We couldn't make this up. Not only is the 
release 
  date for Vista's SP1 still a mystery, and not only is Microsoft already 
  starting to drop hints about the 
next 
  version of Windows after Vista, but it now appears as though Microsoft at 
  some point posted the bulk of SP1 online...and then 
took 
  it away!
Could we get some sanity here, please? And maybe just a bit of transparency? 
  Look, Vista has been 
  disappointing enough without all this cloak-and-dagger stuff in Redmond 
  clouding the picture of the OS' future. Either post SP1 or don't; either tell 
  us about Windows 7 or leave it alone. Partners need to go to customers with 
  some level of certainty (especially with an OS that's not exactly selling itself), 
  not with obfuscation, confusion and rumors. Please, Microsoft, get it straight.
We continue to receive loads of e-mail about Vista. Most of it is negative 
  toward the OS, but not all of it -- and in the interest of balance, we'll run 
  some of the positive stuff here. Be on the lookout for more negative comments 
  tomorrow, though...because some of them are just so much fun.
Stuart writes from London:
  "If you really want Vista take-up to improve, then perhaps you should 
    stop peddling so much negativity. It's quite tiring and frankly naive. All 
    the Vista problems I'm hearing about are the same ones that appeared when 
    XP came out: stability, performance, 'excessive' hardware requirements, lack 
    of third-party drivers and the fact that it wasn't that much different from 
    Windows 2000. And look what happened: service packs were released, consumers' 
    hardware caught up, third parties released drivers and users started to realise 
    that the 'insignificant' user interface changes actually led to a marked increase 
    in usability and productivity. The Vista story will be no different. Come 
    2010 (or whenever MS releases the superseding version) we'll all be wondering 
    why on earth we should upgrade from our beloved Vista."
Well, Stuart, we've said here before that Vista will eventually become most 
  people's default OS (if we're even bothering to use an OS anymore in a few years 
  -- hello, SaaS), but we can't blame partners and users for expecting more right 
  out of the box after years of waiting and tons of hype. Still, you might very 
  well end up being right in the long run. It's almost always been the case in 
  the past with Microsoft. 
In a similar vein, Mark offers:
  "Do you just rerun your columns? Or do you actually put thought and 
    consideration into each one? It looks like the former. 
  "If you take your '"VISTA BOUNCE" MORE LIKE A THUD SO FAR' 
    column in your recent RCP Update e-mail, substitute 'XP' for 'Vista,' it is 
    virtually the same complaints as in 2001. You are putting too much stock into 
    partners that are looking for a quick windfall from the Vista release (that 
    includes AMD's recent whining). Just like the Windows XP release, and Windows 
    95 before that, it will still take partners to work their sales process to 
    convince clients to upgrade. As more and more become comfortable with the 
    new features, as more and more is seen and written on the new features, and 
    as more and more sales work by partners is done, the clients will move. They 
    are moving now, as evidenced by the statistics you mildly reference down in 
    paragraph three. They will move more in the future. If partners want to help 
    their clients move along, get out there and sell, sell, sell clients on the 
    benefits, not sit and wait on orders."
That's a clarion call from Mark, partners -- get out there and move Vista. 
  Tomorrow, we'll run some other thoughts on Vista.
Keep adding fuel to the Vista e-mail fire at [email protected]. 
  We'll get as many in as we can! And thanks to Stuart, Mark and those who have 
  taken the time to write.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on August 01, 20074 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Note the asterisk -- because Works isn't just free, 
it's 
  ad-supported. Then again, this is the first time anybody has had a reason 
  to write about Microsoft Works in about 10 years. It had joined Corel in the 
  "dead or alive" (or, in Corel's case, "dead, alive or Canadian") 
  category.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on August 01, 20071 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Perhaps (although probably not) rattled by RCPU's indictment of Microsoft's 
  coolness (or lack thereof), Ray Ozzie has been 
defending 
  Redmond's forays into the consumer world. The three(!) guys who write 
this 
  blog have a pretty good take on Ozzie's comments. We'd have written something 
  similar here at RCPU already, but we have only one writer; we're simply outnumbered.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on August 01, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Yes, we're doing another one, this time on everything from working with Microsoft 
  to SaaS strategies to competitive threats. Want to know what your colleagues 
  are thinking? They're curious about what you think, too. Be a part of it all 
  
here.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on July 31, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft revealed last week the lighter side of its Jekyll-and-Hyde approach 
  to open source software, unveiling a 
glowing 
  new Web site designed to attract the open source community (as if open source 
  types don't see the mousetrap underneath that hunk of cheese). 
