Two years after joining Kaseya as CEO as part of an investment by  Insight Venture Partners, Yogesh Gupta will become chairman of the board and the  MSP-focused IT management cloud company is pulling in Fred Voccola as CEO.
"I am thrilled to be able to bring Fred onboard as our new CEO,"  Gupta said in a statement released this morning. "His outstanding track  record of driving transformational growth for high-velocity software businesses  and investing in the success of his customers is second to none." 
In introducing Voccola, Kaseya emphasized three times that he has led a  company through rapid growth, followed by a sale. The cases are:
  - Nolio Inc.: As president of the DevOps SaaS company, Voccola drove  100 percent year-over-year growth and oversaw a sale of the business to  Computer Associates.
- Trust Technology Corp.: As president and CEO, Voccola led the  business to $28 million in revenues in three years and sold the company to FGI  Global.
- Identify Software: As co-founder and COO, Voccola helped Identify  grow from $1 million to $60 million in revenues over five years and  participated in the sale to BMC Software.
Voccola was most recently president and general manager of the Brand  Networks Division at Yodle. His resume also includes a stint at BMC as vice  president of Worldwide Sales and Services after the Identify Software sale, as well as management  and executive roles at Intira and Prism Solutions.
"The opportunity at Kaseya is tremendous," Voccola said in a  statement. "The organization, team and products that Yogesh and the rest  of the company have built are nothing short of world-class. I couldn't be more excited to have the  opportunity to come in at this juncture in Kaseya's development to help our  customers reach new heights and lead the next phase of hyper growth for the  company."
In his two years as CEO at Kaseya, Gupta oversaw the integration of  four acquisitions of companies or business units, including Scorpion Software,  RoverApps, 365 Command and Zyrion. Those acquisitions added identity and access  management, bring your own device (BYOD) management, cloud application administration  and cloud monitoring and management, respectively, to Kaseya's products.
Gupta also refocused the company on cloud platforms and managed a  transition to a faster and more reliable pace of product updates -- first to a  three-releases-a-year schedule and then, since April, to an agile delivery  schedule.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 07, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Ahead of its planned separation from Symantec Corp., Veritas on Tuesday  unveiled new datacenter offerings and upgrades to its backup and information management  products, including immediate availability of the next version of NetBackup.
Doug Matthews, vice president of the Information Availability business  unit at Veritas, said the product line overhaul resulted from the "Envision  2019" strategy exercise that Symantec initiated more than a year ago. 
As Veritas looked at all the information its backup, recovery and information  management products touched, product managers realized a more comprehensive  approach was necessary.
"Infrastructure and information sprawl are unbelievable, out of  control," Matthews said in an interview. The spread of data across  on-premises systems, private clouds and public clouds is making it harder for  companies to be aware of, let alone prioritize and get maximum value out of, the  data they have. "How do people handle that situation and ensure that they  get value out of that information?" he said.
Veritas' attempt to address those issues will come out over the next  few months as Veritas  prepares for an operational separation from Symantec that is planned for  October, with complete separation set for January 2016. Symantec will go forward as  a security business, while Veritas will take all products related to backup and  recovery, storage management, clustering, disaster recovery, archiving and  e-discovery.
The new offerings and architectures include:
Veritas NetBackup 7.7: NetBackup, which is Symantec-Veritas' flagship  backup solution and a key product for many Microsoft partners, began shipping  in the latest 7.7 version on Monday. New features include enhancements in  virtualization scenario support for both VMware vSphere 6 and for Microsoft  Hyper-V. Brand-new in version 7.7 is support for cloud connectors that allow hybrid cloud  deployments that use Amazon Web Services, Google Nearline and other cloud  platforms.
Veritas InfoScale: Veritas is relaunching and rebranding its Storage  Foundation as InfoScale. A software-defined storage approach, InfoScale  provides Web-based management of multi-tiered applications. By using on-host  flash and direct-attach storage, the goal, Matthews said, is to provide the "benefits  of a SAN without the cost of the infrastructure."
