A few years ago, I remember thinking that if Siri, Cortana  and their digital voice assistant peers aspired to be more than gimmicks, their  corporate parents would need to teach them to play nice with each other.
Few people live their entire digital lives on one platform.  As an example, Cortana can be deeply integrated into your Microsoft-based work  life, Siri into the iOS part of your personal life, Google Assistant into the  Android portion of your personal life and Alexa into your shopping existence.  Getting those assistants talking could open a lot of possibilities to simplify  and unify things, rather than complicating and compartmentalizing them. 
In the interim, I haven't thought about it much, mostly  because the whole question seemed less important.
While Alexa has emerged as the humanized AI of the moment,  it's obvious that despite her many cool capabilities, she exists in the world for  one reason and one reason only -- to move more product from the silo, albeit the  massive silo, of Amazon.com's e-commerce operation.
Cortana became steadily less relevant as Microsoft abandoned its once grand smartphone ambitions. Granted, she's on the ubiquitous Windows  10, but the voice interface is much less critical for a PC than a smartphone.  It's clearly preferable to talk to a phone rather than to tap away on softkeys  with your thumbs in many situations. There are far fewer use cases on a PC  where talking is as efficient, let alone more efficient, than using a physical  keyboard and mouse. Meanwhile, Microsoft seemed to be pivoting its efforts to  concentrate on improving voice recognition services and APIs for developers  rather than for Cortana, the personified digital voice assistant.
Siri, meanwhile -- and this is my completely anecdotal  experience -- seems to be inexplicably getting less useful over time. When I  first started using Siri two years ago, the voice recognition seemed better and  the responses seemed more relevant, helpful and often fun. Lately the  hit-to-miss ratio has been so low that I've mostly stopped asking Siri anything.
All of which is to say, the digital voice assistants  launched as gimmickry, understandably and necessarily, but don't seem to be  maturing into highly functional assistants that can make it easier to navigate  your 21st-century life.
Then this week, out of the blue, Microsoft and Amazon.com  declared that they'll have Cortana and Alexa talking to one another and asking one  another for favors by the end of this year.
"This collaboration will allow you to access Alexa via  Cortana on Windows 10 PCs, followed by Android and iOS in the future.  Conversely, you'll be able to access Cortana on Alexa-enabled devices like the  Amazon Echo, Echo Dot and Echo Show," said Andrew Shuman, corporate vice  president for Cortana Engineering at Microsoft,  in a blog  post Wednesday.
Amazon.com's news  release on the deal Wednesday extrapolated on the applications: "Alexa  customers will be able to access Cortana's unique features like booking a  meeting or accessing work calendars, reminding you to pick up flowers on your  way home, or reading your work email -- all using just your voice. Similarly,  Cortana customers can ask Alexa to control their smart home devices, shop on  Amazon.com, interact with many of the more than 20,000 skills built by  third-party developers, and much more."
In a New York Times interview,  Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos said he hoped that similar integrations with Apple and  Google could be forthcoming, although both of those companies declined comment.  While much focus will be on whether it's in Apple's or Google's interest to  cooperate, that misses the point.
For digital voice assistants to have real value, these types  of integrations are critical. Let's hope this two-member club becomes a  four-member club in short order. A non-gimmicky future for digital voice  assistants depends on it.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 31, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Vendors and solution providers were poised to help in Hurricane Harvey's  wake as the record-rain-producing storm made its third, and what looked like  its final, pass at the Texas-Louisiana coast Wednesday.
Harvey first struck the Texas coast on Friday night, and as  it lingered the storm dumped more than 50 inches of rain in some places,  causing deep flooding over a wide area including Houston. 
With public officials and infrastructure experts saying the  storm recovery could take years, the process of restoring IT was still a lower  priority for many businesses.
"A lot of people are in survival mode still," said  Patrick Murray, a senior consultant with Houston-based ERGOS, one of the largest MSPs in South  Texas. ERGOS, which didn't lose power or experience outages at its Houston  datacenter, has been proactively checking on customer systems, even those that  haven't called to check in.
