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  3. Small ISV's - do you really feel like Microsoft cares about you any more?

Small ISV's - do you really feel like Microsoft cares about you any more?

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  • M Member 96

    It used to rock being a small software developer using Microsoft tools and technology. They supported us all the way with excellent programs like MSDN Universal which for one flat reasonable price gave you every tool the big guys used. They ditched MSDN Universal and I started to notice all sorts of stuff drifting slowly out of reach. For their online mapping solution they have two plans, free for non commercial useage and eye gougingly expensive to the point you need hundreds of thousands of customers to afford. There seems to be no middle ground any more with them. I'm starting to wonder if they just haven't written off smaller ISV's assuming they use open source software and technology and moved their focus to large corporate developers. The problem with that is small ISV's are no reflection of their client base, we focus on small business and we have thousands of customers all over the globe who use our software as an integral part of their business, in fact it causes them to continually upgrade their windows and buy desktop pc's, year after year, more often than not Office to go along with it etc. If I get pushed into the arms of open source and "cloud" development and move our app entirely online Microsoft loses not merely my MSDN subscription but potentially a lot of desktop computer users and their windows licenses and Office licenses etc etc. And I'm sure as hell not going to Microsoft's Azure cloud with it's unreliable, Byzantine pricing structures and policies. (Though I don't know if anyone else is any better at this point.) Maybe as we are all shoved onto Clouds the small ISV is a thing of the past, maybe you have to have a big investment to roll out a new online app. Maybe you can't start out with a couple of guys in a garage any more.


    There is no failure only feedback

    N Offline
    N Offline
    NeWi
    wrote on last edited by
    #22

    I used to be a big Microsoft fan, but I have been in the software industry for many years and guess what is making me a big open source fan: Microsoft. Why? Our software was making use of Microsoft's Windows Media Encoder 9 Series to allow our users to record movies and send them in for troubleshooting assistance. Microsoft has simply stopped supporting this and replaced it with Expression Encoder 4 which does not seem to expose any such suitable interfaces. So now I have to find another solution. Also, I know that their VBA support/development has been sold to a third party. So I can see the end of its lifespan. And then they have an add against OpenOffice about macro support and reliability. Our software also makes use of the OLEDB interface to JET. But there is apparently no 64-bit version of that (other than one that was released as part of some Office versions) because Microsoft wants to encourage the use of SQL Server. Experiences such as these make me very wary of SilverLight and DOT NET and reluctant to develop against them. Yes I know we have no real choice about DOT NET, but keep in mind that it has pieces that are propitiatory to Microsoft. That just makes me think of Microsoft's "embrace, extend and extinguish" policy (look it up on Wikipedia).

    modified on Monday, December 20, 2010 6:13 PM

    P 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • A Anna Jayne Metcalfe

      Is that the Platform Test[^]? If so, it states you have to pass at least one elective test component - none of which are used by our product. This is the same problem as previously - unless you have a newer link?

      Anna :rose: Tech Blog | Visual Lint "Why would anyone prefer to wield a weapon that takes both hands at once, when they could use a lighter (and obviously superior) weapon that allows you to wield multiple ones at a time, and thus supports multi-paradigm carnage?"

      R Offline
      R Offline
      Rama Krishna Vavilala
      wrote on last edited by
      #23

      No, It is the platform ready test. http://www.microsoftplatformready.com/[^] The website seems to be down for sometime.

      T A 2 Replies Last reply
      0
      • N NeWi

        I used to be a big Microsoft fan, but I have been in the software industry for many years and guess what is making me a big open source fan: Microsoft. Why? Our software was making use of Microsoft's Windows Media Encoder 9 Series to allow our users to record movies and send them in for troubleshooting assistance. Microsoft has simply stopped supporting this and replaced it with Expression Encoder 4 which does not seem to expose any such suitable interfaces. So now I have to find another solution. Also, I know that their VBA support/development has been sold to a third party. So I can see the end of its lifespan. And then they have an add against OpenOffice about macro support and reliability. Our software also makes use of the OLEDB interface to JET. But there is apparently no 64-bit version of that (other than one that was released as part of some Office versions) because Microsoft wants to encourage the use of SQL Server. Experiences such as these make me very wary of SilverLight and DOT NET and reluctant to develop against them. Yes I know we have no real choice about DOT NET, but keep in mind that it has pieces that are propitiatory to Microsoft. That just makes me think of Microsoft's "embrace, extend and extinguish" policy (look it up on Wikipedia).

        modified on Monday, December 20, 2010 6:13 PM

        P Offline
        P Offline
        Pete OHanlon
        wrote on last edited by
        #24

        NeWi wrote:

        When did it become all about the profits

        From day one.

