Private equity technology investment firm Thoma Bravo LLC  continued its sweep of security and other key channel companies with an  agreement to acquire Imperva Inc. for $2.1 billion.
Imperva, which specializes in protection of data and  applications on-premises and in the cloud, announced the agreement on Tuesday. The  deal would leave the current executive team in place and keep its headquarters  in Redwood Shores, Calif. 
That "buy and build" approach is common for Thoma  Bravo, which defines the investment business model on its Web site as advising  firms it invests in "to create value through operational improvements,  internal expansion and accretive acquisitions."
Chris Hylen, president and CEO of Imperva, described  benefits of the deal beyond the value to Imperva stockholders. "The  company will have greater flexibility to focus on executing our long-term  strategy," Hylen said in a statement.
In the same statement, Chip Virnig, a partner at Thoma Bravo,  emphasized the private equity firm's experience with similar companies. "Our  expertise and track record investing in cybersecurity fits squarely with  Imperva's long-term roadmap, and we look forward to advancing the Company's  market position in this rapidly-growing security segment," Virnig said.
Thoma Bravo owns or holds a major stake in several companies  that are important business partners for many Microsoft partners. Those  companies include Barracuda Networks Inc., Centrify Corp., Continuum Managed  Services, McAfee LLC, Nintex Global Ltd., Riverbed Technology Inc. and  SolarWinds Inc.
The Imperva board has a 45-day "go-shop" period to  solicit other acquisition proposals as part of the acquisition agreement. The  parties expect the transaction to close in the fourth quarter of 2018 or in the  first quarter of 2019, assuming Imperva's stockholders approve and all  regulatory hurdles are cleared.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 11, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
Over the weekend, Microsoft pulled the latest version of  Windows 10 and other version 1809 operating systems, just four days after  releasing them.
"We have paused the rollout of the Windows 10 October  2018 Update (version 1809) for all users as we investigate isolated reports of  users missing some files after updating," Microsoft said in a statement on its support site. As of Monday afternoon, Microsoft had not released a new  update. 
Affected platforms included Windows 10, version 1809;  Windows Server, version 1809; Windows IoT Core, version 1809; Windows 10  Enterprise LTSC 2019; Windows 10 IoT Enterprise LTSC 2019; and Windows Server  2019.
Microsoft was advising customers who lost files to contact  the company immediately. Meanwhile, the company warned anyone who had manually  downloaded the installation media not to install it.
Despite the emphasis on the phrase "isolated reports,"  the decision to initiate such a major disruption by interrupting downloads indicates  Microsoft has serious concerns about the code that's been released. There is  always a warning to back up files before initiating an update, but a file  deletion issue ranks among the most serious types of problems that an upgrade  can introduce.
Pulling back the update is another black eye on the major  overhaul of the update process for the Windows 10 era, which has been marked by  a generally popular operating system but frustration over lack of control over  updates and concerns about the speed of release cycles and testing quality issues.  
The previous Windows 10 update, April 2018, ran into delays and post-release  problems, and the patch release process is also taking serious criticism from patching experts, including Microsoft Most Valuable Professional (MVP) and  moderator of the Patchmanagement.org listserve Susan Bradley.
Nobody is saying that quality control of a Windows operating  system releases is easy. Microsoft currently claims a 700-million-user  installed base for the operating system, and that OS runs on hundreds of  hardware configurations and with thousands of other software applications and  cloud services.
This latest incident should suggest to Microsoft that it's  time to swing the pendulum back a little from the pressures in technology to "move  fast and break things" toward being more deliberate, cautious and  exhaustive in the pre-release process for Windows.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 08, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft hosted a media event in  New York City on Tuesday to reveal three new devices in its Surface line of PCs, as well as complementary headphones and a new consumer financing program.