"We've got ways to determine if this customer or that  customer is affected and what part of the technology is affected," Murray  said. "I would say a good 5 percent to 10 percent of our customers were  hit pretty heavy."
One customer that was heavily affected has been spun up and  virtualized. For such remote virtual environments, ERGOS uses a mix of its own  ERGOS-branded cloud at the Houston datacenter and StorageCraft's cloud.
Other than that, Murray said, "We've had to do some  mild file restores here and there where some customer offices are down due to  power or due to flooding."
He credits that partly to the extensive backup and recovery  checks the company ran before the storm and pre-storm queries that poured in  even before the storm was officially upgraded to a hurricane last Thursday.
"The No. 1 question I got two days prior to the  storm, since we anticipated things so much, was, 'Hey, are my backups working?'  The second question was, 'Are my offsite backups working?'" said Murray. "I  probably answered 50 of the same questions from internal colleagues and  associates, as well as customers directly."
Special Offers
Some vendors ran special offers to help customers and  partners in the affected area to mitigate the situation. While disaster  recovery plans are best laid before a major weather event occurs, a slow-motion  situation like rivers swelling to flood stage gave some customers and partners  time to respond.
Infrascale created a program called "30 days free of  Infrascale Cloud Backup to Mitigate the Damage of Harvey." A spokesman  described the offer in an e-mail as "a complimentary, no-commitment offer  that is valid for up to 30 days or until the impacted business (in SE Texas) is  stabilized, whichever is longer. With Infrascale Cloud Backup they can backup  their critical data to the cloud for safe keeping."
Relief Efforts
Other IT companies focused on the  relief efforts in the  immediate wake of the storm.
SolarWinds on Tuesday committed $75,000 for disaster relief  efforts, with the money going to the American Red Cross of Central & South  Texas Region, All Hands Volunteers and Feeding Texas. SolarWinds also offered a  $2-to-$1 match for anything its U.S. employees donate to those organizations  over the next 30 days, and the company is coordinating a volunteer effort by  SolarWinds employees of 1,000 hours over the next six months.
"The impact on our neighbors here in Texas has been and  continues to be devastating," said CEO Kevin B. Thompson of Austin-based SolarWinds   in a statement. "This is a time when we as company -- and all of us as  individuals -- need to step up and help as much as we can."
Microsoft on Monday donated money to the Red Cross. "Microsoft  provided the American Red Cross with $100,000 as an initial step to help support  those in Texas and across the Gulf coast affected by Hurricane Harvey. More  help is needed, and the company and its employees pledged to do more," the  company said in a statement.
Technology distributor Ingram Micro was also looking for  opportunities to help, directly and in conjunction with its partner community,  according to a spokesperson. "Ingram Micro and its Southern Star Chapter  (part of the Trust X Alliance Community ) are keeping in close and consistent  contact with its local members and neighboring members -- many of which relied  on each other 12 years ago when the last disaster came in," the  spokesperson said. "All have offered support, shelter and scale where  needed, including Ingram Micro directly. Trust X Cares and the Southern Star  Chapter have literally just set up a GoFundMe page  to assist those in need. The goal is $10,000." 
Backup service provider Carbonite was directing its  philanthropic efforts to Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh's "Help  for Houston" drive, a spokesperson said.
Update 9/1: ConnectWise on Thursday launched an effort  specifically to help partners in the affected area regain their footing.  "At a time of tragedy, we're here to help our partners survive as  entrepreneurs and reestablish their successful businesses, so we're raising  $750,000 to meet their needs," CEO Arnie Bellini wrote in a blog  post. "You can make a difference for every one of these partners in a  time of desperate need. ConnectWise will match all donations to ConnectWise.com/HelpNow. We'll match  your donation 2-1 up to $250,000."
Bellini urged partners in need of help to reach out to  ConnectWise with their information. "Whether it's now or in the days,  weeks, and months to come, our long-term goal is to continue supporting our  partners through recovery and rebuilding efforts," he wrote.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 30, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Rackspace made a big commitment to its partner program this  week with the introduction of the company's first-ever partner incentive.
