The soon-to-be-dead Windows Live OneCare wasn't a failure, Microsoft folks 
  are saying -- it just didn't succeed because people in developing countries 
  couldn't afford it. Uh, do what, now? Hey, we don't get it, either...but check 
  out the furious spinning for yourself 
here. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on December 03, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Finally, something having to do with unified communications makes sense -- because 
  it really isn't focused on UC at all. 
We've mentioned here before that we 
  just don't get UC, and we kind of doubt that anybody else really does, either 
  -- including a lot of the marketers who work for UC vendors. But one vendor 
  that's more or less in the UC space is finally making sense to us, primarily 
  by attaching an actual practical application for UC. 
We're written about Interactive 
  Intelligence before, and we were pleased when a couple of folks from the 
  company made the trip to Framingham to see RCPU a couple of weeks back. What 
  they talked about was the first thing even remotely UC-related that has seemed 
  to us capable of generating real value for customers. 
Simply put, Interactive Intelligence wants to tie UC with business process 
  automation. In fact, the company is pretty much getting into the BPA business 
  with a little UC on the side. The basic idea is to use UC's find-me-anywhere 
  functionality to automate processes. So, instead of just letting one worker 
  know how to get hold of another worker at a given time, Interactive Intelligence's 
  system would automatically route a process -- say, a claim at an insurance company 
  -- to the right person at the right place...at the right time. 
"In a manual process, there's a lot of human latency and inefficiency," 
  Joseph A. Staples, Interactive Intelligence's senior vice president of worldwide 
  marketing, told RCPU in our meeting. "The way the process gets automated 
  is the system knows what happens in the next step."
Now, see, this makes sense to us -- and it seems like a practical application 
  for UC. Instead of just telling Worker A that it's best to reach Worker B by 
  instant messenger in a given moment, this system, which Interactive Intelligence 
  will call Interaction Process Automation, will actually do some something practical 
  by tying business processes to UC functionality. The company plans to have a 
  product by the middle of 2009. 
Maybe other vendors are doing this -- Staples allowed that his company will 
  soon be competing, on some level, with like likes of Oracle via Siebel -- and, 
  after all, BPA in and of itself is nothing new. So we'd love to hear from anybody 
  and everybody who's doling something similar.
But the UC angle, if we've understood it correctly, sounds unique to us at 
  this point. And it's the first time we've understood how a company could get 
  any significant value out of a product in the UC space. It's the process automation 
  that matters here -- not strictly the ability to find people when they're 
  in their cars or working at home. 
Oh, and by the way, partners, there will be plenty of opportunity for you to 
  do significant customization work, and Interactive Intelligence does have a 
  channel-sales strategy and a partner program. 
There are some potential hang-ups. Staples sees his company's vision as being 
  an alternative to enterprise resource planning, rather than complementary to 
  it. And while we see where he's coming from, especially regarding Interactive 
  Intelligence's SMB sweet spot, we're thinking that some ERP integration might 
  not be the worst idea at some point.
Still, everything considered, this is the first UC solution we've seen that 
  makes sense -- mainly because somebody finally realized that UC all by itself 
  isn't really that useful after all. 
What's your take on unified communications? Is your company doing anything 
  useful with it? Do you have a product or story you'd like to pitch? We're all 
  eyes at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on December 03, 20082 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    No, Barbara Walters isn't prominently involved...as far as we know. This View 
  is a 
new VMware 
  product.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on December 03, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Seriously, Microsoft's not kidding about this patch stuff. If you haven't been 
  on top of it, you'd better read 
this.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on December 02, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    We'd like to thanks the 
Times of London, old chaps, for giving us something 
  to write about in what's bound to be a slow time leading up to the holidays. 
Some Times reporter said this week that Microsoft is going to pay $20 
  billion to buy Yahoo's search business -- a claim quickly refuted in the gosh-darn 
  American Wall Street Journal (well, in one of its blogs, anyway), by 
  a couple of investors who were supposed to be involved in the deal. All the 
  relevant links, plus a nifty news story, are here 
  on RCPmag.com. 
