« December 2007 | Main | February 2008 »

January 2008

January 30, 2008

Gartner | VMWare Buys into Desktop Virtualization

Event

On 16 January 2008, VMware announced that it has agreed to acquire Thinstall, a privately held PC application virtualization software company. VMware also said that it had acquired services-related assets from Foedus, which focuses on virtualization technologies and services. (Foedus' other assets were acquired earlier in January 2008 by GreenPages Technology, a VMware authorized consultant partner.) Terms of the two deals were not disclosed.



Analysis

Combined, these two acquisitions indicate that, during 2008, VMware will be taking a more strategic focus on desktop virtualization.

In the emerging desktop virtualization market, VMware's Workstation, ACE and hosted Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) products have attained product differentiation within each of their respective categories; nevertheless, until now VMware's approach to the desktop virtualization market has been opportunistic, rather than strategic. The vendor has only been participating in this market in very specific use-case scenarios. Technology from Thinstall will strengthen VMware's commitment to the market and add to VDI's flexibility by enabling VMware to offer more configurable options for application isolation — enhancing its ability to compete against Microsoft in an area that is currently garnering much enterprise interest.

As a small but key player in the PC application virtualization market where only applications are put into bubbles (rather than the entire system stack), Thinstall doesn't appear to be an immediate "fit" with existing VMware solutions, but it is complementary with VMware's current desktop products and would extend its presence to an adjacent area of desktop virtualization. Thinstall uses key partnerships with PC configuration vendors (such as BMC and Avocent/LANDesk) to compete with Microsoft Softgrid and Altiris' Storage Virtualization Solution (now part of Symantec), as well as these vendors' complementary PC configuration management solutions. During 1H08, Gartner believes that VMware will leverage and extend these partnerships to maintain Thinstall's momentum and exploit opportunities created by Vista migration.

Foedus has been a strong value-added reseller for VMware's hosted desktop solutions. Its expertise will bolster VMware's go-to-market expertise for VDI as well as making PC virtualization services best practices available to VMware and its partners. VMware's success in the desktop virtualization market during 2008 and beyond will depend on rapid integration of both Foedus and Thinstall.


Recommendations


  • Thinstall customers and partners: Stay the course with this solution. This acquisition is a positive move for Thinstall that will likely increase its stability. We believe VMware will continue existing partnerships as well as develop other new ones for PC configuration management.
  • Foedus customers with service contracts: Expect no change through 1H08. After that, monitor adherence to service-level agreements closely during 2H08, as resources may change.
  • All enterprises: If you have PC configuration tools that lack PC application virtualization capability, add Thinstall to your shortlist, along with competitors such as Microsoft and Altiris. Keep in mind that customization may be required to achieve integration between this technology and your current PC configuration tools if there is no official partnership.

Recommended Reading


(You may need to sign in or be a Gartner client to access the documents referenced in this First Take.)

http://www.gartner.com/DisplayDocument?doc_cd=154825&ref=g_homelink

January 25, 2008

Gartner | Sun and MySQL - Implications

Event

On 16 January 2008, Sun announced that it has agreed to acquire MySQL, the open-source database management system (DBMS), for approximately $1 billion in cash and options. Sun plans to integrate MySQL into its software, sales and service organizations. MySQL CEO Marten Mikos will join Sun's executive leadership team and report to Rich Green, Sun's executive vice president of software. The deal is expected to close in April or May 2008.



Analysis

Sun's longtime partnerships with IBM DB2, Greenplum, Oracle and Sybase offer evidence of its strong history in the DBMS market. For a number of years, Sun has also been an open-source software (OSS) advocate, moving the Solaris operating system, Java and other software into the OSS space. MySQL will be enhanced and aided by other Sun products, such as HPC (Lustre), high-performance file systems (ZFS), Suncluster, Java, Xen virtualization (xVM), identity management and DTrace's diagnostics. In turn, MySQL will add management capabilities to Sun's DBMS environment.

