Yes, we still do this. People still e-mail your editor, and  he still runs their e-mails in newsletter entries and blog posts. Oh, sure,  folks can post comments directly on the blog site (which is great) or Tweet  with abandon (if they must), but old-school e-mail and traditional reader  feedback live on. 
		We start this edition with thoughts on Windows 8, which we  at RPCU think looks great for tablets but not so appropriate for PCs.  To our great surprise, several readers wrote to...agree! Writes Glen:
		  "I'm with you! I certainly don't want to have to  bathe my laptop screen several times a day to get the food particles and  fingerprints off. I stayed with XP until last year when I bought a new laptop  with [Windows] 7 64 installed by Toshiba. I still have to deal with XP on  my other two machines that are too old for W7, but that's not often. I doubt  that I'll even consider W8; I'll wait for W9 or whatever. I don't need to  be the first tester for MS!"
		Glen, we're still on XP here at RCPU, but it does what we  need it to do. It might for a while to come. And the whole idea of touchscreen  computing on a non-mobile device (specifically on a PC) is, well, just kind of  weird.
		Michael chimes in:
		  "You are on point. Let us digest Win 7 on the PC while  Microsoft captures tablet and phone market share with Windows 8. This would be  a great strategic move without blurring the parameters of PC computing."
		Yes, blurring the parameters -- that seems to be what Microsoft  is doing, and while we kind of get the idea behind that, the execution is  poor  thus far. Plus, we're not sure we want our parameters blurred. Let tablets be  tablets and PCs be PCs. And we do think that Windows 8 has chance to capture a  chunk of the tablet market. 
		And then there's Thomas, who wraps up this whole issue with  such gusto that we don't really feel the need to add a comment to what he has  to say:
		  "To those who think the same interface will work with  both mouse-keyboard and finger tips: Look at your fingers. Now look at  your mouse pointer. THEY AREN'T THE SAME. And a user interface designed  for one will NOT work well with the other. (Try doing an 'expand'  with your mouse, or clicking a checkbox [or inserting a cursor between two  letters] with your finger).  
  "Furthermore, the last thing I want on my PC is a 'desktop'  that I have to use like the one on my Windows Phone -- I almost never even look  at my XP desktop -- not to mention the god-awful Windows Phone 7 emphasis on  things like requiring on-line syncing to get anything done.  
  "I want a PC OS able to run multiple large apps  simultaneously, using a mouse and full-size keyboard, optimized for use with  multiple multi-terabyte HDs, a graphics card with several hundred processors  and a GB or so of RAM on-board, dual or triple 10-bit-per-color monitors, etc.  -- not something that a typical iPad-style tablet will have. And I want  the user interface to support that, too. Conversely, I need my tablet OS to be  optimized for that smaller single-monitor, smaller-SSD, longer-battery-life  hardware, and with a user interface to match -- e.g., with touchscreen support.  This one-OS-fits-all idea, like all those previous 'write once, run everywhere'  marketing-gimmick ideas, just never works. Hope someone bursts this  Microsoft bubble before it gets foisted on us users and pops in our faces."
		Of course, we're going to add to this comment, anyway, but  only by saying that we're right with you, Thomas. You said in a couple hundred  words what we tried to say in closer to 1,000. Well done.
		Also recently, we explored the notion of Microsoft becoming  cool, which we believe to be a possibility if Redmond plays its underdog cards correctly.  Richard writes to remind us that if Microsoft does manage to achieve coolness,  it won't be for the first time:
		  "In the fuzzy rush of technology chasing itself pell  mell to nobody knows where, it is sometimes hard to dredge up those old  memories from the world before the World Wide Web changed everything. There  was a time, way back there sometime around 1980 or thereabouts, when Microsoft  WAS cool, the little scrappy company taking on the kings of computing technology  and winning. Remember DOS? That little company invented it out of a  purchased piece of code and delivered a product to the giant of the computing  world, upstaging Digital Research (where is CPM when you really need it?) and  leapfrogging Apple and Radio Shack and Osborne Computer and, well,  everybody. And what is Windows, anyway? As I recall, it was a shot  across the bow of the IBM supertanker when the Big Blue folks wanted to forge  ahead on their own with (we strain to remember it) a new operating system for  their personal computer. So where is OS-2 now?
  "Yeah, those were the good old days before Microsoft  almost missed the boat completely on the World Wide Web, and then crashed the  party by actually giving away Internet Explorer in order to compete with that  other darling of a company who basically stole the Web browser idea from the  University of Chicago and had the temerity to sell Web browsers to unsuspecting  corporate users. Speaking of giving away product, wasn't it Apple that  essentially gave away computers to schools across the country, knowing that if  they got the kids they would have the adults?
  "Way back there, AOL was king of the connected world  (well, at least after they purchased Compuserve) and made money by -- get this --  selling ad space on their network that barely let users out of the box to visit  the Web. So how did Google come up with that idea to finance their search  portal, anyway?
  "Is Apple cool today because they were so good, or  because Microsoft kept them afloat with a massive infusion of cash when they  were about to go belly-up? Is Google cool today because they are straining  mightily to convince us all the world really does belong in the cloud, or is  that just a reflection of their revenue stream? I wonder."
		Richard, we like this comment a lot for a lot of reasons.  First of all, we're history buffs here at RCPU. Beyond that, though, you bring  up a lot of good points about who should and shouldn't be cool. There's only  one problem, though: Cool makes no sense. It never has. It's easy to identify  but very difficult to define. And it often defies rational thinking.  Unfortunately, it matters in the consumer world. 
