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Microsoft Software Windows IT

Microsoft To Shut Down TechNet Subscription Service 280

otaku244 writes "Since 1998, Microsoft TechNet has been a mainstay for all system developers attached to the Microsoft platform, given the ease of access to almost every product the company has produced. Unfortunately, the days of a cheap, unlimited Microsoft development stack are coming to an end."
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Microsoft To Shut Down TechNet Subscription Service

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  • by JustANormalGuy ( 2969843 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @03:43PM (#44158811)
    Visual Studio and other products have free versions now, so TechNet subscription is mostly outdated service. Visual Studio Express is the same great product that the full version of Visual Studio is, but is great for beginners. Visual Studio as a whole is a great product too. And, MSDN subscription is there too.

    Combine that with subscription based Office and you have little reason to get TechNet.
    • by Major Blud ( 789630 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @03:51PM (#44158935) Homepage

      Some of us like to create test labs that will outlast the 30-180 day expiration date associated with MS evaluation periods (such as with SQL Server or BizTalk). An MSDN susbscription is more expensive than TechNet by the order of several magnitude.

      I'm not sure what's going on with MS these days. They release a monstrosity of a desktop OS (Win8), a sub-par hermaphrodite laptop/tablet to go with it (Surface), and they are now giving their loyal developers the finger.

      • So an MSDN subscription is either 19900 or 29900 dollars? Since when?

        • by MadAndy ( 122592 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @04:13PM (#44159199)
          ... for as long as I can remember!

          Here in New Zealand, MSDN Ultimate is $26,369.00.

          Better to fly first-class to the U.S. and pick one up for half the price. Understandably we're a little sour about it!
          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by Anonymous Coward

            And over here in Debian land we just type apt-get install build-essential.

            • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

              by Anonymous Coward
              and then patiently wait for the Year of the Linux Desktop.
          • by skegg ( 666571 )

            Ouch !!! [microsoft.com]

            Though we also get screwed here in Australia.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by mlawrence ( 1094477 )
          Actually *several* orders of magnitude would make it at least $199,000 or $299,000.
      • by JDG1980 ( 2438906 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @03:58PM (#44159027)

        I'm not sure what's going on with MS these days. They release a monstrosity of a desktop OS (Win8), a sub-par hermaphrodite laptop/tablet to go with it (Surface), and they are now giving their loyal developers the finger.

        The cynic in me thinks that Microsoft knows its desktop monopoly is becoming steadily less lucrative, so they want to squeeze out every last penny while they can. We all know that for years, many users got Technet subscriptions and ignored the "for testing only" proviso, instead using them as cheap installs for self, friends, and family. When Microsoft cared about desktop market share, this didn't bother them much, since they'd rather people use their software (even at low cost) instead of going to a competitor. Now, however, they have delusions of being a "device and service company" and want to cut the desktop loose. It's absurd, of course (the desktop is the only area that MS has any kind of real advantage over its competitors) but it is what Steve Ballmer thinks.

        • by Common Joe ( 2807741 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @05:01PM (#44159653) Journal

          The change in Technet doesn't affect me personally (as I'm a developer), but I'm at a life change right now and I need to change and update my programming skills. The question is, what should I be looking to do with my life?

          When Microsoft pulls stunts like this, I take notice and I know I'm not the only one. Why would I want to invest my time and money into a sinking ship? I have 20 to 25 more years of development before I retire and right now I'm a .NET developer. C# is a pretty good language, but Microsoft is screwing up so much else, I don't really see how businesses are going to continue to support Microsoft. When those businesses drop Microsoft, it's going to go fast and my ability to get and keep a good paying job will go with it.