MySQL's largest user base resides on Linux, with the next largest user base residing on Windows. This will enable Sun to:

  • Attract more Linux and Windows users as Sun customers
  • Position itself more heterogeneously and shift its focus from primarily supporting Solaris-based (SAMP) systems to offering more inclusive support for Linux-based (LAMP) systems
  • Demonstrate its willingness to support a stack on other operating systems in addition to Solaris
  • Exploit more market and revenue-generating opportunities by reaching large MySQL users (for example, Facebook and YouTube), who do not overlap with the Solaris installed base

Sun will deliver a Java and MySQL software stack through open-source subscription support licenses, though some advocates of "pure" OSS may now object to defining MySQL as an OSS product. Sun now will be able to deliver both a commercially licensed and a freely downloadable OSS stack.

Sun faces the challenge of integrating MySQL. If it succeeds, it will have created a solid OSS DBMS stack offering. This would increase pricing pressures on proprietary stack vendors (such as IBM, Microsoft and Oracle) as well as on the leading Linux vendor, Red Hat, by offering an alternative for users' current hardware. Sun has had mixed success with its previous acquisitions, but we believe that if it retains the MySQL management team, developers and support organization, it is likely to benefit greatly from this acquisition. The similarity between the two companies' cultures and the licensing models for MySQL and Open Solaris will make this task easier.


Recommendations


All enterprises:

  • Use MySQL and Sun to apply competitive pressure to proprietary DBMS vendors by planning to switch spending on suitable requirements to MySQL.
  • MySQL is capable of supporting clusters, delivering atomic, consistent, isolated and durable (ACID) functionality and handling some mission-critical applications. Evaluate MySQL as an alternative to IBM DB2, Oracle and other DBMSs.
  • Monitor Sun's effort at integrating MySQL to confirm whether Sun is succeeding in its effort to become a different breed of OSS vendor.

MySQL customers:

  • View this deal as positive and continue with your current strategy regarding the use of MySQL.

Recommended Reading


(You may need to sign in or be a Gartner client to access the documents referenced in this First Take.)

http://www.gartner.com/DisplayDocument?doc_cd=154828&ref=g_homelink

Web2.0 Journal | Virtualization2.0

When VMware’s long-awaited IPO took place in August of last year, its stock closed on the very first day up 76%. The company had brought in more than $700 million in revenue in 2006, and its timing was perfect. Founded in 1998, VMware is today still the 600-pound gorilla in the field of virtualization software.

President, CEO and co-founder Diane Greene once famously called VMware’s technology “a non-disruptive disruptive technology.” Since, with virtualization, companies need less hardware to carry out the same computing tasks, the upside of allowing network administrators to spread computer functions across multiple systems or servers so that the various machines act as one is tangible and easy to grok: big users of computing power can lower their operating costs.

Storage powerhouse EMC acquired VMware in 2004, and still owns a majority stake today, but a welter of new contenders has since entered the virtualization market, among them HP, Sun, Cisco, XenSource/Citrix and – not least but surprisingly among the last! – Microsoft.

Virtualization Journal thought it was time to go in search of industry insights into this fast-growing new IT market, and so we asked some of its new and up-and-coming executives for their thoughts on some of the trends emerging already in 2008.

First, in view of the executive memo released this by the SVP of its Server and Tools Business, Bob Muglia, we asked about what Microsoft’s intentions might be. Is it going to try and play catch-up in 2008 with VMware by acquiring Citrix, for example?

Kevin Epstein, VP of Marketing for Scalent Systems, doesn’t think so. “People were saying this about Microsoft and Citrix when Citrix first seized the remote connectivity market, many years ago,” Epstein says. “The alliance of the two looks strong -- why risk altering a successful Linux-Windows virtualization partnership?"

The Executive Vice-President and COO of Trigence, Inc., John Hamilton, agrees. He dooesn’t think Microsoft will buy Citrix, not in 2008 at least.

”Citrix has been trying to get into true desktop application virtualization since I was back at Softricity when Microsoft acquired us and Citrix announced Tarpon,” Hamilton explains. “Since then there hasn’t been a lot of advancement by Microsoft with the Softgrid product and Tarpon hasn't gone very far.” 

”The Citrix acquisition of XenSource certainly brought them closer to the mark, which made for the tighter relationship between the two companies, he continues. “ But they’re both still lagging behind.” 