Veritas Data Insight 5.0: In beta now and planned for general  availability (GA) in August, the 5.0 version of Data Insight will expand Veritas'  platform for applying unstructured data analytics to retention management,  access compliance and other information management policies.
Veritas Information Map: Also planned for an August GA is Information  Map, a cloud application that Veritas describes as being able to "glean  meta-data from Veritas NetBackup, store it in the cloud and present this data  in a user-friendly, visual navigation tool that helps identify areas of risk,  areas of value and areas of waste across a customer's primary content  repositories."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 07, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft is expanding the scope of the FastTrack program and the  Onboarding Center in a few ways that will further overlap with some partners'  current cloud business models.
FastTrack is a benefit for new Office 365 customers  with more than  150 seats who can get free e-mail migration as part of the deal. The Microsoft  Onboarding Center is an internal business unit that Microsoft spun up to handle  the migrations, with the larger goal of increasing customers' consumption of  Office 365 licenses. Microsoft was reportedly hiring hundreds of people  worldwide to staff the Onboarding Center last year. 
Both programs raised concerns from partners when they were unveiled  last July, although many partners became more comfortable with the changes as  they learned the details of a related set of adoption offers that included  substantial partner subsidy funding.
With the start of a new fiscal year this month, Microsoft on Thursday  unveiled a raft of updates to FastTrack and to other partner incentives. A few of the updates fundamentally change, or at least clarify, the  relationship between partners, the  Onboarding Center and Microsoft  Consulting Services.
First, Microsoft is renaming the official name of "Office 365 FastTrack"  to the broader title of "Microsoft FastTrack." Initially, the change means  Microsoft will add Enterprise Mobility Suite (EMS) migrations to the existing  Office 365 migrations. Logically, the new name would also clear the way for  Microsoft to bring other types of cloud workloads into the FastTrack program.
Next, Microsoft is adding e-mail data migration to the e-mail migration  services it offered for free to Office 365 customers. With the inauguration of  the program last year, Microsoft officials told partners that FastTrack would  only cover low-margin e-mail migration services, and even then only for  customers with relatively simple migration scenarios. Higher-margin services  like e-mail data migration, identity integration, user adoption and management  would be reserved for partners. Like the other FastTrack services, the e-mail data  migration is only for customers with 150 or more seats.
In an interesting clarification, Microsoft notes that customer funding  through a new EMS adoption offer for fiscal year 2016  will be available not only for engagements involving Microsoft cloud competency  partners but also for engagements fulfilled by Microsoft's own consulting services.
Microsoft seems very aware that the new changes will be controversial.  In an e-mail to RCP listing the changes, a Microsoft spokesperson said, "With  a partner base as broad as ours, we recognize that not every change we make  will be well-received by all partners. However, we believe that the updates we  make to FastTrack and our incentives portfolio today will not only ensure  success for both Microsoft and our partners, but our mutual customers as well,  in today's mobile-first, cloud-first world."
One lesson Microsoft seems to have learned from the controversy last  year is to communicate the changes before the Microsoft Worldwide Partner  Conference (WPC). With details released a little more than a week before the  conference begins this year, Microsoft's partners can use WPC to get more  detail about the programs rather than trying to piece together what is changing  based on rumors and snippets of information.
Here is the full text provided by Microsoft to list and explain the  changes:
  FastTrack Updates: 
    Throughout this first year of delivery, Microsoft has continued to  evolve FastTrack to ensure we can deliver the best possible customer onboarding  experience and help partners build profitable practices. We quickly realized  the best possible experience is one where both the partner and the Onboarding  Center are working together with the customer to deliver first class  services.  
  FastTrack is designed to minimize the time a partner needs to spend  doing the time-intensive, administrative tasks, so they can accelerate time  spent selling and deploying high-value added services that can be more  profitable and drive usage. 
  Based on feedback around how customers are adopting the Microsoft Cloud  services and where they need help to more fully realize the value of their  investment, today we are announcing several updates to FastTrack and our  Adoption Offers.
  