          Microsoft, are you listening? Technet doesn't affect me directly, but I see this. You know that whole thing with Windows 8.0 and 8.1 and the no-start menu? That affected me and I started changing he advice I gave to people. Then there are the things that do affect me greatly. I called you a few months ago when I was investigating possibilities for my future and you gave me shitty advice because your own people couldn't figure out your own licensing. A word of warning: You have really big problems. You think you hide your issues from us? Tell us things are ok? Lie to us? Tell us that "Metro" which can only hog the whole screen is really a good thing? Think again. We can see your failures and piece together what is really going on behind your closed doors. We can smell how sick your company is and its really repugnant. People like me determine in the workforce which languages and operating systems to use. We play around with this stuff at work and at home. You really think you're going to squeeze us with UEFI and Technet? Your company is dying and we the tech people know it and we're going to start whispering that to our bosses and quietly switching away from you. You are not safe. The momentum is shifting and when it really gets going in the other direction you won't be able to stop it. You still have time to fix this, but you're being brain-dead stupid. Start listening to us because we sure as hell are listening and watching you.

          • You may want to take a little time to look into some non-sql databases (Redis, RethinkDB, MongoDB, Couch etc...) as well as another server-side platform (NodeJS, Python) ...
          • Been there, done that, and got the new IDE...

            Since you are a Microsoft developer you are probably earning money right now. (Don't diss me as saying that with other stuff you can't earn money.) This means you want to get into something that probably has an established marketplace and established income.

            1) Java, or anything related to Java. This is the little engine that could. Whether you are doing Scala, Java, Groovy, or Spring, etc. This little environment just keeps on going. I program these days for the

          • Real developers know that technet was bascially the exact same information available on their website, on a DVD. It also didn't include any developer tools at all (No OS's, No SDKs, No Visual Studio, No Sharepoint, etc.) The fact that most people just look it up online rather than putting in a disk today (and have for years) is why Technet is dead.

            Also real developers know that UEFI is a good thing and has nothing to do with any kind of lock in. You may not like secure boot, which is tin foil hattery of a

        • Do you know what the biggest indicator will be that they are not going to rely on the Desktop OS to be the cash cow?

          If they release Office for Android.

          If they do that then they will be admiting that Office is where they're going to make money and the OS will just be a secondary operation. The reason they are scared as crap to release Office on multiple platforms isn't because they can't do it, it's because they are scared of migration when Corporate Robots learn they aren't stuck with Windows to use their

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by mlts ( 1038732 ) *

          I think MS is shooting themselves in their own foot by canning Technet.

          Instead, for the same stuff, MS demands I pay $6119.00 with a $2569.00 renewal each year? That pretty much cuts out anyone but businesses.

          Microsoft needs developers and people versed in their offerings. Even though VS is not involved, cutting them off like this is not going to help with the paucity of apps for their device platforms. Instead of killing Technet, MS needs to actually expand it, so they can expand the Windows Phone ecosy

      • by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 01, 2013 @04:00PM (#44159051)

        TechNet was never for developers. It was for sys admins/IT professionals.

        • by zlives ( 2009072 )

          i guess MS no longer needs sys admins and IT professionals to support their products.

          • by mysidia ( 191772 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @08:42PM (#44161209)

            i guess MS no longer needs sys admins and IT professionals to support their products.

            They want Enterprises to move to Azure and the Microsoft cloud.

            On-Premise deployments of software are in the process of being phased out.

            Microsoft has planned obsolescence for Windows IT professionals

            • by masdog ( 794316 )
              Do they really expect that to happen? Cloud is great, but there are a lot of legal, financial, and regulatory reasons for on-premise deployments. Does Microsoft really think that companies will just move into the cloud (especially one run by Microsoft)?
        • im a uni student and get msdn-like access to microsoft software, and have even had access to vmware software (mainly workstation, but that was pretty handy)

          i like to run servers in a whitebox vmware esxi server for testing things, sometimes just to learn, sometimes because the IT consulting company i work for doesnt have anything i can test in before i do things at a client, and there are times where i am looking to make a chance that might cause a lot of problems if i cant do some quick testing first. with

      • by FatdogHaiku ( 978357 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @04:30PM (#44159381)

        ...a sub-par hermaphrodite laptop/tablet to go with it (Surface)...

        They knew people were going to say it could go fuck itself... so this is really a time saving feature...

