Virtually Free Server R2

Microsoft, System Admin
3 Comments

John Howard recently left Technet and moved on to become a Program Manager for Windows Virtualisation. Today he announces, on the heel of many rumors, that Virtual Server 2005 R2 is indeed free. Why, you may ask?

Although there are many reasons (see presspass site), the nutshell answer is relatively straightforward. If you look into the future of where we're heading with Windows Virtualisation in the Longhorn Server timeframe, virtualisation can be thought of as a "commodity" – commonplace, extensively used and most importantly free functionality out of the box. Windows Virtualisation will include full migration capability from Virtual Server 2005 R2 to Windows Virtualisation, so this is somewhat of a no-brainer to get people onto the next release.

Enterprise edition is free, both 32bit and 64bit one.

How Windows Mobile Push works

Mobility
2 Comments

Skip a webcast this week, get a to-go sandwich and read this article by Vanitha Prabhakaran. It explains the Direct Push technology, how it works and how its troubleshooted. This should be required reading by anybody involved in Exchange/Mobility. Read it here.

Microsofts Desktop Live Strategy

IT Business, Microsoft
9 Comments

Found a cool new blog with a cool old story but I feel it warrants mentioning if only for the cool community features it brings to the table. Cool! The Live Mail Desktop blog is outlining the features that will be available in the next incarnation of Outlook Express (Windows Vista Mail) and Windows Live Desktop Mail. Windows Vista Mail … brings the Outlook Express core features plus community integration (Microsoft newsgroups), file based databases for mail and contacts, integrated search with Vista, as well as a spam/phishing protection and spell check. Windows Live Desktop Mail … goes a few steps further. It integrates an RSS reader, Blog It! features, Photomail, emoticons, separate POP3 inbox folders. This is great news.. for Jen & Sarah and Gmail. You see, these two will hump anything with a Google logo on it. It's kind of like Microsoft Koolade, the undying loyalty for crappy beta-level applications. While there is slim to no chance that Blog It! will integrate with third party blogging tools this might give a lot of folks that rely on Gmail that offline/archiving functionality that is simply critical. Jen recently had a mental breakdown over Gmail going down ("Gmail is ungodly") and she couldn't get to her homework. Now I'll give you that she is a PR major and doesn't understand the meaning of free or beta or TINSTAFL but it illustrates the biggest problem with "free" services in that there is simply no guarantee, no support and no expectation whatsoever. How do I explain this to my PR folks out there… "If it breaks it cannot be unbrokened." There is no support Indian to call, there is nothing you can threaten to sue because you already gave ownership of all your mail to Google (yes dear, read the agreement you accepted to open the account), and you have no backup because…. well, why would you backup if you have 2GB of storage? Right? Right? Wrong. So how do you use Windows Mail in the most suicidal way with Gmail? Well, open two Gmail accounts. Setup the first account with Gmail as pop3 and then store your nightly backups in the second Gmail account using GMail Drive.

Is your next PC ready for Vista?

Microsoft, OS
4 Comments

Kind of, sort of, maybe? You're not the only one unsure about it, as a matter of fact it is one of the most puzzling conversations on the Internet as of late – what kind of hardware will Vista demand to run efficiently? The latest beta builds have improved the performance quite a bit, I am typing this post on a laptop that now boots into Vista faster than XP. The same machine required close to a day to install November builds with the latest one completing in less than an hour – on battery. Chairs have been thrown people, the performance gains are there and it is looking solid. But how do you spec your next workstation so it can run Vista? Well, go with at least a beefy 64bit chip (no Celeron, no Sampron) and get as much ram as you can. That is about the end of the known minimum requirements but since Vista is overflowing with graphical gadgetry you might want to avoid the el cheapo brand of video card. You know the names… the S3's… the Trident's… the integrated Intel … Basically feel free to consider anything that Dell includes as inferior and upgrade to the nearest best (non-shared) alternative. Much more on this as we get closer to launch but in the meantime spend your money on memory. Looks like 512 is the new basement. What does Vista Capable mean? Basically its designed for Windows XP and will be capable of running Windows Vista Home Edition. In my humble opinion, save your money for a few months. Unless there is a smell of burned silicone in the air you might as well feed your piggy bank for the next year and run Vista the way its supposed to be run.

