As any partner knows, Microsoft doesn't operate in a vacuum.  So when Redmond  
decides to cut costs,  all sorts of organizations feel the pinch. Kelly wrote last week, the day  Microsoft announced layoffs, to tell us that she was feeling it already:
  "We were just informed today that our highly valued  (and highly paid) MCS consultant was off our company project because as of  today he is no longer employed with Microsoft. I don't have all the details,  but it happened without any warning and right at the beginning of our Vista deployment."
Ouch. We don't know which is worse, Kelly, the fact that you  lost your consultant suddenly or the fact that you're deploying Vista. Just kidding. Well, mostly. It certainly is awful  timing for you, and we hope you can find a workaround. 
We suggested this week that if Microsoft has to cut costs,  it might be time for the company to get back to basics and scrap some of its  more, shall we say, peripheral projects. We specifically mentioned the Zune as  an effort that might be up for the chop.  Well, that inspired Brian to deliver this impassioned defense of the uncool  iPod:
  "You made many good points. I have to tell you,  though, ending the Zune is a really bad one. I know the market share is  low, but they keep getting better and there is nowhere you can get so much for  so little. Forget the cost and 'coolness' of a device  --  it's the music  that matters. Zune's Zune   PASS feature is the way  to go. I can't imagine paying for every song I want. With Zune, my  $15/month gets me all the music I could ever hope for. If it's not available (which  is fairly rare), then I can purchase it from them for less than iTunes  charges. So, other than no options years ago, I can see no reason Apple  has such a market share besides a whole bunch of Gen-Yers and Gen-Y wannabes  trying to play the 'be cool in front of others' and 'me too' games. I have  always been a cool guy, so I guess I don't see the need to supplant my true  self and fall for the gimmicky gunk Apple is using to get 'be part of the crowd'  somehow a cool thing to be. Nope -- Zune is way better!"
Gosh, Brian, we feel a little humbled here. Your editor is  the owner of an old, original iPod that actually pre-dates the Zune. But we've  always heard good things -- seriously -- about the Zune, and one of the guys who  edits this newsletter simply loves his. It's not so much that we're anti-Zune,  Brian, more that we're pro-enterprise technology and pro-stuff that makes  partners money. But if Microsoft can continue to produce the Zune and still focus  on the core stuff, we're all for that. 
Thanks to Kelly and Brian for their contributions. To make a  contribution of your own, fire off a message to [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 29, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Just when Windows needs to be getting lighter, the pesky EU  might force Microsoft to 
include every browser under the sun in its operating  system.  Then again, it's Microsoft putting out this news, not the EU. So maybe there's  some jockeying for position going on here. Once again, stay tuned...
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 29, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    If you've taken a spin around the blogs this week, you've  probably read that Google's rumored GDrive, which supposedly will give users  access to all of the files on the computer via the Internet,  is going to 
KILL THE PC AS WE KNOW IT RUN FOR YOUR LIVES AAAAHHHH!!!! 
Or maybe not. Hey, we're big believers in cloud computing,  but Google's cloud efforts are going to raise the same security and privacy  questions that everybody else's cloud plans have raised so far. And while  Windows and the PC will need to get slimmer and cheaper to compete with  netbooks (a good thing as we see it), we're not sure that consumers or  companies will be ready to go all-cloud, all the time any time soon. Besides, it's  not as if stuff like the GDrive doesn't exist already.  And with the reviews coming in for Windows 7, Microsoft might just be poised  for a huge post-Vista revival. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 29, 20092 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    This 
isn't what we wanted to hear from Redmond  about how cost-cutting would affect Microsoft's product offerings. Apparently  PerformancePoint Server is 
up for the chop -- more specifically, it'll be folded  into SharePoint -- in the months to come. 
OK, so maybe PerformancePoint isn't a massive moneymaker (we  don't know) and folding its capabilities into SharePoint probably makes sense.  But on a broader scale, Microsoft, we wish you'd leave the enterprise stuff  alone and look for efficiencies elsewhere. After all, the server and tools  business is the one that's still raking in the bucks for you and for the  channel.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 28, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Champagne  in the Valley for VMware, which beat analysts' expectations with its 
Q4 and  fiscal-year earnings.  But not too much champagne -- and not too expensive -- as the company, like most  other vendors, is signaling that 2009 might be a bit difficult. In fact, VMware  is following the trend of not forecasting for 2009 at all. Not a particularly  good sign, if not surprising.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 28, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    For those of you still not using Firefox (oooh, snap), the  first release candidate of Internet Explorer 8 is 
available.  And, bonus! 
Here's one reviewer's first look at it.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 28, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    We want to believe. We really do. We love the IBM  commercials with the cartoon pixies dancing around executives, and we're ready  to buy into the promise of green technology -- the cost savings, the benefits to  the planet, the overall feel-good nature of the whole thing.