The new devices  were the  Surface Studio 2, the Surface Pro 6 and the Surface Laptop 2, all of which became available to pre-order on Tuesday. The Surface Pro  6 and Surface Laptop 2 will start shipping on Oct. 16. The Surface Studio 2  starts shipping Nov. 15. 
The enhancements rolling out for the various Surfaces were  mostly of the speeds, feeds and color variety. A new black option is coming to  the Surface Pro 6, which is also available in platinum, and to the Surface  Laptop 2, which is also available in platinum, burgundy and cobalt blue.
Major enhancements to the Surface Pro 6 include an upgrade  to 8th Generation Intel processors, which bring quad-core processors to the  2-in-1 category for a 67 percent performance bump; a 13.5-hour battery life and an 8MP  auto-focus camera, according to Microsoft executives. Prices for the new  Surface Pro 6 range from $899 to $2,299 depending on the choices of 8GB or 16GB  of memory, an Intel Core i5 or Core i7 processor, and storage options of 128GB,  256GB, 512GB or 1TB. Prices don't include the Surface Keyboard, so buyers are  looking at a minimum of an additional $100 to use the device as intended.
 The Surface Pro 6 (left) and Surface Laptop 2 in the new black color option. (Source: Microsoft)
  The Surface Pro 6 (left) and Surface Laptop 2 in the new black color option. (Source: Microsoft) 
For the Surface Laptop 2, Microsoft's more traditional  clamshell laptop, the processor upgrade to Intel's 8th Generation leads to an  85 percent performance bump over previous models, while battery life clocks in at 14.5  hours, according to Microsoft. Prices on the Microsoft Store site start at $999  for 8GB of RAM, an Intel Core i5 and 128GB of storage. The top-end  configuration of 16GB of RAM, Intel Core i7 and 1TB of storage costs $2,699. 
The Surface Studio 2 sports the same gargantuan 28-inch screen  as the previous version, but moves two generations forward in processors to  Intel 8th Generation for a 50 percent performance bump, and features more brightness  and contrast in the display. The high-powered system for creative professionals  is available in three configurations. The entry level has 1TB of storage with  16GB of RAM at $3,499. The top-of-the-line model costs $4,788 for 2TB of  storage and 32GB of RAM.
The main teaser from the Tuesday event was Surface  Headphones, which aren't available to order yet and are expected to ship by the  holidays.
As to why Microsoft needs an offering in the crowded premium  headphone category, Microsoft product design guru Panos Panay said, "We  built Surface Headphones to complete the Surface experience." The $349  price tag will deliver 13 levels of ambient noise control, 8 "beam-forming"  microphones for phone calls and voice commands, and PC-specific features like  voice activation of the Cortana digital assistant and automatic pausing of  video when the headphones are removed.
Also Tuesday, Microsoft unveiled a new way for consumers to  pay for Surface devices, which tend to carry a premium price tag compared to  OEMs' Windows laptops and 2-in-1s. Called Surface All Access, the monthly  pricing option includes a Surface device and an Office 365 subscription with a  no-interest 24-month payment plan. The financing is provided by WebBank and is  administered through Dell Preferred Account, rather than through Microsoft Financing.
Starting monthly bundle prices included a Surface Go Bundle  for $24.99, Surface Laptop Bundle for $46.63, Surface Pro Bundle for $47.87, Surface Book 2 Bundle for $54.96  and Surface Studio Bundle for $150.79. The program, which begins on Oct. 16,  comes about a month after Microsoft ended new enrollments into its  consumer-focused Surface Plus Program.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 02, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Ron Huddleston, a senior channel executive at several  high-profile technology companies, including Microsoft, where he was a central  figure in the major channel reorganization last year, died on Friday.
Huddleston's current professional role was chief  partner officer at Twilio, the San Francisco-based cloud communications  platform company. 
"Twilio is heartbroken over the loss of Ron Huddleston,  a dear friend, respected colleague and leader who passed away Friday morning,"  Twilio said in an e-mailed statement. "Ron joined Twilio to lead the  partner organization earlier this year and has made an indelible impact on the  organization and team here at Twilio. He is already and will continue to be  greatly missed. We hold Ron and his family in our thoughts."
Huddleston's assignment since joining Twilio in February had  been building out an ecosystem of ISVs, systems integrators and resellers for  the 10-year-old company. Three months ago, he unveiled the launch of Twilio  Build. That Twilio partner program combined his professional passions of  enabling partners and creating marketplaces, which was his specialty at Salesforce.com  and took up much of his attention while he was at Microsoft.