    - Office 365 FastTrack is  evolving to become Microsoft FastTrack and will include services benefits for  both Office 365 and Microsoft Enterprise Mobility Suite (EMS) customers.
 
 
-  Email data migration is  now included as part of the core benefit of Office 365 FastTrack for Office 365  customers with deployments over 150 seats
 
 
- We are expanding the  Office 365 SKUs and workloads available through Office 365 FastTrack to include  onboarding and migration for K [SKU]s and Non-profit SKUs as well as enterprise  voice
 
 
- For the FY16 Office 365  Adoption Offer, we are focusing on partners driving adoption of workloads which  include SharePoint, OneDrive for Business, Skype for Business, Yammer, Office  ProPlus, Project Online and Visio. The Adoption Offer is in addition to the  onboarding and mail migration benefit, so it no longer requires customers to  choose. Both are available as a customer benefit.
 
 
- With the FY16 EMS  Adoption Offer, customers earn funds on a per-seat basis to pay for qualified  adoption activities by eligible Microsoft competency partners (Cloud  Productivity, or Devices & Deployment) or Microsoft Consulting Services  (MCS). 
 
 
- FastTrack Getting  Started is a new program that helps customers get started with EMS by setting  up a production ready trial, including a 90 day/250 seat trial subscription,  Deployment lab environment, pre-populated end user training resources and business  scenarios as well as templates.  
Incentives Portfolio: 
    Partner Incentives are designed to support partner profitability and  growth whether partners are doing business on-premises, in the cloud, or  somewhere in between. Over the past three years, incentives have increasingly  focused on rewarding strategic cloud outcomes -- in FY16 nearly half of  incentives spend will be directed toward cloud. 
  We're keeping the  Enterprise, Managed Reseller, and Commercial Distributor incentives largely  stable YoY.
  LSP partners will see  incremental investment in the Enterprise program directed at rewarding upsell  revenue at time of anniversary on EAS licenses beginning October 1. 
  Within the Managed Reseller  and Commercial Distributor incentives, we have combined the Growth and  Incubation product categories into a single Strategic product category. 
  We've improved our Coop  offering with a single Partner Incentives Coop Guidebook, which spans our SMB,  Cloud, and Devices incentives programs. 
  Our goal is to continue  advancing usage and consumption, and with new capabilities now available such  as increased telemetry and Digital Partner of Record, we can reward partners  driving customer success across workloads. 
  The Azure consumption  incentive, rewarding partners for driving consumption of Microsoft Azure  Services, will be available to all Silver or Gold Cloud Platform competency  partners. Any partner who earns this competency will be eligible for this  incentive. 
  The Online Services Usage  incentive, previously paid on assigned seats based on the data available, will  be paid on the rate card value of a customer's active entitlements. Microsoft's  strategy in FY16 emphasizes the usage opportunity, so the incentives will  reward increased usage across eligible Online Services  workloads.
  We're making adjustments to  the incentives portfolio in FY16 to prioritize through-partner sales motions. 
   We want to maintain the  Advisor Sell incentive in parity with our through-partner sales motions, but it  will be reduced in years 1-3 as part of a broader shift to prioritize  through-partner sales motions. 
  Microsoft will not renew the  Channel Developer Incentives in Q2 in order to drive more cloud revenue through partners via CSP/Open than around partners via Web-Direct. 
  We're adding new,  limited-time incentives for the CSP 1-Tier and 2-Tier Resellers designed to  drive adoption of CSP. 
Editor's Note: One of the bullet points originally included in  the Fast Track Updates section above has been removed. The original information  provided by Microsoft read: "Office 365 active usage requirements have  also been adjusted from 15 percent to 30 percent to better align with cloud  adoption and usage goals." Microsoft later corrected that section to  indicate that it hasn't changed: "The active usage requirement for the offer  is still 15 percent on a single workload."
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 02, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    As Microsoft rolls into fiscal year 2016 starting July 1, we surveyed readers to find out how happy they are with their Microsoft partnership. 
At a high level, partners are pretty satisfied, and report that Microsoft products are actually becoming more central to their businesses. Yet many partners report that Microsoft is not the most important company in their vendor stable.
For this survey, we received responses from 240 partners from late May through early June. About a quarter had at least one gold competency, making the respondents a gold-heavy group. Microsoft often says partners with gold competencies represent only the top 1 percent of its community.
A little more than 15 percent of the partners had at least one silver competency, and 23 percent were subscribers to the Action Pack. Of the rest, 19 percent were community members and another 19 percent were informal partners who did not participate in the MPN.
Readers gave Microsoft fairly high ratings among their vendor partners. Asked to rate Microsoft as a partner compared to other vendors, 63 percent rated Microsoft as either "Excellent" or "Above Average" (see Figure 1).
 
     Figure 1. Compared to other vendors, how do you rate Microsoft as a partner?
	
		Figure 1. Compared to other vendors, how do you rate Microsoft as a partner?	
	
Microsoft has moved quickly on products in the last two years, with cloud products updated on a quarterly-or-faster basis, and even on-premises products getting refreshed at a good clip. At the same time, Microsoft also moved to embrace open source technologies in many areas. With all that change, we asked readers how important Microsoft technology is in the solutions they sell compared to two years ago. By a ratio of about 10-to-1, readers who reported that Microsoft technology is more important outnumbered those for whom it is less important (see Figure 2).
 