So, yeah...$20 billion for part of a company that had a market cap of $16 billion 
  on Monday before the market got hammered again? Not likely, we're thinking. 
  Will Microsoft make a(nother) play for Yahoo's search business, or for all of 
  Yahoo? Hey, anything could happen -- but we're thinking that the WSJ 
  has probably trumped the Times this time. And we're happy that this story 
  is something that vaguely resembles news in December.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on December 02, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The question isn't so much when Vista SP2 is coming out as it is whether anybody 
  cares that it's coming out. But if you do care, 
April 
  might be your lucky month. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on December 02, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    So, OneCare is dead, but Microsoft's effort to be a security vendor is still 
  alive. Sort of. Microsoft will replace OneCare next year with a set of 
free 
  security applications. Or maybe Microsoft will finally just take steps to 
  secure its own applications the way users have wanted it to for a long time. 
  In any case, there's the potential for trouble in all this.
The immediate reaction from many observers has been to suggest that Morro, 
  the code name for OneCare's free successor, will be lawsuit bait for Symantec 
  and McAfee -- you know, those companies that have made a living doing what 
  Microsoft wouldn't or couldn't to secure Windows -- and antitrust regulation 
  fodder for the ravenous European Union.
Redmond has already started the spin machine, suggesting that rivals' products 
  will 
  still be way better than Morro, which will just be a simple set of tools 
  for people who won't pay for anti-virus, anyway. Symantec and friends, whose 
  stock prices took a hit on the Morro news (not that they were alone in seeing 
  share prices fall this week), predictably played Morro as being no 
  big deal. 
And it probably isn't. First of all, Microsoft isn't going to introduce anything 
  that might even seem like a legitimate Symantec killer. There are lots of reasons 
  for this, but let's just confine ourselves for now to saying that Microsoft 
  likely won't want to throw another meaty bone to the EU regulation dogs. 
Folks in Redmond have learned a lot from their various battles with government 
  regulators, and their attempts to slide in and take over markets aren't as blatant 
  as they used to be. Plus, Microsoft has a right -- a responsibility, really 
  -- to provide some level of basic security. And making it free actually seems 
  less monopolistic and more customer-friendly than making people pay for it.
But that leaves open, of course, greater questions: Where will Microsoft's 
  security efforts stop? And where should they stop? Symantec and McAfee, among 
  others, won't go away if Microsoft seriously decides to shore up its products 
  on its own; the big security vendors have huge businesses these days that go 
  way beyond making Windows work. So why shouldn't Microsoft improve built-in 
  security for its own application infrastructure? Most users would probably say 
  that it should -- and should have a long time ago. 
That's not to say that Microsoft won't eventually try a more significant security 
  land grab -- there is, after all, a hosted 
  security suite on the way -- but for now, Morro seems pretty innocuous. 
  Whether rivals, regulators and the industry will see it that way is another 
  matter.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on November 20, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    It's a little company called Transitive that's 
falling 
  into Armonk's hands. (By the way, we're going to start referring to IBM 
  as "Armonk" the way we refer to Microsoft as "Redmond"...just 
  because.) 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on November 20, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Just in time for a deep global recession, it's a new enterprise software application 
  from Microsoft! This time, it's small-business-focused Dynamics NAV that's getting 
  an update. 
Seriously, this doesn't seem like the best time for Redmond to introduce a 
  new enterprise resource planning offering, but Chris Caren, general manager 
  of marketing and product management for Microsoft Dynamics, isn't freaking out.
"We're just doing a lot more reconfirming [that] deals are as solid as 
  we think they are," Caren told RCPU in a face-to-face meeting in Framingham, 
  Mass. "Deals don't go away; they just get slowed down. Decision-making 
  processes are a little more extended and involved."
Caren's confidence is encouraging, and it may very well be that NAV 2009 will 
  fare better than its Dynamics cousins because of NAV's SMB target audience. 