The importance of taking time off

IT Business, SMB
20 Comments

Take time off in the IT world? Surely this is some sort of an April Fools joke, right? Nope. You see to the right of this text is a picture of my fat ass chilling in a lazy river many, many pounds ago. Before marathons, before a global network nightmare, before the company and all the ITPRO community things there was plenty of time to be spent in the water parks. I blogged earlier today over on my QuickVlad blog about a public comparison between working in IT and working in jail. Perhaps that is why I feel most my readers are prisoners? Either way, it does seem like that every now and then. Your network activity is tracked, your email is being read by half a dozen people, you have 30 RDP and SSH sessions open and OH! someone needs the site turned up right away even though they had a proposal in their hands for three months and just never sent it back. This is every day in Vladville and a reason I write this blog. I also talk to my buddy Rich Walkup (he is still a slave, not quite a masta yet) about how we've never been this successful and how we've never worked quite this hard. So today I'm disonnecting my home WAN and going down by the pool to kick back a little and relax. No books, no whitepapers, no schematics, no reports, no FPGA boards, no specs of any kind. Just me, my mp3 player and a dilbert book. Why? Relaxing helps you remember details It is far too easy to forget and misplace details that go on during the weekday (weeknight). You're not always in a position to take a note, document a conversation, send an email. Kicking back and not trying to hit 100% all the time lets you reflect and remember the little things you meant to do before something bigger fell in your lap. Relaxing allows you to review your process You cannot review your process in a meeting, I'm sorry. You're looking at the clock and thinking about how you're actually going to get things done with the process you currently have without the hour you just blew "talking" about it. Think, really think, about the intricacies of the processes you are currently spending the most time at and find a way to change them for something better. Relaxing opens your mind to new opportunities When you're stuck working on the same old thing your enterprising skill set falls apart. You're more likely to get demotivated than actually inspired to try something new. So take a minute, kick back, and don't think about what you're doing right now but what you could be doing (to make yourself happier, to make more money, to look better in front of your staff/clients/coleagues/peers). If you just stick with the tunnel vision you will not go far. Relaxing helps you get the big picture Same as the above, drop the tunnel vision. We all have a point we're at now and a point we'd like to be at but sometimes it is hard to look at the sky around the two. Further, the longer you work at what you're up to right now you lose perspective or even the reason you desired your end goals. For example, lets say you took on a project that would buy you a new car. Three months later you're 10% on your way to that Lamborghini and you look at the poster every day and say – "my ass is so gonna love those leather bucket seats" – to each his own, right? Well, we lose the big picture sometimes. Our priorities in work and in life tend to change. In the grind its hard to recognize that. So take a day and see if the big picture you used to have grew any or suddenly became a lot clearer. Here's to a start of your beautiful day! See you on Monday.

PSS and Change Management

Podcast
2 Comments

Let's face it, most problems with SBS happen when changes are made. Patches, hot fixes, service packs, migrations, upgrades. SBS PSS guys take on the topic and R2 issues in the latest Inside SBS Episode #17. They are drinking that sweet sweet Livemeeting coolade but don't let that turn you away, I'm listening to it right now and the voice quality is excellent. Download #17

Vista Beta & Meaning of Beta

Microsoft, OS
2 Comments

Good news for the folks that are willing to spend the weekend testing a new Vista build. Get to it before everyone else brings connect.microsoft.com to a crawl.

Dear Longhorn / Windows Vista Beta Tester, We are pleased to announce the availability of Windows Vista build 5342 this afternoon. This build is a snapshot of our progress on our way to the Beta 2 milestone and will allow you to verify fixed bugs as well as check for new regressions that may have been introduced. We need your feedback quickly so it can be evaluated for inclusion into Beta 2. For this reason we ask that you download and install this build as soon as possible. This is the first build we are making available to the beta program outside the CTP so please be sure to read this message completely.

For what its worth, I have been a passionate player-hater of Vista because performance was just NOT there. I mean not even remotely bareable on even a brand new PC. This turned around with the last build, it is almost as tollerable as XP if not quite finished/ready. Thats the beta world for you, its not something that you use in production. And while I'm on the beta tangent, several clueless people on the list were suggesting to someone that was relatively new to SBS to go ahead an install a beta product. The same beta product that Microsoft offers no support for (ie, you break your system beyond recognition and you can't call for help.) The same beta product that has disclaimers, warnings, FAQ's and big red BETA warnings. Yup. So if you're an IT Pro please be a professional and do not allow people to install beta/incomplete/unfinished software on production PC's. Not everyone has the same set of skills to handle experimental software so please don't pour people a poison and tell them to go ahead and drink it if they are thirsty. Fine in a lab, fine on an expendable box… but not in production unless you're on the TAP program and you have Microsoft to hold your hand. Nino from Exchange PSS recently posted on this topic, please take a sec to read it.

Leadership Apathy

Misc, SMB
8 Comments

Over the past few months I've been looking at the communities I am involved in and I really did not like what I saw in terms of value that those groups presented me and its members. I have lately gotten really tired of a lot of issues that I inadvertently became a spokesman for: Microsoft lack of piracy enforcement, Microsoft lack of UG support, major vendors competing with the SMB chain, supposed MCSE's mocking and disrespecting newbies in newsgroups… But then I realized why some folks chose to remain small. They choose to remain small because they think small. There is no passion. No entrepreneurial spirit. No willingness to rise above, work hard, take a long term view. It's all about today, now, immediate gratification. Thats not how things work folks! But propose the change and roaches scatter. Honestly, I probably made a mistake when I started caring and getting involved in the politics of the SBS community. I'm a CEO and an MCSE, thats where my strengths lie and I will continue to pour all I've got to help people that want to be better and greater than they are today.

E12 – Vladstyle

E12
5 Comments

I just got some very exciting news from my MVP lead — it appears that now that Exchange 12 is available to a solid amount of people in the Beta form I can talk about it — and show it — at length. I'll be meeting a ton of my fellow Exchange MVP's in about two weeks at Orlando Exchange Connections and will formulate my approach with their assistance. I am very excited, specifically because nobody talks or shows Exchange. Pardon me, but your IQ must be really low to get a thril out of a 3D notepad with alpha transparent title bar. Show me something that is actually used by kids that aren't 12! I will give you a hint: "Vlad, yea!" 🙂

Windows Live Mail fights obsolescene

IT Culture, Microsoft
2 Comments

As much progress as places like Gmail have made there is simply no substitute for an offline mail storage that web based solutions simply do not offer. Looks like the Live folks actually got that message and are rebranding the Outlook Express into Windows Live Mail. Still in beta, this beast is a part of the latest Windows Vista beta and integrates quick searching, offline storage, spell checking, new UI, better newsgroup integration and finally RSS! I guess someone there finally heard Scoble 🙂 Whats particularly interesting is that this version actually encourages community related functions. For example, Microsoft newsgroups are programmed in (come on guys, say bundled just once!) into the software so you can ask a question and get MVP's to help you out pretty much out of the box! Good job live!