The initial incentive covers Rackspace's strategic tier  of partners who sell between $10,000 and $150,000 in monthly recurring revenue  for deals covering dedicated hosting services, such as Rackspace Managed  Security or Rackspace Private Cloud Powered by Microsoft, VMware or OpenStack. 
"Through the end of this year, we'll match the deals  they generate with customers dollar-for-dollar," said Lisa McLin, a  15-year veteran of Rackspace who is the new channel sales and alliances vice  president for North America as of late June.
As an example, McLin said a partner working on a digital  transformation deal for a customer that wants to put Sitecore on a private  cloud platform with VMware, storage, firewall and load balancer and Rackspace  Managed Security might be a $20,000 a month contract. 
"The partner is  going to get their $20,000 incentive, plus their monthly residual" on an  ongoing basis, she said.
Rackspace has offered spiffs to partners before but this is  the company's first full-fledged, ongoing incentive, McLin said. If it goes as  well as she expects, she said the company will be looking to offer more  incentives.
"We're going to watch this one and see how it goes. Q4  will be really level-setting, where we ask, 'Are we getting good traction on  this?'" McLin said. Expansions could involve other products, as well as  broader sections of the Rackspace partner community.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 29, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
A new version of Chrome OS called Chrome Enterprise aims to  make the Google operating system more attractive to business customers in a way  that could also make Chrome more of a fit for Microsoft-centric channel  partners.
Among many new business management features of Chrome  Enterprise, one of the marquee changes is integration with on-premises Active  Directory, a first for the 8-year-old Chrome OS, which was primarily  designed for cloud-only management solutions. 
"Businesses not yet ready for a cloud-only solution  have wanted to manage Chrome OS with the on-premise identity and management  systems they're already using. To help, Chrome Enterprise is now fully  compatible with on-premise infrastructure through Microsoft Active Directory,"  wrote David Karam, product manager for Chrome Enterprise, in a blog  post Tuesday. 
Google rolled out Chrome Enterprise via the blog Tuesday and  a webcast Wednesday.
"This integration allows employees to use their native  credentials to authenticate across devices and Google Cloud Services like  Google Play while centralizing management of user and device policies for IT  admins," Karam said.
Another enterprise feature of the $50 per device per year  Chrome Enterprise license is a partnership with VMware for unified endpoint  management. VMware Workspace ONE will be the first third-party solution for  managing Chrome devices, Karam said.
Other features exclusive to Chrome Enterprise, as opposed to  Chrome OS, include managed Chrome extensions and browser management, printer  management, single sign-on support, managed networks and proxies, managed  operating system updates and enterprise support. 
The comparatively inexpensive Chromebooks have been making  market share gains in a generally declining PC market. Gartner estimated that  Chromebook shipments increased by 38 percent year over year in 2016 as the  overall PC market fell 6 percent. The base is small, however, with Chromebook shipments  numbering around 9 million in 2016 against an overall PC market of 270 million  units.
One of Google's main markets for Chromebooks has been  education, and some Microsoft partners offer Chromebook solutions in that  sector. For its part, Microsoft earlier this year launched Microsoft Intune for Education and OEMs rolled out low-cost Windows 10 PCs to  better compete against Chromebooks in schools. 
In that January announcement,  Microsoft made its concerns pretty clear: "New Windows 10 Devices Offer  Great Alternatives to Chromebooks."
With Active Directory support in Chrome Enterprise, Microsoft  partners will have new reasons to take a harder look at Chromebooks for certain  business deployments.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 23, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Intel on Monday launched the first of its 8th Gen Intel Core  processors, with the initial group of chips intended to power ultrathin  notebooks and two-in-ones for small businesses and consumers.
The roadmap calls for 8th Gen processors to arrive for  desktop computers in the fall, with enterprise, workstation and enthusiast  notebook and desktop systems coming later. 