Hamilton notes that Microsoft’s latest announcement – and Muglia’s comments about Application Virtualization being important for server based apps – validates the space that Trigence plays in: Application Virtualization Solutions for the Data Center.

Reuven Cohen, Chief Technologist of Enomaly Inc, takes a slightly different view, believing that a Microsoft-Citrix merger would make sense. “Be it a desktop or hosted CRM, chances are in the near future you will access all your applications in a hosted manner. The ISP is quickly becoming your operating system of choice, just ask anyone who's ever lost their cable connection or had their BlackBerry go down.”

http://www.web2journal.com/read/490704.htm

Next page:  Is Desktop Virtualization the 'Next Big Thing'?

January 18, 2008

Fortune | Oracle and Sun - The Old Guard of Enterprise2.0 and Acquisitions

Oracle and Sun both made impressive acquisitions of software companies this week. For its part, Oracle in buying BEA Systems is making the last great stand for licensed software - old school stuff customers buy and install themselves.

It's retrograde, but highly lucrative and canny for Larry Ellison, Oracle's pragmatic CEO. But in no way does the strategy's success undercut one of the fundamental trends in software - to a service-delivered model over the Net.

Meanwhile, Sun is staking its claim on the other massive trend in software - open source. MySQL, the company it bought, is tiny by revenues but huge by influence. Over 100 million copies of MySQL's open-source database software code have been downloaded for free since the product was first released in May 1995. Tens of thousands of businesses rely on MySQL's software.

(I wrote about MySQL in May 2003. Interestingly, way back then Sun's then-CEO Scott McNealy recommended it. MySQL also figured in a longer article called How The Open-Source World Plans To Smack Down Microsoft, And Oracle, And... in February 2004.)

In buying a company that gives its software away, Sun (JAVA, Fortune 500) is betting its $1 billion that more and more users will find it advantageous to pay money to insure that software works smoothly.

Sun's commitment to open source has been steadily growing in recent years. While it remains primarily a hardward company by revenues, it is the services that come along with software that it now seeks for longterm revenue and growth. Its most dramatic move was to release a free open-source version of its crown jewel Solaris operating system. Here's how CEO Jonathan Schwartz describes Sun's approach in his blog entry on the deal: "first investing to grow communities of users and developers, and only then creating commercial services that attract (rather than lock in) paying customers."

Oracle, on the other hand, is one of the three big companies selling conventional commercial database software. The others are IBM and Microsoft. All three have for some time eyed MySQL with alarm. Up to now the pipsqueak open-source database it makes has generally not displaced the big artillery. But with Sun's backing, the chances improve that it will. Largely because customers can modify MySQL's open source database, it has already been given industrial strength by customers like Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) and Yahoo (YHOO, Fortune 500).

But Oracle (ORCL, Fortune 500) revels in its status as old guard. In addition to its databases, it continues to accumulate companies and products in enterprise software that embody neither of the industry's current trends of open source or software-as-a-service. This is not because Larry Ellison doesn't understand what's going on. In fact he just made a big killing when software-as-a-service company Netsuite (N) went public. He funded and nurtured this company for years, separate from his work at the helm of Oracle (though the contrast has not been lost on some quizzical Oracle shareholders).

Nonetheless, Ellison and Oracle have in recent years acquired conventional enterprise software companies including Peoplesoft, Siebel Systems, and now BEA, one of the largest corporate infrastructure software players. Customers of such products continue to pay for services and support many years after they buy the product, so companies like these bring with them annuity revenue.

There are numerous common elements between the Oracle/BEA deal and the Sun/MySQL one, despite the strategic disparities. Both companies are ultimately interested not so much in revenues from selling software as from services and support. Both of these deals represent a way to acquire customers by acquiring the company that serves them. Both aim to sell these new-found customers other products.

Sun and Oracle are thus becoming more alike. And in doing so they are both emulating IBM (IBM, Fortune 500). Its results, also announced this week, explain why they would want to.