But last time we checked -- and that's not meant to be a  cliché; we literally mean the last time we checked -- green technology, green IT  or whatever you want to call it was still more hype than reality. Way more,  actually. 
Now, we'll admit that the last time we checked on green IT  was last summer (the story linked was from August) and a few things have changed  since then. Look at your 401K if you need any reminder of that. So it's  possible that green IT projects have gathered steam in the last few months, but  we're more inclined to say that with budgets and possibly IT teams shrinking,  any sort of new or proposed green activity has probably been put on the shelf  like a house plant. 
So it's into this hype-reality dichotomy that a very big  player, Cisco, wanders with a team of partners. The networking titan has  created the EnergyWise program, which focuses on controlling network power  usage.  A few hearty souls have also signed up for the journey, including Schneider  Electric, Veridem and SolarWinds. They'll integrate their applications into  Cisco products, specifically the Catalyst line of switches. 
While Cisco's program seems to have an ISV focus for the  time being, it should serve as an invitation for channel partners of all  stripes to grow their competencies in green IT and jump on the back of a vendor  that's making a concrete commitment to environmentally friendly technologies. EnergyWise  is a big step in converting green technology from hype to reality, especially  given that the Cisco name is attached to it.
Microsoft's own green plans seem circumspect and somewhat  non-specific at this point, so we'll have to wait and see how Redmond plans to turn talk into action on the  green front. Of course, technologies such as virtualization, in which Microsoft  is making a heavy commitment, have green elements in their very nature (so to  speak). But Microsoft is mostly green around the edges right now and not so  green at its heart. 
Cisco, though, believes -- or is at least taking concrete steps  to show that it's making a commitment to green IT. We still want to believe,  too, and maybe this major vendor throwing its name behind a green-specific  initiative and recruiting partners for it will help reality begin to approach  hype. For partners, that could turn green IT into greenbacks -- and everybody  could use more of those. 
What's your green IT strategy? Are you making money by  helping customers go green? Tell us at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 28, 20091 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    It's all the rage online, but if you want to be a part of  Windows 7 madness, you'd better hurry -- download availability of the beta is  scheduled to 
end on Feb. 10.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 27, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Last week's 
announced layoffs made news,  but there's more than just pink slips to Microsoft's cost-cutting measures. 
This week, Microsoft announced that part of Iowa will remain prairie for longer than planned, as Redmond is delaying construction of a datacenter in West Des Moines.  OK, we know -- West Des Moines (probably) isn't  prairie land, but we like to think of Iowa as  a verdant alternative to slushy suburban Boston. 
It's a prudent move by Microsoft, of course, but we're  wondering how much further Redmond will go to get the numbers back on track  without hacking even more employees off the rolls. And as we've said before in  this space, this downturn might be an opportunity for Microsoft to streamline  operations a bit, to refocus on the technologies that made the company what it  is as well as to concentrate on innovating for the future. 
Of course, we at RCPU would love to see Microsoft pour money  into nothing but Windows, Office, SaaS, enterprise servers and software, and  the Partner Program, but we realize that Redmond might want to have a little  more diverse a portfolio than that. Still, it could be time to pull back a bit  on the quest to catch Google in consumer search or on some of the consumer  stuff (we're looking at you, Zune) that really isn't part of the company's  bread and butter. 
Maybe it's also time to look at scaled-down versions of  Windows and get a little more serious about Linux interoperability. As folks in  Redmond know by now, just about everything in computing is getting simpler,  smaller and cheaper, not the other way around.  Vista was such a resource monster that it seemed to reflect a company out of touch  with what both consumers and companies wanted and needed. 
Hopefully cost-cutting in Redmond won't mean chunks being taken out of  the Partner Program's budget or out of the money set aside for channel  marketing and the like. There's no indication that anything like that is on the  chopping block at this point, and the all-important server and tools business  at Microsoft is one of the few areas that's still booming, relatively speaking.
So the channel doesn't seem likely to take much of a hit  from Microsoft's budget pinch, which is a good thing. And if Microsoft itself  can come out of this mini-crisis a more focused and in-touch company, the  current financial cloud will have completed the old cliché by actually having a  silver lining.
Where would you like to see Microsoft cut costs? How do you  want the company to refocus? Sound off at [email protected]. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 27, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Windows Live and Office Live, the somewhat amorphous  concepts that (at this point, anyway) aren't hosted versions of either  application, are now 
under the same umbrella in Redmond.  And if rumors prove to be true, they might end up with a new name: "Kumo," a  Japanese word that apparently can mean "cloud" but also "sea  spider." That should make for one heck of a mascot.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 27, 20090 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Remember the lawsuit that led to the release of so many  
hilarious internal Microsoft e-mails?  We know you do because it just keeps coming up. And last week, we found out  that the suit could -- but, let's face it, probably won't -- 
cost Microsoft $8.5  billion.  As unlikely as it is to come up in a judgment, that's still a big number at a  scary time.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on January 27, 20090 comments