Intel claims healthy performance enhancements over both its  7th Gen chips and against systems that are at least 5 years old, a category  consisting of about 450 million computers that Intel and its OEM partners hope  to lure to new machines with the new generation of processors.
"This new mobile family sets the bar for outstanding  performance, including a boost of up to 40 percent gen over gen, and that jumps  to 2x if you compare it with a 5-year-old machine. This is all thanks to  the new quad-core configuration, power-efficient microarchitecture, advanced  process technology and a huge range of silicon optimizations," said Gregory  Bryant, senior vice president and general manager of the Client Computing Group  at Intel,  in a blog  post.
Intel's first wave of 8th Gen processors includes two i5 and  two i7 models. Bryant said OEMs will begin releasing notebooks and two-in-ones  based on those chips in the beginning of September, and that Intel is expecting  more than 145 designs from manufacturers.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 21, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    A new Microsoft security report released this week  quantifies a longstanding concern about big cloud services, namely that  hyperscale clouds appeal to attackers like banks attract robbers.
After all, the Microsofts, Amazon Web Services and Googles  of the world are increasingly where the users and data are. The bet by  customers and the industry on big clouds is that in the arms race between  attackers and defenders, the risks of putting all the data under only a few  vendors' control can be outweighed by the high-quality people and processes the  hyperscale vendors will be able to afford. 
The latest data points on the question come from the  Microsoft Security Intelligence Report (SIR) released on Thursday. Version 22  of the somewhat sporadic report has an increased focus on cloud, and Microsoft  comes right out and admits the obvious point that its cloud makes an appealing  target.
"Consumer and Enterprise Microsoft accounts are a  tempting target for attackers, and the frequency and sophistication of attacks  on cloud-based accounts are accelerating," Microsoft's report states.
Just how attractive is made clear in the report, which  relies on telemetry data from various Microsoft products and services, such as  its monthly scanning of 400 billion e-mails for phishing and malware, processing  of 450 billion authentications, and executing of more than 18 billion Web page  checks.
   [Click on image for larger view.] Outbound attacks detected by the Azure Security Center in Q1 of 2017. (Source: Microsoft)
 
   [Click on image for larger view.] Outbound attacks detected by the Azure Security Center in Q1 of 2017. (Source: Microsoft) 
"The Identity Security and Protection team has seen a  300 percent increase in user accounts attacked over the past year," the  report notes in language indicating that it is referring to successful attacks.  
No matter how effective Microsoft's defenses are, the report contends that  enterprise and end user security practices need to improve. "A large  majority of these compromises are the result of weak, guessable passwords and  poor password management, followed by targeted phishing attacks and breaches of  third-party services," the report states. 
Attacks are flooding in from bad sectors of the Internet. "The  number of Microsoft account sign-ins attempted from malicious IP addresses has  increased by 44 percent from 1Q16 to 1Q17," according to the report.
The report does not break out specific numbers, only  percentages. It also doesn't quantify how many successful attacks and  unsuccessful attempts were aimed at business versus consumer accounts in the  Microsoft cloud.
In addition to targeting the digital assets or identities of  targeted accounts, a portion of the attacks involve something Microsoft has  referred to in previous editions of its SIR as "cloud service  weaponization." That involves attackers compromising accounts in order to  take over Azure-based virtual machines, which can then be redirected to other  nefarious purposes, similar in concept to botnets.
According to Microsoft Azure Security Center data cited in  the report, the three most common types of outbound attack traffic that  compromised Azure-based virtual machines attempt to send are communications  with malicious IPs, RDP brute force and spam.
On the other side of the ledger, Microsoft's report details  various Microsoft products and services that can help customers and end users  combat attackers, such as Windows Hello for Business, Credential Guard,  Microsoft Azure Active Directory Identity Protection and Azure Multi-Factor  Authentication.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 18, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    The next version of Kaseya's Traverse tool will feature an  enhanced visualization interface, more powerful automation profiles, and new  remote control integration for the network monitoring and management platform  for managed service providers (MSPs) and mid-market IT departments.
