Rob Enderle ponders this week whether Microsoft could have taken over  the world with Windows Mobile if Redmond   just made the mobile operating system seem cooler, the way Apple promoted the  iPhone.  He has a point, of course, but Microsoft is to marketing as Apple is to  non-proprietary development (heh heh). Incidentally, a recent Windows Mobile  6.5 update did come with a few new features. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on December 02, 20094 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		We in the software world get so used to blaming Microsoft for these  types of things that when news broke of a "black screen of death"  (oddly abbreviated KSoD in some places)  plaguing multiple versions of Windows, lots of observers, including RCPU,  instinctively pointed a finger of blame at Redmond.
Well, as your editor's second-grade teacher used to say, "Every  time you point at somebody, there are three fingers pointing back at you."  (This led, of course, to kids pointing with all five fingers at presumed guilty  parties, which was pretty funny now that we think about it.) Anyway, we're  acknowledging here the three fingers pointed back at us and offering Microsoft's  side of the story, which is, essentially, "It's not our fault." Wrote  a blogger from Microsoft's Security   Response Center:
  "We've conducted a comprehensive review of the November Security  Updates, the Windows Malicious Software Removal Tool, and the non-security  updates we released through Windows Update in November. That investigation has  shown that none of these updates make any changes to the permissions in the  registry. Thus, we don't believe the updates are related to the 'black screen'  behavior described in these reports."
The rest of the short blog entry is here.  Generally speaking, when Microsoft has a security flaw, it acknowledges it and  eventually gets around to fixing it. So, we're inclined to believe Redmond's pleas of  innocence here and conclude that the KSoD problem is coming from somewhere  else.
Not that it matters, of course, because a problem's a problem, and  somebody has to fix it. Security firm Prevx says it has a fix, but the fact is  that it might be better if this flaw did come from Microsoft because then, at least,  Microsoft could get to the bottom of it and issue a fix for it. If it's really  not Redmond's  problem, and we don't know whose it is...then we're not sure who's going to fix  it (or whether Prevx's fix really works). For what it's worth, Prevx thinks it knows  what the problem is, and is working with Microsoft on the matter. 
But we also don't know how big a deal this flaw really is, and  Microsoft is saying that it doesn't seem to be a broad customer issue. So,  maybe this whole story is a whole lot of nothing, or at least not as exciting  and significant as some of us in the press and blogosphere (we hate that word,  by the way) would like it to be during a slow time for news. In fact, now might  be a good time to stop talking about it altogether.
Have you experienced the black screen of death? If so, have you found a  fix for it, and where? Share your information at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on December 02, 20092 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Your editor is swamped with other responsibilities this week, so expect  some short RCPUs. (Yes, we always say that and it never happens, but it's going  to happen this week.)
There's an interesting article in the San Francisco Chronicle this week about how Silicon   Valley has warmed to Microsoft over the last decade or so.  The paper offers a couple of explanations for the thawing of relations between  Redmond and the  Valley. 
First, there's the notion that Microsoft really is a friendlier  company, that it was humbled by the U.S. antitrust suit of the '90s and  that its leaders decided after that to be more open and friendly with the  industry. The second possible explanation is that Microsoft just isn't the  threat it used to be and competitors and partners alike don't hate Redmond because, with the importance of the operating  system on the decline, there is less about Redmond to hate. Microsoft is old money now,  the thinking goes, and the really obnoxious new kids on the block -- as well as  the biggest threat to the industry as a whole -- are new money (read: Google).
We're convinced of Microsoft's staying power as a company, but we kind  of lean toward explanation No. 2 -- if the issue is binary, which it probably isn't -- as  to why Microsoft isn't such a pariah anymore. Sure, Microsoft has opened up to  the software industry and open source somewhat (and sometimes) and has  introduced some transparency and flexibility into its operations. But Microsoft  is like the Dallas Cowboys (and here, your editor sheds a tear): a  once-dominant behemoth that's still successful but just doesn't scare  competitors the way it used to. Well, OK, Microsoft is a lot more dominant and  successful than the Cowboys, but you get what we're going for here.
We're wondering what changes you, Microsoft partners, have perceived in  recent years regarding opinions of Microsoft. Is Microsoft -- and are you, as the  company's sales force -- meeting less industry resistance these days than you did,  say, 10 years ago? Twenty years ago? And, if so, do you think it's because  Microsoft has played better with its industry friends or because it's not as  scary as Google is now? Or both? Send your thoughts to [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on December 01, 20095 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		This is one launch that won't include a ribbon-cutting ceremony, if you  know what we mean. Heh heh. Oh, yes, the ribbon will be back and likely more  confusing than ever by the middle of next year.
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on December 01, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Chris Liddell is moving on,  and Microsoft is promoting Redmond  veteran Peter Klein into the CFO role. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on December 01, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		At least that's what one software company and some users are saying. Redmond's  latest patch is (allegedly) crashing computers running all sorts of Windows  versions.  
One thing to note: Black is the new blue. The famous BSOD has gone dark for the  fall, as have some computers, apparently. Anyway, it's now the black screen of  death, which seems less colorful and festive than the blue screen.
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on December 01, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		At first glance, this almost seems a little unfair. The ERP market  leader and the market leader in almost everything else -- two companies that aren't  always the best of friends -- are teaming up to attack Oracle.  But Microsoft and SAP have their reasons for getting together. 