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by mysidia ( 191772 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @06:10PM (#44160183)

        They release a monstrosity of a desktop OS (Win8), a sub-par hermaphrodite laptop/tablet to go with it (Surface), and they are now giving their loyal developers the finger.

        Technet subscriptions are not allowed to be used for software development and testing purposes per the EULA.

        Technet subscriptions are for IT administrators, training, evaluation, and proof of concept.

        MSDN subscriptions are for development, testing, and demonstration, per the EULA, and not allowed to be used for training/evaluation.

        I wonder if they are just going to combine the two?

      • Here you go, a free copy of Visual Studio 2012 Express: http://www.microsoft.com/visualstudio/eng/downloads#d-2012-express [microsoft.com] that includes all the MSDN information.

        SQL Server, why not develop on either SQL Express or SQL Compact, both are free as well.

        Making websites, no new signups, but you could have gotten Windows 7, SQL Server, Windows Server, Visual Studio 2012 Premium, and MSDN for free here for two years: http://www.microsoft.com/web/websitespark/webpro/ [microsoft.com]

    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 01, 2013 @03:55PM (#44158995)

      MSDN subscriptions are at least 3x the cost of a TechNet subscription. The point of the TechNet was that you were not a developer, you were an integration tester.

      • by Sir_Sri ( 199544 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @04:41PM (#44159473)

        This.

        From TFA it sounds like they're moving more to a 'you only need it for X number of days to do that sort of integration testing, or you can buy one license if you need more time'. If you need a lot of time and a lot of licenses to build an application that's what MSDN is for.

        Ultimately it's just a way to raise the price. Fair enough, if you think the price is too low on your product you're free to raise it and see if the market adjusts. I can see the problem they were getting into as more and more people were probably buying a technet license for their home family offices and parents and that sort of thing, which was costing MS money. I think they probably realized that when they dropped the price of Office Home and student people were.. well, willing to actually buy it. Rather than all these stupid deals where you got it through an employer or through school or the like (or you just pirated it). This way, you go into a store, you pay your money and you go home with it. No special program arrangements on MS end etc. Technet is/was a tremendously good deal, it was quasi legit enough that they couldn't justify trying to enforce the license, and that's the problem. Most of those people will continue to pay, so MS will try and charge them more money for it.

    • by Morpeth ( 577066 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @03:58PM (#44159019)

      It's patently obvious you have NEVER had a TechNet subscription -- especially if you think all there is to it is Office and a light version of VS.

      This is a serious drag, especially for contractors/consultants, small shops, and MS developers of all kinds

      • by avgjoe62 ( 558860 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @06:34PM (#44160373)

        This is a serious drag, especially for contractors/consultants, small shops, and MS developers of all kinds

        This. I set up an entire lab where I used to work using TechNet, mirroring the production environment so we could test MS Updates and other software updates before we let them loose on the corporate desktops. We even used it to test the changes the developers would port from their dev systems before we put them on the production systems.

        When I left that company, I used my own TechNet subscription to test deployments before I would go to a client site. I kept up on my skills and learned new ones using the subscription, even doing an entire MS Dynamics deployment on my network at home before installing it for a client. My TecnNet subscription added value to my work. I will be looking for some sort of replacement, because I know I the value it gave me. I just think Microsoft doesn't realize the value of letting a consultant learn their products in depth at their own pace.

      • I've had a Technet subscription for for years now, and honestly have only used it for cheap access to Office and Win X licenses. Yeah, once in a while I'll need to do an install of something like Exchange for testing before deployment, but that's not why I kept renewing.

        The fact is, MS products are really expensive. I used to pirate them because the costs were so high. When I started a business, and found out about Technet, I jumped on the chance to "go legit" without going broke (morally, more than tech

    • by jones_supa ( 887896 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @03:59PM (#44159043)

      Visual Studio and other products have free versions now, so TechNet subscription is mostly outdated service. Visual Studio Express is the same great product that the full version of Visual Studio is, but is great for beginners. Visual Studio as a whole is a great product too. And, MSDN subscription is there too.