Kaseya unveiled Traverse version 9.5 on Tuesday. Currently  in the final release candidate stage, the new version is expected to reach  general availability at the beginning of September. It will follow the previous  release, 9.4, by about 10 months. 
Network visualization is not new to Traverse 9.5, but it's greatly  enhanced, says Kaseya Chief Product Officer Mike Puglia. "We've really  taken it to the next level. I call it network topology on steroids,"  Puglia says of the feature, called Panorama 2.0. "Not only do you have a  visualization of what your infrastructure looks like, you can see it, you can  hover over and see where something is broken."
   [Click on image for larger view.] The Panorama 2.0 functionality in Kaseya Traverse 9.5 will allow new admins to quickly visualize and drill into problem areas of the network. (Image source: Kaseya)
 
   [Click on image for larger view.] The Panorama 2.0 functionality in Kaseya Traverse 9.5 will allow new admins to quickly visualize and drill into problem areas of the network. (Image source: Kaseya) 
The interface of Panorama 2.0 may not be a huge deal for an  experienced network technician who knows what to do with a simple list of  alarms, Puglia says. The interface improvements are really aimed at newer  network admins. "For the less-experienced infrastructure folks, a picture  is worth 10,000 words. Seeing is a lot faster. Network topology is interesting,  but being able to manipulate it and click around it empowers IT administrators,"  he says. 
Written in HTML 5, Panorama 2.0 is fully functional for admins on their  iOS and Android devices.
Another feature set that is ratcheted up in version 9.5 is  the use of best practices through Automation Profiles. Traverse previously had  best practices-related features, but new capabilities are designed to  dramatically reduce the time it takes MSPs to onboard new customers. Through  the use of faceted search options (think online shopping checkboxes on the  left-hand side of the screen that allow you to sort products by price, brand,  et cetera) and other capabilities, Automation Profiles are designed to automatically  apply monitoring policies to devices during the discovery process.
MSP feedback led Kaseya to add "If Then Else"  capabilities to the Automation Profiles in Traverse 9.5, Puglia says. 
"A lot of people want to tweak the best practices based  on their experience, especially in the MSP world because they all try to  differentiate themselves by the expertise that they have," Puglia says. As  an example, Puglia offered: "If a service crashes on a Windows Server,  automatically I'm going to monitor these services because that's what I like to  do in my environment. No. 2 if it does crash, I want a snapshot -- what was  happening at the time, not an hour later. Restart the service, but I'm going to  automatically start monitoring these five other services because they're  suddenly important to me."
The other headline feature of Traverse 9.5 is the  integration of Kaseya Live Connect, which is Kaseya's tool allowing admins to  remotely view and control a system for troubleshooting.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 08, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Now that Apple is out with its earnings, IDC has the  critical iPad data necessary to refresh its assessment of the worldwide  quarterly tablet market. 
The short version is a decline in quarter-over-quarter  tablet shipments of 3.4 percent. Total units shipped for the second calendar  quarter of 2017 were 37.9 million. 
One interesting aside in the report is some bad news for the  detachable tablets subsegment, which IDC says was "once touted as the  savior of the [tablet] market." Detachables would be the category  pioneered by the Microsoft Surface, and later joined by the iPad Pro.
Without offering specific numbers in its Thursday news  release discussing the results, IDC said detachable tablet shipments declined.
"There's been a resetting of expectations for  detachables as competing convertible notebooks offered a convincing and  familiar computing experience for many," said Jitesh Ubrani, senior research  analyst with IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Device Trackers,  in a  statement. "To date, the 2-in-1 market was bifurcated as Apple and  Microsoft led with detachables while the PC vendors led with convertibles.  Though that is slowly changing as smartphone vendors and traditional PC vendors  begin to offer compelling alternatives, the pace has been rather slow as  Surface and iPad Pro still dominate shelf space and mindshare."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 03, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft's net new licensing package for small businesses, called  Microsoft 365 Business, is now in public preview.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella unveiled  Microsoft 365 last month at the Microsoft Inspire partner conference in  Washington, D.C., as a combination of key parts of Office 365, Windows 10 and  Enterprise Mobility + Security (EMS). 