     Figure 2. How important is Microsoft technology generally in solutions you sell now compared to two years ago?
	
		Figure 2. How important is Microsoft technology generally in solutions you sell now compared to two years ago?
	
But Microsoft isn't necessarily the most important vendor partner for most of the readers we surveyed. For one-quarter of them, Microsoft is the most important partner. But 70 percent only rate Microsoft as among their top vendor partners. And for 5 percent, some other vendor is the most important (see Figure 3). 	
     Figure 3.  Is Microsoft your most important vendor partner?
	
		Figure 3.  Is Microsoft your most important vendor partner?
	
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 01, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    A recent U.S. government contract extension sheds a lot of  light on the price of big contracts to extend custom support for Windows XP.
The U.S. Navy is entering Year 2 of a Custom Support  Agreement (CSA) with Microsoft for 100,000 workstations running Windows XP, the  Office 2003 suite and Exchange 2003. Eagle-eyed editors at Ars Technica spotted  the contract notes amid U.S. Defense Department notices and wrote about them  this week.
Extended support for Windows XP ended a little over a year  ago on April 8, 2014. The U.S. Navy's Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command  (SPAWAR) signed a one-year agreement with Microsoft for custom support that  expired June 8, 2015.
The Navy has better excuses than many organizations for  lagging on the Windows XP upgrade. Cited in Navy documents are the fact that shipboard administration networks are  not available for long periods of maintenance. In other words, the ships are  out at sea. Some of the systems are ashore, and those upgrades have been  postponed by cascade effects of delays in the Next Generation Network (NGEN)  contract.
As for the numbers, an official notice awarding the contract to Microsoft earlier this month put  the cost of the CSA for this year through July 12, 2016 at $9.1 million.  Should the Navy be unable to complete the migration of systems to Windows 7 and  need the support for a third year, the costs will roughly double. If the Navy  exercises options in the contract to continue the contract through June 8,  2017, the total cost of the contract could come to $30.8 million.
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 24, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Asigra plans to start shipping a backup appliance in August designed  with the goal of keeping things simple for managed service providers (MSPs).
"It's coming in this pre-optimized, pre-configured, pre-tested,  turnkey solution, which is comprised of software, hardware, the file system,  the operating system, compute, storage, everything. The solution providers need  only plug it in and be up and running with an enterprise-class backup and  recovery service," said William Kulju, senior product marketing manager at  Asigra. 
Asigra unveiled the Asigra Converged Data Protection Appliance for  Managed Service Providers on Tuesday during the second day of its Asigra Global Partner  Summit in Toronto.
"We've packaged and priced this in such a way that this allows  service providers to be cash-flow positive in as little time as possible,"  Kulju said.
  
     [Click on image for larger view.]	
		The 4U version of the Asigra Converged Data Protection Appliance for Managed Service Providers. (Image source: Asigra)
    
	
		[Click on image for larger view.]	
		The 4U version of the Asigra Converged Data Protection Appliance for Managed Service Providers. (Image source: Asigra)
	
The appliance will come in three sizes. A 1U has up to 9.6TB of what  Asigra calls "billable capacity," which refers to data that's stored  on the device after already having been compressed, deduped and encrypted. A 2U  has 32TB of billable capacity, and the 4U has 96TB.
The entry price is less than $5,000, and has 1TB of the 1U's billable  capacity turned on. MSPs can add capacity within the unit in increments of as  little as 10GB.
The Avnet Embedded business unit of Avnet Inc. is assembling the  appliances for Asigra from Supermicro servers running FreeBSD and ZFS and  shipping them to customers. MSPs won't require any familiarity with the  underlying software, according to Asigra. Instead the MSPs will manage the multitenant  storage environment from a Web-based management console and can control  agentless backups of Windows, Linux, Mac, Android and iOS systems and devices.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 16, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Journalists at The Intercept, the site founded by Glenn Greenwald and  others as a home for Edward Snowden-style disclosures and national security  coverage, published a deep dive on Thursday into the security of Microsoft's  BitLocker full-disk encryption technology.
In "Microsoft  Gives Details About Its Controversial Disk Encryption," The Intercept's  Micah Lee followed up on an earlier how-to he'd written about using BitLocker, among other full-disk encryption  technologies for various platforms. Lee serves as a combination journalist and  resident technologist who helps the site handle the operational security,  including source protection and cryptography, for The Intercept. Based on  security concerns raised in the feedback to the how-to article, Lee approached  Microsoft about specific issues and got some interesting replies from an  unnamed Microsoft spokesperson. 
According to Lee's piece, the main concerns of the security community  about Microsoft's BitLocker technology, which first shipped in versions of  Windows Vista, include:
  - That it's closed-source Microsoft code that no one but Microsoft and  those it invites, be they technology partners or government agencies, may  inspect -- a common security community concern about nearly all of Microsoft's  proprietary code.
 