		Remember how the Fonz from "Happy Days" was cool in the '70s?  A '50s do-gooder in a leather jacket with over-coiffed hair (played by a guy  who was about 60 at the time, or so it now seems) was cool during the "me  decade," when experimentation and rebellion were the hallmarks of the  post-Vietnam era. How on earth did that happen? Was there some sort of reverse  irony there? It makes no sense at all. The Fonz and David Bowie were cool  during the same decade, maybe even among some of the same people. Weird. 
  
Anyway, we digress, but the point is this: Cool makes no  sense. Apple is a big, powerful corporation with a not-so-great record for  being "green" (or so we've heard) and a CEO who might be a genius but  is also, we think, a bit of a megalomaniac. It's kind of like GE with a neat  logo. Yet, among the hipsters and the arbiters of tech taste, Apple is cool. 
		Then there's Microsoft, which, as you mentioned, toppled the  power structure of computing in the '80s and steamrolled everybody in its path.  That would make a great character in a video game (probably -- we don't play video  games), but Microsoft is roundly uncool. Go figure. And, no, we haven't  forgotten that Microsoft saved Apple's bacon (now we're getting hungry) back in  the '90s. We at RCPU are still fans of Pirates of Silicon Valley (yet another reason why we're uncool, too). 
		Have anything to add to the discussion? Send it to [email protected].
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on June 08, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Apple is cool. Do we have to try and quantify that? Nah. You don't have  to be cool to know who's cool. Were you one of the cool kids in high school? If  not, did you know who was? Well, that's our point. We at RCPU are not cool, but  we know that Apple is cool, and maybe Google is, too. 
		Microsoft is not. Never has been, really. One reason is that Microsoft  has long been a bully, a company perceived (and probably not inaccurately) to  have ripped off a lot of other vendors in its quest to dominate the technology  industry. People still love to read about this stuff. The bitterness toward  Microsoft is still strong. Doug Barney's recent Redmondmag.com story on the   "10 Technologies Microsoft 'Borrowed'"  has racked up an enormous number of hits (not to give away our trade secrets or  anything).
		Bullies are feared, maybe even respected -- but they're not cool. And cool  matters in the consumer-heavy world of smartphones and tablets Microsoft so  desperately wants to crack. Logos and labels are critical in that world, and  Microsoft's is more likely to elicit a roll of the eyes from the in-crowd than  it is a nod of respect. Apple's apple, on the other hand, is the gold standard  of techie smugness and self-satisfaction.
		Things might be changing, though, slowly, bit by bit. While digging  around for articles to link to for another entry, we ran across this post from  TechCrunch and couldn't help but notice what one of the user commenters had to say: "I strangely find myself rooting for Microsoft. They are the good  guys now. Go Microsoft! You can do it!"
		That sentiment got 99 "likes" on Facebook (at last count) and  a couple of comments in support. It offers a tiny glimpse into how the  least-cool vendor since IBM in the '80s (also a victim of Apple's  swagger -- partially) can reposition itself in the consumer mind. Microsoft is the  underdog now, at least in the kingdom of tablets and phones over which Apple  and Google are currently fighting for control. And underdogs are almost always  cool.
		Think about it. Apple isn't the scrappy little guy anymore. It's not  Avis or the pre-2004 Boston Red Sox. It is, in fact, more like the post-2004  Boston Red Sox, just another wealthy franchise that crushes competitors under  its cleats and elicits relatively little sympathy from neutrals. Steve Jobs is  brilliant but as a public figure is pretty difficult to like. Apple's hipster  image can be overbearing, to say the least. 
		Plus (and this is very important), Apple is bigger than Microsoft now.  Steve (Jobs) got the loot after all, and it doesn't really matter how much  market share Mac has compared to Windows when the world has moved on to  obsessing over smaller devices -- markets in which Apple is either the clear  leader (tablets) or a major contender (smartphone operating systems). Those  brilliant Mac Guy ads from a few years ago would seem awkward and incongruous  now. The tables have turned. 
		Then there's Google, which is kind of mysterious and creepy. Is Google  cool? Well, Android-based phones certainly sell well, but that might have  something to do with their broad-based availability and the ability of carriers  to offer them with reasonably priced plans. (Full disclosure: Your editor has  an Android phone and really likes it.) Other than that, though, Google is kind  of utilitarian, synonymous with search and big in the cloud but not necessarily  cool. 
		IBM is the antithesis of cool, but it was briefly bigger that Microsoft  recently (and might be again), which only helps the case for cool in Redmond. Sure, Microsoft  has been a bully over the years. Yeah, Windows was and probably still is the  cheese quesadilla appetizer to Mac's foie gras on toast points. But in this new  world of little devices and touchscreens, Microsoft is the underdog. In fact,  it's way, way behind its competitors. And in the technology industry, Microsoft  isn't the alpha dog anymore. It's the beta, or maybe even the, um, third (our  Greek is bad -- gamma?) dog. Microsoft should remind people of that every chance  it gets.
		Yes, that's right. Microsoft should go against every instinct its  executives seem to have and every impression it has ever tried to deliver and  make itself into the blue-collar, hard-working scrapper just trying to get a  foothold among the evil giants of the handheld game. It has happened before.  Let's stick with sports here: The Dallas Cowboys in the early '90s, the Boston  Celtics a few years ago, even the hated (and evil) New York Yankees back in the  mid-'90s reinvented themselves not so much as empires reborn but as interlopers  into games somebody else was dominating at the time. They all came to dominate  eventually (and once again engender tons of hatred, but that's the price of  being on top, where everybody wants to be). Can Microsoft do the same? Maybe  not, but it can and should try.
