In-Depth
Cover Story: The 800-Pound Gorilla
Can anything threaten the Microsoft desktop empire?
When it comes to clients, Microsoft is in the catbird's seat. Despite the Mac, thin clients like Sun Rays, and dozens of iterations of desktop Linux, Windows is on at least nine out of 10 clients. And almost every one of those is running some version of Microsoft Office.
Microsoft critics claim that there's competition and viable alternatives, but only the truly passionate among them buy Macs, or load desktop Linux and open source Office alternatives like OpenOffice.
What conditions would be necessary to turn the fringe into the mainstream and end Microsoft client domination forever? Is there a perfect software storm that could wash away Office and XP like so much flotsam?
A key to understanding Microsoft's exalted position is to realize that Office and Windows are mutually supporting entities: Windows came first, then shepherded Office applications into its healthy market share, starting with Excel and Word. Through an absolute commitment to exploiting Windows, Office has become more and more entrenched. Now Office is part of the Windows ecosystem, and its popularity likewise makes Windows indispensable, creating dual and intimately connected monopolies. Thus, anyone hoping to unseat one has to deal with the other.
The Microsoft Quilt -- Domination
Through Integration
And that position is fortified by
an array of ancillary products, including Windows Servers; Active Directory;
Outlook; Exchange; SQL Server and so on. For better than a decade, Microsoft
has been building an elaborate technology quilt that makes it difficult to break
away from the family. Even if, for example, another database or e-mail system
works better, IT usually opts for the Microsoft solution due to its tight integration
with the installed base.
"As a corporation we've standardized on Active Directory and Exchange, XP, Office and, soon, SharePoint. And it took years to get to this point," says an IT pro who asked not to be identified. "Individual offices might go off the reservation about one application or another, but it would never change the monoculture. Decisions are firmly top-down."
In order to compete, non-Microsoft Office suites and PC operating systems have to offer the same level of integration. That is perhaps one reason the European Commission is trying to force Microsoft to fully document its Windows interfaces, giving competitors the same ability to integrate as Redmond itself.
Politics of Switching
No level of integration will matter,
however, unless the decision makers give the green light. And entrenched management
thinking will keep Microsoft solidly in place, according to Edward Bailey, with
HVAC distributor Carrier Great Lakes in Livonia, Mich. "The top management
here are e-mail users only -- nothing more. [The issue is] mostly cost more than
anything else. We are using AD and Group Policy for control of the environment
and Windows Server 2000 and 2003 are working very well for us. We also use Exchange
-- again working wonderfully well," says Bailey.
Sydney McCoy says management at his company could be persuaded to switch -- with hard numbers. "If it can be demonstrated that necessary functionality and full compatibility exists, with no demonstrative impact to productivity or processing overhead, then potential open source licensing cost savings and broad-based support and acceptance would likely be overwhelmingly welcomed throughout management," says McCoy. "I've been dabbling with the potential substitution of a SLES [SuSE Linux Enterprise Server] file and print server, but the biggest obstacle is our inexperience with the platform, rather than any potential licensing costs vs. savings. As go the bean counters and lawyers, so follows the entire staff."
Is
Microsoft Losing Its Grip? |
Tony Bove has written the book on getting off
of Microsoft -- literally. His book, aptly titled Just
Say No to Microsoft, talks about how and why you should
look at alternatives. Bove talked to Redmond magazine
about potential Windows/Office tipping points.
What events or factors could cause the Microsoft XP and
Office monopolies to crumble?
Tony Bove: It's happening now. The company as it
is today just wasn't made for these times. As Gates himself
pointed out in his recent memo to Microsoft executives, a
"services wave" of applications is about to reach
millions of users, and Microsoft needs to catch up. But the move
to offer a services platform for developers puts Microsoft
between a rock and a hard place with regard to its existing
software business models. So Microsoft has to start over.