 
- That BitLocker may rely on a pseudorandom number generator (PRNG)  called Dual_EC_DRBG, short for Dual Elliptic Curve Deterministic Random Bit  Generator, that many experts believe has been compromised by the U.S. National  Security Agency.
 
 
- That an important component of BitLocker security, called the "Elephant  diffuser," was removed from Windows 8 to potentially weaken its security.
 
 
- That Microsoft's real, reported and rumored track record of  cooperating with U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies makes any  security solutions produced by the company automatically suspect, a concern  that is closely related to the closed-source-versus-open-source question.
On the PRNG question, Microsoft told Lee that Dual_EC_DRBG is not used  by BitLocker or by Windows itself by default. "It has never been the  default, and it requires an administrator action to turn it on," Lee  quoted the spokesperson as saying. Instead, BitLocker uses the default Windows  algorithm, CTR_DRBG.
While the Elephant diffuser was removed, Microsoft cited performance  problems caused by the diffuser and a lack of compliance with the U.S. Federal  Information Processing Standards (FIPS). "[The Elephant diffuser is] not FIPS  compliant, so certain companies and government clients can't use it," Lee  quoted Microsoft as saying. Lee also pointed out that LUKS, the respected disk  encryption technology for Linux, also lacks a diffuser and is vulnerable to the same  types of attacks that not having Elephant diffuser exposes in Windows.
An even less reassuring response, from a technical security and privacy  standpoint, came on a question about whether Microsoft can provide access to  BitLocker disks to comply with a government order. "The spokesperson told  me they could not answer that question," Lee wrote.
In the earlier how-to piece, Lee presented BitLocker as "the best  of several bad options for Windows users." In the deep dive, Lee also  looks at alternatives, including TrueCrypt, VeraCrypt, CipherShed, BestCrypt,  Symantec Endpoint Encryption and DiskCryptor, and arrives at roughly the same  conclusion.
"Balancing trust, ease of use, transparency, apparent robustness, compatibility  and resources for squashing bugs, BitLocker comes out ahead for the average  user," Lee concludes. "Whatever you choose, if trusting a proprietary  operating system not to be malicious doesn't fit your threat model, maybe it's  time to switch to Linux."
Full-disk encryption is a major pillar of any complete security  solution these days. The Intercept has done the Microsoft community a service  by turning up some hard facts about the security of Microsoft's full-disk  encryption technology. Lee's deep dive gives anyone considering Windows disk  encryption the information that allows them to approach the myriad challenges  and risks with open eyes.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 04, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    At its three-day Automation Nation conference in Orlando this week,  LabTech executives made clear how important ScreenConnect is to the remote monitoring  and management (RMM) tool's future.
ConnectWise, which has an equity stake in LabTech, acquired  ScreenConnect in February. Within a month, LabTech integrated the standalone  remote control technology into version 10 of its eponymous RMM tool. 
In a telephone interview from Automation Nation on Wednesday, LabTech  CEO Matt Nachtrab described LabTech 10's support for ScreenConnect as a quick  integration that placed buttons for the new technology side-by-side with the  company's pre-existing remote control technology, VNC.
Nachtrab makes no bones about how much better ScreenConnect works than  VNC. "To remote control, historically they would click VNC. But it would  be slow to connect and slow while you're connected. With ScreenConnect, in  about 2 seconds you're on that remote computer; and while you're on, it's  almost like you're working at that computer," he said.
At the time of the acquisition, Nachtrab asserted that ScreenConnect  represented a 95 percent improvement in time to connect compared to VNC. During  a keynote this week, another LabTech executive showed some of the conference's  700 attendees a tombstone slide featuring VNC and held a moment of silence for  the outgoing remoting technology.
"It's a huge strategic deal," Nachtrab said Wednesday of the  importance of ScreenConnect to LabTech's future. "The No. 1 feature  used in LabTech was VNC -- No. 1, by far. It just wasn't a very good  experience. We replaced the No. 1 feature area of our product, at no  additional charge to our customer base, with a very elegant and enjoyable  remote control. It's huge for the product of LabTech."
Version 10.5, set for release later this year, will be integrated much  more completely with ScreenConnect.