 Ron Huddleston at the 2017 Microsoft Inspire conference.
  Ron Huddleston at the 2017 Microsoft Inspire conference. 
Judson Althoff, executive vice president for the Worldwide  Commercial Business at Microsoft, was Huddleston's supervisor at Microsoft until  last December. In a LinkedIn  post, Althoff called Huddleston friendly, open and optimistic.
"I learned over the weekend that my long-time friend,  Ron Huddleston, passed away. Ron was young, and his death untimely,"  Althoff wrote. "Ron and I worked together at both Microsoft and Oracle,  and he also held leadership roles at Salesforce.com. For as long as I have  known Ron, one thing was always clear: He was passionate about his work,  especially the cultivation and nurturing of relationships with partners. He  spent more than 20 years dedicated to partner success, helping partners grow  and partner ecosystems thrive."
Huddleston's tenure at Microsoft was relatively brief, but  left significant organizational marks.
He started at Microsoft before his first days on the  Microsoft Dynamics team in the summer of 2016 via phone conversations with  Althoff. In a 2017 interview  with RCP, Huddleston explained how those conversations, as well as talks  with CEO Satya Nadella and former CEO Kevin Turner, helped define a new  structure for Microsoft's channel.
Those plans started taking concrete shape in January 2017  with the formation of One Commercial Partner (OCP), a new organization to which  Huddleston was named corporate vice president.
Huddleston integrated developer evangelism much more tightly  into partner operations and began work on industry maps/solution maps/catalogs,  which are regional lists of go-to partners for different solution areas.
The OCP structure also included a major re-alignment of  partner-facing job roles within Microsoft in the areas of build-with, sell-with  and go-to-market. The OCP partner management job role changes took place  against a backdrop of a broad and tumultuous reorganization of Microsoft's  worldwide field organization in the summer of 2017. Huddleston went on an indefinite  family leave from Microsoft in December 2017.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 02, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
  - Access the 2018  application form here.
We are taking applications starting today for the 6th annual  RCP/Rocket Awards sponsored by Redmond Channel Partner magazine and Revenue  Rocket Consulting Group.
The 2018 award is open to all U.S.-based Microsoft partners,  with annual revenues between $5 million and $100 million and whose innovative  business strategies resulted in sustained growth over three years (2016, 2017  and through the first three quarters of 2018). 
Those strategies could involve applying new technologies,  addressing an adjacent vertical, sharpening a vertical focus or even honing  business processes. The 2017 winner, AgileThought LLC, for example, dialed down  its hiring process to support very fast growth in billable hours. See the  AgileThought story here and  visit our RCP Rocket  Awards page for more details on the innovative business approaches employed  by previous award winners.
The application process this year consists of two steps. First, we're  using Survey Monkey as the mechanism in  which to submit your initial responses electronically. You can access the  survey application here. Second, upon reviewing these initial submissions, we will  select a few finalists to interview for a deeper dive into their application submissions,  and from which we will determine the winners. The deadline for the initial submission is Nov. 7, 2018.
Joining me on the panel for evaluating all of the submissions  are Mike Harvath, CEO of Revenue Rocket Consulting Group, and other  distinguished guests with hands-on experience in growing an IT services  business.
Entries will be evaluated on two key criteria:
  - First, the results. What did your company achieve over a  three-year period in terms of revenue, profit and other relevant metrics you  deem appropriate? 
- Second, the strategies. What unique combination of  strategies did you employ to generate the results you achieved?
The components of the initial survey include:
  -  Revenues for 2016, 2017 and so far in 2018.
-  Net income as a percentage of your revenues this year.
-  Brief description of your company's business type.
-  Status in the Microsoft Partner Network.
-  Brief description of the strategies that led to this  growth.
For the interview, which we plan to conduct in mid-to-late  November, we will probe deeper into your business performance, key strategies,  lessons learned and any other aspect of your growth strategies that drove your  business.
