Weather forecast from hell: Its cold today.

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I spend most of my day coding ExchangeDefender and flying through some quite vile stuff, so it takes a lot to knock me out of my chair. Well, this morning I got an email from a fellow SBSer with a technical question – nothing new there, I field them from all over the world each day and I really like the “world-famous” status. But this one was special. Click on the image to the left, look at the domain name 🙂

I have now, on this Tuesday, 18th day of October 2005, answered a technical question from a person in India. Parsad, buddy, thank you for making my day. I hope this doesn’t start the disturbing trend of India outsourcing technical support to USA as Chris was very quick to point out.

Free Microsoft VB.NET Books

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Read all about it without killing a single tree. Microsoft Press has made two titles available for free download off their web site, both dealing with Visual Basic.NET. If you are a coder (or aspiring to be one) you’ll be hard pressed to find anything easier than Visual Basic and Microsoft books are great at getting you started right away. Go on girl, get your download on.

Introducing Visual Basic 2005 for Developers
Upgrading Microsoft Visual Basic 6.0 to Microsoft Visual Basic .NET

Virgin Blogging

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What a priceless blog title, I’m sure it will bring in a ton of perverted visitors but I assure you that I am not trolling. Virgin Groups’s Sir Richard Branson was interviewed for a series of small business blog events and American Express is pushing them to each of their business customers. Very interesting, just yesterday I read an article in Newsweek about small business blogging and giving an additional insight about your business to your customers. Now a push from American Express….

Perhaps corporate blogging in small business can overshadow the PR weasels of the big business blogs.

Sprint PPC-6700 and why blind people should not do hardware review

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PC Magazine reviewed a Sprint PPC-6700 (HTC) device this weekend and gave it glowing remarks. Sascha Segan gave it 4 out of 5 stars with the following remarks:

“This is the best Windows Mobile PDA/phone we’ve seen, with a nearly ideal balance of size and power, though we have a few quibbles.”

One must wonder if they actually had the device in hand when they did this review or if they just skimmed the box at the Sprint store. This device is horrificly misproportional, giving even the brick diminutive a run for its money. The screen on it is small to the point that it looks more like an overweight smartphone than a PocketPC. The antenna and the stylus protrude outside of this “small-factor” device and make it an uncomfortable pocket gadget, if the 6.1 ounce weight was not enough to drag your pants down to your knees to begin with. The screen is so tiny that it cannot be used without a stylus for most activities, making one-hand operation impossible. The keyboard design, although ingenious, is quite cheap in keeping with HTC “Made in Taiwan” tradition of quality.

I got a chance to play with this device over the weekend for a few hours and I must say I was not impressed. The point to a Pocket PC is a large screen, a decent keyboard, solid constuction. This device lacked them all and is a very solid loser in my book. Look for a different device or save your money, pass this one.

New Vista CTP Released to testers

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As all the other Windows sites scramble to cover the release of the new Vista CTP (Build 5231), they seem to be missing the big picture on how Microsoft is handling and shaping the release through its beta process. Yes, Microsoft released the October CTP today to testers at Connect but what is more important is the addition of features Microsoft is providing with this one. This is simply brilliant, they are pacing themselves by offering slight feature incriments in each months technology preview, checking the feedback and taking hints on how to do it better. Run each part of the OS and the interface through a thorough public review and end up with an operating system they demand. Brilliant!

So as you can see on the right, Vista is bringing the novel concept of virtual search folders to Windows Explorer shell. Much like the current Outlook 2003 allows you to create virtual folders containing items from a previous search, the next operating system will bring that functionality to all of your files and change the way we retrieve information. Yes, it is a little tweak but immensely useful – MacOS users lived without snap-to-grid and auto-align functionality for years, despire their mantra of being user friendly. Sometimes Microsoft just gets it.

So where is your Computer Science engineering degree?

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A cheap Xerox copy of mine is about three feet to the left of me, framed in an even cheaper plastic frame we got on sale at Michaels. The original went to my dad along with a $350 mahagony frame with reflection-free coated glass and a beautiful blue and orange suede background. It was a complete and total waste of money, and I am not talking about the frame.