        I'm not a stalker, I just know things. Oh by the way, you're out of milk.

        Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

        My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Onyx

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • M Member 96

          Rama, I'm coming at this from the perspective of someone who has been in the biz for over a decade. I *know* what they used to offer and I know what they offer now and there is no comparison. I'm also coming at this as an ISV, a small one. What the hell would a small ISV do with 25 MSDN licenses? If you think that's small you must work for Microsoft. :) Don't even mention Bizspark, it's a slap in the face to experienced shops like ours who have stood the test of time. In fact any business that offers a special deal to new customers and not to their existing ones deserves a slap in the face as well. People are smarter than that, treating them like fools is not good for business. The partner program is a pale shade of the MSDN Universal. If no other company cares more then it's no wonder open source is so popular.


          There is no failure only feedback

          L Offline
          L Offline
          Lost User
          wrote on last edited by
          #25

          John C wrote:

          any business that offers a special deal to new customers and not to their existing ones deserves a slap in the face as well

          Your hands would only get sore.

          John C wrote:

          People are smarter than that, treating them like fools is not good for business.

          I wish you were, but I am not sure you are right about that. Time and again I see big companies offering better deals to new customers while keeping existing customers on existing agreements without being abot to take advantage of the specials for new recruits. Telstra and Foxtel come to mind, but also several ISPs and many many banks. now I know these are big businesses, but they are not stupid - they do do research, and the problem is that people do not change accounts or the company has a monopoly. with MS you have little choice if you are already in the MS arena - moving to iPhone or Android is a big jump, so many just swallow it. They know that and take advantage of it - why give a good deal to existing repeat customers when the majority of them will stay with you without that deal.

          ___________________________________________ .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

          M 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • A Anna Jayne Metcalfe

            Sadly I know exactly what you mean - I feel exactly as you do. The current MSDN setup is definitely not ISV friendly (the rampaging pricing has certainly seen to that), and neither is their partner programme, which appears to be aimed solely at partners who wish to resell MS product to their clients. Empower appears on paper to be a great idea - but the ISV competancy tests which go with it are an inflexible joke our product couldn't pass no matter what we do (it's native code, and doesn't use Office or XML Web Services. Even MS UK threw up their hands and said "we don't know" at that one). I get the impression that Microsoft's idea of an ISV is an SME with venture capital funding rather than a successful small business of the type you describe. A shame really. They're missing an opportunity, and as you say in many cases that could mean throwing away customers to the OSS stack.

            Anna :rose: Tech Blog | Visual Lint "Why would anyone prefer to wield a weapon that takes both hands at once, when they could use a lighter (and obviously superior) weapon that allows you to wield multiple ones at a time, and thus supports multi-paradigm carnage?"

            G Offline
            G Offline
            Gary R Wheeler
            wrote on last edited by
            #26

            Agreed. Even though I work for a big company, the software community in my part of the organizaion is small. The majority of our development is native mode. We feel neglected. The only reason I still have an MSDN membership is we have a corporate license.

            Software Zen: delete this;
            Fold With Us![^]

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • L Lost User

              John C wrote:

              any business that offers a special deal to new customers and not to their existing ones deserves a slap in the face as well

              Your hands would only get sore.

              John C wrote:

              People are smarter than that, treating them like fools is not good for business.

              I wish you were, but I am not sure you are right about that. Time and again I see big companies offering better deals to new customers while keeping existing customers on existing agreements without being abot to take advantage of the specials for new recruits. Telstra and Foxtel come to mind, but also several ISPs and many many banks. now I know these are big businesses, but they are not stupid - they do do research, and the problem is that people do not change accounts or the company has a monopoly. with MS you have little choice if you are already in the MS arena - moving to iPhone or Android is a big jump, so many just swallow it. They know that and take advantage of it - why give a good deal to existing repeat customers when the majority of them will stay with you without that deal.

              ___________________________________________ .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

              M Offline
              M Offline
              Member 96
              wrote on last edited by
              #27

              _Maxxx_ wrote:

              I am not sure you are right about that

              Hmmm..maybe not over there but over here there is resounding bitching happening now when people see this crap going on. It's a current meme that is getting traction.