"They're doing a deeper integration of ScreenConnect within  LabTech to make it feel like it's more one system," Nachtrab said. Among  the items in the roadmap for the ScreenConnect Plug-in for the LabTech 10.5  timeframe are support for Mac agents and an agent-presence indicator, which  lights up green to tell an administrator if a device is available to remote in  to. Also planned for the plug-in are enhanced deployment options, which allow a  client, location or computer to be excluded from remoting capabilities. 
"In LabTech for privacy and HIPAA compliance reasons, we have the  ability to configure by customer, and even by computer, very granularly what  happens when a technician attempts to take control," Nachtrab said. For  example, at a hospital computer, a system could be configured to provide an end  user a prompt to allow or deny a remote control attempt, or to deny all  attempts when a computer is unattended. VNC supports those types of policies in  version 10, but ScreenConnect will support them in 10.5.
LabTech engineers are also working to make ScreenConnect the default  remote control feature in the 10.5 timeframe for Web Control Center, a  lightweight feature set that allows technicians to manage customers' systems  while out of the office. The ScreenConnect remoting capability is also being  added to Web Portal, an ad hoc support and mobile workforce tool.
The remote control capabilities aren't the only integrations coming in  version 10.5. Another major area of improvement is in LabTech Ignite, which is  the RMM's engine for application and service monitoring. In an effort to make  it more easily customizable, the company is adding Ignite Management Packs,  described in a LabTech public  roadmap as, "Comprehensive solution packs for application and/or  service monitoring enabled with searches, monitors, thresholds and alert  actions necessary for management of devices running Exchange, IIS, SQL, etc.  These new Management Packs give you the freedom to choose which LabTech Ignite  solutions you want to utilize and which ones you do not." Management Packs  for version 10.5 will include Web/proxy, messaging, database and network.
Other features coming in LabTech 10.5 include support for Windows 10  and Hyper-V, new Active Directory integrations, a redesigned StorageCraft  plug-in for backup, a new HitmanPro plug-in for whitelisting and an ESET  plug-in.
The importance of the ScreenConnect addition goes beyond the features  of LabTech's future RMM releases, Nachtrab said. Because ScreenConnect is a  standalone remote control tool, he said, "It's a nice, light entry point  to the LabTech family. It's also fully multinational and multilingual. So  strategically ScreenConnect is massively important to the long-term expansion  of all the ConnectWise products."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 03, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Microsoft on Tuesday named its 2015 Partner of the Year award winners.  Here are the winners in the 43 worldwide categories: 
Alliance Partner of the Year: Accenture/Avanade
Global Commercial ISV Alliance Partner of the Year: GE Healthcare
Application Development Partner of the Year: Lieberman Software
Application Integration Partner of the Year: nVisionIT
Application Lifecycle Management Partner of the Year: Readify
Big Data and Analytics Partner of the Year: Neudesic
Business Intelligence Partner of the Year: BizData
Cloud Customer Relationship Management Partner of the Year: 
PowerObjects
Cloud Packaged Solutions Partner of the Year: SADA Systems Inc.
Cloud Platform -- Application Innovation Partner of the Year: VMob
Cloud Platform -- Customer Focus Partner of the Year: bluesource
Cloud Productivity Partner of the Year: Kloud
Collaboration and Content Partner of the Year: AvePoint Inc.
Communications Partner of the Year: Enabling Technologies Corp.
Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Partner of the Year: Accenture/Avanade
Data Platform Partner of the Year: Scalability Experts
Devices and Deployment Partner of the Year: Sogeti
Digital Advertising Partner of the Year: 
Advance Digital
Distributor Partner of the Year: Tech Data Europe
Enterprise Mobility Partner of the Year: Oxford Computer Group LLC
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Partner of the Year: mcaConnect LLC
Hosting Partner of the Year: Rackspace
Innovative Technology for Good Citizenship Partner of the Year:  alligatortek
Intelligent Systems Partner of the Year: Harman
Learning Partner of the Year: QA Limited
Messaging Partner of the Year: Convergent Computing (CCO)
  
Microsoft Dynamics Industry Partner of the Year: UXC Eclipse
  
Modern Datacenter -- Customer Focus Partner of the Year (3 winners): Dimension Data, Cisco, NetApp
  
Modern Datacenter -- Hybrid Partner of the Year: Convergent Computing  (CCO)
  
OEM Device Partner of the Year: TrekStor GmbH
  
Office and SharePoint Application Development Partner of the Year:  Nintex
  
Open Source on Azure Partner of the Year: Alter Way
  
Project and Portfolio Management Partner of the Year: Projectum
  
Public Sector -- CityNext Partner of the Year: LeapThought NZ Ltd.
  