The latest Gates memo indicates that Microsoft faces competition on all fronts -- not just Windows; not just Office. Open source software threatens everything from server and client systems to e-mail clients and servers, databases and applications. Mac OS X is a threat to Microsoft's entire computing experience. Even though the vast majority of everyday computer users are stuck in Windows XP, the cutting edge of innovation is happening elsewhere.
What would cause a mass move away from Microsoft to alternatives?
More bad press about viruses and malware. It amazes me
that the industry and press still refer to new outbreaks as
"computer viruses" and "computer adware and spyware," rather
than what they really are: Windows, Outlook, IE and Office
viruses and malware.
Office has matured to the point that it's not only easy to clone but easy to improve upon. Windows is under constant attack from Linux and Mac OS X. The reason people give for needing to use Windows -- because they need to run certain applications -- is quickly eroding. To use the new Internet services, all you need is a computer that runs a browser. I think [potential] missteps by Microsoft in the coming year -- with Vista, and with advertising-supported software -- will reduce the Microsoft monopoly enough to enhance competition and spark more innovations. At some point a low-cost, non-Windows computer will be very popular for the consumer market, and so will Apple Macs on the "high end." It's only a matter of time. -- D.B. |
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All About the Beans
Ah yes, the beans. Open source fans
tout the cost savings: after all, it's pretty hard to beat free. Even in this
arena, though, open source contenders still have to prove themselves, as costs
other than the software must be considered. "Any consideration of a replacement
to Microsoft products would have to entail administration, deployment, security
and upgrades, at a minimum," says JC Warren, a network management specialist
for a high tech company. "I'd have to be dramatically dissatisfied with
our current product suite to even begin to consider alternatives. If an alternate
product suite could be found that would improve user productivity, I'd then
have to consider the costs of deployment, administration, etc., in order to
get a handle on the total cost to switch. Then we'd need to factor in the learning
curve for users to attain their previous functional state. Any time lost is
money lost to my employer."
Tech Support
Downtime also costs money, and tech
support is a huge tipping point factor. "I've had former colleagues relate
the horror stories of being forced to switch to an open source product by misguided
management, only to strip it out after it proved totally unsupportable in a
corporate environment," says Warren.
For Microsoft challengers to make inroads, it's clear that tech support will
need to improve. Fortunately for them, Microsoft may have provided an opening.
"For some products, Microsoft has stopped having higher-level support available
during evenings and weekends," laments Karl W. Palachuk, of KPEnterprises
Business Consulting Inc. "So a call might get escalated during the week,
but you're back to Tier-One [support] on Friday night and all weekend. In other
words, the highest level of support for the biggest problems is only available
during business hours, during the week. In what universe does this make sense?
I'm not ready to make the switch today, but I find myself surprisingly open
to the possibility."
Why
I'm Sticking with Windows |
By David R. Bayer
As network administrator for a small part of a very large heterogeneous
network, I've had to weigh the pros and cons of alternate OSes
for my corner of the world. Even in my small area of responsibility -- 250
workstations, three servers and one virtual server -- we're running
various versions of Windows and Macs, along with Windows and
Linux servers. This is all part of a large Active Directory
network (30,000-plus nodes). There are several things that prevent
me from really migrating away from Windows.
The first, and most important, reason is the remote control capabilities we get with AD and Group Policy. Controlling logins, software updates and distribution and various other items are a big plus for us. I haven't heard of a good way to do that on Linux yet, and haven't gotten buy-in from management for Apple's Open Directory. Another biggie is user education. The best users I have are now comfortable running Windows and making some tweaks, things like video resolution changes and other such tidbits. In a network the size of ours, those users are heavily relied on to help nearby users with easy-to-solve problems, leaving LAN admin and desktop support to handle more involved issues. Most users still fall into the category of "if it's not obvious and easy, I can't find it or do it." Another reason we stay with Windows is for messaging solutions such as Exchange. Entourage on the Mac doesn't do nearly as good a job interfacing with an Exchange server as Outlook does on the PC (although Entourage is much better in Office 2004 than earlier versions). Exchange is very convenient and streamlined for combining messaging and calendaring, and other solutions don't do as good a job or have as nice an interface (at least the ones I've seen). Microsoft Office is available on the Mac, and Sun's OpenOffice is available on Linux. Both options seem to have very good compatibility with the ubiquitous Windows versions of Microsoft Office. I enjoy getting to work with Macs and Linux boxes, but at this point it just doesn't seem practical, on multiple levels, to migrate to another option.
David R. Bayer is LAN manager, Divisions of Hematology/ Oncology
and Nephrology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. |
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Even with some level of dissatisfaction, though, the Microsoft Quilt concept
continues to give it an advantage, says Jason Thompson, a consultant architect
in Arlington, Va. "My network has three players; Cisco, Dell and Microsoft.
All software is from Microsoft, so we know that it works well together. If we
do have problems, we only need to call one place. For me to leave Microsoft,
a single vendor would need to support database, e-mail, Web, etc., from a single,
highly supported platform. IBM is the only vendor I currently know that can
accomplish this, but [it isn't] competitive in price."
Another aspect of support working in Microsoft's favor is the army of IT pros trained on its software. "Businesses would not go to alternatives such as Linux or OpenOffice unless the support staff were readily available to resolve issues. Currently, Linux and Unix professionals are in short supply and thus command higher wages. Just look at the demise of Novell," says Allen Thomas, systems engineer with Lockheed Martin in Baltimore, Md.
Given these factors, it's clear it will take more than
just management buy-in, cost savings which may or may not appear and improved, across-the-board tech support to loosen the Microsoft desktop stranglehold. The products and platforms have to be comparable (or better) in quality. Are they?
Big Mac Attack
In the case of Apple, the answer
is clearly yes. If Redmond reader response is indicative of the industry, the
Mac has a clear client edge over Linux as a Windows alternative. Many readers
hype their switch to the Mac, while almost no one mentions moving to Linux PCs.
Perhaps the Mac has an edge because it has the polish of an OS with two decades'
worth of evolution, is backed by a commercial company and has solid application
support, including an official and up-to-date version of Microsoft Office. And
because there's less malware, troubleshooting and help desk tasks are less onerous.
Why
I Ditched Windows |
By Rob Hughes
I did a basic cost-benefit analysis when considering a migration,
as my network was then mainly Windows, with one Linux box and two
Solaris boxes for testing. It had reached the point where I
was mostly running around trying to fix various problems with
Windows, both at the server and on the client. I needed to add
several boxes for a new project and looked at the cost of doing
it on Windows vs. Linux, as what I needed could be done on either
platform. I found that in that situation, with Linux, I could
get by with two fewer systems [and decided to move to Linux].
Since the migration, I spend very little time doing administration
on my network, and most of my time doing research. I'm using
Linux, BSDs and Solaris as both client and server OSes.
Two of the main advantages of KOffice [the office software that runs on the KDE Linux desktop environment] and OpenOffice are Opendoc/XML compatibility and cross-platform support. KOffice doesn't currently run easily on Windows, but KDE can be compiled under cygwin if you're fairly patient (big package, long compile time). And there's a lot of talk of porting KDE/QT (QT being already available) to Windows when version 4 of both products are released.
XML, being text, is pretty easy to manipulate programmatically. Opendoc
also doesn't use any binary "blobs" within the XML
schema like Microsoft Office 2003 does, which makes trying
to use Office 2003 files with anything other than Office nearly
impossible.
Another advantage is that I can read and write most other file formats, including Microsoft formats, giving me good compatibility with whatever someone sends me.
I find these tools offer really good performance and
flexibility -- and, being open source software, integration/
extension possibilities are limited only by the amount of time and effort one is willing to put into a project. At the end of the day, what I'm talking about here is openness. Not just in the published sense (open standard format), but in the true sense of an Open Standard format.
Rob Hughes is an escalation engineer with a technology company. |
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But even with those advantages, the Mac hasn't made significant inroads into
the Wintel space. That may be changing, however, with Apple's switch to Intel
processors. The Intel machines could be cheaper in the long run (the early units
have premium pricing), perhaps pushed by low-cost marketing powerhouse producers
like Dell. Macs that could compete with PCs on the cost and speed side would
certainly be a cause for concern in Microsoftland.
Another advantage Intel processors will provide, and which could prove significant, is the ability to run Windows alongside the Mac OS. "If the future generation Macs (the ones using Intel processors) can run Windows software effectively, I'd switch in a heartbeat," says Jerry Koch, chief technical officer for WebNow1 LLC. "I'm sick and tired of Microsoft getting rewarded for its failures, like selling anti-spyware software because its OS has so many holes."
David Cantrill, a London-based Redmond reader, echoes that sentiment. "What have I discovered in my time with a Mac? It works. No viruses, no spyware and consequently no AV software to constantly update. I can still do everything I did on my PC and don't need to worry that I'm going to lose all my information by having to reformat the thing. Microsoft better hope Vista creates a whole new ball of momentum, or this mag will be retitled Cupertino sometime in the next three years," says Cantrill.
Desktop Linux -- Untapped Potential
Linux PCs are much rougher around
the edges than Macs, no doubt about it. They're still much more difficult to install
and use than Windows and Macs, often lacking anything but the most basic instructions.
That leaves a dedicated group of hard-core, tech-savvy consumers, hobbyists and
geeks to tweak and improve it, just as they did with Altairs 30 years ago.
Market
Share |
Linux has 3 percent desktop market share
and will have 6 percent two years from now (2008), IDC says.
Meanwhile, the Mac is generally thought to have slightly less
than 3 percent market share. |
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But these pioneers are small in number, and on the corporate side, things are
even worse. The few widespread adoptions are almost all among the Linux vendors
themselves -- companies like IBM, which has more than 10,000 desktops running
Linux. Peruse the Red Hat Web site, and you'll find 38 case studies, only two
of which mention Linux desktops to any degree.
One bright spot, which could portend a tipping point, is in a market not yet dominated by Microsoft, or any other vendor for that matter: those who are too poor to even have considered a computer in the past. Nicholas Negroponte, of the MIT Media Lab, and his team have designed Linux laptops for the third world. For about $100 the machines come with a range of applications, 1GB RAM, peer-to-peer capabilities and wireless connectivity. Negroponte hopes that as many as 150 million units will be built in the next two years.
That's a lofty goal; but even if only a tenth of those get built, it still
means 15 million Linux laptops will be in use. At that price, and with that
kind of base, it becomes an interesting and proven proposition for lots more
folks. Add some polish and some apps and you may just have a popular, new portable
platform.
Top Tipping
Points |
- A unified or dominant
Linux client – such a client could have better driver
and apps support
- Intel-based Macintoshes
– cheaper Macs running XP or Vista alongside Mac OS X could
appeal to Windows shops
- Third-world $99
Linux laptops – a huge base of Linux clients could jumpstart
the apps markets
- Dell selling Macs
or solid, reliable and usable Linux PCs – a trusted
low-cost supplier could give these machines corporate cachet
- A bug-laden, insecure
Vista – if Vista is a huge pain to secure, and requires
loads of training, an alternative may not be viewed as altogether
disruptive
- A bug-laden, insecure
Internet Explorer – if IE7 is no better than today’s
browser, corporations could move in droves to Firefox, which
already has about 10 percent market share
- Major change in
Office 12 causes disruption – interface and file formats
(if native XML is really supported, are file formats still
a lever?) -- like with Vista, the Office suite, code-named
Office "12," could be as tough to move to as Office
rivals
- Dramatically improved
Windows interoperability with Linux or the Mac – if
Linux and the Mac become a seamless part of the Microsoft
Quilt, IT objections will be answered
- Brand new computing
paradigm/architecture – just as the PC killed off the
Apple II, a compelling new approach could sweep away legacy
Windows and Office
- Web services take
over and bring back the Network Computer – if Web services
become dominant, fat client PCs won’t be necessary
- Open Source becomes
a broad corporate mandate – if open source offers a
compelling ROI, CEOs could mandate a move away from Microsoft
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Whither Office?
If Windows on the desktop could be
toppled, what about Kong's other arm -- Microsoft Office? Much as with desktop
Linux, the potential is there, but the open source competition still has a way
to go.
One user tried OpenOffice, but the performance simply wasn't there. "Upon
reading benchmarks of the new StarOffice/OpenOffice versions that have up to
10 times the processing overhead compared to the Microsoft products we already
license, there's just no way to justify consideration in a shared environment,"
says Sidney McCoy.
On the other hand, critics claim that Office suffers serious feature bloat,
perhaps providing an opening. "I would absolutely move away from Office
and XP for the majority of my users, if I could have a solid desktop and office
suite with similar core functionality and interactions as XP and Office. That
seems to be a rather broad stroke until you evaluate what "core functionality
and interactions" really means to a given set of users, and the respective
business processes. In most cases, Office and XP are overkill in function and
cost," says Yusuf F. Abdalhakim, of Abdalhakim & Associates, an IT consultant
with 20-plus years of experience.
In addition to the footprint, interoperability is another potential tipping
point away from Microsoft. OpenOffice cracked the door open for the OpenDocument
file format, an XML format derived from StarOffice that may be able to break
Microsoft's deathgrip on productivity file formats. If these file formats become
open, Office suddenly becomes less necessary.
In
Microsoft’s Corner: Keeping Windows Large and in Charge |
- The Microsoft Quilt – XP and Office
aren’t standalone but work closely with other Microsoft
tools
- The sheer number of applications
– no one can match the volume of Windows programs
- Custom Corporate Client Code – internal
applications developers have written billions of lines of
Windows code that would have to be re-crafted
- Active Directory – the standard
corporate directory works best with Microsoft tools
- Exchange – Exchange works with Outlook,
which works with Office, which works with XP ...
- Office training – as tough as it
can be to use, no program has more training muscle behind
it than Office
- Office file formats – many shops
use Office just so they can share files with partners
- OEM lock-in – PC vendors unanimously
support Windows, not Linux or the Mac
- Price/Performance – competition
has pushed PC prices to an all-time low
- The Groove factor – Ray Ozzie, one
of three CTOs, is planning to bring rich collaboration technologies
to the Office suite, code-named Office “12,” and Vista
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Microsoft has responded by proposing its own XML-based format others can support,
but that Redmond ultimately controls. That makes it less appealing to many,
and, ironically, may lead to a move away from Office. "The XML stuff and
the Open format specification of OpenDocument is extremely relevant for any
organization that considers control over its data a priority, rather than giving
that control to a single vendor via proprietary formats and forced upgrades
in order to maintain supported status," says Rob Hughes, an escalation
engineer with a technology company. "The fully documented nature of OpenDoc
would also play on the enterprise development side, as things like integration
with various sorts of database back-ends and so forth are all greatly eased."
Cool Tool |
Code
Weavers has a tool, called Crossover Office, which is
a version of WINE that lets Linux run key Windows apps. WINE
essentially implements the Windows API set on Linux. |
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From Hunter to Hunted
There's no doubt that right now, Microsoft
is sitting pretty. But there's accumulating evidence that its place on the perch
could be getting more precarious. In fact, according to author Tony Bove, who's
written a book on how to swear off of Microsoft completely (see "Is Microsoft
Losing Its Grip?" above), the possible seeds of its demise can paradoxically
be found in its overwhelming success.
"Microsoft is essentially held back by its monopoly and the complexity of its
products, and can't innovate fast enough without hurting its existing business,"
Bove says. "That wasn't always the case -- in the early days of the monopoly, Microsoft
was invincible. There was so much activity on so many fronts that the company
was a moving target. Now … the company has become a big fat target."