"Microsoft 365 Business is the coming together of all  of these products in a very compelling offer and package for every small  business, every medium-sized business to have the same tools, the same  sophistication that any large business has," Nadella said during his  Inspire keynote.
An enterprise version, Microsoft 365 Enterprise, is an  evolution of Secure Productive Enterprise, which was already available in E3  and E5 SKUs, and is supposed to be generally available (GA) this quarter.
As a completely new bundle, Microsoft 365  Business is only entering the public preview stage on Wednesday. Microsoft  currently says a fully supported version will be available by the end of the  year.
For now, the preview is free, although Microsoft recommends that  customers hire a partner to deploy the solution. At GA, Microsoft 365 Business  will cost $20 per user, compared to the $12.50 per user charge for Office 365  Business Premium. Like Office 365 Business Premium, Microsoft 365 Business  includes Microsoft Office, 1TB of file storage, a 50GB mailbox, online  meetings, Microsoft Teams, and business applications including Outlook Customer  Manager, Bookings and MileIQ.
The $7.50/user/month premium for the release version of  Microsoft 365 Business will get organizations Windows 10 Pro upgrade rights for  users with Windows 7 or Windows 8.1, as well as Windows Defender and other  security features and device management features, such as a single console to  manage user and device settings, self-service PC deployment, and automatic deployment  of Office apps to Windows 10 PCs.
Organizations that are currently paying for Office 365 will  need to continue to pay the subscription while using the public preview,  Microsoft said in a FAQ.
Microsoft 365 Business is meant for organizations with no  full-time IT staff, no Active Directory domain controllers and fewer than 300  users. The FAQ states that customers using on-premises Active Directory "must  switch to cloud identity and management as part of their deployment."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 02, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft, an industry foot-dragger to bug bounties, seems  satisfied with the results of the programs over the last few years.
The company has been offering financial rewards for the white  hats who find security flaws in its products since 2012, with sporadic  increases in bounty amounts and products covered, as well as occasional pop-up  opportunities to find problems in select software, such as technical previews,  before a specific deadline. 
This week, Microsoft again expanded the scope of the  products involved, and also bumped potential awards for bounties related to  Hyper-V.
"In the spirit of maintaining a high security bar in  Windows, we're launching the Windows Bounty Program on July 26, 2017," the  company stated Tuesday in a blog  post from the Microsoft Security Response Center team. "This will  include all features of the Windows Insider Preview in addition to focus areas  in Hyper-V, Mitigation bypass, Windows Defender Application Guard, and  Microsoft Edge. We're also bumping up the pay-out range for the Hyper-V Bounty  Program."
That payout range for bugs discovered in Hyper-V is now  fairly large. Microsoft will pay $5,000 to $250,000 for Hyper-V bugs that meet  certain criteria on the Windows 10, Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2012 R2  and Windows Server Insider Preview platforms.
Outside of Hyper-V, a new base program for bugs found in the  Windows Insider Preview can pay between $500 and $15,000. Focus area programs  offer the same pay range for the Microsoft Edge browser, $500 to $30,000 for  Windows Defender Application Guard, and $500 to $200,000 for "Mitigation  Bypass Bounty and Bounty for Defense" in Windows 10. 
That last category  consists of two separate bounties, maxxing out at $100,000 each, for the same  issue. Essentially, Microsoft is asking individuals to submit a novel  mitigation bypass against the up-to-date Windows platform, as well as a  separate defense idea that would block the exploitation technique.
Beyond the bounty programs launched or updated this week,  Microsoft also offers ongoing bounties for bugs reported in Microsoft .NET  Core, ASP.NET Core and in Microsoft cloud services. Those programs currently  top out at $15,000.