              There is no failure only feedback

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • A Anna Jayne Metcalfe

                Sadly I know exactly what you mean - I feel exactly as you do. The current MSDN setup is definitely not ISV friendly (the rampaging pricing has certainly seen to that), and neither is their partner programme, which appears to be aimed solely at partners who wish to resell MS product to their clients. Empower appears on paper to be a great idea - but the ISV competancy tests which go with it are an inflexible joke our product couldn't pass no matter what we do (it's native code, and doesn't use Office or XML Web Services. Even MS UK threw up their hands and said "we don't know" at that one). I get the impression that Microsoft's idea of an ISV is an SME with venture capital funding rather than a successful small business of the type you describe. A shame really. They're missing an opportunity, and as you say in many cases that could mean throwing away customers to the OSS stack.

                Anna :rose: Tech Blog | Visual Lint "Why would anyone prefer to wield a weapon that takes both hands at once, when they could use a lighter (and obviously superior) weapon that allows you to wield multiple ones at a time, and thus supports multi-paradigm carnage?"

                P Offline
                P Offline
                peterchen
                wrote on last edited by
                #28

                Still, while I feel someewhat out of place in the partner program*, the Action Pack Subscription *is* cool for ISV's. They have a new program that even includes 3 licences of Visual Studio Profesisonal (Clickety[]). *) But that's ok, I feel out of place almost everywhere.

                Agh! Reality! My Archnemesis![^]
                | FoldWithUs! | sighist | WhoIncludes - Analyzing C++ include file hierarchy

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • M Member 96

                  It used to rock being a small software developer using Microsoft tools and technology. They supported us all the way with excellent programs like MSDN Universal which for one flat reasonable price gave you every tool the big guys used. They ditched MSDN Universal and I started to notice all sorts of stuff drifting slowly out of reach. For their online mapping solution they have two plans, free for non commercial useage and eye gougingly expensive to the point you need hundreds of thousands of customers to afford. There seems to be no middle ground any more with them. I'm starting to wonder if they just haven't written off smaller ISV's assuming they use open source software and technology and moved their focus to large corporate developers. The problem with that is small ISV's are no reflection of their client base, we focus on small business and we have thousands of customers all over the globe who use our software as an integral part of their business, in fact it causes them to continually upgrade their windows and buy desktop pc's, year after year, more often than not Office to go along with it etc. If I get pushed into the arms of open source and "cloud" development and move our app entirely online Microsoft loses not merely my MSDN subscription but potentially a lot of desktop computer users and their windows licenses and Office licenses etc etc. And I'm sure as hell not going to Microsoft's Azure cloud with it's unreliable, Byzantine pricing structures and policies. (Though I don't know if anyone else is any better at this point.) Maybe as we are all shoved onto Clouds the small ISV is a thing of the past, maybe you have to have a big investment to roll out a new online app. Maybe you can't start out with a couple of guys in a garage any more.


                  There is no failure only feedback

                  R Offline
                  R Offline
                  ronDW
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #29

                  Small ISV's? How about any small business? We are entering a time of having to submit to a ruling class. It is not restricted to being in government. I found an interesting comment in an article by a professor named Angelo M. Codevilla who wrote the article: "America's Ruling Class -- And the Perils of Revolution"[^]. He said, "In general, the country class includes all those in stations high and low who are aghast at how relatively little honest work yields, by comparison with what just a little connection with the right bureaucracy can get you. The country class is convinced that big business, big government, and big finance are linked as never before and that ordinary people are more unequal than ever." I do not believe in punishing the large corporations with taxes. It is that oppression that forces some toward greed as it looks to the little guy. It is survival for the corporate executives. I would prefer to be conservative and not oppress the business world but I think there are 'evil' corporations. It comes from a "ruling class" mentality. So do we want-to-be ISVs and already ISVs need to form a "tea-Party"? As Codevilla reflects in closing: "Suffice it to say that the ruling class’s greatest difficulty—aside from being outnumbered—will be to argue, against the grain of reality, that the revolution it continues to press upon America is sustainable. For its part, the country class’s greatest difficulty will be to enable a revolution to take place without imposing it. America has been imposed on enough." So to oppose the current trends, we have to organize and become like minded which goes against the "I" in ISV. I think it is important to understand the flow of things, know the times. Microsoft might have been friendly once, but it might be time to leave bondage.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • M Member 96