The winners will be notified in early December. In addition  to an award plaque, winners will also be the focus of an article on RCPmag.com,  and a donation will be made in their name to a charity of their choice.
Start thinking about getting your entries ready, and good luck.  Apply using the survey form here.  For any questions, e-mail [email protected].
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on October 01, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft introduced a plethora of new technologies for  customers and partners to test and evaluate this week in the form of  significant previews for a new version of its flagship database, several big  advances in the Azure public cloud, and a number of more targeted cloud  enhancements and tools.
The batch of preview releases came during the Microsoft  Ignite conference this week in Orlando, Fla. While the preview technologies  aren't yet supported or touted as production-ready, their delivery marks the  key milestone when a product goes from slideware to something concrete. (For  coverage of technologies hitting general availability at Ignite, see this  roundup.) 
SQL Server 2019
The highest-profile public preview at Ignite is SQL Server 2019, the latest release of  one of Microsoft's most significant server platform products. The preview is classified  as a community technology preview (CTP). Getting the most attention in the new  version of the database server is SQL Server Big Data clusters. Other  enhancements include database performance enhancements, encryption improvements  to protect data in use and significant indexing improvements.
See related coverage for details of the new features and a  Q&A about SQL Server Big Data clusters here and here.
Big Azure Advances
A key Microsoft initiative for securing the Internet of  Things (IoT) also reached the public preview stage. Microsoft first unveiled Azure Sphere in April, but at  Ignite, Microsoft announced the preview for the solution, which includes a  microcontroller unit known as the Azure Sphere MCU, a Linux-based Azure Sphere  OS and an Azure Sphere Security Service. An Azure Sphere development kit is  immediately available for prototyping from seeed  for $85. Inspired by the explosion of IoT devices, their increasing  connectivity to the Internet and other networks, and the emergence of IoT  botnets like Mirai, Azure Sphere is Microsoft's attempt to be a principal  provider of a framework for helping device makers and users  secure IoT.
Another significant security enhancement effort in Azure is  a public preview coming on Monday, Oct. 1, for an encryption-in-use solution  called Azure confidential computing.  Data is commonly encrypted at rest (by encrypting the files or disks on which  it is stored) and in motion (via protocols such as HTTPS, SSL, TLS and FTPS).  The trickier challenge is to protect data during processing, known as  encryption in use. Microsoft at Ignite announced the public preview of a new  Azure virtual machine family, which it calls the DC series and is based on  Intel SGX technology.
Another public preview that is less than a month away is Azure Digital Twins, which is expected  on Oct. 15. The big idea is a service for creating a virtual representation of  a physical environment. Part of the IoT platform, an Azure Digital Twin will  give partners and customers a platform to create comprehensive digital models  and spatially aware solutions, Bert Van Hoof, partner group manager for Azure  IoT, explained in a blog  post: "Most IoT projects today start from a things-centric approach,  but we've flipped that around. We've found that customers realize huge benefits  by first modeling the physical environment and then connecting (existing or  new) devices to that model."
The concept has been associated with industrial equipment, such  as machines and engines, but Microsoft's new vision has more to do with  creating smarter spaces out of offices, schools, hospitals, banks, stadiums,  warehouses, factories, parking lots, streets, intersections, parks and plazas.
 Azure Stack, Microsoft's private cloud version of its  Azure public cloud that is sold by certified hardware partners, will become  more container-friendly with a public preview of Kubernetes support. Kubernetes is the popular, open-source system for automated  deployment, scaling and management of applications in containers. Azure Stack  customers will now be able to install Kubernetes using Azure Resource Manager  templates.
Targeted Updates
 Microsoft declared a handful of other technologies as public  previews at Ignite.
  -  Ad-hoc data exploration is the focus of Azure Data Explorer, a speed-optimized  indexing and querying service for analyzing event data from apps, servers and  edge devices.
 