The payouts are adding up. According to a bounty  hunters honor roll that Microsoft maintains, the company has paid out over  $1.5 million in bounties to date. The list includes three payouts of $100,000  bounties under the mitigation bypass category, and a $125,000 bounty for a  mitigation bypass that was shared among three researchers.
Details about Microsoft Bounty Programs are available here.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 27, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft recently posted the full  text of a lengthy report on Office 365 by independent analysts at Gartner.  In it, Gartner's Craig Roth, Joe Mariano, Michael Woodbridge  and Steve Crawford analyze Office 365 for strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and  threats (SWOT).
The whole report is worth reading for a lot of insights on the  technology, market forces and usage trends. Of special note to the Microsoft  channel are the lengthy sections on the Office 365 partner and ISV ecosystems.  After leveling criticism at Microsoft's previous approaches, including direct  sales under the Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) and the syndication program, Gartner repeatedly lauds  Microsoft's Cloud Solution Provider (CSP) approach as a solid strategy and  notes that 20,000 partners have signed up as CSPs. 
For now, Gartner notes that the migration market is booming. Yet  the analysts warn that growth, while still in double digits, has settled down  considerably. Those partners looking for the next wave of opportunity and  attention need to go vertical or align with strategic technologies being  surfaced in Office 365, the analysts say.
Key quote:
  To succeed, channel partners will need to create  differentiation by industry focus or some other specialty, and bundle this  differentiation in the form of value-added services for Office 365 and other  Microsoft cloud services. There will be ample migration, training, change  management, integration and other opportunities as large enterprises move from  on-premises Exchange to the cloud. And new ways of working will present plenty  of lucrative opportunities for nontechnical change management: helping  organizations shift how they create content, communicate and collaborate.
The analysts also suggest that ISVs and other Microsoft  partners are likely to get noticed in a crowded field by developing  applications and solutions that highlight strategically important technologies  within Office 365: "Attaching to emergent portions of the suite (such as  Teams, Microsoft Graph, Cortana and Power BI) becomes doubly compelling."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 25, 20170 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    As evidence mounts that attackers are probing critical  infrastructure worldwide, Microsoft is spinning up a new partner program for  securing utility customers' operations through modernization.
Larry Cochrane, Azure Principal Program Manager, Energy,  unveiled the Azure Certified Elite Partner Program for Cyber Analytics in Power  and Utilities this month in a Microsoft  blog. That post cited a flurry of recent attacks affecting the utilities  industry, including devastating take-downs of the power grid in Ukraine, the  WannaCry ransomware and a recent targeting of U.S. power firms, including the  Wolf Creek nuclear facility in Kansas. 
"Microsoft is deeply aware of the importance of  cybersecurity for companies supporting the electric grid and is committed to  helping partners and customers secure their nations' most critical of critical  infrastructure," Cochrane wrote.
The program hinges on the Operations Management Suite (OMS),  which is Microsoft's Software as a Service IT management platform for cloud and  on-premises systems, and this new group of elite systems integrator partners  with OMS deployment expertise. Starting in the United States with plans to  expand worldwide, Microsoft aims to seed utility participation by covering the  initial costs for deploying and running the Azure-based OMS, and will also  include a limited Azure subscription to help with training, development and  expediting projects.
The platform will be able to collect data from Windows  agents, Linux agents, System Center Operations Manager, various Azure resources,  Office 365 and custom logs. In response to an e-mailed question, Cochrane  confirmed that the data sources go "way beyond just Microsoft systems,"  and noted that the platform offers several ways to capture data about the SCADA  systems that are often targets in industrial attacks.
In addition to the management capabilities, another  important component is anti-malware software built into OMS and extended for the  utility solution.
"Initially this Azure Certified Elite Partner Program  is all about securing our nation's power system," Cochrane said in the  e-mail interview. "Utilities may potentially get immediate value about  threat actors and malware that might be present in their networks."
Longer-term, Cochrane said he hopes the program will cause  utility customers to see the value of OMS and sign up. "The  power and utilities industry is undergoing the most fundamental change since  its inception, driven in part by renewables and digital transformation,"  he said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 24, 20170 comments