When Microsoft released Vista a few years ago, we trumpeted the launch  event with a post in RCPU simply titled, "Vista!"  It was, we suppose, meant to convey some sense of excitement about the arrival  of the long-awaited operating system that would gracefully lift the desktop  crown from the head of XP and reign over us with benevolence and majesty.  
But instead of reigning over us, Vista  rained on us. It poured application incompatibilities, outrageous hardware  requirements, draconian user access control and all sorts of other big, wet  drops of nastiness on our heads. Well, about three years and many, many jokes  at Vista's expense later, we find ourselves writing  an edition of RCPU for the coronation of Windows 7, which will try to wrest the  OS crown from the arthritic but mighty hands of Good King XP. 
For this launch, though, we're toning our enthusiasm down considerably. Yes, we've  heard that Windows 7 is great. We feel fairly confident based on reviews,  reader feedback and analyst babble that Windows 7 will do what Vista couldn't: become  the next flagship Microsoft OS and probably the next default OS for personal  and corporate computing.
Before we go on, let's restate one thing that everybody who reads RCPU  must know: We do not work for Microsoft. We do not promote Microsoft, nor do we  serve to promote Microsoft. We are advocates for companies in the Microsoft  channel -- our target audience -- but we endeavor always to cover Microsoft  objectively and without bias, positive or negative. In a few Web searches, your  editor has found comments on other sites suggesting that RCPU is somehow a promotional  vehicle for Microsoft and its products. That's just not the case. Most of you  know this, of course, but those who don't should learn it. 
That's not the reason, though, that we're taking it easy on Windows 7  hype. For one, today's launch is just a formality; many, if not most, of our  readers have at least used Windows 7, and there are no doubt large numbers of  you who run the OS every day. Beyond that, the launch of a new version of  Windows isn't what it used to be. It might still feel a bit like a coronation,  but the empire is shrinking. 
Windows is still the king of desktop computing, an OS that really  competes only against itself (for now) and continues to dominate mainly because  IT people and other workers alike are used to it and don't want to go through  the hassle and expense of implementing something else.  The Microsoft channel also has a lot to do with Windows' success; we're pretty  confident in stating that it's easier (and probably cheaper) to find a  Microsoft MVP partner who can perform implementations or fix problems than it  is to find a Linux or Mac expert. 
So, Windows 7, if it's not a repeat of Vista,  will probably take over the OS world. But for how long will Microsoft be king  of the software mountain? And when will other computing models -- specifically  cloud computing -- start to make the OS itself irrelevant, thereby making Windows'  dominance a fond memory for Microsoft and its partners?
Just this week, obviously timed for the Windows 7 launch, IBM and  Canonical (the distributor of Ubuntu Linux) revealed that they've teamed up to  provide a relatively inexpensive cloud-Linux combo for the desktop called IBM  Client for Smart Work.  Now, we don't really suspect that this offering, intriguing as it is, will make  a serious dent in Windows' market share.
In fact, if Windows really is going to cease to be emperor of the  desktop at some point, it'll likely die the death of a thousand cuts rather  than get bludgeoned in the head with one single offering from a competitor.  Google, IBM, Linux, cloud computing in general, even the Mac -- they're all making  inroads into the enterprise, and as their ecosystems grow and gain influence, the  undeniable expense of Windows compared to other alternatives will start to make  less and less sense.
The real strength of Windows, then, is you, the Microsoft partner. It's  your expertise, availability and numbers -- along with the familiarity companies  have with Windows itself -- that will keep Microsoft on top in the enterprise and  make Windows 7 a success (again, as long as Windows 7 isn't another Vista -- nobody could fix that). 
Of course, at the same time as they're moving clients to Windows 7,  partners also have to be adapting to changing computing models, preparing for  the onslaught of cloud and mobile technologies that are already here and will  only grow in the future. In the meantime, though, today represents less a day  of celebration than a day of commitment. 
Partners, the work of pulling Microsoft out of its funk and keeping it  on top of the software market (and filling your wallets at the same time) is  beginning anew with today's release of Windows 7. It's your job to make sure  that Windows is able to step down as emperor when its time comes rather than  being deposed. Hopefully Microsoft has given you something to work with in the  form of Windows 7. But now is the time to work, not to celebrate.
Have any comments about Windows 7 to add to the huge pile we already  have? Send them to [email protected].  Your thoughts are always welcome. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 22, 200918 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
				Profit and sales declines will likely be the order of the day again  when Microsoft announces earnings later this week.  As always, RCPU will be back next week with an analysis of how Microsoft did  and probably a wistful goodbye to jokes about Vista.