                    It used to rock being a small software developer using Microsoft tools and technology. They supported us all the way with excellent programs like MSDN Universal which for one flat reasonable price gave you every tool the big guys used. They ditched MSDN Universal and I started to notice all sorts of stuff drifting slowly out of reach. For their online mapping solution they have two plans, free for non commercial useage and eye gougingly expensive to the point you need hundreds of thousands of customers to afford. There seems to be no middle ground any more with them. I'm starting to wonder if they just haven't written off smaller ISV's assuming they use open source software and technology and moved their focus to large corporate developers. The problem with that is small ISV's are no reflection of their client base, we focus on small business and we have thousands of customers all over the globe who use our software as an integral part of their business, in fact it causes them to continually upgrade their windows and buy desktop pc's, year after year, more often than not Office to go along with it etc. If I get pushed into the arms of open source and "cloud" development and move our app entirely online Microsoft loses not merely my MSDN subscription but potentially a lot of desktop computer users and their windows licenses and Office licenses etc etc. And I'm sure as hell not going to Microsoft's Azure cloud with it's unreliable, Byzantine pricing structures and policies. (Though I don't know if anyone else is any better at this point.) Maybe as we are all shoved onto Clouds the small ISV is a thing of the past, maybe you have to have a big investment to roll out a new online app. Maybe you can't start out with a couple of guys in a garage any more.


                    There is no failure only feedback

                    I Offline
                    I Offline
                    ISVBiz
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #30

                    Looking at this thread I can't help but jump in. First full disclosure - I'm a Microsoftie. I work with small ISVs. Its a group we are super passionate about and critical to success so if we get it wrong, and we sometimes do, we are committed to fixing it. I also recognize that getting the right information from us isn't always as easy as it should be. Its an area we are constantly trying to improve. Enough mea culpa. As a small ISV you should be getting your software dev licenses through MAPS (Microsoft Action Pack)- https://partner.microsoft.com/global/program/memsubscriptions[^]it's the replacement for Empower for ISVs. About testing - Most of the former tests have been replaced with the new "platform ready" tests. They are free and self service. We have tests avail for Azure, Win7, WinServ, SQLServ, Exchange, Lync, and MS CRM. All of these test can be used to qualify for the Microsoft Partner Program as an ISV - which provides you with upgraded MSDN access. If you are an ISV with a valid solution but because of the way you deploy you cannot pass one of the tests then you can apply for a test waiver. The tests and waivers process are available at www.microsoftplatformready.com Hope that helps - i am interested in hearing about other things the community feels we are taking away, or anything that you'd like to see us add.

                    M 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • M Member 96

                      It used to rock being a small software developer using Microsoft tools and technology. They supported us all the way with excellent programs like MSDN Universal which for one flat reasonable price gave you every tool the big guys used. They ditched MSDN Universal and I started to notice all sorts of stuff drifting slowly out of reach. For their online mapping solution they have two plans, free for non commercial useage and eye gougingly expensive to the point you need hundreds of thousands of customers to afford. There seems to be no middle ground any more with them. I'm starting to wonder if they just haven't written off smaller ISV's assuming they use open source software and technology and moved their focus to large corporate developers. The problem with that is small ISV's are no reflection of their client base, we focus on small business and we have thousands of customers all over the globe who use our software as an integral part of their business, in fact it causes them to continually upgrade their windows and buy desktop pc's, year after year, more often than not Office to go along with it etc. If I get pushed into the arms of open source and "cloud" development and move our app entirely online Microsoft loses not merely my MSDN subscription but potentially a lot of desktop computer users and their windows licenses and Office licenses etc etc. And I'm sure as hell not going to Microsoft's Azure cloud with it's unreliable, Byzantine pricing structures and policies. (Though I don't know if anyone else is any better at this point.) Maybe as we are all shoved onto Clouds the small ISV is a thing of the past, maybe you have to have a big investment to roll out a new online app. Maybe you can't start out with a couple of guys in a garage any more.


