Ray Ozzie, as it turns out, is a pretty darn good writer. The  soon-to-be-ex-Microsoft chief software architect laid out effectively, at times  even beautifully, his vision for the future of computing in an entry on his new  blog.
Lots of folks have taken a shot at dissecting Ozzie's little manifesto;  our favorite interpretation comes from esteemed Microsoft watcher and Redmond magazine columnist Mary Jo Foley.  Allow us, though, if you will, to break down in the very simplest and most  direct of terms what Ozzie says so eloquently: Microsoft is too fat, too slow  and too dependent on fading technologies.
Oh, sure, Ozzie gives his employer all kinds of credit for making  headway in the cloud and in service-oriented computing. After all, he has to  have been doing something there for the last five years, right? But the bulk of  Ozzie's prose is a gentle but convincing indictment of a company that, at its  core, is still all about Windows and Office and has allowed itself to be caught  and passed certainly in the mobile arena and probably in the cloud as well.
It's clear that Ozzie, never the most forceful of public communicators,  takes some of Microsoft's Windows-first mentality personally and doesn't really  appreciate it too much. Just read this paragraph from his blog entry and  replace the word "complexity" with the word "Windows:"
"Complexity kills. Complexity sucks the life out of users,  developers and IT. Complexity makes products difficult to plan, build, test and  use. Complexity introduces security challenges. Complexity causes administrator  frustration." 
OK, so maybe he's not addressing Windows directly there...but he could  be, and his tone leads us to think in that direction. "Complexity kills"  seems to not-so-loosely translate to "obsession with fat-client Windows  will be your downfall, Microsoft." And he's right. As Ozzie says so  artfully -- and he's hardly the only person to say it, nor is this the first  time he's said it -- computing as a concept and a practice is changing. It's  about services, simplicity, thinness and flexibility -- four words that don't exactly  describe Windows.
If we might extrapolate a bit from Ozzie's text, Windows should be a  necessary evil at Microsoft, the revenue driver that the company can't quit  producing but definitely should put on the development back burner. Instead,  Microsoft talks a good game about mobile and the cloud but doesn't show enough  real commitment to either; Windows is still where the company focuses the bulk  of its efforts, and that's a bit like trying to make the best 2D TV in what is  rapidly becoming a 3D world. 
Ozzie challenges Microsoft to dream, but he doesn't want the company to  dream big. Microsoft already owns big in the software industry. It needs to  head toward small -- not an easy destination for a battleship of a company with  a massively complex core product to reach but one it needs to set a course for  nonetheless. The question now is whether anybody in Redmond is listening to the eloquently soft-spoken  short-timer as he reveals his final prophecy for the company. 
What's your take on Ray Ozzie's vision for Microsoft and computing? How  is Microsoft set to take on the future of the industry? Send your thoughts to [email protected].  
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 25, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Yes, we're talking about the portable cassette player here.  Sony was still selling them in Japan(!) but will finally cease production more  than 30 years after the famed device's debut. The Zune of its day...haha, just  kidding...the iPod of its day, the Walkman will go down as one of the great  relics of the 1980s and the device that ultimately killed the boombox (held on  the shoulder, naturally) and ushered in the era of tuning everybody else out in  favor of, well, some tunes. Vaya con Dios... 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 25, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Where might Ray Ozzie turn  up next? Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff sure did have some sweet things to say about him this week.  Of course, Benioff, likely still stinging from losing a patent battle with  Microsoft, also poked a little fun at his larger rival, suggesting that Ozzie's  resignation "happened much faster than a Microsoft upgrade." OK, that's  a little funny. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 21, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Scott Bekker:
It's always interesting to scan through the comments at  the infamously anonymous employee blog  Mini-Microsoft when there's a major executive shakeup in Redmond, like Ray  Ozzie's pending departure. Reaction to the Ozzie news is mixed over there.  But more specifically, there's an anonymous  post from a commenter claiming to be on the corporate sales force that's  relevant to partners and the Microsoft Online Services effort. You can never  tell, but there's enough detail in the post to make it seem credible. Money  quote:
  "The company's  commercial Online Services offering has nowhere near the traction that the  executives and others would like everyone to believe. In FY09 and FY10, the  sales force gave away BPOS, so we could hit one of [Microsoft COO Kevin  Turner's] scorecard metrics. Customers took it because it did not cost them  anything. In the last two years, the vast majority of these customers have not  put it in production either. Now we are trying to figure out how to get our  partners to help get it deployed."
