Practical Technology

for practical people.

July 9, 2007
by sjvn01
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Look Out Microsoft! Here Comes Google and Postini

The combination of Google and Postini is exactly what CIOs need for their corporate e-mail systems and what Microsoft doesn’t offer.

When you think e-mail servers and service, do you think POP/SMTP and MAPI? Or, do Sarbanes-Oxley and HIPPA come to mind? If you think of the former, youre thinking like a system administrator; if youre thinking of the latter, youre a CIO.

Google, with its purchase of software security company Postini, is trying to win the hearts and minds of technology friendly users and administrators this time. No, they want to open the wallets of midmarket and enterprise CIOs. And, you know what? Theyre going to get those checkbooks opening.

Gmail, while trailing far behind Yahoo! Mail and Windows Live Hotmail, is quickly picking up users since it finally opened the doors to anyone. Not long after that, Google announced Google Apps Premier Edition.

For those of you who dont know it, Google Apps Premier Edition is a hosted office suite. It combines a customizable start page with chat, e-mail, calendaring, word processing, a spreadsheet and a simple Web page builder into a package that Google sells for $50 per user per year. For that, you also get a 99.9 percent SLA (service-level agreement) for Gmail uptime, and 24/7 phone support.

At $50 per user, you can set up your office users at a price well below any Microsoft deal. The list price per user per year for Microsoft Exchange is $225 and Microsoft Office Professional Edition will run you $499. Of course, Google Apps Premier does not offer a PowerPoint clone. Yet. Google seems to have that in the works too in a skunkworks project code-named Presently. Besides all that, Googles applications can read and write the older Microsoft Office formats like .doc and .xls.

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July 3, 2007
by sjvn01
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Red Hat, Microsoft talk Tux

We knew that last year Red Hat CEO Matthew Szulik held talks with Microsoft concerning a patent deal. Once Microsoft and Novell signed an agreement with Novell, those talks were history. In fact, Red Hat made a point of spitting on the Microsoft/Novell deal.

That was then. This is now.

On July 3, according to Paul Cormier, Red Hat’s executive VP of engineering, said that Red Hat wants to work with the Microsoft to improve Linux/Windows interoperability. “I want to talk to the folks at Microsoft about our two operating systems and how we can work together to solve real customer problems without attaching any unrelated strings, such as intellectual property,” Cormier told Peter Galli of eWEEK.

Patent agreements, however, won’t be on the table, as far as Red Hat is concerned.

Microsoft officials, though, don’t see it that way. They say that the issues of interoperability and IP (intellectual property) are not completely separate, and have to be considered together.

Bob Muglia, Microsoft’s senior VP for server and tools said, “In terms of helping to drive conversations with those guys [Red Hat], we’re open to talking to them about interoperability, we’re always open to talking about this.”

“But,” Muglia continued, “It is necessary to have a conversation about intellectual property when it comes to open source, and you can’t just sit back and talk about interoperability for interoperability’s sake without fully solving the customer issue. Unless you actually address the issues around IP you haven’t fully solved the customer’s interoperability problem,”

While the two sides are still disagreeing about this fundamental issue, they are also clearly still interested in working out some kind of deal. Muglia said Microsoft’s customers want better Linux interoperability and support with Red Hat. What he’s telling customers now is, “our message was really very simple: ‘go and talk to Red Hat, because we very much would like to do that.”

Some of you may be shocked by Red Hat and Microsoft even considering working together. I’m not.

When Reuters asked Szulik recently if Red Hat was in negotiations with Microsoft about a patent agreement, he gave that always interesting answer, “I can’t answer the question.”

That was a red flag if I ever saw one. And then, when Red Hat’s official PR people didn’t have anything to say to me, I knew something was up.

Now, between Szulik’s comment and today’s news, I think that Microsoft and Red Hat aren’t just talking about talking; they’re already trying to hammer out a deal. I’d also be willing to bet that they’ll come up with a partnership that does address IP as well as interoperability issues.

