exchange is 
tearing 
  users away from Notes at a healthy clip these days. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 22, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft is like a quick-strike football team that's never really out of 
  a game no matter what the score or how much time is left on the clock. When 
  a new technology comes along, Redmond can fumble, throw interceptions and blow 
  coverage for three quarters and still storm back in the fourth quarter to win...or 
  at least to send the game to overtime. (Yes, we're caught up in the excitement 
  here in Boston about the perfect Patriots. Bear with us, please. It's going 
  to be two long weeks until the Super Bowl.)
Oh, sure, sometimes Microsoft waits too long to stage its comeback and gets 
  clobbered -- think consumer search and personal music players (otherwise known 
  as iPods). But in so many "games" in years past -- the browser wars, 
  productivity-suite competitions, even the battle for operating-system supremacy 
  -- Redmond has found some way (even if it wasn't always entirely legal -- yes, 
  we're sticking with the Pats theme here) to break out of an early funk and steamroll 
  the competition. 
And so we have this week's virtualization shindig taking place on the home 
  field in Redmond. Once again, Microsoft stumbled out of the gate trying to react 
  to a new technology. Once again, an opponent -- in this case, VMware -- has 
  a big lead. And, once again, Microsoft is on the comeback trail.
We all know about Hyper-V, the virtualization technology that will eventually 
  come with Windows Server 2008. But, this week, Microsoft gained a few more yards 
  in its pursuit of VMware's goal line. For one thing, it opened 
  up its virtualization policy on Vista. Finally, Redmond is going to open 
  all versions of the OS to virtualization. (And before you go saying, "Who 
  cares? It's only Vista," keep in mind that analysts -- and, yes, even RCPU 
  -- are predicting that Vista will finally make serious inroads into the enterprise 
  in 2008. So this week's announcement should eventually carry some weight, even 
  if it seems trivial right now.)
Redmond also bought this week a little company called Calista -- presumably 
  not named after the former star of "Ally 
  McBeal," not that we ever watched that show -- which makes technology 
  to improve the desktop virtualization experience. Combine that acquisition with 
  Microsoft's partnership 
  with Citrix to market desktop virtualization and to allow interoperability 
  between Hyper-V and XenServer, and we see a virtualization strategy coming together 
  in Redmond that shows some flexibility and some backbone.
Of course, we're not even close to counting VMware out of this contest, given 
  the lead the popular -- and, let's not forget, EMC-owned -- vendor already has. 
  And Oracle and Sun, among others, pose formidable opposition, as well. What 
  we are seeing, though, is Microsoft finally connecting on a few passes, getting 
  a few first-down runs, making a defensive stand or two and gearing up for a 
  real battle in virtualization. Given Microsoft's built-in advantage -- massive 
  existing investment in its technology -- this one should be a battle until the 
  final gun.
What's your take on Microsoft and virtualization? How do you see the strategy 
  taking shape? Let me know at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 22, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The 
next version 
  of Windows could be available by the end of next year (that's the end of 
  2009 for those of you still writing 2007 on your checks -- if you even write 
  checks anymore). Of course, if Microsoft has a late-2009 release for Vista's 
  successor on its roadmap, we should probably expect the OS some time in 2015.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 22, 20082 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    RCPU had a little sit down this week (well, a phone conversation, anyway) with 
  Steve Hale, vice president of the North American Partner Organization for 
F5, 
  a vendor of technology that, among other things, provides a platform for the 
  delivery and optimization of applications for enterprises. 
If Hale's name sounds familiar, it's because he was with Microsoft for 17 years 
  and has just been with F5 for the last six months or so. But he's been a busy 
  guy in his short time at the new gig. Primarily, he's trying to take an F5 partner 
  base that's "very transactional in nature," he said, and get some 
  of its membership to start providing services as well as ringing up sales.
The main thing that Hale and his organization want to do is get partners up 
  to speed in terms of technical know-how, making sure that they're prepared to 
  provide services for disciplines including application delivery, networking 
  and infrastructure, and storage virtualization. And while Hale said that partner 
  technical readiness "is not a real glamorous thing," it is, he said, 
  "the foundation kingpin of everything we do. If we don't get that right, 
  you're done from square one."
F5 currently has about 300 partners in North America, Hale said, and rather 
  than trying to move all of them to a services-based model at once, he wants 
  his organization to work with those most interested in getting serious about 
  services. 
"We're not going to do some big, broad-based approach," he said. 
  "We'll take a few partners that really want to be in this space."
Along with getting partners up to speed in terms of technical expertise, F5 
  is focusing on pairing partners up with each other so that they can combine 
  competencies and serve customers together. 
The company is also reaching out to one of its own primary partners, Microsoft, 
  with a series of white papers on implementations of Microsoft technologies, 
  mainly Exchange, SharePoint and Dynamics. 
"I'm saying, 'Hey, Microsoft, show me where you've got implementations 
  going on, and we will go optimize it,'" Hale said.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 17, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Channel consolidation continued this week as one Gold Certified Partner 
snapped 
  up another: Ascentium is purchasing U.K.-based SharePoint consulting firm 
  Artemis. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 17, 20080 comments