                      There is no failure only feedback

                      T Offline
                      T Offline
                      tm_quinn
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #31

                      "Maybe you can't start out with a couple of guys in a garage any more." Of course you can't start as 3 guys in a garage anymore, all of the garage's outlets are charging our electric cars :laugh:

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • I ISVBiz

                        Looking at this thread I can't help but jump in. First full disclosure - I'm a Microsoftie. I work with small ISVs. Its a group we are super passionate about and critical to success so if we get it wrong, and we sometimes do, we are committed to fixing it. I also recognize that getting the right information from us isn't always as easy as it should be. Its an area we are constantly trying to improve. Enough mea culpa. As a small ISV you should be getting your software dev licenses through MAPS (Microsoft Action Pack)- https://partner.microsoft.com/global/program/memsubscriptions[^]it's the replacement for Empower for ISVs. About testing - Most of the former tests have been replaced with the new "platform ready" tests. They are free and self service. We have tests avail for Azure, Win7, WinServ, SQLServ, Exchange, Lync, and MS CRM. All of these test can be used to qualify for the Microsoft Partner Program as an ISV - which provides you with upgraded MSDN access. If you are an ISV with a valid solution but because of the way you deploy you cannot pass one of the tests then you can apply for a test waiver. The tests and waivers process are available at www.microsoftplatformready.com Hope that helps - i am interested in hearing about other things the community feels we are taking away, or anything that you'd like to see us add.

                        M Offline
                        M Offline
                        Member 96
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #32

                        Hi, I think you've probably got a lot of mostly helpful feedback from this thread already so there isn't much more to add except my personal pet peeve which is that Bing Maps has no licensing option for ISV's who make Windows based apps for small business. I've been emailing and asking for something for years (well before it became Bing Maps) and though everyone is nice and agrees that it makes little sense that Microsoft doesn't have a license option suitable to get yet more revenue out of their pricey map data they had to pay for, no one manages to accomplish anything. There is no technical reason we can't use Bing Maps with windows software but the license doesn't support it: http://www.microsoft.com/maps/product/licensing.aspx[^] In short I want our customers who use our windows desktop software to be able to work with their data plotted on Bing Maps. Technically more than feasible but the licensing doesn't support it. Get that fixed and I'll truly believe Microsoft cares about ISV's and small business end users.


                        There is no failure only feedback

                        I 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • A Anna Jayne Metcalfe

                          Sadly I know exactly what you mean - I feel exactly as you do. The current MSDN setup is definitely not ISV friendly (the rampaging pricing has certainly seen to that), and neither is their partner programme, which appears to be aimed solely at partners who wish to resell MS product to their clients. Empower appears on paper to be a great idea - but the ISV competancy tests which go with it are an inflexible joke our product couldn't pass no matter what we do (it's native code, and doesn't use Office or XML Web Services. Even MS UK threw up their hands and said "we don't know" at that one). I get the impression that Microsoft's idea of an ISV is an SME with venture capital funding rather than a successful small business of the type you describe. A shame really. They're missing an opportunity, and as you say in many cases that could mean throwing away customers to the OSS stack.

                          Anna :rose: Tech Blog | Visual Lint "Why would anyone prefer to wield a weapon that takes both hands at once, when they could use a lighter (and obviously superior) weapon that allows you to wield multiple ones at a time, and thus supports multi-paradigm carnage?"

                          T Offline
                          T Offline
                          TheCodeMonk
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #33

                          Wait, what? There is only one competency test to pass... Either you pass the one with a solution supporting Windows Server, or a solution passing compatibility with Windows 7. You can't pass either of those? If you can't, you have more problems than just being in the partner program... Those tests are dirt simple to pass... Even OUR application passed it and we consider the code in it sloppy and buggy. There is no requirement for Office or XML Web Services. None.

                          A 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • D Dan Neely

                            it still comes down to how many devs you have and what level you're using MSDN at. If you renew yearly the breakeven point is 3 or 4 devs at the baseline subscription levels (Professinal with MSDN Essentials, 549; Professional with MSDN $799), if you're using premium or ultimate it's a no-brainer. If you've decided a subscription is worthless and it's only worth buying MSDN for a new VS iteration then over the last decade you'd've bought MSDN 4x, or once every 2.5 years. At that point you need 5 or 6 devs to break even ($799, $1199) unless you're using premium or higher, in which case it's again a no-brainer. Depending on your workflow you can easily do without all the stuff in premium or higher so it still a bad fit for the smaller shops. I know MS wants to get you hooked on their advanced tools, but not everyone wants/needs the stuff they do.