Bill Gates has been making the rounds at various colleges, making speaches and buying buildings. As does every other IT CEO, Gates has made a point to encourage students and particularly minorities to focus on careers in computer science. Apparently, the demand for software writers will be greater than ever and we are in danger of not having enough computer science majors to fill that role. What a tragedy that will be.

Except, this is the very same story I heard in 1996 when I was choosing a college. By the time I graduated in 2002 there was no such thing as an IT job, unless it was replacing a defunct position that no existing employee was willing to apply for because it would lead to certain professional career suicide. Knowing they could not find a single qualified person for the job, they offered ridiculously low wages ($35,000/year) and expected to train someone. Not much has changed since, and despite massive layoffs and off-shore outsourcing, there is a desperate need for programmers. Or so the IT CEO’s would claim.

Well, here is a little kicker: I am AN IT CEO. I own a little ISV and a service provider and I am proud to proclaim that my engineering education has been a horrific waste of money, time and effort. Had I not invested my spare time on a second degree in business I would currently be a Sr. Analyst, as my buddy Pablo is at America Online. Keep in mind that that you’re considered a senior citizen at 35 in the IT world, which would give me about eight more productive years during which I would be mentally penciling myself into a daily Dilbert cartoon and hopelessly waiting for that six figure developer gig from Monster.com, only to be solicited endlessly by recruiters trying to get me to move to California for a 3 month contract-to-hire position.

Thats the cold hard truth. I am not writing this to demotivate anybody or discourage you from pursuing an education, but consider who is telling you the story. The fact that it is Bill Gates, the CEO of the largest software vendor on planet, is completely besides the point. These facts apply equally to Oracle, Symantec, Sun, SAP and everyone else in the IT CEO world:

  • We do not need more software developers.
  • We do not need more computer science majors.
  • We do not need more developers.

What we do need is more creative, ingenious people. Do not be fooled for a second thinking that Microsoft (or any other IT leaders) got to where they are on innovation. They got there through careful business acquisition. There are few innovative people out there, and trust me, they are not engineers. Engineers solve problems. Engineers identify problems. Engineers brainstorm. But they do not produce.

Who does? Entrepreneurs. People that can identify the problem, find someone that can identify and work on a solution (ie: computer science engineer), find someone to financially back the idea and then work it through to a finalized product. Look up and down your degree requirements. I think you would be hard pressed to find a single class that will teach you anything about the business of IT. Instead, that engineering degree will make you somewhat capable of written and verbal communication with emphasis on putting the pieces together. Congratulations, you’re on the same virtual footing as the guy building a brick wall. How tall, wide, what color brick? C# SharePoint web part for the NCAA Sweet 16? Yes sir!

Crude but true. So why is Bill so focused on getting more computer science majors? Drive around Redmond, try to find a single building under construction. Now Google through the AP newswire and find out how many new jobs is Microsoft sending to India. How about China? That is where your college loan repayments are being sourced out to. And there are plenty of them, filled with Ph.D candidates. For 1/4 of the pay of United States.

Perhaps Bill is right, one day down the road the circumstances may change and there will be more jobs in Redmond, more jobs in San Francisco, more jobs in Silicon Valley. Until that happens, you will not be able to break even on the investment you put in your education, stress and social implications of being an underappreciated, underpaid software developer. So go and sign up for an elective that will teach you what a breakeven point is. Hang out with people that work to be better and strive to provide solutions where they can see problems.

But if you still think that Gates has an inspiring message for you, run over to jibjab.com and look at the Big Box Mart movie for some added inspiration. This is not a negative email, and I think it strikes at the core of American Opportunity: you are in control. You can choose to follow the pipe dream, or you can choose to do what made Bill Gates, Larry Ellison and every other IT CEO successful. And no, it was not C++, not by a loooong shot.