When Lou Gerstner was IBM's CEO, he made a historic shift of the company's energies towards services. That proved prescient. Now the resulting lucre is flowing in. More than a third of the recent quarter's $28.9 billion in revenues were from services, which in themselves grew a stunning 17 percent year over year. The profits from those services grew even faster.

IBM's services-centric strategy has been right for years. Oracle got on board a while back, and its results have been on fire. Now Sun, so lately the wounded child of computer companies, has, so to speak, finally seen the light.

http://money.cnn.com/2008/01/18/technology/kirkpatrick_deals.fortune/index.htm?source=yahoo_quote

January 12, 2008

VentureBeat | Quaris raises $7.1M for Business Intelligence Apps

Quaris offers analytical software for business intelligence, with a front-end designed to be accessible to any worker who needs to use it. It caters to both large and small businesses.

The company has various competitors, including both giants like Microsoft and other startups like LogiXML, OnDemandIQ and SeaTab.

As part of its funding announcement, Quaris also reported that it has a new CEO. However, according to Portfolio, the “new” CEO Brian Kelly has effectively been in that role since March 2007.

Foundation Capital led the $7.1 million round, while Partech International also participated. Partech also provided the company’s $1.5 million seed funding.

http://venturebeat.com/2008/01/11/quaris-raises-71m-for-business-intelligence-apps/

GigaOM | The Sun is Setting for its Own Data Centers

Sun Microsystems now has a firm plan to eliminate its data centers by 2015, which would bring the reality of on-demand computing to a company that has been focused on it for years. Brian Cinqe, Sun’s data center architect, said in his inaugural blog entry yesterday that Sun would cut its data center square-footage in half by 2013, and eliminate it completely by 2015.

This falls in line with CEO Jonathan Schwartz’s vision for Sun (JAVA) to become a company that makes standardized hardware and open-source software to deliver computing power as a utility. I heard Schwartz speak back in 2005, when he compared the utility computing model to delivering electricity. Later, Sun CTO Greg Papadopoulos said the company could make a profit delivering the commodity boxes required by on-demand computing much like GE still makes money delivering more efficient power stations (though the comparison isn’t as apt as it seems, since GE doesn’t rely solely on its power-generation business to make money.)

While utility computing isn’t new — Hewlett-Packard, IBM and even British telco BT already provide on-demand computing services — Sun’s announcement is likely to get a big publicity push thanks to the debut earlier this week of Nicholas Carr’s “The Big Switch.” In the book, Carr compares the current shift to utility computing to the dawn of electric power. This is an inevitable shift, and Sun’s announcement (and eventual attempts to rely on utility computing) means the company is willing to practice what it preaches. Unlike, say, the new AT&T when it comes to telecommuting.

http://gigaom.com/2008/01/11/sun-plans-for-its-data-centers-to-set/

January 07, 2008

VentureBeat | SugarCRM takes $14.5M for CRM software

An online customer relationship management system notorious for taking its software open-source, SugarCRM has so far defied its early critics by continuing to attract new clients and investment.

The Cupertino, Calif. company is a competitor to web giant Salesforce.com.We also wrote about it way back in 2005.

The $14.5 million is part of a $20 million fourth round of funding, according to peHUB. Return investors Draper Fisher Jurvetson, New Enterprise Associates and Walden International participated in the round.

http://venturebeat.com/2008/01/03/sugarcrm-takes-145m-for-crm-software/

January 03, 2008

The Economist | Mao and The Art of Management

Books on management tend to define success in the broadest possible terms—great product, happy employees, continuous improvement, gobs of profits, crushed competitors. Even when words such as “excellence” and “success” are omitted from the title, they are often implicit. A case in point is the book which many would say defined the genre, Alfred Sloan's “My Years with General Motors”, published in 1963 when GM was still an iconic company and Sloan correctly acknowledged as the architect of the well-run, decentralised, global corporation.

But focusing on how the best produce the best has its limits. Most managers, after all, do not stitch an industrial triumph from a vast bankrupt junkyard, as Sloan did. They do not delight their customer, crush competitors and create vast wealth. They struggle. They stumble.