Public Sector -- Education Partner of the Year: IAM Cloud
  
Public Sector -- Government Partner of the Year: Advanced Digital  Systems Inc. (d/b/a "Mi-Co")
  
Public Sector -- Health Partner of the Year: Rapid Circle
  
Public Sector -- Public Safety and National Security Partner of the Year: Black Marble
  
Small & Midmarket Cloud Solutions Partner of the Year: Adactit
Software Asset Management (SAM) Partner of the Year: COMPAREX
Volume Licensing Partner of the Year: COMPAREX
Windows 8 Custom App Developer Partner of the Year: Black Marble
YouthSpark Citizenship Partner of the Year: 
  Global Knowledge
Click here for a full list, including finalists and links to country Partner of the Year  Award Winners.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 02, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Windows 10 will be available on July 29, Microsoft announced Monday,  giving partners a little less than two months to get ready for a massively  disruptive change to Microsoft's client operating system business model.
The release is on the early side of industry  expectations that the OS would arrive in the second half of calendar year  2015. Unconfirmed reports over the last few weeks had been pointing to a July  release. The timing means Microsoft will succeed in having a buzz-heavy OS in  the market in time for the critical back-to-school season. 
The most significant change in Windows 10 is that the upgrade will be  free for most users in the year after release and that they will be able to  continue upgrading to the latest version of the OS so long as their device is  supported. (For  a good overview of the caveats and open questions around what free means, see  Kurt Mackie's recent piece.)
Terry Myerson, executive vice president of the Microsoft Operating  System Group, unveiled the availability date on Monday in a blog entry titled, "Hello  World: Windows 10 Available on July 29," which was a play on both the  traditional "Hello World" phrase common for new computer programs and  on the "Windows Hello" features in version 10.
Myerson left the actual announcement to Cortana, the digital assistant  who made her debut on Windows Phone 8.1 and will be coming to all devices  running Windows in version 10. "Windows 10 will be available on July 29,  but you can reserve a copy now. Can't wait to be on your PC," a Cortana  recording embedded in Myerson's blog post said. Myerson also invited Windows  Phone and Windows 10 PC preview users to ask Cortana themselves, although the  experience was still buggy. A test on a Windows Phone 8.1 with Cortana brought  back a Bing search result, rather than the spoken answer provided in the blog's  sound clip.
The July 29 release will only include PCs and tablets. Myerson gave no  details on when Windows 10 would be available for Windows Phone or other form  factors, such as the Microsoft HoloLens mixed reality goggles that Microsoft is  preparing to ship.
In addition to free upgrades, Cortana and Windows Hello, Myerson's blog  emphasized several areas of improvement coming in Windows 10, such as the full  return of the Start menu, quicker startup and resume, Windows Defender, the new  Microsoft Edge browser and Office on Windows.
For partners, the radical change in licensing of Windows upgrades is  sure to have unpredictable consequences, especially for licensing solution  providers, original equipment manufacturers and distributors. (For more, see "10  Ways Windows 10 Will Affect Microsoft Partners" and "Microsoft  Throws Hardware Roadmap for Loop with Windows 10 as a Service.")
Microsoft has offered some traditional resources for partners that  highlight new selling opportunities tied to the new operating system features.  General Manager of the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group Gavriella Schuster  highlighted a number of marketing decks, training videos and other partner  resources in a March  blog post.
Given the timing of the release, Windows 10 partner readiness is  guaranteed to be a top focus at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC) on  July 12-16 in Orlando, Fla.
Update (6/2): Later on  Monday, Corporate Vice President of the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group Phil  Sorgen followed up with a partner-specific  post about Windows 10, outlining new resources such as expanded training  tools, materials for Windows 10 Technical Preview campaigns and a Windows  10 pre-RTM proof of concept module.
Sorgen's post on his Channel Chief blog acknowledged the scope of the  business shift represented by Windows 10: "As I've said in previous posts,  times of change can spark the best in our progress and creativity. We think  Windows 10 holds a vast opportunity to reinvent productivity and inspire new  ways to develop and delight customers."