		The message is this: If you're sitting in a coffee shop with a  Microsoft Windows Phone 7 phone or Windows 8 tablet (as soon as there's a  Windows 8 tablet to sit with), you're not a bandwagon fan surrendering to a  nasty corporate force and falling in with the broad swath of sheep-like  consumers. Oh, no. You're a rebel, part of the resistance, a game changer and a  trendsetter. You're daring to shun Steve Jobs and Google for something new,  something really different, something not everybody has the guts to buy. 
		You're not a PC. You're a Windows handheld device. You're a little out  there, a little mysterious without being creepy. The iPad minions and Android  lemmings are the sheeple. You're...cool. People want to be like you. You know it,  and they know it. Will Microsoft ever know it? We kind of doubt it, but we also  kind of hope so.
		Can Microsoft be cool? Does it matter? Send your thoughts to [email protected] or leave a comment below.
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on June 06, 20115 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		There's a dog pile, and I'm about to jump on top of it. (Yes, I'm also  dropping RCPU's trademark obnoxious royal "we" for this entry, as I'm  going to be dishing some opinions that are more personal than usual. Be ready.) 
		Remember dog piles, by the way? How much fun was that, as a kid, to be  playing football on the playground or in the backyard and have some kid yell "dog  pile!" at which time all the kids would jump on each other until somebody  suffered a collapsed lung? Good times. It's no wonder I enjoyed playing rugby  so much when I lived in Europe (as an adult).
		But back to today's dog pile. It's a collapsed scrum of tech pundits  this time, all pretty much saying the same thing about Windows 8, which Microsoft showed off at D9 yesterday: It looks  great,  but should it be a PC operating system as well as an OS for tablets?  Probably not. (As always, some have taken this opportunity to tear into  Microsoft,  but we're not on that dog pile.) 
		The interface of Windows 8 -- as does that of Windows Phone 7,  frankly -- looks elegant, easy to use and downright pretty. In the RCPmag.com link  posted above (here it is again),  there's a short video demo from Microsoft of the new OS. (Note to Microsoft, by  the way: A little sound editing goes a long way. We don't want to hear Windows 8  demoed in a fish bowl.)
|  [Click on image for larger view.]
 | 
| The Windows 8 start screen. Courtesy: Microsoft | 
		The sliding, touchscreen tiles are attractive, the colors vibrant; the  whole setup looks perfect for a tablet. It's a clean break from both iOS and  Android, which are actually pretty similar in look and feel. There's only one  problem. The demonstrator is using Windows 8 on a PC with a monitor. Here's  where we turn into 
Lumbergh from Office Space:  Ahh, yeah, Microsoft. So, I guess we should go ahead and have a little talk,  hmm?
		
No, it's not about putting cover sheets on TPS reports. It's about  touching my computer screen: I don't want to. Yes, I love the touchscreen on my  phone. I'd love one if I had a tablet. Those are tactile devices, small and  physically approachable. But personally, I use a netbook connected to a pretty  large monitor in my home office and an ancient laptop at work (thanks, 1105  Media). I don't want to lean over my desk and touch my monitor. I don't want  to touch my laptop screen and get it all greasy from the residue a Whole Foods  burrito left on my fingers. I'm fine using keyboard and mouse the way I have  for I don't know how many years now. Heck, as other members of the dog pile  point out, even Mac users, as cool as they are, use keyboard and mouse. I don't  need a revolution in PC computing interfaces.
		In fact, I don't need anything from Windows 8 at all on the PC. I don't  even need Windows 8. Like many PC users, I'm still on XP. Why? Because it does  what I need it to do -- boot, run with acceptable speed and not crash too  often -- and nothing more. I don't want my PC OS to be gorgeous. I don't want it  to be elegant. I don't even want to know it's there. (That's one reason I've  never bought another Mac, although I loved the old bubble-back iMac I had years  ago.) 
		Sure, IT administrators and other pros love Windows 7. That's cool. I get  that. But as a consumer and a low-level office (and Office) user, all I want from an OS is pretty much what I want from other people's  kids: to be seen and not heard, and preferably to not be seen all that much,  either. Just leave me alone. I have a feeling that most consumers -- and, really,  we're all consumers on some level -- feel the way I do. 
		Now, on my tablet (if I had one) and on my phone, I want to goof  around with sliding apps here and there and finding contacts and such with my  fingers. I can hold those little computers in my hand; it feels right and makes  sense for me to let my fingers do the walking on them. When they get a little  smeared, I rub them on my shirt or on the sofa and clean off the glass a bit. Windows  8 looks great for all that -- maybe great enough that if I ever did buy a tablet,  I'd consider a Windows 8 device as opposed to the iPad (as long as the Windows  device had enough apps; tablet and smartphone computing are all about apps). 
		But on a laptop or on a monitor, I just want the same simplicity I've had  for a couple of decades now. There's no reason to go changing that. I don't  want to have to use glass cleaner on my screen every few hours. (Hey, I like  the occasional finger food, OK?) Windows 8, unfortunately, is designed to be  everything for everybody -- touchscreen tablet interface and full-fledged PC OS  with all the trimmings. It needs to be just the former. Let XP or Windows 7 or some  forthcoming version of the OS handle the PC stuff. Windows 8 is great,  Microsoft, for what it needs to be: your weapon against the iPad juggernaut. That's  the word from the top of the dog pile.
		What do you want out of Windows 8? Are you interested in having a  touch-screen interface for your PC? Sound off at [email protected].
Related:
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on June 02, 201112 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Microsoft is in a funk, a rut, a down period with no real  end in sight. Heck, even IBM blew past Microsoft in value last week. 
