On their own merits, Gartner Inc.'s forecasts this week were interesting: Windows 7 will 1) run on 42 percent of the global  PC installed base by year end, 2) account for 94 percent of OSes shipped on new  PCs in all of 2011, and 3) be the shipping OS for 635 million new PCs by the end  of this year.
		Even more interesting was an assumption included in the  analyst firm's news release announcing the research.
		"Gartner's forecast assumes that Windows 7 is likely to  be the last version of Microsoft OS that gets deployed to everybody through big  corporatewide migration," the release stated.
		It's not the first time analysts and other industry pundits  have suggested that the current massive Windows rollout will be the last. We  heard this idea surface fairly often when Windows Vista shipped.
		But Gartner has three interesting points of support that  probably make the statement more likely to be true this time.
		"In the future, many organizations will also use  alternative client computing architectures for standard PCs with Windows OS,"  Gartner wrote. I'm reading iPads (err, tablets) here for alternative  architectures. Microsoft's next OS release should contribute to this trend with  its simultaneous tablet/ARM version (see "New Windows 8 Leaks Show Focus on Tablets").
		Gartner also cited the moves toward both virtualization and  cloud computing as reasons there may not be a next major migration season.
		Unmentioned by Gartner is a fourth point that supports the  view. Windows XP's share is huge, Vista's is  small and Windows 8 looks, thus far, potentially disruptive. That could amplify  Windows 7's attractiveness as a corporate OS, extending its life in the  enterprise and giving the other three trends time to gather steam.
		My gut feeling is that Gartner's probably still a little  early on this assumption, though. There's a lot of corporate inertia and  business justifications behind mass migrations, and many trends have to  continue on their current trajectories for this assumption to become reality.
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 12, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		When RCP covers the way Microsoft handles billing in the  cloud, most of the responses from partners are pretty negative about Microsoft's  approach. Partners motivated to write usually want to handle customer billing  themselves, and they say they aren't considering Microsoft's offerings because  of the direct billing issue. But my last column about it, "With  Office 365, Microsoft's Direct Billing Drama Continues," prompted an  e-mail from a reader who asked to be identified only as J.
		  "Just saw your article. First, I want to point out that  syndication is nothing new for BPOS/O365. In fact, it's the primary model in  place for partners in countries like Australia.
  "Second, I hear the argument other partners are making,  but I can see both sides of this. I work for a large partner with many hundreds  of customers and just seeing a fraction of the escalations makes me grateful I'm  not dealing with billing issues overall. In doing so, there would be cash-flow  issues, not to mention how would Microsoft manage the service if they were  disconnected from the revenue stream -- would partners want to pay Microsoft  directly and then collect money from their customers? Who would decide when a  customer gets cut off for non-payment? To some extent, partners that are  focused on this piece may be overly focused on a small piece of the business,  and, frankly, one that would add very marginal value if it were to change, and  at great cost to the partners.
  "On the flip side, as a partner I do want to own that  relationship with the customer, and I think Microsoft could do more to support  its partners, for example, opening up the e-commerce platform, putting partner  logos on the invoice, etc. I'm hopeful that Microsoft will get to these  possibilities in time and are focused now on the core pieces of the platform. I  don't think that many partners, and in articles such as yours, Microsoft gets  enough credit for accomplishing what they have been able to in such a short  period of time (and I think this is important and applies equally to other  technologies in the Microsoft stack), while supporting legacy customers as well  as partners."
		Thanks for the feedback, J. Especially good points about the  escalations and for the perspective on how far Microsoft has come.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 11, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Cross-country flights have often been lost time for me from  a work perspective. I've bought a lot of overpriced books in airport bookstores  and read them rather than endure the  hassles: opening a too-big laptop in a too-small space, monitoring the  nauseously quick deterioration of battery life, reaching a productivity  cul-de-sac because some key detail -- a 20-second Internet search away -- is  unavailable at 30,000 feet.
I was pleasantly surprised to find recently that my $370  AirTran roundtrip flight from Baltimore to Los Angeles offered in-flight  Wi-Fi. It was my first experience with wireless in the sky.