At this point, however, even though it won’t be adopted by Linux, the GPLv3 will cover enough important bits and pieces of a Linux distribution that it will be impossible for Microsoft and Red Hat to craft a deal like the Microsoft/Novell patent deal.

One way or the other, some sop will be given to Microsoft for its eternally vague IP claims, and the two companies will work together on interoperability issues. These will no doubt include Open XML/ODF document format translators and virtualization and network administration tools.

Why is Red Hat doing this?

I already gave my general answers for why Linux companies want to partner with Microsoft. To sum it up: Microsoft interoperability makes business sense. Whether it’s being able to watch a Windows Media Video with Totem, or being able to integrate RHEL 5 (Red Hat Enterprise Linux) servers into an AD (Active Directory) network, both individual users and Fortune 500 CIOs want easy-to-use and easy-to-manage Linux and Windows computers.

A few weeks back, I predicted that Ubuntu would be the next Linux to follow in the footsteps of Novell, Xandros, and Linspire in partnering with Microsoft. Now, it looks like it will be Red Hat.

I’ll note in passing, however, that while Mark Shuttleworth, CEO of Canonical Ltd., the company behind Ubuntu, categorically ruled out making a patent deal with Microsoft, he didn’t, in his words, “rule out any collaboration with them, in the event that they adopt a position of constructive engagement with the free software community.”

Doesn’t that sound like Red Hat’s position to you? It does to me. The big difference is that in Red Hat’s case, we now know that they are at least talking about talking. Hmmm… Who knows, maybe Ubuntu will be next after all.

By this time next year, I predict that there will not be any major Linux company or distribution, except for Debian, that won’t have some kind of Microsoft partnership in place. If Red Hat makes a deal — and I’m sure they will — then I can’t see any of the remaining major Linux distributors holding out.

A version of this story first appeared in Linux-Watch.

July 2, 2007
by sjvn01
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SLED 10 SP1: a great Linux desktop gets better

Sometimes, a service pack comes along that really makes a big difference. Take NT. Before SP3, it was garbage; afterwards Microsoft had its first server operating system that was worth anything. XP before SP2 was so-so, but after SP2, it became Microsoft’s best desktop operating system ever (sorry, Vista).

And, now, with its SP1 for SLED (SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop), Novell has given an already excellent business desktop a real kick in the pants.

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July 2, 2007
by sjvn01
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Microsoft, Newspeak and Open XML

One of the most chilling concepts of George Orwells novel “1984” is “Newspeak.” In Newspeak, the language is constantly being cropped of words that might lead to “thoughtcrimes.” If you control the language, the logic goes, you control what people think.

Microsoft is doing exactly this with its “Open XML.” Its meant to remind you of open source—a term which is now fighting to maintain its integrity—and, in particular, of open standards.

Open standards, most of us in the IT business agree, are good things. If we didnt have open standards, wed still be stuck with half-a-dozen incompatible versions of the C programming language, we wouldnt have universal 802.11g Wi-Fi, and so on. Of course, reaching though standards can be a long, painful experience, as anyone who has followed the 802.11n Wi-Fi standard wars knows.

Microsoft, however, isnt really trying to win the open-standard wars in document formats between its own Open XML and the truly open ODF (Open Document Format). Instead, its appearing to be willing to compromise and to make it easy to translate from the two formats.

In fact, its even working with rivals like Novell and Xandros to make it easier to translate from the two formats.

Sounds good, doesnt it?

Microsoft is winning, as we can see from Massachusetts decision to support Microsofts Office Open XML format in addition to ODF. Massachusetts, in case youve forgotten, is where the open document format war started. Massachusetts CIO at the time, Peter Quinn, said “Government is creating history at a rapidly increasing rate, and all documents we save must be accessible to everybody, without having to use closed software to open them now and in the future.”

Great idea, but from the reaction from some Microsoft lobbyists you would have thought hed proposed throwing babies to packs of starving dogs.

