Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Microsoft: breaking with licensing tradition
The Register USA ^ | 8-2-2002 | Gavin Clarke

Posted on 08/02/2002 4:28:29 AM PDT by JameRetief

Microsoft: breaking with licensing tradition
By ComputerWire
Posted: 08/02/2002 at 04:40 EST

ComputerWire: IT Industry Intelligence
These are critical times for Microsoft Corp. The company deliberately broke its software licensing model with Thursday's introduction of the unpopular Licensing 6.0.

Until now customers paid Microsoft's licensing charges, shelling-out hard-won IT budget while complaining of expense and confused details. For Microsoft, this was a reliable - if imperfect - revenue model.

After all, what alternatives were there to Microsoft's products?

As Microsoft ushered in Licensing 6.0, though, alternatives were - for the first time - emerging. Unfortunately for Microsoft, those alternatives compete in the company's lucrative desktop homeland.

Corel Corp yesterday joined Sun Microsystems Inc and Ximian Inc offering a new take on either low-cost or Linux and open source desktop alternatives. Corel introduced a new licensing program to propel Word Perfect - touted as the most popular productivity suite after Office - into Microsoft's Enterprise Accounts.

Ottawa, Ontario-based Corel follows Ximian Inc, offering a 25% discount and introductory price-cut on its open-source Desktop Professional Edition. Sun Microsystems, meanwhile, is seeing growing interest from concerned corporates in its radically re-worked StarOffice.

And there a lot of concerned corporates out there. A survey of InternetWeek 319 readers published this week, confirmed resistance - persistent for nearly a year - to Licensing 6.0, remains solid.

The survey found 40% "will definitely not" upgrade to Licensing 6.0. Thirty eight percent of corporates, meanwhile, are seeking alternatives products to Microsoft offerings, according to a Sunbelt Software/ITIC survey of 1,500 senior IT executives published in April.

One concerned Microsoft customer is the MGM Mirage, operator of 26 hotels across the US including the high-profile MGM Grand hotel and casino in Las Vegas. The MGM Mirage runs thousands of desktops and is a Microsoft ship, but one top IT manager is about to recommend Ximian's Desktop and Ximian Connector in some company locations where Office, e-mail and AS/400 are his users' only requirements.

Another is the Burlington Coat Factory. The retailer is currently debating whether to replace Office 97 and older versions of Star Office with either Sun's Star Office 6.0 or OpenOffice.org's OpenOffice 1.0 on up to 500 head office desktops. The move completes installation of StarOffice at PCs in Burlington Coat Factory's 315 stores.

StarOffice 6.0 looks like winning this particular contract. Sun has smoothed the older suite's rough edges, introducing geometrically correct and Asian fonts, regression testing, packaged binaries and improved documentation. Plus it offers support.

Tim Brennan, store services group manager, said Star Office 6.0's price and feature set are compelling reasons not to adopt either Office XP - the latest version of Office - or Licensing 6.0. Office is too feature rich many of Brennan's users.

Brennan said Licensing 6.0 is suitable for pure Microsoft shops who are experimenting with .NET, and who anticipate lots of upgrades. Lots of upgrades would - theoretically - give some return on investment under Licensing 6.0's new Software Assurance program. "If you like to stay on the cutting edge [Licensing 6.0] makes sense. But that's not us," Brennan said.

StarOffice has enjoyed steady downloads with version 6.0 - 70,000 since May's launch. Tony Siress, senior director of marketing for Sun desktop solutions, attributed demand to Sun's decision to finally support StarOffice, ending its drift in the open source community.

"[Customers said] we need to know you are serious and will continue to support development," Siress said, adding corporates "don't like surprises."

Price and licensing is also a factor. StarOffice 6.0 costs $25-50 per user for five desktops with an additional 17-20% support and maintenance cost, which includes upgrades and patches.

"My goal was to create a business model, not a $10m profit engine," Siress said digging Microsoft. But then, Sun can say that as software isn't Sun's core business - unlike Microsoft.