Going out, I actually did go through the hassle of using my  laptop on the plane. I had a magazine feature story to write and all the notes necessary  to get it done. But coming back, a combination of in-flight Wi-Fi, an Apple  iPhone 4, a Microsoft Word-compatible app called Office2 Plus and a  Bluetooth keyboard gave me a way to work in comfort with near back-in-the-office  speed and productivity.
Signing up for in-flight Wi-Fi was relatively painless.  AirTran uses a provider called GoGo,  which charges $7.95 to hook up a Wi-Fi-enabled mobile device to the Internet  for a flight longer than 1.5 hours. (Connecting with a laptop would have cost  $12.95 on the same flight.) After turning on Wi-Fi from the iPhone's Airplane  Mode, opening the Safari browser and entering some credit card info, I was  online.
The next step was figuring out if Bluetooth use was allowed.  Gogo's FAQ didn't mention Bluetooth, but an online chat with a Gogo helpdesk employee  revealed that I'd need to ask the flight crew. The AirTran attendants hadn't fielded  the question before. After discussing it over the beverage cart, one told me, "Try  it, it might work."
Permission secured, I turned Bluetooth on from Airplane Mode  and connected with an Apple Wireless  Keyboard. Although sold as an accessory for Macs and iPads, the keyboard  works just as well as an input device for the iPhone. It's a great little  keyboard. It reminds me of my first computer, a Radio  Shack TRS-80 Color Computer, with its metal body and white plastic keys. While  the keyboard is very small, the keys are comfortably sized and spaced for rapid  typing. It fit nicely on the airplane tray table.
With an OtterBox case providing traction, the iPhone propped nicely against the seatback,  leaving plenty of space for the keyboard and some notes. (See the below photo for a  re-enactment of the in-flight workspace from back in the home office.)
The point of the whole exercise was to write up some blog  entries and get them posted to RCPmag.com. The next step was to open Office2  Plus to create Word documents from scratch. To write the blog entries, I  was referring to my written notes on the tray table, using Safari to look up  various facts and using multi-tasking to copy and paste quotes from speech  transcripts on the Web into my documents.
Once finished, the docs saved easily on the device in the  Office2 Plus interface. The app also provided the option to e-mail  the docs, making it easy to send each doc to other editors for editing and  posting. When it came time to shut down this mobile office 3.5 hours later as  the flight approached 10,000 feet, three new blog entries had popped up on  RCPmag.com and the iPhone battery was still at 50 percent.
To quote the old Philips TV ad quoting the Beatles, "I  have to admit it's getting better. It's getting better all the time."
Have an unusual in-flight productivity combination of your  own? Share it below or at [email protected].
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 08, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Microsoft's hotly anticipated Build conference, during which  much more is expected to be revealed about Windows "8" and Windows  Server "8," is sold  out.
		Buzz around the show, which is something of a combination  between the Professional Developers Conference and the Windows Hardware  Engineering Conference, intensified after the early June previews of Windows 8.
		The Sept. 12-16 show in Anaheim, Calif.  seems to have sold out despite a complete lack of detail about its content. The  agenda page has time slots with entries like, "9:00am-11:00am Keynote,"  and, "11:30am-6:00pm Sessions."
		According to the show home page,  Build will be "the first place to dive deep into the future of Windows."
		The description promises attendees will get details about  the touch-centric user experience, a new app model, the special role of HTML5  and JavaScript and Internet Explorer 10.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 03, 20112 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		David in Ireland  was motivated by a recent RCPU link to an April blog entry I wrote about partner  branding in Windows Intune to e-mail about his trials in selling Microsoft's  cloud-based systems management solution.
		Here's what David had to say:
		  Regarding your article about branding of Intune  I thought I'd share some of my experiences.
      - Pricing. At €11 per client per  month, any prospective customers we demo'ed it to thought it was pricey. It  works out over €2 cheaper per client if calculated at the worst ever Euro-British Sterling exchange rate. €1 =  £0.80p. That's an extreme example, and  similar too if compared to the U.S. dollar. Also, if you benchmark its price  against WSUS and a third-party antivirus suite like Symantec Endpoint  protection, it ain't competitive. The free Windows 7 upgrade has a hidden cost  of upgrade labour. After all, Windows 7 is just a nice eye candy o/s platform,  and a customer will already have a secure firewall and antivirus in place to  bulletproof their LAN. 
 
 
- Have spent the guts of a day on the  phone to various Microsoft departments to try resolve a customer who switched  from credit card billing to direct invoicing. However, once you switch from  credit card billing to invoicing, you are not allowed switch back. Also, the  customer only gets an e-mail notification  addressed only to the network  administrator and not the person who writes the cheques. So I had to set up a  forwarder rule. However, back to the person who writes the cheques: They find  the Intune billing portal not very user friendly and have to "dig" to  find what they are looking for. My odyssey to get Microsoft to e-mail them  direct with attached invoice continues. So far any representative I've spoken  to seems either too frightened to use initiative and give me straight frank  answers or they speak "export English" and don't really grasp the  issue.
 
 
- Easy-Assist is not as easy to set up  as you would imagine. I still find "Log Me In" or "Mikogo" far more end-user  friendly and faster to implement sessions than Easy-Assist.
Thus far we have only been able to implement  one of our customer sites with Intune. But if the price came down we could sell  it to more clients. Microsoft still demonstrates massive contradictions in  giving administrators control over their cloud-based apps; I've had similar  ridiculous incidents with them over BPOS. Contradiction because they claim that  they give you, the administrator, more control because everything is now in the  cloud. The way they want you to work is one-dimensional and this does not  reflect real-world computing. At least over time they seem to have revised and eased  restrictions, like recently allowing administrators to set passwords to never  expire. Could they not also restrict administrative access to public IP  address?
  Anyway these are my thoughts and experiences  with Microsoft Intune...and I snuck in BPOS (Office 365) in there too. 
		Thanks for writing, David. As Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer  said of partners last month at the Worldwide Partner Conference, "You're  always pushing us, pushing us, pushing us" to be better. Well, here's some  pushing. Sounds like international pricing could use more thought in some  subsidiaries and Microsoft's billing infrastructure, touted as a function that's  too complicated for partners to handle directly themselves, isn't quite the  well-oiled machine it's supposed to be.
												More Windows Intune Coverage on RCPmag.com:						
		 
	
Posted by Scott Bekker on August 03, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Need a kickstart of adrenaline to recharge you for the  nonstop meetings and sessions of a Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference? Toronto, the site of the  July 2012 WPC, may have just the thing.
The Toronto EdgeWalk opened on Monday. To quote MSNBC,  "For $175 Canadian dollars, you, too, can strap yourself into a harness to  walk 'hands free' atop the 5-foot-wide ledge on the CN Tower, which rises 1,168  feet in the sky."
I'll pass. But if you do the EdgeWalk next July, tell me all  about it.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 02, 20111 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Datacenters aren't turning out to be quite the power hogs  they were supposed to be.
		A 2007 forecast by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency  predicted that power consumed by datacenters would double between 2005 and  2010.
		Instead, a new study prepared by a Stanford engineering  professor at the request of The New York Times found that the increase was actually  closer to 56 percent over that period.
		"Mostly because of the recession, but also because of a  few changes in the way these facilities are designed and operated, data center  electricity consumption is clearly much lower than what was expected, and that's  really the big story," the professor, Jonathan G. Koomey, told  the Times.
		Koomey wasn't able to separate how much of the difference  between his finding and the EPA numbers was due to the recession versus  increased hardware efficiency and more use of virtualization.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 01, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Ever wonder where Microsoft's much-touted billions in  R&D spending goes?