 
-  A preview will be available Oct. 1 for Azure SQL Database Hyperscale for  single databases, with an auto-scaling capacity of a whopping 100TB per  database.
 
 
-  Seven months after making Azure DataBricks generally  available, Microsoft unveiled several updates to the Apache Spark-based  analytics platform for building collaborative Big Data and artificial  intelligence solutions. Among those is a preview of Azure DataBricks Delta, a transactional storage layer atop Spark to  improve data consistency and read access.
 
 
-  A new Azure Managed Disks offering known as Azure Ultra SSD Managed Disks is designed for  latency-sensitive workloads through the use of solid state drives.
 
 
-  Azure Files is being updated with a high-performance,  SSD-backed storage tier known as Azure  Premium Files.
 
 
- Storage capacity for Azure Managed Disks is being expanded in certain regions to now cover 8,  16 and 32TB capacities. Those storage sizes will apply to Premium SSD, Standard  SSD and Standard HDD.
 
 
-  An application acceleration platform used internally for  Bing, Office 365 and Xbox will be available as the Azure Front Door Service (AFD). It is designed for delivery,  control and monitoring of global microservice-based Web applications.
 
 
-  A solution for adding governance capabilities called Azure Blueprints is available in  preview and will be included in the Azure platform at no additional cost once  it is generally available.
-  The Azure Resource Graph brings the ability to explore  Azure resources through the Azure Portal, PowerShell or CLI for efficient  inventory management.
 
 
-  Supporting DevOps teams efforts to ship more quickly with  better compliance and auditing is a new Azure  Policy tool, with additional features that are unlocked when it's used in  combination with Azure App Insights and Azure Monitoring.
 
 
-  The constant imperative to predict, monitor and contain  Azure usage costs gets a native tool as Microsoft previews Azure Cost Management as a component of the Azure Portal for  Enterprise Agreement customers. The capabilities were previously available as a  standalone platform from Cloudyn.
Posted by Scott Bekker on September 27, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Partners will leave Microsoft Ignite this week with more than a dozen new generally available (GA) technologies to sell or build offerings on, ranging from the latest version of Windows Server to strategic Internet of Things (IoT) offerings to a number of Azure services and features.
Kicking off its flagship IT conference Monday morning with a  keynote by CEO Satya Nadella, Microsoft released details on more than a dozen  major products, services and frameworks. While Microsoft's product cycle has kept  pace with industry trends to become more fluid in recent years, GA is still a  key milestone that signals a product will be fully supported in production  environments. 
Windows Server 2019
Headlining the announcements of products reaching GA at  Ignite is Windows Server 2019. The  direction for Microsoft is clearly to the cloud, and the company ceaselessly  encourages customers to move workloads to the Azure public cloud or to  purpose-built cloud applications, such as Office 365 or Dynamics 365. Yet,  Microsoft has carved a competitive niche for itself in the cloud out of its  hybrid capabilities, and promises to continue to make and support software that  runs on-premises for a while longer.
In strict terms, what Microsoft is announcing for Windows  Server 2019 is an October GA, making real availability at  least a week off. In technical terms, Windows Server 2019 is a Long-Term  Servicing Channel release. That means it is compiled to include features from  previous Semi-Annual Channel release versions 1709 and 1803, and that it will  have five years of mainstream support and five years of extended support.
A simultaneous Semi-Annual Channel release of Windows  Server, version 1809, will also be  made available. Microsoft is emphasizing a focus in that version on containers  and micro-services.
Internet of Things
One of Microsoft's most significant IoT  initiatives also hit GA during Ignite. Azure  IoT Central is intended to democratize IoT by making it accessible to users  and organizations that don't want to set up the back-end infrastructure or  perform the integration necessary to support and leverage an army of sensors  and other devices in the field.
The solution differs from other Azure IoT solutions in that  it is a Software as a Service (SaaS) offering rather than a Platform as a  Service (PaaS) offering. Companies subscribe to Azure IoT Central on a per user  per month model. The service gives each device a unique security key, provides  device libraries, supports common connectivity protocols, scales to millions of  connected devices or millions of events per second, and offers time-series  storage. The technology had been in public preview since December.
A more tactical GA release this week in  the IoT arena is new capabilities in the Azure  IoT Hub Device Provisioning Service. Overall, that service allows customers  to provision, register and scale IoT devices. The new capabilities will deliver  more control to customers over their IoT solutions through the ability to  reprovision devices from one IoT solution to another and through enrollment-level  allocation rules.
Major Azure Services
Three major services that change the product mix for the   Azure public cloud reached GA at Ignite.
Microsoft is throwing its hat in the firewall-as-a-service  ring with Azure Firewall. Hitting GA  after a three-month public preview phase, Azure Firewall brings native security  controls to the Microsoft public cloud. Microsoft describes it as "a  managed, cloud native network security service to protect application resources  with built-in high availability and unrestricted cloud scalability." The  security control includes central administration and logging across  subscriptions and virtual networks.
Another major Azure service reaching GA after a short public  preview is Azure Virtual WAN. The  cloud networking service is designed to allow organizations to provide  branch-to-branch connectivity through Azure in an optimized and automated way.  Customers can configure branch devices manually to connect to Azure Virtual  WAN, or they can work with partners who automate the process. Microsoft lists a  number of preferred partners already, including Barracuda Networks, Check  Point, Citrix, NetFoundry, Palo Alto Networks, Riverbed Technology and 128  Technology.
Monitoring Azure services is an evolving task with an  ever-broadening scope, and Microsoft made a number of enhancements GA to Azure Monitor. With the  changes, Azure Monitor becomes the central location for monitoring  infrastructure, apps and networks on Azure. The main change is integrating  Azure Log Analytics and Azure Application Insights into Azure Monitor as  features, rather than as separate services. While maintaining the full  functionality of those deep application monitoring and deep infrastructure  monitoring tools, Microsoft is making them available from within the Monitor  interface.
Other Azure Enhancements
Eight other significant Azure services and features also hit  the GA stage at Ignite.
  - A new Speech  Service takes improved versions of several of Microsoft's AI speech  capabilities and combines them into a single service. Included are speech  recognition, speech translation capabilities and customization capabilities to  create a unique voice.
 
