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Canadian IT Pro Blog

February 2010 - Posts

  • RunAs Radio – Rolly Talks about Project Server 2010

    As part of EnergizeIT 2010 we have partnered with RunAs Radio to produce some podcasts on Office 2010.  The first podcast of this 4 part series was posted yesterday.  If you don’t already subscribe to RunAs Radio I encourage you to do so.  It is a great podcast aimed directly at IT professionals.

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    In this episode Richard and Greg talk to Rolly Perreaux about Microsoft Project 2010 and Project Server 2010. Project moves into the 64 bit world in 2010 and a host of other features. Rolly digs into Project Server to take project management to an even higher level.

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  • Services in the Cloud. Should you really Give a Crap - yet?

    (Thought that title might get your attention)

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    Over the last month or so – I’ve had my head in the clouds working away on creating a scenario based demo for EnergizeIT that leverages the scalability of the cloud and “transportability” of existing .net code and “n” tier architecture. I’ve been living the life of an IT Pro influenced in a “Dev” world for the most part.  I don’t know how many of you IT Pros deal with in house developed apps and are considering Azure – but it got me thinking of a more general question I thought I’d ask you.

    As IT Pros who save the world every day at work – what do you think about all this “cloud” stuff?

    Like – seriously. Do you think it is going to impact you in the short term? Is it something that you can “ignore” because it’s a DEVELOPER thing? Are you worried about how it will affect your day to day work? How much change will it introduce when it does “hit” your environment – if it hasn’t already. I have my on theories on it and it’s affect on “life as an IT Pro” based on research I’ve been doing over the last while – but until now – I haven’t asked YOU.

    What are “cloud services” and how will it impact you?

    This shouldn’t be anything new to you for the most part – you can look at it in one way as a marketing term to spin a simple concept that has been around for ages - Hosted Services. Hosting has been around for a while. Initially as something that made sense was to host your public presence of website / eCommerce (remember that term?) at a hosting provider/partner and you maintained it as a separate entity – instead of having it hosted within your own premise and exposing parts of it to the public. Cloud Services like Azure introduce scalability and performance “elasticity” for applications hosted in the cloud. But the term “cloud services” really is more then just Dev and application stuff.

    Now that we’ve talked about apps - what do you think is The Next generalised workload that is a good fit for hosting? Think for a moment about your environment – regardless of size – and what takes a good chunk of your time and would MAKE SENSE to have hosted by someone else but managed and controlled by YOU. What workload would that be? What workload would you consider to offload to the cloud if you have the power to make the decision right now. Am I blowing smoke? Would you / could you do it?

    OK – now tell me with a comment posted below.

    EnergizeIT will be talking about “the cloud” from one perspective (with a really COOL multi-faceted scenario based demo in the morning) and it will even show you some real world examples of how it might impact your “IT Pro world”. That being said - I thought I would start a thread of conversation specifically targeting NON application hosted / developer perspectives on “cloud services” for IT Professionals here on the blog and explore the “non-developer” (for lack of a better term) focused scenarios and what it could actually mean to you in your day to day activities / tools and even roles at work as an IT Pro.

    I’m anxious to read your comments.

    Rick-sig

    IT Pro Team Blog | IT Managers Blog |Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn

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  • Managing Your Virtual World

    “Virtualization without management is more dangerous than not using virtualization in the first place.”
    ~ Tom Bittman, Gartner VP & Analyst

    There are many good things about using virtualization in your infrastructure:

    • consolidation of physical servers
    • flexibility to respond to business needs
    • time savings when ramping up new services

    However, this same flexibility and agility lends itself to chaos if left unchecked as virtual servers can crop up all over the place in response to business requests. One company I know of consolidated their servers only to end up with 3x the number of virtual servers!

    Management of virtual assets is important, but don’t take my word for it. Sign up for the IT World Real Voices Roundtable below and hear from partners who are working on virtualization projects and IT managers who have implemented virtualization at their company.

    IT World Real Voices Roundtable – Friday, February 26, 2010, 1PM EST

    Hear firsthand as IT leaders weigh in on the dynamics of IT Infrastructure Management and the critical importance of cost savings.  Join us on Feb 26th for this month’s Real Voices Roundtable as we discuss how to optimize your firm’s management capabilities. Every Real Voices attendee will be registered for a chance to win a copy of Windows 7. Register Today! 

    Real stories. Real challenges. Real results.

    Register now.

  • Understanding Microsoft Virtualization R2 Solutions

    The R2’s are out the door with the release of Hyper-V R2, SCVMM R2 and MDOP R2.  As with the new release of any technology you are probably wondering how it works, how to use it and how it is going to make your life easier.  Well I am happy to share that my friend Mitch Tulloch and the team at MSPress have been working hard and have written a FREE e-book covering everything from server to local and remote desktop virtualization, virtualization management and what the cloud brings to the table.  It is a great read an I highly suggest you download a copy.  It’s free, it’s 15MB and you can get it in XPS of PDF formats!

    Also be sure to check out Mitch’s site with free e-books on other topics and the unofficial Windows 7 Resource Kit support site.

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    Download XPS Version

    Download PDF Version

  • Windows Phone 7 Series: Now That’s More Like It!