		IBM! IBM rising to the No. 2 spot in the industry, behind  Apple, feels kind of like Grand Funk Railroad or Air Supply racing up the pop  charts in 2011, if pop charts still exist. (OK, so here's your obligatory Grand  Funk YouTube link. Beware of considerable '70s shirtlessness.  We'll spare you the Air Supply link.)
		Of course, Microsoft isn't exactly...um, we're having trouble  coming up with a pop star here to complete our metaphor...would Beyonce work? Let's  just go with her. Microsoft isn't exactly Beyonce, or whoever is on top of the  pop charts these days. 
		In fact, it's starting to feel like a '90s band that's been  around too long and is just trying to hang on to a shred of popularity. Can we  think of an example? No, we cannot. (Our pop-culture references are getting a  bit moldy, as you might have noticed. You might say that we've become the  Microsoft of pop-culture knowledge.) But you get the point -- we hope.
		While Apple is unquestionably cool and Google is kind of  enterprise cool these days, Microsoft, while still plenty big and powerful,  seems to lag behind its competitors in hot technology categories such as  tablets and mobile operating systems. (And we do mean way behind.) 
		And now even IBM, the company Microsoft crushed in the  enterprise as well as in the American home office a couple of decades ago, has  emerged to take its long-sought revenge -- at least for a while, depending on how  the market plays out in the days to come. Microsoft, meanwhile, remains  stagnant, stuck in neutral.
		So, what does Microsoft need to get itself going again? The  end of the world. Or at least something like it. (Yes, we have the REM video,  too.) 
		You know those people who said the apocalypse was going to  hit last Saturday?  Their prediction might have been a bit off (or maybe not -- take a look around and  see who's not in the office today), but could you possibly ignore them over  the last week or so? We couldn't. We only wish the earthquake had arrived  before the Boston Bruins blew a three-goal lead in their playoff game Saturday  against Tampa Bay. Alas. 
		We weren't seeking out news on this tiny group of  unconventional folks, but they were everywhere, unavoidable, literally making  news all over the world with a few billboards, some vans, a collection of  way-up-the-dial radio stations...and a claim that they knew exactly when the  world was going to end. 
		They're not exactly the first people to make that claim, of  course, which makes their staggering publicity all the more remarkable. Lots of  major corporations would have killed for press coverage like that, no matter  how mocking most of it was.
		It there's no such thing as bad publicity -- and we believe  that to almost always be true, major oil spills and nuclear meltdowns being the  possible exceptions -- then this Harold Camping fellow really did do something  exceptional in what he apparently thought would be his final days on this planet.  He captured the world's attention. He got people talking. So, they made fun of  him. So what? We all know who he is now and what his message is, or was. Again,  that's the kind of attention companies crave.
		Maybe that's what Microsoft needs -- some sort of apocalypse.  Oh, it doesn't have to be an actual one (only Steve Jobs has the power to pull  that off, as far as we know...just kidding, God), but some sort of shocking  prediction might give Microsoft the perception jolt (and maybe the actual jolt)  it needs.
		Just what that would be, we're not sure. Predicting the end  of the world is so last week. That's not going to work. And it has to be  something weird, something Microsoft couldn't actually control or do on its  own. 
		Maybe a company spokesperson could say this week that at the  Worldwide Partner Conference in July, Steve Ballmer will explode into 10,000  tiny Steve Ballmers who will then infiltrate Apple's headquarters armed only  with electric-blue shirts and boundless enthusiasm. It could be a kind of  Apple-calypse prediction.
		Or maybe Microsoft could play off of Camping's prediction  and say that on some particular date, maybe July 1 to kick off the company's  fiscal year, Planet Earth and all of its physical properties will suddenly blue  screen and require a massive celestial reboot. Those still running IE 6 on XP  will be left behind.
		If none of that works, maybe Microsoft could put a firm date  on when it'll have a tablet device capable of competing with the iPad. Nah,  never mind -- the crazy proclamation has to be at least somewhat plausible. 
		The whole point is to get lots of people thinking about  Microsoft again, even if folks are just making fun of the company. Get back in  the news in some remarkable way, and maybe Microsoft can then follow up with, "While  you're mocking our outrageous predictions, how about having a look at Windows  Phone 7?" (The Mango update really does look pretty good.)
		Harold Camping's failed rapture has left the door wide open  for the creative marketing minds in Redmond.  They need to jump on the apocalyptic bandwagon before it empties out and get  people talking about Microsoft again. Of course, if that doesn't happen, it won't  be the end of the world...or will it?
		What kind of apocalyptic prediction would you have Microsoft  come up with? Send your best suggestions to [email protected], or leave a comment below.
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on May 23, 201112 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Just a few years ago, Microsoft was building massive datacenters,  complete with water-powered cooling systems and enormous generators. Those days  are gone.
		Wednesday at Tech-Ed in Atlanta,  Rick Bakken, senior director of datacenter evangelism at Microsoft, revealed  during a breakout session that the next generation of Microsoft datacenters  will be smaller, air-cooled facilities that will use less power and cost less  to operate.
		Microsoft's Chicago  datacenter, now about 4 years old, is a staggeringly large facility, with  two separate power supplies for redundancy and a massive water-based cooling  system. The colossus is one of a group of large datacenters Microsoft has built  around the world in recent years. But the next generation of Microsoft datacenters will look very different, Bakken said. 
		"We're not doing this again," Bakken said, noting that much  of the cost of building the facility went into "cement, copper and steel,"  rather than into actual technology, such as servers. Microsoft won't close its  big datacenters, Bakken said, but it will begin building what he called "edge  nodes" -- smaller, cheaper datacenters that will use less power and can  even be relocated if necessary.