 
- A version 4 SDK for the Bot Framework, with ease-of-use and pick-and-choose enhancements to  make it faster and simpler for first-time bot creators.
 
 
- The Azure Cosmos DB has three significant updates that are  GA -- multi-master support for high-availability and lower  latency, the Cassandra API that makes Cosmos DB multi-model and multi-API, and  the Reserved Capacity subscription option.
 
 
- The size limit for Azure  Files shares is being expanded dramatically from 5TB to 100TB, a move  Microsoft positions as enabling more flexible migrations of on-premises data  files to the cloud.
 
 
- Azure Maps are updated with an improved Map Control API, which adds  enhancements related to data layering, visualization, HTML-based icons and a  new spatial math library.
 
 
- The Azure Standard  SSD Managed Disks offering will give customers running Web servers and  lightly used servers better performance with this SSD (Solid State Drives)  offering than they would get from Azure's offerings featuring Hard Disk Drives  (HDD).
 
 
- The Azure Serial  Console is a tool to help developers and system administrators conduct  self-service diagnosis and troubleshooting on virtual machines even when the VM  is unreachable.
 
 
- The Azure SignalR  Service builds on the SignalR ASP.NET library for adding real-time  functionality, like chat or stock tickers, to Web applications by providing a  back-end service that handles tasks like capacity provisioning, scaling and  persistent connections.
Posted by Scott Bekker on September 24, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    New modules coming to Dynamics 365, Microsoft's business applications suite, promise to help businesses access cutting-edge AI and mixed reality technologies to solve their everyday problems.
Microsoft showcased five new apps for Dynamics  365 on Tuesday that integrate everyday business tasks with either the AI capabilities that increasingly permeate the Azure cloud or the  mixed reality promise of the Microsoft HoloLens visor-based computer and Windows  Mixed Reality immersive headsets from OEMs. 
The demonstrations came as a teaser for the Microsoft Ignite  and Microsoft Envision conferences next week in Orlando, Fla., where Microsoft  will address IT and business applications audiences and unveil new products,  features and services across its many platforms.
In a briefing for press and analysts, Alysa Taylor,  corporate vice president of Business Applications & Industry Marketing at  Microsoft, unveiled three AI modules that will be released as previews this  fall: Dynamics 365 AI for Sales, Dynamics 365 AI for Customer Service and  Dynamics 365 AI for Market Insights.
Taylor described the three products as "a new class of  AI applications that will deliver out-of-the-box insights by unifying data and  infusing it with advanced intelligence to guide decisions and empower  organizations to take informed actions."
Dynamics 365 AI for Sales will be designed for both  salespeople and their managers, providing next-step suggestions for the sales  team and coaching recommendations based on pipeline analysis for their  managers.
The Customer Service module will use natural language  recognition and AI to both guide customer service employees and to provide  virtual agents that can handle basic tasks and lower support costs. Again, the  emphasis, Taylor said, is to deliver those benefits "without needing  in-house AI experts and without writing any code."
The Market Insights module for Dynamics 365 is aimed at  surfacing Web and social insights to improve the performance of marketing,  social media and market research teams.
Also on Tuesday, Microsoft officials showed off two mixed  reality modules for Dynamics 365 that have been previously discussed as part of  the October 2018 release of Dynamics 365, which will be generally available on  Oct. 1.
   [Click on image for larger view.]
 