The bulk of his message focused on concrete opportunities. "By  taking license costs out of the equation," Sorgen argued, the Windows 10  free upgrade offer should fuel business segment interest in Windows 10. Sorgen  then made the familiar case for partners to move up the solution stack.
He said Windows 10 will enable partners to "[deliver] the  traditional set of migration-related projects easier and therefore faster,"  "deliver a variety of ongoing, higher value services," "secure  new universal LOB application projects" and "provision Office 365 and  Azure cloud services to your customers."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on June 01, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    This week saw a number of high-profile acquisitions, with EMC Corp.,  Hewlett-Packard Co. and Tech Data Corp. driving the action. 
EMC's was the only deal with a dollar figure attached, and it was a big  one. The storage giant has a definitive agreement to buy privately-held Virtustream for $1.2 billion in a deal expected to close in the third quarter. 
The acquisition is part of EMC's effort to build an end-to-end hybrid  cloud infrastructure and services offering. Virtustream will be part of the EMC  Federation family with Virtustream's CEO and co-founder Rodney Rogers reporting  to EMC Chairman and CEO Joe Tucci.
The Virtustream products -- which migrate, run and manage applications,  including SAP, in the cloud -- will be sold direct and through EMC partners.
The HP deal fits into its network functions virtualization (NFV) push,  branded the HP OpenNFV Program. The company is acquiring Mountain View,  Calif.-based ConteXtream.
Saar Gillai, senior vice president and general manager of NFV for HP,  in a blog post described ConteXtream as a provider of OpenDaylight-based,  carrier-grade SDN fabric for NFV and a current HP OpenNFV partner. "ConteXtream  offers solutions that allow service providers to create a more flexible and  programmable network through an SDN/NFV model," he said.
Distributor Tech Data is acquiring parts of Signature Technology Group (STG),  a North American datacenter and professional services company, in a deal expected to close next month.
Phoenix-based STG's services will be folded into Tech Data's Advanced  Infrastructure Solutions (AIS) division. In a statement on the deal, Joe  Quaglia, president of the Americas at Tech Data, said STG will strengthen Tech  Data's datacenter offering, diversify the services portfolio and provide an  opportunity for the distributor's solution provider partners.
Chuck Bartlett, senior vice president of AIS at Tech Data, signaled  that the STG addition would result in packages that could backstop solution  providers' other offerings.
"IDC has predicted that over the next two years, more than 60  percent of companies will stop managing their IT infrastructure and rely on  qualified service partners to boost efficiency and provide value,"  Bartlett said in a statement. "STG will complement our AIS offering,  giving our solution providers an extension of their business and service levels  for their end users. Their specialized, expert skillset in the datacenter will  help provide enhanced support for our field organization, better equipping our  solution providers to effectively serve complex datacenter environments."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on May 28, 20150 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Seven months after buying Riverbed Technology's SteelStore product line  for $80 million, NetApp Inc. made the hybrid data protection line more  completely its own on Wednesday by rebranding it as NetApp AltaVault.
In the months in between, NetApp marketed the product line as NetApp  SteelStore. The newly branded AltaVault will push the product line forward with  new capabilities and new appliance models. 
The AltaVault brand covers three discrete products types. Traditional  AltaVault physical appliances will run NetApp software on NetApp hardware. The  AVA400 physical appliance, supporting up to 72 disk drives and 288TB of raw  capacity, is available now. A larger AVA800, supporting up to 96 drives and  576TB, is planned for Q3.
Virtual AltaVault appliances run NetApp software on VMware ESX or  Microsoft Hyper-V virtual machines on third-party hardware. Cloud appliances  for AltaVault are currently available in the Amazon Web Services marketplace  and are scheduled to be available in the Microsoft Azure marketplace later this  year.
The appliances include inline deduplication and compression, and they  integrate with NetApp SnapProtect. Other supported backup software includes  Arcserve, CommVault Simpana, Dell vRanger, EMC NetWorker, HP Data Protector,  IBM Spectrum Protect, Veeam, Veritas Backup Exec, Veritas Enterprise Vault,  Veritas NetBackup, Microsoft SQL Server and Oracle RMAN.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on May 27, 20150 comments