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 21, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		No Ray Ozzie? No problem! Actually, Ray Ozzie deserves a lot of credit  for the contract Microsoft trumpeted this week:  a deal with the City of New York  that features online services and will include Office 365. 
Take that, Google! The search giant beat Microsoft to win the battle of  Los Angeles, signing the California city to a Google Apps deal late  last year. Never to be outdone, though, Microsoft has snagged the big municipal  prize, New York City.  If anybody doubted it, Microsoft is relevant in the cloud now.
So, which Microsoft partner cleaned up in this New York deal? Uh, actually... Apparently,  this was a direct-sales deal, and one that "unbundles" Microsoft's  applications and services at that. 
Well, now. Hopefully the direct-sales element isn't setting a precedent  here. It might very well be, though, especially on the Web-services side.  Microsoft has not hidden its plans to sell online services directly to  customers. Now, we're seeing that plan in action. 
How does it look, partners? Sure, maybe there will be some room for  partners to provide services or add-ons here -- or maybe not. The details aren't  clear; the contract isn't even final yet. But the news to start spreading on  this New York  deal seems to be both good and bad. It's great that Microsoft is winning  high-profile cloud contracts; it's not so great to see that partners aren't  necessarily part of them.
What's your take on Microsoft's New    York City deal? Send your thoughts to [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 21, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Hey, the PC market is somewhat less bad than it used to be!  This has to be good news, right? That full economic recovery must be right  around the corner...right? 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 20, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Finally, an honest-to-goodness, basically full-featured, legitimate  online version of Microsoft Office is in beta.  It's competitively priced and aimed squarely at the right market -- small and  tiny businesses. And, fortunately, Microsoft decided to drop one of the worst  and most hilarious product names of all time -- BPOS -- and give the service a  decent moniker, Office 365. Although we are worried that Xbox 360 might get  jealous at some point...
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 20, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Before you start reading this entry, click on this link and read Scott Bekker's take on Ray  Ozzie's "retirement."  Seriously, just do it. Go back right now and click it. Your editor won't be offended.  Bekker nailed this thing, and you're better off reading his blog post than you  are reading what follows here.
OK, with that out of the way (seriously, go back and click now), let's  talk about why Microsoft and Ray Ozzie were very good for each other and why  Ozzie's tenure in Redmond  ended exactly as it should have. Oh, we know. Nobody else feels this way. News  of Ozzie's "retirement" this week has sent the pundisphere (let's try  to make that catch on...) into a tizzy,  with most commentators taking Steve Ballmer and Microsoft to task for losing a  visionary and questioning the future of the company (again). 
OK, so maybe the timing of Ozzie's departure isn't perfect, with  Microsoft getting rolling in the cloud with Azure and other services. And maybe  Ozzie didn't turn out to be the next Bill Gates as some in the pundisphere expected  he would. But waiting for the "next" anybody is usually an exercise  in futility. Only Gates is Gates, and Ozzie never had the edgy business sense  or the thirst for power that made Gates such a financial success. 
And as for the cloud, Ozzie was -- quietly -- the visionary behind Azure,  as well as the construction of a bunch of huge data centers, which have already  made Microsoft a major player in the cloud. Before Ozzie arrived in Redmond, Microsoft was  looking positively Luddite, floating by on the (admittedly swanky) life rafts  of Windows and Office as the rest of the industry prepared for the rapid  evolution of online services. 