   [Click on image for larger view.]
Microsoft Dynamics 365 Remote Assist (pictured above) provides for a new type  of customer support that takes advantage of the hands-free nature of a HoloLens  headset. The person needing assistance can wear the HoloLens, which both  streams video to a remote support worker and allows the support worker to  project spatial directions or diagrams onto the person's display. In technical  terms, the solution consists of heads-up, hands-free video calling, image  sharing and mixed reality annotations.
Microsoft Dynamics 365 Layout immerses planners and their  customers in a 3-D version of potential room designs, floor plans or entire building  configurations that help them collaborate on the finished setup. Leveraging  various pieces of the Microsoft stack, including HoloLens or immersive goggles,  the Layout module includes capabilities for scanning real spaces, loading new  virtual layouts to overlay the physical version and the ability to view the  results in mixed reality or via streaming to other screens.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 18, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Software-defined perimeter (SDP) specialist Meta Networks on  Monday launched a formal partner program.
SDP is an emerging area in IT security, with analysts at  Gartner last year identifying it as one of the top 10 security approaches to  keep an eye on. Generally replacing virtual private networks, an SDP uses  software-defined policies to put users at the center of the network security  model, identifying those users in policies and determining what resources they  can access. 
Meta Networks executives position their approach as  zero-trust, meaning that users don't have default access to resources within  the network. Instead, they only see and access resources that they need for  their jobs. Meta layers its SDP as an encrypted cloud service, or Network as a  Service (NaaS), delivered via points of presence around the world that  customers connect to. The NaaS supports connections from on-site users and  remote users, from datacenters and from clouds, including public clouds like  Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure.
Meta Networks calls its partner program the Meta NaaS  Channel Program, and it is designed for managed security service providers,  VARs, VADs, integrators and IT service providers. Current Microsoft channel  partners are a key potential source of partners, said Director of Sales Royi  Barnea, due to the tight integration of Meta's products with Microsoft  infrastructure software and services.
The initial program is three-tier, with Silver, Gold and  Platinum levels for financial rewards and incentives. The program also includes  standard components, such as training, certification, demo solutions, sales and  marketing materials, sales leads and market development funds.
Palo Alto, Calif-based Meta Networks has also built an  indirect account management team and dedicated partner services team.
One early market opportunity for SDP is VPN replacement to  provide secure, browser-based remote access to applications for contractors,  partners and customers, company officials say. Another popular use case is  secure remote access for employees.
The solution is tailored for medium-sized organizations,  Barnea said. "Organizations with 300 to 5,000 users are a perfect fit and a very  fast sales cycle," he said. "Sales average two weeks to a month, and  sales reps like that very quick win and small and fast sales cycle."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 17, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft is battening down the hatches of its Azure infrastructure in  advance of Hurricane Florence's approach to the U.S. East Coast.
As of Thursday afternoon, Florence was a Category 2 hurricane that was pounding  the Carolinas from offshore with damaging waves and high winds that have  already left tens of thousands of customers without power. The U.S. National  Weather Service was forecasting that the storm would make landfall sometime  late Thursday or early Friday with a storm surge equivalent to a higher-category hurricane, followed by catastrophic amounts of rain. 
In a blog  post on the Microsoft Azure site on Wednesday, Jeremy Hollett, partner engineering  manager, Azure CXP, detailed the company's preparations to protect both  customers and Microsoft's people.