Microsoft has also submitted its shared-source software licenses for 
  approval from the Open Source Initiative as open source licenses. Oh, it 
  all sounds so cozy and wonderful, but some commentators are wondering whether 
  Redmond's make-nice strategy is part 
  of a greater, more sinister scheme.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on July 31, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    For those of you wondering just what Microsoft's software as a service -- or 
  even Software Plus Services -- strategy might involve, Ray Ozzie 
spelled 
  things out in fairly good detail last week.
This is one of those times when we'd like for you to take a look at what Ozzie 
  said (yes, that means clicking 
  the link) and tell us how you, as a partner, think you can fit into this 
  strategy. We're reading over this carefully ourselves, but we're going to hold 
  off on any commentary until we hear from you. So step up and let us know how 
  SaaS-y you plan to get with Redmond in the months and years to come. 
Where's the partner opportunity in Microsoft's layers of SaaS? Let me know 
  at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on July 31, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    So, who came out the big winner in the first of Microsoft's Linux patent deals? 
  If we're to believe a recent study, it was 
le 
  Chapeau Rouge, monsieur!
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on July 26, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Last summer, it 
burst 
  onto the scene like a villain from a summer blockbuster movie, making enemies 
  wherever it went and generally wreaking havoc in the channel and in corporate 
  IT departments. 
But now, Windows Genuine Advantage has gone 
  from zero to hero, helping bust (according to Microsoft) the Chinese piracy 
  ring that Microsoft and the FBI just nabbed.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on July 26, 20070 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Remember the good ol' days of November 2006? When Microsoft blasted Vista out 
  the door to eager enterprise customers, and partners awaited the windfall that 
  the new operating system was sure to bring? Well, just like Chicago Cubs fans 
  wondering when their loyalty will pay off with a World Series title after nearly 
  a century of frustration, partners are waiting for Vista to start making the 
  cash registers ring. It isn't happening yet.
In fairness, partners probably have a better shot at profiting from Vista than 
  the Cubs have had of winning a World Series over the last century or so. Just 
  this week, more news came out about how Vista is making strides, eating up market 
  share from competitors and making 
  slow but steady progress on its beloved in-house rival, XP. 
Still, talk -- and statistics -- are cheap, and upgrading to Vista isn't. And 
  as Rich Freeman notes in a feature story in the August 
  issue of RCP, companies don't 
  yet seem ready to pony up the cash to move to the new OS. That means that 
  partners aren't really profiting from Vista the way that some had thought that 
  they might. 
Nevertheless, there doesn't seem to be much panic in the channel about Vista. 
  Partners, after all, understand how these things work -- companies are reticent 
  to move to anything new from Microsoft (or any vendor, really) right off the 
  bat. Some customers will wait for SP1, others for planned infrastructure upgrades. 
  The hope in the channel has to be now that customers won't wait for the post-Vista 
  version of Windows (supposedly due 
  in 2010) before upgrading. But three years is a long time, and we wouldn't 
  lay money on Microsoft actually getting the next version of Windows out the 
  door by 2010. 
Even if there's no panic in the channel, though, there is disappointment -- 
  with the hassle of XP downgrade rights and the simple notion that something 
  as massive (and massively hyped) as Vista should have dropped a few extra coins 
  into partners' coffers by now. Then there's the seemingly prevailing feeling 
  that Vista just isn't that good...a topic we've hit on more than a few times 
  in this space by now.
Microsoft partners have fared considerably better than Cubs fans over the years, 
  and they probably will in this case, too. But, for now, both groups are in limbo 
  with a shaky product that might or might not really pan out, especially in the 
  short-term. For a partner channel accustomed to something more of a New York 
  Yankees-level of success, Vista -- not unlike the Yankees themselves this year 
  -- has to be a disappointment so far.
We've received tons of comments about Vista over the last few months. We'll 
  run some more tomorrow. Keep them coming to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on July 26, 20072 comments