Where is the book for them? Who can help the under-performing, over-compensated chief executive fighting to survive intrusive journalists, independent shareholders and ambitious vice-presidents who could do a better job? Where is the role model for the manager who really needs a role model most—the one who by any objective measure of performance cannot, and should not, manage at all?

An obvious candidate is Mao. Yes, he was head of a country, not a company. But he self-consciously carried a business-like title, “chairman”, while running China from 1949 until dying in office in 1976, having jailed, killed, or psychologically crushed a succession of likely replacements and therefore created the classic business problem: a succession void. He thought of himself as, in his own words, an “indefatigable teacher” and the famous “Little Red Book” drawn from his speeches is packed with managerial advice on training, motivation and evaluation of lower-level employees (cadres); innovation (“let a hundred flowers bloom”); competition (“fear no sacrifice”); and, of course, raising the game of the complacent manager (relentless self-criticism).

Mao still has at least a symbolic hold over the Chinese economy, even though it began to blossom only after death removed his suffocating hand. His portrait is emblazoned on China's currency, on bags, shirts, pins, watches and whatever else can be sold by the innumerable entrepreneurial capitalists that he ground beneath his heel when in power. No other recent leader of a viable country (outside North Korea, in other words) is so honoured—not even ones that did a good job.

It was not a nurturing management style that won Mao this adulation. According to Jung Chang's and Jon Halliday's “Mao, the Unknown Story”, admittedly an unsympathetic portrait, he was responsible for “70m deaths, more than any other 20th-century leader”. But why stop at the 20th century? In Chinese history, only Emperor Qin Shi Huang, who started building the Great Wall (in which each brick is said to have cost a life), was competition for Mao; and since the population was much smaller then, Mao is likely to have outdone him in absolute numbers.

Botched economic policies caused most of the carnage. Deng Xiaoping, Mao's successor, turned the policies, and eventually the economy, around. Yet he does not even merit an image on a coin.

The disparity between Mao's performance and his reputation is instructive, for behind it are four key ingredients which all bad managers could profitably employ.

A powerful, mendacious slogan

Born a modestly well-off villager, Mao lived like an emperor, carried on litters by peasants, surrounded by concubines and placated by everyone. Yet his most famous slogan was “Serve the People”. This paradox illustrates one aspect of his brilliance: his ability to justify his actions, no matter how entirely self-serving, as being done for others.

Psychologists call this “cognitive dissonance”—the ability to make a compelling, heartfelt case for one thing while doing another. Being able to pull off this sort of trick is an essential skill in many professions. It allows sub-standard chief executives to rationalise huge pay packages while their underlings get peanuts (or rice).

But Mao did not just get a stamp from a compliant board and eye-rolling from employees. He convinced his countrymen of his value. That was partly because, even if his message bore no relation to his actions, it expressed precisely and succinctly what he should have been doing. Consider the truth and clarity of “serve the people” compared with the average company's mission statement, packed with a muddle of words and thoughts tied to stakeholders and CSR, that employees can barely read, let alone memorise.

Deng Xiaoping's slogan, which he used in his campaign to revive the economy, had similar virtues. “Truth from facts” is a sound-bite that Sloan would have loved and every manager should cherish, but you won't find it chiselled on a Chinese wall. It doesn't have the hypocritical idealism of Mao's version—nor was it pushed so hard.

Ruthless media manipulation

Mao knew not just how to make a point but also how to get it out. Through posters, the “Little Red Book” and re-education circles, his message was constantly reinforced. “Where the broom does not reach”, he said, “the dust will not vanish of itself.” This process of self-aggrandisement is often dismissed as a “personality cult”, but is hard to distinguish from the modern business practice of building brand value.

Yet within China economic growth was pathetic and living conditions were wretched. So why did a vast list of Western political, military and academic leaders accept the value of Mao's brand at his own estimation? Even Stalin, no guileless observer, believed in and, to his later regret, protected Mao. The brand-building lesson is that a clear, utopian message, hammered home relentlessly, can obscure inconvenient facts. Great salesmen are born knowing this. Executives whose strategies are not delivering need to learn it.