                            3x12=36 2x12=24 1x12=12 0x12=18

                            T Offline
                            T Offline
                            TheCodeMonk
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #34

                            I think this boils down to what you need and what you don't need... Also, people comparing the MSDN Universal of 4 or 5 years ago cannot compare to what they offer now. The software is no where near the same. Before Team System came around, there really wasn't anything special to go after. You either got the dev tools or you didn't. Why does a 1 person shop need the architect version of visual studio? Why do you even need the database developers edition? That stuff is geared towards the large distributed teams that want all the development broken out by different people creating enterprise software. The chances that a 1 person shop is creating huge enterprise software is pretty slim. If you are doing it, my apologies, but also the best of luck to you. We have 4 developers (including myself who double teams as the manager), and we would be paying 3x what we are now had the partner program not been around. With our lowly $1450 a year, we get 10 MSDN subs, 10 licenses to Visual Studio Premium, TFS with client licenses, and a crap ton of test software that each of us has access too. Not to mention more production licenses of servers and client OS's that we will never fully use. Heck, I have 40 licenses to Windows 7 Enterprise that I haven't even found a use for yet. We look at whats available to us if we go gold, and for us the only reason to go gold is to get recognition, and in our market, being a partner is enough. When we look at the higher levels of the MSDN subscriptions with visual studio, there is nothing in there that would benefit us, at all. Even with the expression studio ultimate, the only thing you get is the stupid sketchflow which doesn't really make things any easier anyway. Most of the stuff, even in the premium edition, is mostly useless fluff that small 1 man shops can do without. Having early access to the betas are take it or leave it.. But getting a new copy of studio the day it comes out has kept us ahead of the game.

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                            0
                            • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                              No, It is the platform ready test. http://www.microsoftplatformready.com/[^] The website seems to be down for sometime.

                              T Offline
                              T Offline
                              TheCodeMonk
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #35

                              I can get there just fine, it's not down for me. It's just ONE platform ready test. From the requirements: Effective October 2010 Competency requirements are closely aligned with customer needs. To attain the Silver ISV/Software competency, you must meet the following requirements. Testing Requirements Your organization must deliver one software application or solution that must pass one of the following application tests: Windows 7 Platform Ready Windows Server 2008 R2 Platform Ready Windows Azure Platform Ready SQL Azure Platform Ready Certified for Microsoft Surface Qualifying applications include developed and marketed packaged software solutions based on Microsoft technologies. Custom-written applications not meant for resale do not qualify. Note: If your organization has qualified for the Silver ISV/Software competency with a software test that is not in the preceding list, you must meet the requirements detailed here once your test expires to retain the Silver ISV/Software competency. I did ours in about an hour. And that included downloading and setting up virtual environments to do the testing (i had VMs already built). So it might take longer for you to do, but they provide all the testing software and instructions. All you do is upload the XML file once it's done and it's auto-passed as long as your pass the test. It was showing up in my partner account 2 days after I submitted it.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • T TheCodeMonk

                                Wait, what? There is only one competency test to pass... Either you pass the one with a solution supporting Windows Server, or a solution passing compatibility with Windows 7. You can't pass either of those? If you can't, you have more problems than just being in the partner program... Those tests are dirt simple to pass... Even OUR application passed it and we consider the code in it sloppy and buggy. There is no requirement for Office or XML Web Services. None.

                                A Offline
                                A Offline
                                Anna Jayne Metcalfe
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #36

                                That appears to have changed only recently - the last time we looked at it a prerequisite of passing the ISV Competancy was an independent Platform Test by Verisign, including at least one "elective test component" of Office, XML Web Services etc. Visual Studio integration and ATL (both of which would have been ideal elective components for us) were not included, and our product used none of those available. Hence we simply couldn't pass that test.

                                Anna :rose: Tech Blog | Visual Lint "Why would anyone prefer to wield a weapon that takes both hands at once, when they could use a lighter (and obviously superior) weapon that allows you to wield multiple ones at a time, and thus supports multi-paradigm carnage?"

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • M Member 96

                                  It used to rock being a small software developer using Microsoft tools and technology. They supported us all the way with excellent programs like MSDN Universal which for one flat reasonable price gave you every tool the big guys used. They ditched MSDN Universal and I started to notice all sorts of stuff drifting slowly out of reach. For their online mapping solution they have two plans, free for non commercial useage and eye gougingly expensive to the point you need hundreds of thousands of customers to afford. There seems to be no middle ground any more with them. I'm starting to wonder if they just haven't written off smaller ISV's assuming they use open source software and technology and moved their focus to large corporate developers. The problem with that is small ISV's are no reflection of their client base, we focus on small business and we have thousands of customers all over the globe who use our software as an integral part of their business, in fact it causes them to continually upgrade their windows and buy desktop pc's, year after year, more often than not Office to go along with it etc. If I get pushed into the arms of open source and "cloud" development and move our app entirely online Microsoft loses not merely my MSDN subscription but potentially a lot of desktop computer users and their windows licenses and Office licenses etc etc. And I'm sure as hell not going to Microsoft's Azure cloud with it's unreliable, Byzantine pricing structures and policies. (Though I don't know if anyone else is any better at this point.) Maybe as we are all shoved onto Clouds the small ISV is a thing of the past, maybe you have to have a big investment to roll out a new online app. Maybe you can't start out with a couple of guys in a garage any more.