Partnering with Sun is Boston, Massachusetts-based Ximian, offering its own price incentives. Until August 15, Boston, Massachusetts-based Ximian is offering a 25% discount on Desktop Professional Edition for Linux, normally $59.95. The product includes Ximian's Outlook alternative Evolution, Mozilla Browser 1.0, the Red Carpet online software update service and StarOffice 6.0.

Ximian's appeal is further enhanced with a 10-user starter pack for $449, saving $150.50 on 10-separate copies of Ximian Desktop Professional Edition for Linux. The starter pack is not available after 15 August.

John Parr, Ximian vice president of marketing, sees the break in Microsoft's licensing model as an opportunity. Customers finally have an incentive to actually test Linux and open source software.

Parr predicts the next 12-24 months will see increased penetration of the Linux desktop and open source productivity, browser and messaging software among corporates. "Now is the time to do the evaluation," he said.

However, Parr struck a cautious note. Gone is the vision of the Linux operating system and open source applications offering a wholesale replacement to Windows and Office on the desktop. This dream was largely killed by ease-of-use problems and failure of a credible portfolio of applications to materialize.

Linux and open source software is now being pitched as filling certain need. That need could be call center or warehouse users where browsing, email and word processing are needed instead of a fat Office suite.

Also seeking to exploit the break in Microsoft's licensing model is Corel. The company yesterday launched two licensing schemes: Corel Transactional License (CTL) is for customers who wish to purchase a broad range of products without a volume agreement. Corel Contractual License (CCL) is a "tailor-made" volume licensing deal with support and services.

Microsoft is aware of the danger it faces. Transition from any old product or old way of doing business to something new opens a chink in the armor, which rivals can exploit. Hence, Corel, Sun and Ximian are lining-up.

Little wonder, then, company chief executive office Steve Ballmer urged caution over Licensing 6.0's potential for immediate success at Microsoft's annual financial analysts' conference last week. Ballmer warned Microsoft had only a "rough feel" for customer uptake. He blamed customers' failure to understand changes.

Speculating on the rate of adoption and impact on Microsoft's fiscal 2003, Ballmer said: "Until we get into it, we don't know."

© ComputerWire

Related stories
Today's MS Licensing 6.0 deadline to loom again tomorrow
Dodgy discounts offered ahead of MS licensing deadline?
Clock ticks on Microsoft's licensing - opposition remains


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: corel; licensing60; linux; microsoft; office; staroffice; sun; wordperfect; ximian
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 141-160161-180181-200201-202 last
To: discostu
It's about piracy to me. And I'm not talking crusade, crusades are for other people, MS protects their investment. They're working to protect themselves both from pirates and from suits. Fact is MS stuff has been throwing things on your system for a long time (automatic update has been in the OS since 98, Windows Media has been grabbing updates and codecs since 7.0), they've also been using those same tool to check some GUIDs for piracy

What a weasel.

Look, piracy is defined as the use of force to commandeer a vessel on the high seas. The theft of the term to label people who copy software illegally is an Orwellian tactic to make the act seem violent, thus lending creendence to their cause and hoping that the public will turn a blind eye to the over-the-top reactions to it. Like sending CIA agents to investigate overseas copyright violations instead of hunting down terrorists. The fact that you use the term says something about you.

It isn't about Microsoft protecting their investment, unless you mean that their investment is domination of the software world. Then, yes, that's exactly what it is. Microsoft has defacto control of users desktops, now they want it in writing that the user agrees that Microsoft has the right to do whatever they want to users systems and software, no matter where that software came from.

You and I both know that WMP always asks first before it installs CODECs. Windows Update requires the user to confirm patch and software installation. The new EULAs require the user to agree that Microsost has the right to install software without notifying the user. That is entirely different. Before it required the user to intervene to install software, now it doesn't.

It's not an evil conspiracy. A corporate conspiracy requires more than one company acting in collusion. This is just Microsoft doing this.

201 posted on 08/09/2002 4:54:41 PM PDT by Knitebane
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 195 | View Replies]

To: Knitebane
What a jerk. Bye.
202 posted on 08/09/2002 5:03:57 PM PDT by discostu
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 201 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 141-160161-180181-200201-202 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson