Small Business Specialist vs. Google Spreadsheets

Beta, Google
11 Comments

It’s been a while since I talked about G vs. M, but little has changed since then. Google is still whipping that llama.

If you’re a Microsoft Small Business Specialist I hope you remember the IT Basic questions from the Sales & Marketing assessment. If you’re truly one of us you also know that most small business owners, regardless of size, tend to be IT Basic, if not to an extent even IT ignorant

If that turns out to be true, there are bad times ahead for these guys.

Google is launching a (beta) of Google Spreadsheets, a web-driven ajax spreadsheet program that at least for my needs is superior to Microsoft Excel. Yes, superior. Look at some of these modern features that are available directly from a web site: access control, instant sharing (enter an email and send out an invitation), realtime collaboration via IM. No application to install, no viewer.. just the web browser. I don’t need to link data in 3 books, I don’t get easily impressed by shiny objects and I have not built my entire business and accounting system on top of Excel – but what I do often is edit the sheets with multiple people, work from systems that do not have Excel installed, create backups and save my work at every turn. For me, this is perfect and its enough.

More importantly, as I use this I will invite others to look at the Spreadsheets and edit them in a browser instead of piling on attachments and thus starts a viral elimination of Microsoft Excel.

Tour2

Now I usually caution against trying out beta software for consumers but considering that this runs out of a web browser it just might be worth a try. Honestly, I’d pay for Google Spreadsheets over Microsoft Excel, just based on the few screen shots that I’ve seen. Although ads don’t bother me much I really don’t click on them often and I’d rather pay and get all the screen real estate I can. Really, it is that good… except… Google Talk is just awful which means I’ll be sticking to Outlook until Google admits that their chat is weak and figures out a way to totally rip off MSN Messenger.

Now will an established small business jump at this? Highly, highly unlikely. One thing you start to appreciate about small business IT ignorant cases is that they will run their business out of an Excel spreadsheet. That spreadsheet eventually becomes a full blown application and a CRM and a toaster and a babysitter when the child grows up enough to be able to do basic data entry. Forget about “switching” to Google Spreadsheets for most established small businesses. However, if you ask 9/10 people they will admit that the behavior I just described is detrimental to their business and that there must be a better way. So to all the doomsday predictions in links above, I don’t think Microsoft has much to worry about here. For the new business, IT basic and everyone not living in a spreadsheet… there seems to be less and less of a reason to buy Office 12 with each passing day. Don’t worry about Steve or Eric, they’ll still sell millions of copies of Office 12, in the short term they got nothing to worry about.

In the long term, this is pretty bad for Microsoft. Where is a live.com equivalent of Google Spreadsheets? “Our goal is to make our customers more productive with bloatware” is the likely quote from Microsoft PR because, lets face it, do you think they would really sacrifice their cash cow to win a little fight with Google? Of course not. But in the long term, that same stance of “our customers need features, our customers need integration” will make live.com part of their initiative largely irrelevant. What is more likely here? Microsoft kills its cow and succumbs to Google’s killer online portfolio… or Google rips off MSN Messenger and pushes forward with Gmail, Gcalendar, Gspreadsheet, Gpowerpoint and Goutlook? I’d bet on Google. Which, in essence, is a bet against me and my business.

Who are you betting on today?

Linux and History of Understatements

Linux
3 Comments

Untitled document

Post on my local Linux User Group reminded me that Linux is just about 15 years old. Linux Journal, something my friend Pablo subscribed to in the long long ago when we were just starting at CyberGate, is doing a big write-up on it and has put up the original Usenet post from Linus regarding his project:

“Hello everybody out there using minix – I'm doing a (free) operating system (just a hobby, won't be big and professional like gnu) for 386(486) AT clones. This has been brewing since april, and is starting to get ready. I'd like any feedback on things people like/dislike in minix, as my OS resembles it somewhat (same physical layout of the file-system (due to practical reasons) among other things).I've currently ported bash(1.08) and gcc(1.40), and things seem to work. This implies that I'll get something practical within a few months, and I'd like to know what features most people would want. Any suggestions are welcome, but I won't promise I'll implement them 🙂

Linus (PS. Yes – it's free of any minix code, and it has a multi-threaded fs. It is NOT protable (uses 386 task switching etc), and it probably never will support anything other than AT-harddisks, as that's all I have :-(.''

Ok, so I did find that bit a little cute, as I'm here in 2006, at 4:00 AM and my Windows workbench keyboard (HP 1996 baby) has F6 worn out. If you don't get that you're reading the wrong blog 🙂

Who can take a beta, sprinkle it with Dew?

Shockey Monkey
4 Comments

Untitled document

Mountain Dew that is, the beta man can, the beta man can.

Last night was perhaps one of the most exciting days I've had in this business in a long, long time. We released beta one bleeding edge code of Shockey Monkey and proceeded to debug the code, live. Much like running the marathon, beta testing is a very humbling experience. You go from "Wow, look at what we created" to "Wow, I would have made less mistakes if I just pounded my head against the keyboard" in a matter of minutes. Our beta testers, bless them, were quite excited and really excited to get it going.

Anyhow, beta launched last night and I spent most of the day debugging it. I'll write more about the experience later but suffice to say that you get a very interesting high on showing your product off for the first time and 4 2-liter bottles of Mountain Dew. Fun, fun, fun, fun. And people ask where I get the energy to do all this stuff! 

OneCare & Cheesesteaks

Deals
5 Comments

Crazy Ligman sale on security this weekend! How would you like Microsoft OneCare Live, full version, shrink-wrap, media, manual, license AND a glossy box for.. $49.95? Of course you would. But you won’t pay $49.95. No. You won’t even pay $39.95, and believe me friends, its worth every penny. You won’t pay $35.95, not $34.95.  Not even half way to hell $33. No siree.

What would you say if I told you that you can have OneCare Live, full retail copy, in your hands for just $32.99? (hold for applause) Butt wait friends, wait. Yes, its a great deal but we can better than that. What if I told you that you can protect your other PC with this box as well? Yes, legit. Well, we’re throwing it in there. Thats right, protect two PC’s and don’t pay a penny more. Oh what the heck, we’ll take care of Uncle Bob too! Promise to tell a friend and we’ll protect all three PCs and don’t pay a penny more!

IMAGE_00008

$32.99 friends, just $32.99 protects three of your PC’s for a year! Thats less than $0.001 an hour? How many web sites do you visit an hour? How many emails do you get? Do you backup? Well, you need Live OneCare.

$32.99. $32.99! Get it today at your neighborhood Cotsco and tell them Crazy Ligman sent you, where L stands for Lower prices for Legitimate software.

Pretty cool thing actually, onecare.live.com site wants $50 but the FPP at Cotsco is $33 plus tax. And the pic was snapped on the T-Mobile MDA, looks decent for a cell phone camera, doesn’t it? I downsized it quite a bit to make it fit on the blog but I’m impressed. Also I ate some sort of a cheesesteak while cruising around and I wish I wrote down what the heck it was. I don’t know if I was hungry or what but man, that steak really tasted good.

Philips Live Messenger Phone

Gadgets
5 Comments

LivephoneDear Susanne,

It’s your penpal Vlad from the third world of consumer electronics. I need your help. Here in America we don’t get consumer electronics unless Walmart can enslave a village in Taiwan to make phones and gadgets for $0.015 a piece. So I would beg for you to order one of these and ship it to me so we can chat over Live Messenger. And none of that silly British VAT crap either.

We really need an alternative to Skype. It’s cute for one-on-one, yes, but get a few people in a conference and the voice quality goes downhill quick.

-Vlad

Exchange IMF v2 Operations Guide

Security
4 Comments

IMF v2 operations guide is out and packed with 33 pages worth of goodness for you cheap bastards that won’t pay for ExchangeDefender  Joke aside, very decent entry level effort, and if you’ve got nothing to beat away spam, don’t be lazy, configure this free spam filtering that comes with the Exchange 2003 SP2 for free anyhow. What do you have to lose, you already know you qualify for a Ph.D in Nuclear Physics based on your life experience.

At the very least check out pages 25 – 28, they show you the most common errors and ways to get some monitoring and reporting back from IMF.

SBS Show #20 – Web 2.0 for an IT Pro

Podcast, Web 2.0
11 Comments

Sbsshow-little-763868Can you believe we’ve banged out 20 of these so far? I’m impressed. The little SBS Show has grown from “Man, how do I stop these illiterate people from shooting themselves in the face with SP2” to one of the only places in SMB where you can get the whole story. Even though its an expensive and time consuming process I have to admit its totally worth it. I get so much mail thanking us for putting this together, telling us how successful they have been with the info they got from the SBS Show, how much they enjoy listening, how they listened to all the episodes back-to-back during their drive to Vegas, how they had to buy an MP3 player because of the SBS Show. So thanks guys, thanks for the support and well over a million listeners that tuned in to the SBS Show. Thanks to all the awesome guests and cohosts that put their time into making the SBS Show such a success.

So go and get #20. Joining us this week is Bob Rebholz from Microsoft to discuss the Web 2.0. You know, we in the “dev” roles know what Web 2.0 means because we’ve been dealing with it for such a long time. But if you’re over 19 and in IT odds are you don’t know what Web 2.0 or Ajax or DOM/DHTML or any of these things mean. Digg what? Bob is the guy behind theworkingnetwork.com blog and recently transitioned over to microsoft.com to make information discovery easier for IT Pro’s digging around microsoft.com for solutions.

Sarah Perez (www.sarahintampa.com) is cohosting this week because she is my web 2.0 go-to person. I’m not sure how the heck I found her but she has been a constant inspiration as she constantly lives on the bleeding edge of web services. Plus she’s an SBSer! Little known detail is that she inspired the SBS Show with her own podcast. I thought about the podcast for a while before doing it but without her help and all the advice I never would have pulled it off. So thanks for the inspiration Sarah and thanks for the help with #20.

I’m just incredibly proud of our little SBS Show. Honestly, I hope this inspires you. I can’t tell you how many people have told me “I was thinking about doing that but you beat me to it!” – beat you to what? It’s not like we’re the 8PM show on NBC that you need to bump to get the attention, if you’ve got something to say and think you can contribute then go for it. This is not a competition guys, this is sharing and collaboration. Just do it.

Best business advice for a workaholic CEO

Vladville
Comments Off on Best business advice for a workaholic CEO

Got some great advice today from a dear friend:

“Just because the plate is full it doesn’t mean you have to finish it”

Something to take into the weekend and going forward. I’m taking it easy this week, going to think of what to do next Saturday, it’s going to be a one-year anniversary of the Vladville blog.

Why is Vlad not doing enough for the community?

IT Culture
10 Comments

Untitled document

Yes, I do get these messages every other day. Dude, where is my SBS Show. Dude, where is my whitepaper. Dude, your guide didn’t fix the problem, could you walk me through it? Uh, no.

Such is the saga lately of the 7 days of SBS R2. I’ve received perhaps over 100 requests for this thread, including one on a Microsoft webcast. I made it to day one and then on day two I went to see JJ and the TS2 event and well, he did a much better job than I did. So no sense in writing the other 6 days if you can go see a TS2 event and see it live with a demo and screenshots and a bunch of other stuff Microsoft won’t let me say or show. So check out the slide deck for TS2 and go see them live.

I also don’t feel right promoting the notion of SBS R2 since we as a corporation decided against further testing, support and eventual rollout of SBS R2. I don’t feel right recommending the product that we don’t intend to use ourselves.

They teached me how to reed good at the Masters of Engrish at University of Rolling Tide, Drown ‘em Tide

Chris again fights the notion that people in the South can’t read. Numbers that is. He reviews this free 500 page book on fundamentals of TCP/IP which by the way is a free download at Microsoft.com. Yup, free. Did I mention it’s free? No, it can’t fix the table but it can help you understand how your network functions. Chris breaks down the guide into essential, helpful, ipv6 and skip because we all know stupid people fear big numbers so at least he’s helping you go right to whats important and what you need to know. 

To patch a patch

Security
2 Comments

Microsoft releases an update to WSUS, Windows Software Update Services.

Honey, did you remember to patch the patch machine? Well, the SP is out, RTFM then plow away. As for what is in it, here is an overview from the readme:

  • Windows Vista client support: Computers running Windows Vista can be updated by WSUS SP1 Server.
  • More client language support: Support for all Office and Windows Vista languages.
  • New version of WMSDE: The WMSDE instance will be upgraded to WMSDE SP4 by WSUS SP1 (WSUS RTM uses WMSDE SP3).
  • Performance improvements: WSUS SP1 includes various performance improvements to accelerate user interface response times.
  • All hotfixes: WSUS SP1 includes all changes and hotfixes that have been released since WSUS RTM.
  • Support for SQL Server 2005.

For the newbies, RTM means Released to Manufacturing. Same as going “gold” (burned on a CD) and so on and so forth. So go patch yourself.