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 22, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		The good news is that things should pick up in 2010,  but here's the bad news (if you're ready for it) from the Wall Street Journal article linked above: 
  "While spending growth is expected next year, spending won't  return to 2008 levels until 2012."
Oh dear. That doesn't sound like good news at all. Well, at least  things won't get any worse than they are now...right? Right? 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 22, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		If you're a partner who stands in any way to profit from companies  moving to Windows 7, you have to love hearing stuff like this. The analyst  honchos at Forrester are telling IT departments that the time to move to  Windows 7 is now.
Well, more specifically, the Forrester folks are saying that IT  organizations should start planning their migrations now. They give a few not  illogical reasons for their recommended urgency, which are, in a nutshell,  these:
  - Microsoft is going to end XP support and make  you migrate, anyway. "Extended support" for the legendary OS begins  in July, and patches will stop altogether in April 2014, which is not an  immensely long time from now, especially considering that XP will be well more  than a decade old by then.
 
 
- Downgrade rights from Windows 7 to XP won't last  forever (they'll last 18 months after launch or until the first service pack  for 7 arrives, whichever comes first), so buying XP for new PCs could  eventually get expensive.
 
 
- Applications developed for XP won't be around  forever, either. Eventually, Windows 7 will become what Vista  never became -- the new default Microsoft operating system.
All of that, of course, sounds reasonable enough, even if that third  point seems a bit presumptuous. And for partners, Forrester's recommendations could  be useful sales tools. But then again, Forrester kept telling companies to  move to Vista before adopting Window 7, something most companies haven't done  and don't plan to do. 
Plus, we're not in a Microsoft-only world anymore. Even if Microsoft  kills XP support and downgrade rights die quickly, there's nothing preventing  IT departments from looking at, say, Linux, or moving seriously into the cloud  and accessing everything through a browser running on just about any OS. Of  course, either of those might be a much more expensive proposition in the long  run than embracing Windows 7, but Microsoft, now more than ever, isn't the only  OS game in town.
That means that Windows 7 needs to be very good -- and, by most accounts,  it is. It also means that Microsoft and partners need to convince companies  that Windows is still relevant, that there's a business case for Windows 7 vs.  XP, and that alternatives (Linux, Mac, the cloud) are either not reliable enough  or are eventually more expensive than the newest Windows OS. 
So, regardless of what Forrester says, there will be more to convincing  companies to migrate this time than just saying, "You're going to have to  do it eventually." For the record, we believe that Windows 7 will be a big  success for Microsoft and the channel. But it won't be as easy a sell as  Windows usually was before Vista.
We've had tons of great tales of Windows 7 migrations come in (and I'll  be responding to each of you personally at some point). Add yours to the pile  at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 21, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		To its credit, Microsoft is actually doing a pretty good job of putting  an end to its Sidekick data-loss nightmare. If data recovery continues at this  pace -- there's now a tool online that T-Mobile users can use to recover much of  their data -- Sidekickgate could (and probably should) end up being mostly a non-story. 
At  any rate, it doesn't and never did portend the death of cloud computing. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 21, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Google's campaign to dethrone Microsoft Office on the desktop, which  began with a few billboards in tech-heavy U.S. cities, is going global.  Does this mean war? Oh, the war's been going on for a while -- but Microsoft  still has control of most of the map.
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 21, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Free-software radical Richard Stallman and a group formed by Ralph  Nader want the EU to quash the proposed Oracle-Sun merger.  Big surprise, right? Well, their beef is with what Oracle would do with MySQL,  which is a legitimate concern, and it might make sense all around for Oracle to  sell MySQL and get the deal through (unless the whole thing was only about  MySQL to begin with, which we don't think it was). 
So, are we sprinkling rock  salt where hell froze over here and agreeing with Richard Stallman? Nah, not  really. Sure, we'd like to see MySQL saved, but if Oracle's got the money and  Sun is willing to sell, ol' Larry Ellison should be able to do what he wants  with what he buys. That's kind of how business works.  
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 21, 20094 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		It's Windows 7 week! On Thursday, Microsoft will roll out its latest  operating system at an event in New    York. Did you see this? Have you heard about this?  Well, be informed -- it's happening!
But if you just can't wait a couple more days to get your hands on the  Vista Slayer, there is a place where you can (sort of) get Windows 7 for about  $3. As you might have guessed, that place is China, were software pirates have  not only beaten Microsoft to the Windows 7 launch, they've also begun offering  the new OS at a very competitive price. 