		"We're still going to have our large datacenters," Bakken  said. But he explained that edge nodes "are not billion-dollar datacenters. I can build these a lot faster and a lot cheaper. If you make a  mistake, you can pick it up and move it," Bakken said.
		Microsoft's construction of massive datacenters might have gotten a  bit out of control, Bakken said. "The amount of usage of the failover  systems in most of our datacenters is .001 percent of the time, and the majority  of that is testing," he said. "The fact that we have 12 diesel  generators running behind that is probably overkill."
		Edge nodes, on the other hand, will reside in what Bakken called IT-preassembled components, or ITPACs. Modular buildings much smaller than  Microsoft's current enormous datacenters will house Microsoft's servers, which  the company will cool not exclusively with pumped water but with a system  called adiabatic cooling. Essentially, outside air will cool the facilities,  and hot or cold water will regulate the indoor temperature only when the  temperature outside becomes unacceptably hot or cold. 
		Microsoft used the adiabatic model for its recently completed Dublin datacenter, Bakken  said. Letting in outside air rather than exclusively using water to cool datacenters can reduce operating expenses for the facilities significantly, he  said. 
		"We built a fully redundant datacenter in Dublin," Bakken said. "We run 365  days a year on outside air. [We're] not pumping water through for cooling. If  you can take advantage of outside air, you don't have to put massive  infrastructure in place. If you're not playing around with a bunch of  environments, your operating expenses go down 60 percent." 
		Also during his talk, Bakken rattled off a couple of startling facts  about Microsoft's datacenter infrastructure: "We buy between 2 and 5  percent of the servers manufactured in the world every quarter," he said. "If  we were an ISP, we'd be the fifth-largest provider in the world."
 More Tech-Ed Analysis:
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on May 19, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Microsoft's System Center Operations Manager (SCOM) is a popular component of  a very popular management suite, and it would take a brave third-party vendor  to try to compete with it.
		Idera is that vendor. In announcing this week at Tech-Ed SharePoint  diagnostic manager v2.5,  Idera is ramping up its battle with Microsoft in the market for SharePoint  administration tools. But while SCOM and Idera's diagnostic manager are competitive  products, they're not necessarily aimed at the same audience.
		"SCOM tends to go to larger IT groups," said Marcus Erickson,  director of engineering at Idera, this week at Tech-Ed in Atlanta. "They have the CIO saying, 'I  want the solution for everything.' We're selling mainly to SharePoint  administrators." Erickson adds that SCOM can be "intimidating"  for SharePoint admins but that Idera's product is designed to be targeted and  easy to use.
		For instance, Erickson said, SCOM offers a large number of options for  SQL database best practices to users, but Idera's tool identifies just the top  10 settings admins should set up in their SQL databases for running SharePoint.  "We show the 10 you need to care about," Erickson said.
		Priced at $995 per server, SharePoint diagnostic manager is also  considerably cheaper than SCOM. It's not always a competitor, either. Erickson  says that Idera often sells the product as a complement to Microsoft's  management tool. And while the company targets customers in a broad range of  sizes, small and medium-sized businesses tend to be particular fans of  diagnostic manager.
		"The small and medium [businesses] are just looking for tools that  are reasonably priced that they can buy," Erickson said.
		Also this week, Idera released SQL doctor 2.0, which helps database  administrators tune SQL server performance. 
 More Tech-Ed Analysis:
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on May 18, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		The old-fashioned operating system doesn't get the hype it used to.  Here at Tech-Ed in Atlanta, all the talk is about mobile operating systems,  virtualization and the cloud. And Windows XP continues to cling stubbornly to a  ridiculous level of market share for a decade-old OS. 
		But many, probably most, companies are going to move to Windows 7  eventually, and when they do they'll have plenty of help if they want it. Aaron  Suzuki's company, Prowess, makes applications that deploy what some might  consider more old-school OSes, from Windows 7 to Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1. And ChangeBASE tests for application compatibility and remedies potential app problems with OS  migrations. The companies' products might not be the sexiest stuff at Tech-Ed,  but they're still the bread and butter of corporate IT infrastructures (and  they actually seem pretty darn useful).
				Here for the Long Haul				
  It's neither unusual nor misguided now to ask how long the fat-client,  desktop OS as we know it has to live. Virtualization and cloud computing, along  with the appearance of lightweight OSes such as Google's Chrome OS, seem to  have Windows down for the count. Chances are, though, it'll be a long count.
		It's true that Suzuki doesn't see clients lining up to move to Windows  7. Many will stick with XP, he says, and just pay extra for support when  Microsoft finally kills XP support for good in 2014. "I don't think it  makes Microsoft very happy or comfortable," Suzuki said at Tech-Ed this  week, "but that's the client mentality. People don't have a reason not to  deploy [Windows 7], but there are also some barriers. It's not about the  software costs. It's about running their business. You don't buy Windows just  to be able to have Windows."
		The next question is whether companies will buy Windows again at all,  but Suzuki suspects that they will -- in time. And, he figures, they'll keep  buying it for a while to come. Even hypervisors still rest on a traditional OS,  he opines. 
		"We are very bullish on desktop virtualization," Suzuki told  RCP. But he added, "Something has to get a hypervisor there. It's like a  key. It has to fit properly for the operating environment to land on whatever  it's landing on. The ability to move operating systems from environment to environment  [is critical]. I don't know anyone who is in a homogenous environment."
		The desktop OS, he figures, isn't going away anytime soon. "That  no-operating-system thing is a 30- to 50-year proposition," he said. "Even  in that picture of a highly virtualized desktop, that virtual machine has to  get from place to place and the hypervisor on the workstation is probably not  going to be identical to the hypervisor in your datacenter."