When it became clear that Microsoft couldnt just bulldoze open document standards away, the company decided that it should open up Office 2007s document formats. At the time, Id said Microsoft would find a way to poison its open standards. I was right.

Standards expert and attorney Andy Updegrove explains the current open standard trap well in his Standards Blog. Where does this leave proponents of ODF now? Clearly, if Ecma 376 (the official standard that hides Open XML) achieves equal status with ODF in Massachusetts, it will be a cause of great disappointment.

One can assume that privately, if not publicly, ODF opponents will have a field day one-on-one with other government purchasers, and will declare the open format battle over. Indeed, earlier in 2007 Microsoft did just that, calling a unilateral truce and announcing that there had been “two winners”

Updegrove continued, “After all, two years ago Microsofts formats were closed, and now they have been adopted by Ecma, and perhaps may soon be adopted by ISO/IEC as well. Bringing Microsoft to this point is, from that perspective, a victory indeed.

“But this would likely be a Pyrrhic victory at best. Office still commands a huge lead in the marketplace, and its ability to outspend the new entrants (many open source) into the office productivity suite marketplace will be enormous. If no one is buying ODF-compliant products, no one will develop them. And if no one is developing them, no one will be competing with Microsoft.

“And if no one is competing with Microsoft, then no one will care whether Microsoft contributes new features to Ecma or maintains them as proprietary extensions of Ecma 376, or whether it fully implements Ecma 376, or whether, in fact, it continues to support Ecma 376 at all. And then we will be right back where we started—dependent upon a single vendor, and with the accessibility of its all current documents, and indeed the history of our civilization, at risk.”

Why is Updegrove so full of doom and gloom? Isnt Open XML a standard? Arent there Open XML translators?

Hes down because hes tasted the poison in Microsofts so called open standard. Updegrove took a long, hard look at another Microsoft open-standard proposal before Ecma, TC46 – XPS (XML Paper Specification). This one, in case you dont know, is Microsofts latest attempt to stop Adobes PDF in its tracks.

“Why does this latest submission matter?” Updegrove asks. It matters because “it indicates a desire by Microsoft to institutionalize and expand a perpetual, standardized environment that would surround a single vendors products.”

The poison pill in both this and in Open XML is that Microsoft, not a standards organization, not a consortium of companies, gets to decide what goes into Open XML and what doesnt.

Sure, Open XML, all 4,000 or so pages of it, is sort of open now, but once ODF is off the table as a viable format, is it going to stay that way? Especially when it would be so easy to add just a bit of incompatibility here and there within such a monstrously sized standard?

Congratulations, Microsoft, it looks to me like youve played the Newspeak game very well and enough people are buying your “Open XML” is truly an open standard that we may be stuck with it. And that ensures that everyone will need to keep buying your Office programs instead of any of the others.

Life will be good for Microsoft stock holders. Lousy for every one else, but, come on, Microsoft doesnt believe in competition, it believes in winning by crushing its enemies, and making nice with customers only until Microsofts products are left as their only choice.

Best of all, thanks to your Newspeak, some fools already believe that Microsoft makes not only the best, but the most open programs. Excuse me. I feel a bit ill now.

A version of this story was first published in eWEEK.

June 22, 2007
by sjvn01
0 comments

Airport 2007: The Horror, the Humanity

Tight airline budgets and antiquated IT systems are making summer air travel more arduous than ever.

My summer travel horror show started on my way back from San Francisco after covering the inaugural Linux Foundation’s Collaboration Summit. About half an hour before the US Air flight to Charlotte, N.C. was to board, we were told there would be a 4-hour delay.

Not good. That delay ensured that there would be no way I’d make my local connection to my home in Asheville, N.C. Still, this kind of crap happens in today’s deregulated airline world. There is no slack left for travelers in any airline’s schedule. One delay quickly cascades into another, and you darn well better have a toothbrush in your carry-on bag.

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