Hot SBS Podcast

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Fresh out of the oven: SBS Support Podcast #4. Go and get it, here are some of the things they discussed:
* Fake XP SP3
* Multiport Fax Cards and Fax Best Practices
* RWW with TLS
* SBS and Domain Rename
* SBA on SBS? –
* VOIP and SBS
* Crickets
* James talks about Exchange Store corruption
* GroupWise Migrations – you really, really want the 5.5.2 client
* ISA 10060 Timeouts
* ISA Address Ranges

On the other hand, considering doing and SBS webcast here; I’ve been doing my due dilligence, looking at home hardware, rounding up all the ideas, talking to Sarah in Tampa about her podcast, and most of all trying to figure out how to record phone calls. I’m waiting for some feedback from Eriq on how he intends to do it. As soon as I figure out how to tape someone willing to talk to me we’ll get it going.

Neutering your Internet Explorer

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Amy was asking on a newsgroup about locking down Internet Explorer for some clients on the list the other day so here is the short of it: There is no quick GPO for doing this effectively, but short of building your own IE with Connection Kit there are a few quick registry entries which will keep a lot of the novices out of trouble:

To remove Address Bars:
Set NoAddressBar = 1 in HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Toolbars\Restrictions

Set NoBandCustomize = 1 in HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\Explorer

Additionally, it might help to remove the other shortcuts and context menu items.
Nuke entries in here:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\MenuExt

Take a look inside those registry entries, there are quite a few things you can remove from IE to make it as friendly (or unfriendly) as you need.

Local events & Geek Radio

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I forgot to post about these earlier, so if you’ve got time this weekend here are some geek things to do:

Marketpro Computer Show is in Orlando this weekend at the Central Florida Fairgrounds. From 9:30 AM today till 4PM tomorrow. Central Florida fairgrounds is at 4603 W Colonial Dr. If you’ve never been to Marketpro… think of it as a mobile eBay of junk. You can score some pretty cheap network cards, modems, older computer parts and as usual tons of pirated software. Nothing like paying to be a thief. If you need to stock up on spare parts and don’t want to pay shipping, this is the place to be. Ticket is $6.

Central Florida Computer Society is meeting this weekend (http://www.cfcs.org/) with the general meeting covering Linux at 2:15 PM. Individual membership in CFCS is $36 and their membership is mostly home-user / soho so if that sounds interesting to you, or if you’ve got customers/family that could benefit from great presentations on general computer use – this is the place to be at. Don’t let the $36 fee scare you, these folks do a lot of good work. This weeks meeting is on Linux, or rather Knoppix so if you wanted to find out more about Linux this would be a great opportunity to see it from the ground level. You can download Knoppix at http://www.knoppix.com

Along the same lines as the above, the CFCS has a Windows SIG meeting at 1:15 PM this Sunday. I am not sure what they will be covering but Stan Wallner, SIG Chair, is also a member of Orlando IT Pro so I hope he’ll share what they are up to this weekend. This is more technical than the general meeting.

Local events & Geek Radio

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I forgot to post about these earlier, so if you’ve got time this weekend here are some geek things to do:

Marketpro Computer Show is in Orlando this weekend at the Central Florida Fairgrounds. From 9:30 AM today till 4PM tomorrow. Central Florida fairgrounds is at 4603 W Colonial Dr. If you’ve never been to Marketpro… think of it as a mobile eBay of junk. You can score some pretty cheap network cards, modems, older computer parts and as usual tons of pirated software. Nothing like paying to be a thief. If you need to stock up on spare parts and don’t want to pay shipping, this is the place to be. Ticket is $6.

Central Florida Computer Society is meeting this weekend (http://www.cfcs.org/) with the general meeting covering Linux at 2:15 PM. Individual membership in CFCS is $36 and their membership is mostly home-user / soho so if that sounds interesting to you, or if you’ve got customers/family that could benefit from great presentations on general computer use – this is the place to be at. Don’t let the $36 fee scare you, these folks do a lot of good work. This weeks meeting is on Linux, or rather Knoppix so if you wanted to find out more about Linux this would be a great opportunity to see it from the ground level. You can download Knoppix at http://www.knoppix.com

Along the same lines as the above, the CFCS has a Windows SIG meeting at 1:15 PM this Sunday. I am not sure what they will be covering but Stan Wallner, SIG Chair, is also a member of Orlando IT Pro so I hope he’ll share what they are up to this weekend. This is more technical than the general meeting.