		Prowess this week announced enhancements to its flagship SmartDeploy  product. 
						Moving Apps Forward				
  If the old-school OS is going to continue to exist, then applications  are going to have to move in the migration from one version to another.  ChangeBASE has users covered there. The U.K. vendor has developed a system  for identifying and remedying potential problems with applications in OS  migrations. 
		ChangeBASE's software looks not so much at what applications do as at  how they behave with an OS and with each other. Using a knowledge base  developed through years of experience, ChangeBASE can reduce the process of  testing for and fixing application-compatibility issues from days or weeks to  minutes, said Greg Lambert, the company's chief technical architect, at Tech-Ed  this week. 
		"We deal with classes of problems," Lambert said. "We  don't deal with applications. [We] ignore the application and look at  behaviors. Is this application trying to install to this directory, yes or no?  It's like an anti-virus model. There are new updates available."
		Solving problems with application compatibility could be a critical  step in helping companies move from XP to Windows 7. Lambert says he's seeing  movement already, primarily from the companies with the most money and the most  risk inherent in their businesses, such as banks. He says he's also seeing a  geographical track for Windows 7, starting in the U.K.  financial sector and moving to the financial sector on the U.S. east coast, then to the U.S. west coast, Asia and Europe.
		"I'm actually seeing the dawn of Windows 7 move across the world,"  Lambert said.
		ChangeBASE announced this week enhancements to its free AOKLite v2.0  product. 
 More Tech-Ed Analysis:
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on May 18, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Tuesday wasn't the best day for HP, which took a stock-price hit after a  profit warning.  But there was a little bit of good news from Tech-Ed in Atlanta.
HP's thin-client business, long a steady grower, is gaining interest  among customers thanks to enhanced virtualization technologies from Microsoft,  Citrix and VMware, as well as the current cloud computing craze.
Allen Tiffany, thin client manager at HP, said Tuesday that the  long-trusted thin-client model is getting a boost -- at least in terms of  mindshare -- as a result of companies' willingness to look at what have, until now,  been nontraditional computing models. 
Thin-client computing has long offered cost savings and increased  efficiency, and it no longer seems as risky or unusual as it once might have  now that companies are embracing the idea of lighter computing. At Tech-Ed this  week, HP announced performance enhancements to its thin-client offerings.  So there has been some good news from the venerable vendor recently. 
 More Tech-Ed Analysis:
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on May 17, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Pretty much everybody attending Tech-Ed this week was expecting  Microsoft to drape the show in Azure and heavily tout its cloud platform. That didn't happen -- at least not the way most observers expected that it would. 
Windows Phone 7 and Visual Studio got most of the stage time at this  morning's keynote, and Azure didn't get anything like a starring role. But that's  not to say that the nascent platform was absent. In fact, it was everywhere -- but  always as a component of something else.
A demo during this morning's keynote involving the forthcoming System  Center 2012, due in the second half of this year, showed how IT pros can use  the suite to manage both public and private clouds and move applications from  one cloud to the other. That capability includes managing Azure components, and  System Center 2012 gives users a single, consolidated view for managing all  cloud elements. It's the "single pane of glass," as Microsoft folks  like to say.
"We saw cloud all morning [at the Tech-Ed keynote] if you think  about it in that lens," said Ryan O'Hara, senior director of the  Management and Security Division at Microsoft, in an interview. "Once we  had control of those [cloud] resources, it became management as usual. Here's a  familiar context, but you have completely unfamiliar capabilities."
Microsoft also talked today about an Azure toolkit for Windows Phone 7  and about cloud application development using Visual Studio and Azure. O'Hara  says that Azure won't necessarily garner a lot of attention by itself anymore,  but it'll be a key component of just about everything Microsoft does for the  enterprise. 
"We went through a definitional phase as an industry, and now we  are in an embrace or integration phase where the cloud style of computing is  now intertwined with our application development experiences, our  virtualization experiences, our application management experiences, and even our  productivity experiences," O'Hara said.
In other words, Azure might not make headlines anymore, but it'll be  part of just about every story Microsoft tells. Of course, not everything with  Azure is going smoothly. Many observers expected Microsoft to discuss at Tech-Ed  long-awaited and still forthcoming Azure appliances, but company officials have  not said a word about them thus far. Still, although it's hard to notice Azure  here at Tech-Ed, it's even harder to escape it.
 More Tech-Ed Analysis:
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on May 16, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Something or someone called the Glitch Mob opened for the Microsoft  keynote at Tech-Ed this morning. Aside from having what seems like a very  unfortunate name for a group performing at a tech conference, the Glitch Mob  wasn't Microsoft's typical pre-keynote fare.
In the past, Microsoft has blasted early-morning attendees with  musicians banging on drums and dancers descending from the ceiling on wires.  But today, the Glitch Mob just kind of grooved, offering some sort of dance  music and generally hanging in the background.
That set the tone for a keynote that featured a couple of relatively  unknown Redmondians, Robert Wahbe and Jason Zander, both corporate vice  presidents and neither with the energy of Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer who, if  he's here, didn't show up to say a few words this morning.
  
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    | Robert Wahbe, corporate vice president, Server and Tools Marketing Group   at Microsoft Corp., delivers the keynote speech at Tech-Ed North   America 2011. May 16, Redmond, Wash.   Source: Microsoft Corp. | 
Wahbe and Zander gave over to lots of demos -- more than we usually see at  a Microsoft event, it seemed -- and didn't offer too much in the way of long-term  vision. Zander's explanation of Visual Studio vNext, which is supposed to bring  non-developer types into the Visual Studio mix, was worth hearing but seemed to  lose much of the audience about halfway though. 