  Still, Dynamics' recent 
  revenue struggles and Microsoft's 0 percent financing offer for the Dynamics 
  product lines seem to be signs that the decision-making process is becoming 
  very slow indeed. 
Still, Microsoft has a not unappealing message with NAV 2009, and it's one 
  we've heard many times before from more than one ERP vendor: ERP does an organization 
  no good if users won't touch it.
And still, a lot of ERP applications sit on a virtual shelf in many companies. 
  Caren cites an oft-noted statistic: According to AMR Research Inc., only 10 
  percent of a given company's employees on average are licensed to use ERP applications, 
  and of that 10 percent, only half actually use the apps. 
Microsoft has long developed its four Dynamics suites with the goal of increasing 
  employee usage of ERP and therefore increasing its value in an organization. 
  That theme continues with the release of NAV 2009, which Microsoft announced 
  on Nov. 19 and will become generally available on Dec. 1. NAV is generally aimed 
  at companies with 50 to 1,000 employees that don't need international ERP deployments, 
  Caren said. 
The 2009 version of the suite brings further enhancements to its user interface, 
  which looks increasingly similar to that of NAV's up-market cousin, AX, Caren 
  said. The idea is to make the ERP interface as Microsoft Office-like and familiar 
  as possible to users in order to ease their transition to using the back-office 
  software. "It looks like a very modern, consumerized, Web-based experience," 
  he said.
While Caren said that the enhanced interface is the biggest change in NAV compared 
  to prior versions, he also notes that NAV 2009 will include for the first time 
  a database layer that embeds SQL Server. That has allowed Microsoft to build 
  in business intelligence capabilities that weren't present in previous versions, 
  Caren said.
"Our mid-market strategy for BI is to take it to market through Dynamics," 
  Caren said. And by embedding SQL Server and BI capabilities in NAV, he said, 
  Microsoft is helping companies skip some of the more arduous steps in the deployment 
  of business applications. "The advantage of embedding is you have a pre-defined 
  data model. You can build in all the data models and security. The heavy lifting 
  is done when you embed BI into a business application," Caren said. 
Caren said that Microsoft can't necessarily keep up feature for feature with 
  other BI vendors, but he points to simplicity as an advantage Dynamics has over 
  other systems: "Functionally we're at 85 percent" in comparison to 
  some BI competitors, he said, "but we transform ease of use and we have 
  price points that are at 20 percent of [those of other] BI tools. Our goal is 
  not to replace high-end data mining. We want to make [BI] an everyday technology 
  that all information workers access."
Well, all information workers whose companies are spending money on enterprise 
  software, anyway.
What's your outlook for Microsoft Dynamics and enterprise software in a tough 
  economy? Share your thoughts at [email protected]. 
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on November 19, 20081 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    It probably won't affect the channel except at the very low end, and even there 
  partners who are trying to make money strictly by reselling software are probably 
  going broke, anyway. But the 
opening 
  of Microsoft's online store in the U.S. might still make a few partners 
  queasy.
Sure, the prices are high, and there's no threat to the services element that 
  brings in most of partners' revenues, anyway, but Microsoft going into the direct-sales 
  business in the U.S. -- it had already opened stores in Europe -- just might 
  not set right with partners who are already concerned about Redmond's not-necessarily-channel-friendly 
  cloud computing strategy. 
There's always that nagging question: If Microsoft is willing to cannibalize 
  retailers' business, when and how might it turn on the rest of the channel? 
  Hey, we know that Microsoft still makes the overwhelming majority of its revenue 
  through partners and has probably the best channel program in the business. 
  Microsoft still seems committed to keeping partners happy, so there's no panic 
  here. There's not even much suspicion. But there are tiny, lingering questions 
  that weren't there so much a few years ago. That's all we're saying.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on November 19, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Jerry Yang is 
out 
  as CEO of Yahoo...which is, perhaps, a sign that Microsoft 
might 
  be back in to buy the company -- eventually.
 
	
Posted by Lee Pender on November 19, 20080 comments