  
Of course, it's not really Windows 7, but for $3, the fake version will  likely sell pretty well in China.  It might even get a few takers here in the U.S. And that costs Microsoft,  partners and customers money. Even if your business doesn't reach Shanghai  directly, the piracy taking place there is still lifting money out of your  wallet -- and pretty directly, in some cases. (Remember, for one thing, that a lot  of pirated Chinese software ends up in North America and Europe.)
For specifics on piracy's effect on the channel, re-read Scott Bekker's  excellent RCP article from 2007 on  Chinese software piracy. Piracy flits in and out of the news as  authorities make arrests or Microsoft sues partners who are allegedly selling  pirated software, but it's a problem that never really goes away. 
The New York Times story  linked above quotes IDC as saying that fake software accounted for 80 percent  of all software sold in China  last year (compared to about 20 percent in the U.S.). China is, of course, a huge market that's  only getting bigger as the company develops technologically, so an 80-percent piracy  rate is a massive challenge for vendors and U.S. and Chinese authorities alike. 
And then there's this, also from the NYT story: 
  "Business Software Alliance, a trade association created by the  software industry, said the sector had lost more than $6.6 billion in China  last year to piracy."
Some of that $6.6 billion is yours, partners. With all the numbers  being thrown around in bailouts and stimulus packages, a measly $6.6 billion  might not have an immediate emotional impact, but it's roughly equal to about a  tenth (or, actually, a bit more) of Microsoft's annual revenue for the past  couple of years, which has been around $60 billion. So, it's a lot of money. 
Things are getting better, though. Microsoft has dropped prices of its  wares in China.  Chinese authorities are actually starting to enforce anti-piracy laws that have  existed for a while. Chinese courts are convicting pirates and putting them in  jail. 
And partners are looking out for each other -- and looking for signs of dodgy  business at home and abroad. After all, a few partners have sided with the bad  guys over the years, and there are very likely some out there that still do. So,  keep your eye out for ridiculously low prices or markets that suddenly become  hyper-competitive. And, if you think you've found a culprit, don't be afraid to  take your concerns to Microsoft. Somebody there will likely listen if it's  obvious that you're being serious and have some evidence to back up what you're  saying.
Pirates might have beaten Microsoft to the Windows 7 punch, but they're  slowly losing their grip on the software industry both in China and worldwide. It's up to all  of us who abide by the law (yes, even journalists and bloggers) to stay  vigilant and stay away from those $3 copies of Windows 7. They cost a lot more  than that in the long run.
Have you had any experiences with piracy among your competitors or even  within your own company? Tell your story at [email protected]. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 20, 20092 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		It's the 2010 version of each product we're talking about here. For a  closer look at what's going to be in both (particularly in SharePoint), take a  look at Redmond magazine columnist  and friend of RCPU Mary Jo Foley's take on the products. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 20, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Redmond's embarrassing Sidekick data-loss fiasco  might still have a non-tragic ending, but the company's ongoing effort to  salvage Sidekick users' lost data isn't as easy as Microsoft might have made it  seem -- or perhaps even thought it would be. 
The initial euphoria over reports of the data's death being greatly  exaggerated has turned to something closer to cautious optimism  and a bit of a call for patience among users. The whole thing got somebody at  the New York Times so excited,  though, that the paper busted out a Microsoft-is-dying feature that details how Microsoft will fail in the cloud and ultimately sink into  irrelevance. (OK, so that's a harsh description of the story -- but not that  harsh.)
Of course, the whole Sidekick fiasco is really more of a mobile problem  -- one of many -- than a cloud problem for Microsoft (as we've said here before),  and it may even be something a bit more sinister than just a gigantic screw-up.  Microsoft has some catching up to do with Google and maybe even Amazon in terms  of cloud technology, but nobody has a dominating lead in this race. In fact,  the race is just beginning, and Ray Ozzie and Microsoft have as much a shot of  winning it long-term as Google or anybody else does. They'll certainly be a  contender.
So, New York Times, please spare us your wishful thinking that Microsoft is on  its death bed. Yes, the Sidekick thing was and is a disaster, but if Microsoft  really can restore users' data, the whole incident might end up going down as a  footnote rather than a chapter in cloud computing's history. In any case,  Microsoft will survive. Besides, is anybody in the newspaper business really in  a good position to tell us all that some other company is in trouble? 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 20, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Not cool, Microsoft. Not cool. Sneaking add-ons into Firefox that ended  up messing up users' (including your editor's) browsers was a bad move.  So bad, in fact, that Mozilla blocked a couple of Microsoft's under-the-table  add-ons before finally working with Microsoft to at least make the .NET Framework  Assistant add-on safe for use.  
Next time, Microsoft, just give us a hint when you're going to do something  like this (as in, mess with somebody else's product in a fairly serious way),  OK? Thanks. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on October 20, 20090 comments