Still, vNext could be a huge product for Microsoft if it really can tie  "application stakeholders," as the company calls them, along with a  broad base of IT professionals, into the development circle. vNext could take  Visual Studio from a popular development tool to something closer to an  application design and execution platform. That's a broad vision for an  application that still resides mostly in the hard-core dev realm at this point.
Likewise, the improvements coming in Mango, the next version of Windows Phone 7, looked impressive on the big screen at Tech-Ed and could make the mobile OS a  much more serious player in the market. Integration with Lync Server, which is  clearly a big corporate priority at Microsoft (see the Skype acquisition), will  be huge for Mango's usefulness in the enterprise. 
Could Mango, and by extension Windows Phone 7, be the next BlackBerry,  the mobile OS for the serious businessperson? It looks as though Microsoft  might be setting it up to be just that. Windows Phone 7 might never have the  hipster appeal of the iPhone or the wide-open charm of Android, but it has a  clean interface and looks pretty useful, and native integration with much-used  Microsoft technologies can only help its prospects.
So Tech-Ed didn't blow the roof off the cavernous Georgia  World Conference  Center here in Atlanta, but its highlights represent  important steps forward for major Microsoft properties. There has been other  news, too -- enhanced virtualization capabilities for Exchange, for instance -- which  has fit into the same category, not headline-grabbing but certainly of interest  to the audience that has made the trip to the American South and probably to a  lot of other partners and Microsoft IT professionals, as well. 
 More Tech-Ed Analysis:
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on May 16, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Back in 1987, SMU lost its football program for a season after the  NCAA -- the governing body of collegiate athletics here in the United States, for those who  might not know -- handed the school the infamous "death penalty" for  repeated rules violations. 
		The school chose to cancel the 1988 season and therefore went two years  without football, which in Texas  is kind of like going without air or water for two years. Needless to say, the  scandal rocked the state and, among college football fans, the nation. (One of  ESPN's "30 for 30" documentaries, Pony Excess, did a mostly marvelous job last  year of recounting the whole sordid episode.)
		In the early 1980s, when the payroll was huge and talents such as Eric  Dickerson and Craig James were sporting the famous Mustang logo (yes, Ford  named the car after the SMU Mustangs -- true story), SMU, a relatively small  school with a mixed history in football, was good. Really good -- arguably the  best team in college football in the early 1980s. But SMU cheated (a lot) and the  NCAA finally put a stop to it. Never mind that other schools, which we won't  name, cheated rampantly for years and never got any punishment that even  approached the severity of the death penalty. That's another rant for another  blog.
		The point here is that the death penalty -- administered only once -- was  harsh. So harsh, in fact, that it did effectively kill SMU's program for more  than two decades. Only in the last couple of years and after considerable  turmoil have the Mustangs begun to pull themselves out of the mire and become  competitive again. Pretty much any observer of college football who knows the  SMU story will say that the NCAA will never hand down the death penalty  again -- and, in fact, it could have by now to several other schools but hasn't.  It was just too much, too harsh, too severe. And it certainly didn't curtail  cheating in college football as a whole, which remains common, if a little more  stealth these days (although the program at Rose Bowl champion TCU is, of  course, completely clean -- seriously).  
		
				
				Anyway, the parallels between SMU's death penalty and the U.S.  government's antitrust oversight of Microsoft, which ends this week after a  decade, aren't especially strong, except for one thing: It's doubtful that we'll  ever see anything like either one of them again. Back in the late-'90s, the  panic about Microsoft's dominance in the operating system market and its  supposed execution-style killing of the Netscape browser were such that a U.S.  District Court judge -- Thomas Penfield Jackson, you remember him -- ordered the  software giant broken in two. Microsoft appealed and stayed intact, but the  government watched it like a hawk for the following decade. And many industry  firms lined up to make to make Microsoft look only slightly more dominant and  suffocating with power than Genghis Khan.  
		Your editor was a teenager in Texas  during the SMU scandal and was a reporter for a fairly well-known trade  magazine during the original Microsoft lawsuit; he remembers them both well and  actually covered the lawsuit in some depth. With the benefit of hindsight, the  prevailing feeling now is that both episodes were a little ridiculous. The  death penalty and its excessiveness we've already discussed, but the Microsoft "remedy"  now looks pretty silly as well. Microsoft, after all, remained one company, but  it didn't continue to crush the rest of the industry. 
		In fact, these days, despite still owning a huge portion of the market  share for PC operating systems, Microsoft finds itself well behind some of its  competitors in other key -- arguably much more important -- areas. Some observers  posit that open source is what made the Microsoft antitrust scare -- and for those  who don't remember, there was very real panic and hand-wringing about it on all  sides -- ultimately irrelevant.  And we think there's a lot of credence to that.
		But we look at the withering of Microsoft from terrifying titan to mere  giant from a broader perspective. The reason Microsoft isn't an antitrust  threat anymore is because other companies have out-innovated the folks in  Redmond, and the 'Softies, by contrast, have under-innovated in recent years.  We haven't forgotten, as many seem to have, that Microsoft bailed out Apple  financially in 1997 when the hipster company was on the brink of extinction.  But Apple made the most of the lifeline, eventually creating the iEverything  line of products that now dominates consumer electronics and is rapidly moving  into the enterprise with the iPhone and iPad. 