		At least part of the money funded what's emerging to be an  influential research paper that projects a radical slowdown on progress in Moore's Law, the idea  that the number of transistors that can be inexpensively fit on an integrated  circuit doubles roughly every two years.
		Doug Burger, a computer scientist at Microsoft Research,  co-wrote the paper called, "Dark Silicon and the End of Multicore Scaling" (PDF).  Burger and the other authors postulate  that chipmakers are reaching limits on getting electrical power to all of the ever-smaller  transistors that are getting jammed onto chips.
		According to an account in The New York Times today:
		  "In their paper, Dr. Burger and fellow researchers  simulated the electricity used by more than 150 popular microprocessors and  estimated that by 2024 computing speed would increase only 7.9 times, on  average. By contrast, if there were no limits on the capabilities of the  transistors, the maximum potential speedup would be nearly 47 times, the researchers  said."
		Not all experts are as pessimistic that the technical  challenges won't be overcome, but the research paper seems to have struck a  nerve.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 01, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		One of the most-quoted statements from Andy Lees' keynote  earlier this month at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference came when he  said a Microsoft tablet wouldn't be based on Windows Phone.
		The president of Microsoft's Windows Phone division said, "Now,  a lot of people have asked me, are we going to produce a phone that is a  tablet? You know, are we going to use Windows Phone 7 to produce tablets? Well,  that is in conflict with this strategy."
		When he refers to "this strategy," Lees is talking  about bringing devices together into a "unified ecosystem."
		"At the core of the device itself, it's possible to be  common across phones, PCs and TVs, and even other things, because the price  drops dramatically. Then it will be a single ecosystem. We won't have an  ecosystem for PCs, and an ecosystem for phones, one for tablets. They'll all  come together," Lees said.
		Those of us who have watched Microsoft for a long time are  familiar with this argument from Redmond.  Microsoft has talked up the benefits of a unified ecosystem ever since it  started putting Windows on servers, phones and purpose-built tablets.
		What's new is what this argument comes in service of. In the  past, the argument was rather baldly in the service of Windows everywhere.  Whether or not the traditional Windows interface met the need of the device  (such as a phone), it met Microsoft's need to have its operating system on all  devices to support Microsoft's own business goals.
		Now, with the Windows "8" previews of early June,  the re-imagined Windows looks like it will actually meet the needs of tablet  users, the Windows Phone 7 and "Mango" interfaces arguably meet the  needs of phone users, and the strongly-hinted-at-Windows 7-legacy option within  Windows "8" would meet the needs of mouse-and-keyboard PC users even  as the more tablet-like aspects make it intriguing for next-generation PC form  factors.
		Rather than a unified interface to meet Microsoft's own  needs, it's a varied interface to meet actual users' needs. Suddenly, the idea  that a common architecture would also support development across different  platforms is more compelling, as well. For example, the fact that the version  of Internet Explorer 9 on "Mango" will be the same as the one on the  PC will make things easier on Web developers.
		If I'd heard Lees' talking about unifying the ecosystem two  months ago, I might have expected something like the Fujitsu Windows 7 F-07C device  launched last week, about which Microsoft observer Ed Bott hilariously Tweeted,  "Microsoft should pay Fujitsu not to release this."
		Following the Windows 8 demos, however, I'm actually  inclined to trust Microsoft to come out with compelling reasons for why a  unified ecosystem could actually work for those of us who don't work for  Microsoft. It's amazing what some real competition can do to focus the mind on  real users' needs.
		