      Visual Studio 2013 Preview [microsoft.com] just came out of the oven, too.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Resource View isn't even available in Express editions, so you can't even edit a dialog.
    • Visual Studio and other products have free versions now, so TechNet subscription is mostly outdated service. Visual Studio Express is the same great product that the full version of Visual Studio is, but is great for beginners. Visual Studio as a whole is a great product too. And, MSDN subscription is there too. Combine that with subscription based Office and you have little reason to get TechNet.

      You mean other than the fact that it costs considerably more for the MSDN subscription to get the same level of service. I went and looked at their free technet downloads and found the selection lacking, considerably. They only put in the main products so if I want to practice with MDT, MDOP, or any number of other smaller expansion packs I have to go with a much more expensive MSDN subscription. That complaint is secondary only to the fact that I can't do anything complicated with what is available because

    • by pla ( 258480 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @06:30PM (#44160343) Journal
      Visual Studio and other products have free versions now, so TechNet subscription is mostly outdated service.

      Translation: "I have no clue what Technet does".

      Visual studio? Try virtually every Microsoft product ever created, available for download and legal for running without further licensing so long as you use them for intentionally-vague "development" purposes.


      Bad move all around, Microsoft. On the one hand, I don't really care, because I have the last 15 or so years worth of physically mailed MSDN discs, and if you cared about selling from your back-catalog, you'd still offer XP for retail. On the other hand - You want me giving the latest and greatest version of your toys a spin, because what amuses me to write my next internal app for today, my company will pick up a few hundred thousand in licenses to legally deploy it next year.

      But hey, just keep pushing Win8 and the cloud, and pulling stunts like this, and then wonder why no one seems to write apps for your platforms anymore.
      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        Visual studio? Try virtually every Microsoft product ever created, available for download and legal for running without further licensing so long as you use them for intentionally-vague "development" purposes.

        I believe the product you are thinking of is called MSDN Ultimate. Technet doesn't even include Visual studio, because Technet is not for use in an application development environment!

    • Did you read the article? Here is what was said:

      "Unfortunately, the days of a cheap, unlimited Microsoft development stack are coming to an end."

      First, Visual Studio Express is not a development environment. It is a toy environment to attempt to learn how to program. Yes yes I can write some "sophisticated" code. However, let's compare this to other IDE's like Eclipse, NetBeans or Idea Community edition. I am not trying to start an IDE war. I am pointing out regardless of the mentioned IDE's their base func

  • by onyxruby ( 118189 ) <onyxruby@ c o m c a s t . net> on Monday July 01, 2013 @03:56PM (#44159009)

    This has got be the third dumbest idea Microsoft has had in the last decade (Windows 8.0 and the f*cking the start button in Windows 8.1 being the first two). Microsoft Technet was a relatively cheap way for people that made a career out of Microsoft products to get their products for a reasonable price.

    This allowed for two very important things, first it allowed for the ecosystem to be license compliant which made it easier to stay in the habit of being license compliant while at work work. The second thing it did was allow workers exposure to products to gain access for skills development. Workers that have exposure to products tends to push for the products that they are familiar with at work.

    It's all about the ecosystem, and TechNet was absolutely brilliant for supporting the ecosystem of workers that support their products in the work place. Sure, you can follow their suggestion to switch over to the much more expensive MSDN subscription, but for most workers that is simply too expensive for a personal salary. Microsoft is shooting themselves in the foot for exploitation of the very people the very workers that make their success possible to begin with in the first place.

    • I think what they're trying to do is move people over to the evaluations, which is really what TechNet was *supposed* to be for. Sure, the license keys you got with it allowed you to "indefinitely evaluate" their software (in a lab environment, or whatever), but with some trials lasting as long as half a year, it's kind of become redundant.

      • Not really. Not if you have several projects over the next few years and don't want to have to set up your Server 2012 domain over and over and over again...
        • by mysidia ( 191772 )

          Not really. Not if you have several projects over the next few years and don't want to have to set up your Server 2012 domain over and over and over again...