"Our datacenters (US  East, US East 2, and US Gov Virginia) have been reviewed internally and  externally to ensure that we are prepared for this weather event. Our onsite  teams are prepared to switch to generators if utility power is unavailable or  unreliable. All our emergency operating procedures have been reviewed by our  team members across the datacenters, and we are ensuring that our personnel  have all necessary supplies throughout the event," Hollett said.
Hollett said primary communications channels for updates would be on  the original  blog post, through the Twitter handle @AzureSupport or on the Azure  Service Health section of the Azure portal.
The hurricane is hitting a little over a week after a major outage for  Azure and other Microsoft cloud services that resulted from a lightning strike  that damaged infrastructure in the San Antonio, Texas-based South Central US  datacenter. Microsoft released an after-action report detailing the causes and lessons learned from that  incident earlier this week.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 13, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    AccountabilIT, based in Scottsdale, Ariz., acquired Little  Rock, Ark.-based ClearPointe Technologies this week in an acquisition that  brings two managed service providers (MSPs) together.
WestView Capital Partners provided financing for the  transaction. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. 
AccountabilIT was founded in August 2016 and has a portfolio  of managed services that include cybersecurity, service desk, cloud and  virtualization, and disaster recovery. ClearPointe has been around since 2000  and specializes in cloud-based transformations, migrations and managed  services.
ClearPointe boasts Microsoft gold competencies in Datacenter  and Cloud Productivity and a silver competency in Cloud Platform. The company's  Microsoft-specific services include Azure migrations, Azure governance, Azure  platform monitoring and modern workplace.
"This acquisition is critical in providing  AccountabilIT with additional scale and experience needed to maintain our  position in the industry," said Chuck Vermillion, AccountabilIT's CEO and  founder, in a statement. "We are thrilled to add ClearPointe's  leadership to our organization."
Jeff Johnson, CEO and founder of ClearPointe, said that his  company's Microsoft-centric services will complement AccountabilIT's expertise  in application management, database administration, Linux administration and  managed security.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 13, 20180 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft is prepping a new service to reduce friction involved in  migrating applications to Windows 10 and Office 365.
The service, dubbed Desktop App Assure, will be delivered as a  component of FastTrack, Microsoft's internal migration desk for moving  customers to its cloud platforms. 
Desktop App Assure was announced Wednesday in a blog post, with more details to come at the Microsoft Ignite show later this month.  A North American preview of Desktop App Assure will start on Oct. 1, and  worldwide availability is set for Feb. 1, 2019.
"Desktop App Assure operationalizes our Windows 10 and Office 365  ProPlus compatibility promise: We've got your back on app compatibility and are  committed to removing it entirely as a blocker," wrote Jared Spataro, corporate  vice president for Office and Windows Marketing,  in the post.
The service is designed to overcome concerns about app compatibility,  which Spataro characterizes as disproportionate to the statistics Microsoft  sees in customer diagnostic data. His post contends that 99 percent of apps are compatible  with new Windows updates, and that apps that work on Windows 7 will generally  continue to work on Windows 10 and subsequent feature updates.
"But if you find any app compatibility issues after a Windows 10  or Office 365 ProPlus update, Desktop App Assure is designed to help you get a  fix," he said.
The program works on a service desk model. Customers who experience a  problem file a ticket through FastTrack and receive follow-up from a Microsoft  engineer.
Desktop App Assure will be included for customers of Windows 10  Enterprise and Windows 10 Education.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on September 06, 20180 comments