				
						
								|   [Click on image for larger view.]
 | 
						
								| Despite this new Fujitsu device, Microsoft actually seems to be on the right track for unifying the ecosystem. | 
				
		
		
				
						Related:
				
		
		
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 27, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		
				ClearPointe, a Little Rock, Ark.-based provider of cloud  systems management solutions, on Tuesday added Microsoft System Center-based cloud  management of IBM iSeries systems through a partnership with Raleigh,  N.C.-based EView Technology.
		IBM iSeries systems, commonly known by their old name AS/400,  continue to run business-critical applications in many organizations,  especially enterprises.
		"Having silos inside your enterprise is no longer  effective; enterprise operations must be seamless," said Ellis Gregory, president  of EView Technology,  in a statement. "By partnering with EView,  ClearPointe can now offer a cloud-based solution that breaks down the internal  IT silos and provides a comprehensive view and management of enterprise  operations under System Center Operations Manager."
		The solution from the two companies is called EView/400i  Management for System Center Operations Manager. It will allow customers to  monitor, correlate, control and report on iSeries systems from within the  System Center Operations Manager interface.
		ClearPointe and EView are both Microsoft System Center  Alliance Partners.
		
				
						Related:
				
		
		
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 26, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		A few  days ago, I posted a call for your stories about why you did or didn't chose  Windows Phone 7 as a platform. The e-mails have been flooding in. Thanks to all  of you who've sent in your stories already. If you haven't sent one yet, there's  still time -- send it to [email protected].
At  the same time, we're backing up the anecdotes with a poll of Microsoft  partners. It's a quick, 12-question poll about the smartphone platform you're  using and the apps you find most helpful for your partner business and for your  customers' businesses. (There's also a question where you can profile any cool  apps your company is working on for possible future stories.) We're giving away  some RCP T-shirts to a few lucky survey-takers, as well. Got a few minutes?  Help us get the full story by taking the survey here.
Admit  it, you talk about your smartphone all the time. We're inviting you to brag  about what you have and how you use it!
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 25, 20110 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
  - Read an in-depth feature on the Master VAR pilot program here.
A few months after publicly deflating a trial balloon for a plan to introduce a franchising concept to the Dynamics  channel, Microsoft is back with a related idea.
		On Sept. 1, Microsoft plans to launch a pilot of a "Master  VAR" program for Dynamics partners.
		The plan addresses Microsoft's stated goal of giving some of  the smaller Dynamics partners who are being crowded out of the market by  economic trends, by customer preferences and by Microsoft channel program  changes a way to stay in the Dynamics business without having to engage in  mergers and acquisitions.
		Jeff Edwards, who as director of Microsoft Dynamics Partner  Strategy steered Microsoft's evaluations of both the franchising and Master VAR  approaches, explained the thinking behind the decision to go with a  Master VAR  concept rather than franchising to RCP at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner  Conference earlier this month in Los    Angeles.
		
		"I think the word franchising has connotations around  fast food," said Edwards. (We couldn't agree more; the cover  illustration for Jeff Schwartz's article about the franchising idea in the April RCP issue showed a McDonald's motif.)
		Aside from potentially negative associations, there were  other factors that proved more problematic in a franchising model. Edwards said  the business filing, tax and legal requirements for setting up a formal  franchising system were all fairly daunting.
		That aside, Edwards said there was one main element to  franchising that Microsoft wanted to keep: "What we did like about it is  you did have consistency with national brands."
		Enter the Master VAR approach. Under the model, a Master VAR  would recruit smaller partners, known as affiliates, who would sell Dynamics  ERP and CRM under the Master VAR's brand.
		One of the most difficult aspects of the transition to the  Microsoft Partner Network structure over the last year for Dynamics partners  has been the much higher bar for membership at the gold level, and a similarly  high bar for the new silver level, as well. For Dynamics partner companies with  fewer than six employees, the requirements are nearly mathematically impossible  to meet. Even for slightly larger organizations, the gold and silver hurdles  are much more difficult to clear than the Gold Certified Partner status of the  past.
		Under the Master VAR setup, Edwards said, "We would  hold [only] the Master VAR to the MPN gold requirements, like any large  partner."
		While that requirement would allow smaller partners to  continue to sell and deliver Dynamics solutions as a gold-branded partner, it  would have to be under the Master VAR's brand and on the Master VAR's terms. "The  Master VAR would decide the financial relationship," said Edwards, adding  that most agreements would probably involve the affiliates being able to take back  their customers if the master-affiliate relationship didn't work out.
		In addition to the MPN certification requirements, Microsoft  would expect its Master VARs to centralize marketing, search engine  optimization, support, billing and other operations.
		For small partners considering an alliance with other small  partners in other regions, the Master VAR pilot won't support that particular  arrangement, Edwards said. "We require a unified brand," he said. "We  don't want it to be that lightweight."
		To be considered as a Master VAR, a nationally focused  Dynamics partner will need to meet several requirements. The company will need  to:
		  -  have $1 million in operating capital,
-  assume legal liability for the work done under its brand  by its affiliates,
-  drive the certification, operations, support, marketing  and SEO for its national brand, and
-  require affiliates to operate under a common brand.
Edwards declined to identify the national partners that  Microsoft is in discussions with about participating in the Master VAR pilot  this fall, but he did share some characteristics.
		"We're going out largely to existing large partners,"  he said and added that four to five companies are interested. "We only  want two or three," he said.
		Edwards said Microsoft does have a sweet spot in mind for  the Master VAR program: "You'll find it more in the lower midmarket and  core midmarket."
		The Master VAR pilot starts just a few months before the  Jan. 1 launch of a new Dynamics  Incentives Program that will increase product margins for partners that  are meeting growth targets and decrease margins for partners that miss the  targets.
		Edwards said the Master VAR program could give both Master  VARs and especially their affiliates an opportunity to realize those growth  incentives, which can add up to 20 percentage points to Dynamics margins.
		If you're a Dynamics VAR who won't be qualifying for a gold  competency under the MPN, is an affiliate relationship with a Master VAR  appealing to you? Let me know either way at [email protected] or leave a comment below.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 25, 201112 comments