                                  There is no failure only feedback

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                                  FrankLaPiana
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #37

                                  Well, I'm not an ISV but my personal feeling is that MS has given up on the small developer, and Windows "native" development. My personal observation is most "native" work is being done with Linux, and anyone who wants to do "native C++" doesn't have much of a choice except to migrate away from Windows. History: SCO Unix and then USL sold "desktop Unix" licenses for $800 per computer; everyone quickly migrated to Windows 3.1 which cost $30. IBM had OS/2 (again, at $800 and over per computer) and when Windows NT appeared, there was a fairly rapid migration to Windows NT (cost under $100 at that time.) Now MS Windows desktop lists for $200 to $400. Hmmm where is the market going to go?

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                                  • M Member 96

                                    It used to rock being a small software developer using Microsoft tools and technology. They supported us all the way with excellent programs like MSDN Universal which for one flat reasonable price gave you every tool the big guys used. They ditched MSDN Universal and I started to notice all sorts of stuff drifting slowly out of reach. For their online mapping solution they have two plans, free for non commercial useage and eye gougingly expensive to the point you need hundreds of thousands of customers to afford. There seems to be no middle ground any more with them. I'm starting to wonder if they just haven't written off smaller ISV's assuming they use open source software and technology and moved their focus to large corporate developers. The problem with that is small ISV's are no reflection of their client base, we focus on small business and we have thousands of customers all over the globe who use our software as an integral part of their business, in fact it causes them to continually upgrade their windows and buy desktop pc's, year after year, more often than not Office to go along with it etc. If I get pushed into the arms of open source and "cloud" development and move our app entirely online Microsoft loses not merely my MSDN subscription but potentially a lot of desktop computer users and their windows licenses and Office licenses etc etc. And I'm sure as hell not going to Microsoft's Azure cloud with it's unreliable, Byzantine pricing structures and policies. (Though I don't know if anyone else is any better at this point.) Maybe as we are all shoved onto Clouds the small ISV is a thing of the past, maybe you have to have a big investment to roll out a new online app. Maybe you can't start out with a couple of guys in a garage any more.


                                    There is no failure only feedback

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                                    Yortw
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #38

                                    I (we, the company I work for) feel the same way, but perhaps for different reasons. Mostly, these days it seems Microsoft is trying to solve problems which aren't the problems we have. They produce wonderful frameworks/tools etc. that look good until we try to use them, and then we discover they are still great if you use them as intended, but because we are not an enterprise/large scale outfit, the way they were intended to be used just doesn't work for us. That's why, as a small ISV, we feel unloved. Of course it would be nice if things were cheaper, but I haven't heard my boss complaining about the price of MSDN... our current issue that our MCP/MCTS/MCPD certifications have expired. By having a certain number of employees with these certs we achieved some level of partner status which made MSDN more afforable (I think we had to have 2 certed employees to MCPD level, plus two customer references + pay somewhere around $3-4k for the equivalent of MSDN Universal). Our certs expired sometime in the last year and we had no idea until we tried to renew - and all the new dev courses require knowledge of new technologies like Linq, WPF etc. which are know of or have used a little, but because we're stuck in .Net 2.0 we probably don't know well enough to pass the exams. Our customers have some servers that won't run .Net 3.0+ and actually managing the .Net upgrade across multiple companies and hundreds of PC's is a problem, not to mention that VS2010/.Net 4 dropped support for the compact framework which some of our stuff relies on. That, combined with the fact that we didn't really see anything compelling for our business until .Net 4, means that we are behind the 8 ball now in terms of skillset. It actually isn't hurting us that much in terms of the business, but it's now an issue because of the certs/msdn cost. I haven't really got much experience with the cloud, but we did look at Azure briefly for a project we were doing. I don't *think* anyone elses pricing is better, at least not by a lot, but then again I don't really know. If I were going to the cloud I would still want to use Azure despite the pricing (if it was feasible), from the little I know I think their tools and architecture design for Azure is better than many of the other offerings and being able to leverage stuff I know like .Net is appealing. Sadly, we didn't use Azure (or any other cloud based system) for the project we considered it for *because* of the pricing, so that certainly is an issue. The funny thing about the cloud is that a