          One of the things they will probably fix one day, is if you're content with a notification experience and/or (with some of the OSes) a reboot every 24 hours, you can probably evaluate for longer by not activating, or by ignoring the expiration

    • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Monday July 01, 2013 @04:42PM (#44159489) Homepage Journal

      This has got be the third dumbest idea Microsoft has had in the last decade

      Hey, as someone who competes against proprietary solutions (including Microsoft) with Free Software solutions, I wholeheartedly endorse this change!

      What I frequently see is businesses that hire a developer to code a solution, and that developer has Technet, so he chooses whatever technology he thinks is best on there, and then when the customer gets ready to deploy it, they find a chain of Microsoft dependencies that all need licensing and CAL's, and often get roped into a software maintenance agreement for 5+digits over their initial cost estimate. Often it gets big enough to require new hardware and a virtualization solution too.

      I get "second-opinion" work from them, but it's often too late to do anything else. I've heard of some (that I don't work with) who 'just get Technet' too.

      If there's a silver lining, it's that I often get first-crack at the next project. But either way, this is a great decision on Microsoft's part as far as I'm concerned!

    • by s.petry ( 762400 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @04:43PM (#44159495)

      It is a way to turn a quick buck and show the shareholders that MS can make money with something other than XBox. Let us look at the long list of garbage shareholders are dealing with at MS.

      Windows Phone is a dud, Windows 8 was simply horrible and I'm not sure if they can make it work. They keep pumping money into advertising, and people keep pulling out the old MAC vs. PC commercial telling them how stupid that tactic was and still is.

      Server is still losing market share to Linux and Desktops are losing market share to tablets, phones, and MAC computers. It was never a boom town, but Exchange and Outlook was cheaper than Lotus Notes so people went that route.

      IIS never saw huge adoption, but the reduced server footprint means that more webapp servers are moving to something other than MS products. Office and other productivity software has been stagnant for over a decade.

      Bing is still a joke, and as with Windows 8 they keep paying people to tell you how good it is when we all see what the search engine market looks like.

      So this is a way of them screwing people in order to turn a quick buck. Even if it shoots their own foot off, they don't care. I have two words for people thinking that they do care, which is "Windows 8".

      All in all, I believe that this is a good thing! While it has taken a long time for justice to happen, and the failure of the US Justice system to make happen, Capitalism is killing off a monopoly all on it's own. It's going to be a slow and painful death, but a well deserved one. It also shows that a corrupt justice system just makes things worse! If they would have done their job in the first place and chunked them up like AT&T, they might still be thriving as several separate companies. (I emphasize the "might" there because it is a rhetorical fallacy to make a claim.)

    • by Freshly Exhumed ( 105597 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @04:45PM (#44159515) Homepage

      Rod Trent over at http://windowsitpro.com/windows/dead-microsoft-technet [windowsitpro.com] speculates on the TechNet shutdown that "...in a Cloud world, this makes a lot of sense. Those wanting to test new software can simply spin-up a Microsoft Azure-hosted VM, completely configured for the application they want to try-out or through the use of TechNet Virtual Labs. These days, using Microsoft Azure, a testing lab can be setup and running in minutes with just a mouse click."

      Plausible, but risky if/when devs don't like it.

      • by PRMan ( 959735 )
        If you don't mind your dev code out in the cloud. What could possibly go wrong?
        • by 0123456 ( 636235 )

          If you don't mind your dev code out in the cloud. What could possibly go wrong?

          Look on the plus side. The NSA will be able to let you know whether you have any serious bugs.

      • Those labs are fun for a quickie, like a short test drive, but if you want to do anything more serious than take it for a spin around the block you're out of luck now. This will seriously hamper the ability of IT professionals to do any meaningful research on MS product offerings. My $350 subscription has netted them an extra 10 grand in revenue last year alone. I'm paying for the ability to test drive their products, which is in their best interests, and they think that taking that tool away is no big deal
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      This allowed for two very important things, first it allowed for the ecosystem to be license compliant which made it easier to stay in the habit of being license compliant while at work work. The second thing it did was allow workers exposure to products to gain access for skills development. Workers that have exposure to products tends to push for the products that they are familiar with at work.