		And then there's Google, which wasn't even on the radar screen in 1997  (remember using search engines like HotBot and Lycos?) but has emerged as the  locked-in No. 1 firm in consumer search and has also taken over, with Apple,  the ever-expanding market for mobile operating systems. Google was born out of  an era in which the government was watching supposedly dangerous and  competition-quashing Microsoft, and yet Google managed to grow right under  Microsoft's nose and steal from the folks in Redmond markets they would love to dominate  but now likely never will. Let's also not forget Amazon, which went from quaint  online bookseller to major enterprise technology provider during the big, bad  Microsoft era, and companies like Salesforce.com, which used the cloud and SaaS  to get a jump on bigger competitors, including Microsoft.
		Did the government help Apple, Google and the others by "watching"  Microsoft and making sure it didn't step out of line? Probably not (although  Microsoft's investment in Apple was a move to fend off the feds). Those  companies succeeded because they either forged or beat the competition (namely  Microsoft) to new markets and out-smarted and out-innovated a company in Redmond that had become a  bit complacent. Your editor said in 1997 -- and we've always said in this  space -- that the "remedy" for "monopolies" isn't the  government coming down hard on one big, dominant company but instead other  players in the market figuring out how to slay the beast. That's exactly why  the notion of Microsoft as dangerous monopolist is laughable these days -- because  competitors have beaten it to the punch in market after market and turned it  into a desperate also-ran in lots of key areas. That was the market's doing,  not the government's. 
		And that's why, we're saying here, we'll never see another government  crackdown in the technology industry like the one we saw with Microsoft for the  last decade-and-a-half -- and we shouldn't. Technology is not a commodity  industry. Microsoft was never Standard Oil. Technology is an innovation  industry, and innovation can come from anywhere and out of nowhere. Just when  one player looks unbeatable, another can come along with a new product or even  a whole new concept and knock it off its perch. Apple's reign as undisputed  king of the mobile phone OS didn't last long once Google got Android rolling.  Will Google always be the No. 1 search provider? Maybe, but we can't know for  sure. Somebody out there might have a better idea and might find a way to get  it implemented. 
		If there's any lesson we've learned from the U.S. government's ultimately  pointless hounding of Microsoft, it's that nothing is a sure thing in the  technology industry. Nobody stays on top forever -- not IBM, not Microsoft,  probably not even Apple or Google. So it seems kind of ridiculous for the  government and industry players to freak out and call for penalties and  oversight for dominant or "monopolist" companies in the tech  industry. The Microsoft case has proven that sort of excessive oversight to be  silly and unnecessary (and even a bit embarrassing), and like SMU's death  penalty, we think and hope that we'll never see anything like it again. 
		How much of a role should the government play in regulating the  technology industry? How much of a monopolist does Microsoft look like to you  these days? Leave a comment below or send your answers to [email protected]. 
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on May 12, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		In a flurry of late-night bill paying, your editor happened to notice  that the Wall Street Journal reported Monday night that Microsoft would  announce the acquisition of Skype this morning.  Microsoft is splashing out somewhere in the neighborhood of $8.5 billion for  the video chat service, which makes this buy the biggest in Microsoft's  history.
It's probably a good one. After all, more than 600 million users know  that Skype works -- it almost has Kleenex status in terms of brand recognition -- and  the technology Microsoft is buying should fit in very well with the software  giant's significant push into unified communications. This buy also snatches  Skype away from Google, which had been sniffing around, as had Facebook,  although, the WSJ says, maybe not to the extent that some pundits suggested.
Of course, this isn't Skype's first rodeo in terms of being acquired.  eBay (the other reason your editor was online late last night) wrangled the  company six years ago and ended up having to dump it at a loss,  so Skype's history as an acquisition target is a bit speckled. Plus, $8  billion-plus is a big outlay. Last time Microsoft spent that kind of money, it  bought advertising firm aQuantive in 2007 and did what, exactly, with it?  Worked it into Bing or something? We're really not sure, but we're thinking  that the accountants in Redmond  would be hard-pressed to quantify the value of that purchase.
Still, this is the type of purchase that should be right in Microsoft's  wheelhouse, whatever a wheelhouse is. What was eBay ever going to do with  Skype, anyway? Were eBay users supposed to video chat with the person behind  bostonsportsjerseys2003 (not a real eBay name, as far as we know) when  purchasing a New England Patriots throwback jersey? Your editor will settle for  decent photos and good user reviews, thanks. 
On the other hand, the enterprise usefulness of Skype is obvious, and it  should serve as a major component in Microsoft's ambitious (and potentially  very lucrative) attempt to connect everybody all the time in every way  possible, otherwise known as its unified communications effort. There are  probably many more uses for Skype than just UC, but that's the one that jumps  out immediately as the real dealmaker. 
And as for that $8.5 billion, well, it's a lot of money, but that's  about what Oracle spends on acquisitions in any given quarter (just kidding...we  think -- but Oracle does buy a lot of companies). Microsoft might be smaller than  Apple these days and less of a titan than it used to be, but it's still a  massive company with huge sums of cash in the bank. Spending $8 billion-plus  isn't even all that big of a risk for a company the size of Microsoft. 
Besides, it's about time Microsoft became proactive again, fending off  competitors for a prize catch and acting like the king of the software jungle  it once was and really should still be. Even if this acquisition doesn't  work -- and we at RCPU believe that it will -- it's at least a welcome sign of life  from a company that had begun to look like the clichéd deer in the headlights.  Plus, we love the angle that this is a purchase that could translate directly  into profits for Microsoft's enterprise partners, who might feel a bit left out  these days with the company chasing its tail trying to catch its rivals in more  consumer-oriented spaces. This is good news, then, and a strong move for a  company that needed a boost and went out and got it the old-fashioned way, by  spending a huge sum of money to get it.
What's your take on Microsoft buying Skype? Send it to [email protected].  
 
	Posted by Lee Pender on May 10, 20113 comments