In half a decade, Ozzie revved Microsoft up from zero to competitive in  the cloud, and he leaves a technological legacy that will serve Microsoft well  for years to come. He wasn't a particularly good speaker; he didn't have Gates'  drive or Ballmer's chutzpa, and he was never the right guy to be the next face  of Microsoft. But years from now, when Microsoft is a major player in the  ever-expanding cloud, Ozzie's fingerprints will still be all over Microsoft's  success. Ray Ozzie did what he needed to do in Redmond, and Microsoft got what it needed  from Ray Ozzie. 
 So, how about Microsoft, which seems to be leaking top executives? There might  be a legitimate brain-drain problem there, but Ozzie's departure isn't  symptomatic of it. Really, Ozzie and Microsoft were essentially finished with  each other, both having been better for their relationship. It's up to  Microsoft to carry out Ozzie's vision now, but carrying out a vision is easier  than having it in the first place. As for Ozzie, his future is wide open. He'll  be able to do whatever he likes -- even "retire," if that's what he  wants to do (although we doubt that, obviously).
Breakups are rarely easy, and very few relationships actually end well.  But the relationship between Ray Ozzie and Microsoft finished about as  positively as it could have. Really. For both parties, with a little  determination, everything else from here can be blue skies.
What's your take on Ray Ozzie's tenure at Microsoft? Send your thoughts  to [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 20, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		We've had the X-Men, the X Files, OS X, Generation X, even the movie  Malcolm X...and now Adobe has given us Acrobat X. Oh, sure, we know that some  of those X's are actually tens in Roman numerals, but we're trying to work with  a theme here...
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 18, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		It's a shame that Microsoft can't come up with a catchier name for this  product because it's very popular and very useful. SCCM doesn't even really  spell anything, and if it does, that's a word we'd rather not have to pronounce. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 18, 20102 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		If you had a billion dollars to spend, how would you spend it? Would  you advertise your new mobile operating system and motion-controller game peripheral?  No?
Well, that's how Microsoft is about to spend a cool bil. The combined  advertising budgets of Windows Phone 7 and the Kinect game add-on (what is it  with Microsoft and the word "kin," anyway?) will amount to one  billion dollars.
Yeah, we know. That's chump change in Redmond. Still, we're about to be bombarded  with messages about a mobile OS that's arguably behind its two biggest  competitors feature-wise and a motion-control function that delivers more or  less what the Wii introduced years ago. Just how successful these initiatives  will be, of course, remains to be seen...but let's not forget that it took  pretty much a decade for Microsoft's game-development efforts to actually turn  a profit. 
For partners, all of this stuff is peripheral at best, although some  partners might be able to cash in on Windows Phone 7 somehow. The greater point  here, and the one we keep making in this space, is that moves like this one in Redmond signal where  Microsoft's priorities are and where they're going to be going forward. 
There's no doubt that the Microsoft Partner Network is bringing  sweeping changes in comparison to its predecessor, the Microsoft Partner  Program. And we believe, based on feedback we've had, that the MPN will be much  more about big, global partners than the more egalitarian MPP was. 
So, mid-size and smaller partners, you could soon see a decrease in  marketing funds, support and other investment flowing from Redmond. Maybe you're feeling the pinch  already. Yet Microsoft -- and we get that we're talking about a huge,  multi-faceted company here -- is letting $1 billion flow into one area (games)  that has mostly been a money loser and another (mobile) that the company has  shockingly mismanaged in recent years (and months, for that matter). Oh, and by  the way, that $1 billion is just for advertising. Don't forget that.
Microsoft will have an enterprise presence for many years to come, as  well it should. And a lot of partners will be able to continue to profit from  that aspect of Microsoft's business. But if you're wondering where the company  wants to head for the next few years to come, don't ask your Partner Account  Manager (if you still have -- or ever had -- one). Follow the money, or just  turn on the TV. You won't be able to miss what Microsoft is buying with its  billion dollars.
How do you feel about Microsoft investing so heavily in advertising for  games and Windows Phone 7? Have your say at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 18, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		How will Microsoft's new  mobile operating system fare in the market? And is it any good? RCP's Jeff Schwartz offers some  excellent observations (but only tepid enthusiasm) on the matter following his  live coverage of the Windows Phone 7 launch event.
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 14, 20100 comments