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                                    • M Member 96

                                      It used to rock being a small software developer using Microsoft tools and technology. They supported us all the way with excellent programs like MSDN Universal which for one flat reasonable price gave you every tool the big guys used. They ditched MSDN Universal and I started to notice all sorts of stuff drifting slowly out of reach. For their online mapping solution they have two plans, free for non commercial useage and eye gougingly expensive to the point you need hundreds of thousands of customers to afford. There seems to be no middle ground any more with them. I'm starting to wonder if they just haven't written off smaller ISV's assuming they use open source software and technology and moved their focus to large corporate developers. The problem with that is small ISV's are no reflection of their client base, we focus on small business and we have thousands of customers all over the globe who use our software as an integral part of their business, in fact it causes them to continually upgrade their windows and buy desktop pc's, year after year, more often than not Office to go along with it etc. If I get pushed into the arms of open source and "cloud" development and move our app entirely online Microsoft loses not merely my MSDN subscription but potentially a lot of desktop computer users and their windows licenses and Office licenses etc etc. And I'm sure as hell not going to Microsoft's Azure cloud with it's unreliable, Byzantine pricing structures and policies. (Though I don't know if anyone else is any better at this point.) Maybe as we are all shoved onto Clouds the small ISV is a thing of the past, maybe you have to have a big investment to roll out a new online app. Maybe you can't start out with a couple of guys in a garage any more.


                                      There is no failure only feedback

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                                      sjariel
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #39

                                      Hi I would have to say the opposite. Years ago they were terrible and they are so much better today. I am in Australia and years ago down here MS where terrible. I built a system that replaced a huge amount of unix boxes in a multi national org and was screaming to them for some help and got nothing. In the end MS sold the customer 1000's of windows and office licenses as they were able to replace their major unix system with mine and I did not see any recognition. The big multi national had an account manager to handle the OS and office sales so my software was the catalyst for them moving to windows but got nothing. Any yet to me this is exactly the type of thing that MS should have been aiding an ISV to do. This year I started another company to do web based line of business apps and have found MS so helpful. First they got me a websitespark license and now a bizspark. They have had free training day events and thrown in hosting on Azure. So they key is to start a startup. I have heard people warn that after 3 years when the bizspark license expires that I will be up for big costs. But reality is that if I use Azure to host my SQL Server and Web servers I wont be as this software and the managment is paid monthly and if I am not making money after 3 years well it is time to start another startup anyway.

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                                      • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                                        No, It is the platform ready test. http://www.microsoftplatformready.com/[^] The website seems to be down for sometime.

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                                        A Offline
                                        Anna Jayne Metcalfe
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #40

                                        Ta for the link - will look at it shortly. :beer: I do wish they'd get their s**t together with testing requirements and present a unified front; conflicting tests and requirements really are part of the problem. :doh:

                                        Anna :rose: Tech Blog | Visual Lint "Why would anyone prefer to wield a weapon that takes both hands at once, when they could use a lighter (and obviously superior) weapon that allows you to wield multiple ones at a time, and thus supports multi-paradigm carnage?"

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                                        • M Member 96

                                          Hi, I think you've probably got a lot of mostly helpful feedback from this thread already so there isn't much more to add except my personal pet peeve which is that Bing Maps has no licensing option for ISV's who make Windows based apps for small business. I've been emailing and asking for something for years (well before it became Bing Maps) and though everyone is nice and agrees that it makes little sense that Microsoft doesn't have a license option suitable to get yet more revenue out of their pricey map data they had to pay for, no one manages to accomplish anything. There is no technical reason we can't use Bing Maps with windows software but the license doesn't support it: http://www.microsoft.com/maps/product/licensing.aspx[^] In short I want our customers who use our windows desktop software to be able to work with their data plotted on Bing Maps. Technically more than feasible but the licensing doesn't support it. Get that fixed and I'll truly believe Microsoft cares about ISV's and small business end users.


                                          There is no failure only feedback

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                                          ISVBiz
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #41

                                          Hi John, I haven't forgotten about you I'm working with the bing maps team to get the answer.

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