========================================================================
ENTERPRISE WINDOWS: OLIVER RIST                 http://www.infoworld.com
========================================================================
Monday, November 29, 2004

TECHNET PLUS 2.0 GIVES WINDOWS SHOPS CAUSE TO PERK UP

By Oliver Rist

Posted November 26, 2004 3:00 PM Pacific Time

Being tech geek press may not be as glamorous as writing for Rolling
Stone, but it's still got a few perks. That's why we journalist types
tend to whine louder than most when those perks get taken away. I don't
get to rub elbows with rock stars and their groupies, so at the least I
should have free access to any kind of software that strikes my fancy.
At least that's my logic.

ADVERTISEMENT
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW TO ENHANCE YOUR IT PRODUCTIVITY
This InfoWorld Spotlight on IT Productivity, Sponsored by
Intel and BMC software brings together news, white
papers, and research on capturing value through IT
metrics, managing your company's IT productivity,
linking IT priorities to business objectives, and
managing IT investments. Visit this Spotlight today to
find out how to optimize your IT productivity:
http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=A2D788:2B910B2
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --

Microsoft used to share that reasoning. You'd call their PR agency,
prove you're press, and a free subscription to MSDN (Microsoft Developer
Network) was yours. For a Microsoft review geek like me, MSDN is a
godsend. All the new software just shows up; no fussing with review
requests and similar obstacles. But in 2004, Microsoft canceled this
policy for press. No rock stars, no groupies, no free MSDN subscription.
It's been breaking my heart since last spring.

But last week, in Copenhagen of all places, Microsoft managed to put a
little perkiness back in my life by introducing TechNet Plus 2.0. The
previous TechNet subscription didn't work that well for review hounds
like me -- not only was the software severely time-limited, but it also
omitted a number of important products.

TechNet Plus 2.0, however, is a different breed. This iteration brings
you full versions of all software in the Microsoft Windows operating
system, Office system, and Windows Server system product lines. And,
much like MSDN, you'll get beta versions of upcoming releases for
early-bird learning-curve missions. This turns TechNet from an expensive
commercial into an actual tool that can really help not only
groupie-deprived techno-reporters like me, but desktop-support
technicians and network managers as well.

They've also been doing some hiring up there in the Northwest, as
TechNet Plus 2.0 beefs up your support options. First, every TechNet
Plus 2.0 subscriber gets two no-charge technical-support incidents,
which should make those first two installation hours a little cheaper.
Beyond your two freebies, TechNet users also get a 20 percent discount
on subsequent tech support calls. There's nothing like cheap hold music
to make me grin.

Should hold music not be your thing, hit the Web where TechNet Plus 2.0
now gives you access to more than 100 topic-specific newsgroups. Drop
your particular problem on a thread, and Microsoft is guaranteeing
24-hour turnaround in English. It jumps to two days if you force the
good folks in Seattle to translate to French, German, or Spanish.

And last but not least, the new TechNet ensures you've got all the
latest patches, security updates, and hot fixes on CD. Just in case you
lose Internet connectivity, you can still set up a new machine entirely
from scratch. Suddenly, that little TechNet CD wallet becomes a real
treasure trove.

Fortunately, Microsoft says that TechNet won't be married to this format
forever, either. Where we'll still get our subscription on CD and DVD
for the near future, Redmond has announced it wants to move all TechNet
content to a subscriber-accessible Web site as well. And a brand new
feature is TechNet Virtual Labs, which I've already discussed
previously. For those crazy few of you who don't read every last
syllable of my word-craft, Virtual Labs offers sandbox installations of
complex Microsoft products designed not only to let you eat the learning
curve in a reasonable stretch, but also to test the effect the product
will have on your existing infrastructure.

All this for only $529 for a single-user license. Now if I can convince
InfoWorld to pay for it, I'll be right back on Perk Street. But even if
you don't have a magazine's purse you can pickpocket, TechNet Plus 2.0
is definitely worth the price of admission, especially for field support
technicians. It's finally a truly useful IT toolkit and one more
tangible way that Redmond can differentiate itself from the support
capabilities offered by the penguin people.

Oliver Rist is a senior contributing editor at InfoWorld.


========================================================================
TECHWORLD: THE NEW WEB SITE FOR UK IT PROFESSIONALS

Techworld is IDG's Web site for the IT professional.
It has been set up with one aim in mind; that of making
the network and IT manager(1)s job easier. It is written by
people with experience of running networks, people who are
aware of the technical problems that are thrown up in the
course of the working day. People like you in fact. Let us
know what you think at http://www.techworld.com

ADVERTISE
========================================================================
For information on advertising, contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

UNSUBSCRIBE/MANAGE NEWSLETTERS
========================================================================
To subscribe, unsubscribe or change your e-mail address for any of
InfoWorld's e-mail newsletters, go to:
http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=A2D785:2B910B2

To subscribe to InfoWorld.com, or InfoWorld Print, or both, or to renew
or correct a problem with any InfoWorld subscription, go to
http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=A2D787:2B910B2

To view InfoWorld's privacy policy, visit:
http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=A2D786:2B910B2

Copyright (C) 2004 InfoWorld Media Group, 501 Second St., San Francisco,
CA 94107



This message was sent to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to