      I probably already mentioned it, but the Cynic in me tells me Microsoft maybe wants fewer people having a

  • by Vrtigo1 ( 1303147 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @03:59PM (#44159037)
    Technet was very reasonably priced at a couple hundred bucks a year and that got you access to almost everything Microsoft makes. Of course, you couldn't use it for production, but for testing, etc it was great. As a sysadmin, I don't want to pay 5-10x as much for an MSDN subscription because I just want the software, I could care less about the development stuff.

    So at the end of the day, what Microsoft will see is less money from me when I turn to other sources to get the MS software I need for testing purposes. I know guys at other companies with MSDN universal subscriptions and they're happy to share their login info.
  • by Synerg1y ( 2169962 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @04:00PM (#44159049)

    For an annual subscription fee of a few hundred dollars, subscribers get the right to download virtually all of the desktop and server software Microsoft sells, with multiple product keys. The software is licensed for evaluation purposes only, but that restriction is part of the license agreement and not enforced in the software itself.

    Could it be they're trying to cut pirating / abuse as a business entity to raise license sales? Nah, it's a conspiracy to spite the users.. ya that's it.

    • Pirating will happen anyway, and MSFT of all software companies knows (or knew) how to benefit from "market chumming".

      Seems they forgot how Office 97 slaughtered the competition by being so convenient to copy from the CDs borrowed from work.

      I want to see MSFT screw users good and hard because I don't care for the company. Large hardware dongles keyed to each application would be just dandy.

    • Could it be they're trying to cut pirating / abuse as a business entity to raise license sales? Nah, it's a conspiracy to spite the users.. ya that's it.

      Of course they don't intend to spite the users - nobody running a company ever puts fucking over their users as a business goal. It's disingenuous to suggest otherwise.

      The problem happens when they forget to include "not fucking over users" as a business goal and so they end up doing just that as a side-effect of otherwise well-intentioned decisions.

      • I'm sure they acknowledge that they're going to lose some users over this. However, from a business POV the users they're losing are bottom tier for them, so they are indicating that they're losing more from piracy and unlicensed production use from this program than what they're gaining from the users.

        A few bad apples don't spoil the bunch, but when most of them are rotten, you throw it away right?

        It's also unreasonable to expect a commercial publicly traded business to continue all programs forever, thei

        • A few bad apples don't spoil the bunch, but when most of them are rotten, you throw it away right?`

          You are not using that metaphor correctly, pretty much completely backwards.
          The saying is, âoeeven a few bad apples will quickly ruin the whole barrel.â

    • by Stormin ( 86907 ) *

      I was an MSDN subscriber for 11 years. I wrote applications for many clients that were Microsoft based, and those clients spent significant sums on licenses for their servers, CALs, etc.

      Over the years though it got harder and harder to justify the cost of MSDN, especially as they did all these things to restrict availability of product keys, etc.

      I decided not to renew my MSDN subscription. I only have one client left using a MS stack, and they will be migrated to a Linux / Java solution shortly. They wil

    • by hackus ( 159037 )

      NOW piracy is a problem?

      Bit late in the game tisn't it?

      No, something else is up and I think it is the gradual decline of Microsoft as we are seeing defensive moves all across the board to make any sort of profit.

      I am not sure how people on Slashdot feel about the cloud, but the idea of allowing a third party company store all of your private and critical data for your organization is like out of some sort of 1984 B movie knock off from Hollywood.

      So a cloud substitute won't work for trying out Microsoft soft

  • by JustAnotherIdiot ( 1980292 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @04:09PM (#44159151)
    Microsoft hasn't been hating on their partners enough lately, too much on their customers.
    Thanks for remembering us, Microsoft!
  • by lord_mike ( 567148 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @04:24PM (#44159323)

    "Developers! Developers! Developers!" I guess that with their obsession of trying to be everything Apple, they've decided to abandon everything that made Microsoft successful. Is the management team just panicking and throwing crap at the wall to see what sticks?

  • by roc97007 ( 608802 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @04:33PM (#44159417) Journal

    > Unfortunately, the days of a cheap, unlimited Microsoft development stack are coming to an end.