Chief executives are not in a position to crush the media as Mao did. Nevertheless, his handling of them offers some lessons. He talked only to sycophantic journalists and his appeal in the West came mainly from hagiographies written by reporters whose careers were built on the access they had to him.

The law constrains the modern chief executive's ability to imitate Mao's PR strategy. Publicly listed companies have to publish information, rather than hand it out selectively. But many, within bounds, emulate Mao's media management; others, determined to control information about them, are delisting. Burrow beneath laudatory headlines on business and political leaders, and it becomes clear that the strategy works.

Sacrifice of friends and colleagues

“Who are our friends? Who are our enemies? This is a question of first importance,” Mao wrote. Sloan agreed. He worried that favouritism would come at the expense of the single most valuable component of management: the objective evaluation of performance.

Mao had a different goal: he did not want people too close to him, and therefore to power; so being Mao's friend often proved more dangerous than being his enemy. One purge followed another. Promotions and demotions were zealously monitored. Bundles of incentives were given and withdrawn. Some demotions turned out well. Deng Xiaoping's exile in a tractor factory may have helped him understand business, and thus rebuild the economy, but that was an unintended benefit.

This approach makes sense. Close colleagues may want your job, and relationships with them may distract you. Mao's abandonment of friends and even wives and children seemed to be based on a calculation of which investments were worth maintaining and which should be regarded as sunk costs. Past favours were not returned. According to Ms Chang and Mr Halliday, a doctor who saved his life was left to die on a prison floor after being falsely accused of disloyalty. Mao let it happen: he had other doctors by then.

Enemies, conversely, can be useful. Mao often blamed battlefield losses on rivals who were made to suffer for these defeats. The names of modern victims of this tactic will be visible on the list of people sacked at an investment bank after a rough quarter; the practitioners are their superiors, or those who have taken their jobs.

Activity substituting for achievement

Mao was quite willing to avoid tedious or uncomfortable meetings, particularly when he was likely to be criticised. But maybe that helped him avoid getting bogged down. From the Anti-Rightist Movement of the late 1950s to the Great Leap Forward, a failed agricultural and industrial experiment in the early 1960s, to the Cultural Revolution in the late 1960s, Mao was never short of a plan.

Under Mao, China didn't drift, it careened. The propellant came from the top. Policies were poor, execution dreadful and leadership misdirected, but each initiative seemed to create a centripetal force, as everyone looked toward Beijing to see how to march forward (or avoid being trampled). The business equivalent of this is restructuring, the broader the better. Perhaps for the struggling executive, this is the single most important lesson: if you can't do anything right, do a lot. The more you have going on, the longer it will take for its disastrous consequences to become clear. And think very big: for all his flaws, Mao was inspiring.

In the long run, of course, the facts will find you out. But who cares? We all know what we are in the long run.

http://www.economist.com/business/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10311230

January 02, 2008

.NET Journal | What Does 2008 Hold for SOA?

Joshua Allen is a Senior Evangelist at Microsoft, helping large consumer facing web sites adopt Microsoft's user experience technologies.  In 9 years at Microsoft, he's shipped several products including APIs for XML and services for MSN, as well as worked with many of the large web sites during the first dot-com era.

1. Web standards will matter more than ever, as more development shifts to the web: HTML5 will eclipse XHTML. Atom Publishing Protocol will emerge as a key component of the programmable web, as will Simple Sharing Extensions (SSE). Interest in using pure web standards for mobile development will increase, and will become more practical by the end of 2008.

2. MySpace and Facebook will remain the dominant social networking sites. All social networking sites will have platforms, but interop will be spotty as the players compete to “value-add” services beyond the interop profile.

3. Ad agencies will be more important, not less, by end of 2008.

4. Disparity between bandwidth haves and have-nots will grow. Net neutrality will take an even worse beating in 2008 than 2007.

See next pages for predictions from: Dr Adam Kolawa, Parasoft; Eric Newcomer, IONA Technologies; Bill Roth, BEA Systems; Brad Abrams, Microsoft; Kevin Hoffman, iPhone Developer's Journal; Ian Thain, Sybase; Yakov Fain, Farata Systems.

http://dotnet.sys-con.com/read/478303_2.htm