Oracle is a major ERP player these days and a threat to SAP's  market-leading position in the space. (Microsoft wants to be an ERP player,  too, but we'll get to that later.) Microsoft, of course, wants to cut into  Oracle's massive share of the market for database software. So, Microsoft and  SAP have come together in what is essentially a business-intelligence play in  which Microsoft -- and its channel, presumably -- will recommend and implement SAP's  BusinessObjects BI software for Microsoft customers...with  that software running, of course, on Microsoft's database applications. There  will also be some cross-sales and cross-promotion-type stuff.
There are a lot of entanglements here, and we wonder at  first blush whether Microsoft and SAP are trying too hard to torpedo Captain  Larry Ellison's Good Ship Oracle. (Larry's an avid sailor, you know.) First  off, what does Microsoft embracing BO (a common abbreviation for  BusinessObjects among company insiders -- and, yes, your editor did briefly work  there in Paris  almost a decade ago) say about Microsoft's own efforts to create a BI platform? 
Although the concept for it has never seemed to have much structure,  Microsoft has tried to lump together its own BI offering and has even made a  few acquisitions over the last few years with development of BI in mind. Is  this, then, the end of the Microsoft's half-cooked BI experiment? 
Redmond has always talked about baking BI tools into a Microsoft stack  rather than offering them as something of a separate entity; there's not really  such a thing as "Microsoft BI" (although it would make a good name  for a detective show set in Hawai'i). SAP, on the other hand, sells BI software  as more of a separate commodity and has given BO some level of autonomy  post-acquisition. (The BO name survives, anyway, as do many of BO's employees,  who are now on the SAP payroll.) 
If Microsoft really is going to send partners into accounts touting BO  as Redmond's "preferred" BI software, there seems to be somewhere in  that decision an admission that cobbling together BI capabilities has been more  difficult and not as profitable as Microsoft thought it would be. 
And speaking of things that are cobbled together, what does this  agreement mean for Microsoft's Dynamics ERP suites, at least a couple of which  feature Microsoft's own BI capabilities already? Does Microsoft now ask its  channel members to go into Dynamics accounts pushing BO, at the risk of  exposing those companies to SAP on the ERP side? And what of SAP -- which, by the  way, uses a hybrid channel and direct sales model -- going on sales calls with  representatives of a company that wants to eat away at its position as ERP  market leader? 
This isn't, of course, the first time that Microsoft and SAP have  hooked up,  and rumors of Microsoft's desire to buy SAP have persisted for years; only a few  months ago, Steve Ballmer was busy quashing them again.  Plus, there seems to be little doubt (albeit from biased observers in some  cases)  that this deal really could take a chunk out of Oracle's two primary business  lines. 
But at what cost? And why? "Coopetition" is a delicate  balance. It should offer more benefit than risk, although there will always be a  bit of both involved. The obvious benefit here is that Microsoft and SAP have an  excellent opportunity to carve up and conquer Oracle, a frankly brash and  unlikeable company (according to RCPU) that, in many ways, embodies the  attitude of its CEO. 
But in slicing and dicing Oracle, how often will Microsoft and SAP slip  and cut each other and themselves? How will they and their partner bases avoid  conflicts and stepping on each other's toes? And do the ERP titan and the world's  most powerful software company really need to take all these risks to pick on  Oracle at this point? We're not so sure. This deal seems to bring Microsoft and  SAP too close. So close, in fact, that it might be time to dust off that Microsoft-SAP  acquisition rumor again. Just for fun, anyway.
Are Microsoft and SAP going too far to attack Oracle? Sound off at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 19, 20092 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Microsoft is revealing all sorts of cloud stuff at this week's PDC. If  you want to read about it, you'll just have to help drive traffic to the  RCPmag.com Web site (and, honestly, Mike Desmond's story is very much worth a  read).  Oh, and by the way, there are new Office and SharePoint betas this week, too. 
What we like best about this week's PDC news is that Microsoft now has  an Azure-related project code-named Dallas.  Dallas is more or less your editor's  hometown (it's actually Midlothian for you  RCPU trivia buffs out there) and was, of course, the setting for one of the  most epic TV dramas of all time. 
We at RCPU love the "Dallas"  theme song.  In fact, we're pretty sure we want it to start playing every time your editor  walks into a room. But, upon searching for Dallas  stuff, we remembered a great tune about Texas  that used to open a popular local human-interest show in DFW. We can't find the  original Boston Pops recording of "Hill Country Theme," but a version by the  Reivers, out of Austin, isn't bad,  or you can hear it with lyrics sung by the legendary Willie Nelson.  Yee-haw!
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 19, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Cloud CRM pioneer Salesforce.com -- which, incidentally, is doing pretty  well financially -- introduced this week a Facebook-like corporate app called Chatter.  Naturally, this got us to thinking of the old "Simpsons" episode in which Bart  and Lisa have a hockey rivalry (here's a funny scene from it)  and Apu tells a forlorn Milhouse to "keep up the chatter!" (True  "Simpsons" nerds can find the reference buried somewhere here.)  
Anyway, Facebook for work? Isn't that called LinkedIn, and isn't everybody in Sweden already  a member of it or something like that? We'll see what Salesforce.com, an  innovative company, can do with this thing. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 19, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		More than a little trouble, actually, as Microsoft's loss in an  intellectual-property case there could have ramifications for Windows 7. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 19, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Betas of HPC (high-performance computing, naturally) Server 2008 R2 and  Excel 2010 are out for the fiddling pleasure of folks who like their computing  performance high. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on November 18, 20090 comments