    ...followed by a sharp decrease in Microsoft development.

    • With Android, iOS, and Web development taking center stage these days, that decrease in Microsoft development is already well under way.

      • With Android, iOS, and Web development taking center stage these days, that decrease in Microsoft development is already well under way.

        Exactly. So this would be a perfect time to eliminate your cheap, unlimited development stack.

        If you were trying to commit corporate suicide.

  • (Or, What can a clueless Microsoft management fuck up this week?)

    Microsoft wants to cut down on piracy of its development tools.

    All Java developement tools are free.

    SharpDevelop is free.

    Any questions?

  • ...with the OS or the language platform anymore. Not enough long term profit in it. They want to be a sort of Cloud/HP/Apple. They want to be a smartphone/tablet and internet based business services vendor and that's it. There's apparently just not enough profit in the OS or supporting application developers.

    Why don't they just admit it so we can all move on? Linux awaits.

    • by JDG1980 ( 2438906 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @09:41PM (#44161581)

      Microsoft doesn't want to be bothered with the OS or the language platform anymore. Not enough long term profit in it. They want to be a sort of Cloud/HP/Apple. They want to be a smartphone/tablet and internet based business services vendor and that's it. There's apparently just not enough profit in the OS or supporting application developers.

      It's clear that this is what Ballmer is thinking (he's recently on record as saying that he wants MS to become a "device and services company"), but it really doesn't make any damn sense.

      When it comes to cloud services and portable devices, MS is actually pretty late to the game, with nothing particularly special to offer. And their brand name is actually a negative – even people who like MS products often don't like their business practices, and many people only use MS because they more or less have to.

      I use Windows at home because it's what I am used to (I've been using it since Win95), and because some of the software I want to run is only available for Windows. My workplace uses Windows, Office, and a variety of other MS technologies in part because it's an industry standard, but also largely because of legacy lock-in: much of the third-party software we use is Windows-only, we have to work with existing Office documents all the time, and all our existing processes and procedures are based around Windows/Office.

      The desktop (and associated IT functions related to the desktop) is the one area where Microsoft has a real competitive advantage that will be very hard for anyone else to erode. Yet they seem blithely willing to ignore it, throw it away, in favor of moving to new lines of business where existing competition is fierce and they don't bring anything new to the table. It doesn't make any damn sense, and if the stockholders cared about the long-term viability of the company, they'd pitch Ballmer (and his chair) out the window right now.

  • Oh well, so much for that theory.

  • Now you'll have to put that test client on the cloud and get it through Azure so you can do your testing. I'm sure with Azure you can deploy almost any Windows OS you want.

  • MSDN is the developer stack. More stuff, but costs more too

  • Change the subscription policy so that you have to check in every 24 hours to maintain your subscription. You can only access it from a friends house if your home PC is still on. Hey, it worked for the Xbox One, didn't it?
  • I liked the way TechNet felt like a group of people united around the purpose of pushing MSFT's software beyond its stated limits. I think they improved a lot as a result of the feedback they got.

  • It's actually all due to the perceived threat of piracy. Rather sad actually. I'm sure it was misused more often then not, but I think it will hurt more than help in the long wrong. My employer wants to can my MSDN subscription due to moving to open source...was going to try to talk them into a technet subscription so we have access to test the latest versions of windows, exchange, office, etc. but now it looks like that won't be an option. Keep in mind that I've had a personal technet account for a whi
  • All done now (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Bravoc ( 771258 ) on Monday July 01, 2013 @09:49PM (#44161623) Journal
    As an MCT, I get the TechNet subscription as part of my annual fees. Probably the most valuable benifit of the MCT program. Since I'm not really doing much with MSFT training these days, having much more fun with Linux and Open Source stuff, I've been debating weather or not to keep my MSFT certifications going. I stopped doing all the Novell certification crap back in the '90s as they became less and less relevant. I'm thinking this is just more MSFT not being able to figure out how to play in today's environment. I guess I'm done with Microsoft now.

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