    Note: I was very excited to learn more about the new Windows Phone 7 Series launch that happened on Monday. So much so – I tethered my Samsung Omnia II phone to my laptop in order to browse around and find out more details while I was up at the cottage. In case you missed it – My colleague Joey Devilla did an Awesome post on the launch, details and resources over on the Developer Connection blog. Rather then duplicate his efforts – I’ve brought it over here for you to have a look see. Make sure you check out the Channel 9 video for a real nice look at it (it’s better then the actual Launch IMHO). The post in it’s entirety is below:

    windows phone 7

    A New Windows for the Phone

    Ever since joining The Empire, I’ve been saying that Windows Mobile needs to go back to the drawing board. While there was good technology lying in its innards – mobile versions of the .NET framework, SQL Server and Office – treating the mobile form factor as “the desktop, but much, much smaller”, was the wrong approach. In the meantime, the Esteemed Competition were doing the right thing: designing their phones’ OS features and interface from the ground up rather than attempting to force-fit the desktop UI into a pocket UI.

    Today at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Microsoft previewed the latest in a series of steps forward – consider Xbox to Xbox 360, Windows Vista to Windows 7, Live Search to Bing – there’s now Windows Phone 7 Series.

    A Quick Look at the Windows Phone Experience

    A good starting point is this video, which covers Windows Phone’s features in three minutes, thirty seconds:

    You can take an interactive tour of the UI at the Windows Phone 7 Series site:

    image

    A Closer Look at the Windows Phone Experience

    Over at Channel 9, Laura Foy has posted her interview with Joe Belfiore, VP Windows Phone 7 Program Management, who gave her a walkthrough of the goodies in Windows Phone (the video is 22 minutes, 18 seconds):

    Get Microsoft Silverlight

    Some quick notes from the video:

    • There are three mandatory hardware buttons, which are context-sensitive:
      • Back
      • Windows (the “Start” button)
      • Search
    • The screen is a capacitive touch-screen, capable of supporting multi-touch
    • The Start menu is built up of tiles: little block representing the information and features that you care most about
      • You can add your own custom tiles; Joe shows a “me” tile linked to his Facebook profile
    • A browser with:
      • Snappy performance
      • Support for multitouch actions such as pinch zoom, double-tap to zoom and finger drag
      • Very readable text, that to sub-pixel positioning in HTML
      • Phone number recognition in HTML documents; touch them to dial them
      • Street address recognition in HTML documents; touch them to get a map
      • Multiple tabs
    • The “People Hub”
      • Aggregates Exchange, Hotmail, Gmail, Yahoo! Mail and other mail contacts
      • Provides a live feed of your contacts
    • Context-sensitive search:
      • Press the “Search” button while in the People Hub, and you search your people list
      • Press the “Search” button while in the Start menu, and it runs a web search
        • Based on your query, it knows whether to give you a web search result or a local search result
        • In the demo, Joe does a search for pizza and gets a map and results for pizzerias near him, and a quick pan over to adjacent pages yield directions and reviews
        • A tap on “nearby” yield the locations of useful things like parking, ATMs and so on near the selected pizzeria
        • In another demo search, Joe does a search for “Avatar” and it returns a list of nearby theatres and times for the movie Avatar; a quick pan to an adjacent page yields the results for local business and places with “Avatar” in the name
    • Email:
      • Easy pivoting between unread, flagged and urgent emails
      • A caching system prevents you from seeing the dreaded “loading” screen
      • Press “Search” within email and you perform a search of your email messages, by subject, text and so on
    • Rotation: you can operate the phone in “portrait” or “landscape” mode
    • Calendar:
      • Support for both work and personal calendars
    • ActiveSync works in the background and keeps the phone synced with email, contacts and calendar
    • User-customizable UI colour schemes
    • The “Pictures Hub”
      • Gallery: Lets you browse all the pictures on your phone
      • Mosaic: Recent and favourite pictures
      • What’s New: New photos from your social networks
      • Camera roll: A folder for photos taken with your phone
      • Support for photo albums from Facebook and Windows Live, which you browse as if they lived right on your phone
    • Music and Video
      • History: Most recently played music and videos
      • New: New music and videos added since the last sync
      • Zune HD-style marketplace searching and support for Zune subscriptions with unlimited music plays
    • The “Me” tile
      • Lets you update your status on places like Facebook
      • Nice little typing features like auto-spelling-correction and a special soft keyboard for emoticons
    • The UI concept: Windows Phone is task-centric, not app-centric, with a hub associated with each: people, photos, media
    • There's also a games hub, which ties into Xbox Live
    • Third-party applications and games? Wait…

    Wait a Minute…What About Third-Party Apps and Games?

    MIX10: The Next Web NowCan you wait a month?

    Here’s the deal: the announcement at Mobile World Congress was about showing what Windows Phone can do. As for what’s possible on the developer front, it’ll all be announced at the MIX10 Conference, which takes place from March 15th through 17th in Las Vegas.

    There will be a dozen sessions at MIX10 for Windows Phone, and they promise to be quite interesting. I’ll be at MIX10, and will blog what I learn from these sessions when they take place.

    You can save $200 off the price of MIX10 registration if you register before February 21st, so if you want to get in on the ground floor with Windows Phone and save some money, register now!

    What the Tech Press is Saying

    Pretty good stuff, actually. Rather than bury you with links to a zillion blog entries filed from Mobile World Congress, I thought I’d pick two of the big tech blogs, Gizmodo and Engadget:

    Here’s what Gizmodo has to say about the new Windows Phone:

    It's different. The face of Windows Phone 7 is not a rectangular grid of thumbnail-sized glossy-looking icons, arranged in a pattern of 4x4 or so, like basically every other phone. No, instead, an oversized set of bright, superflat squares fill the screen. The pop of the primary colors and exaggerated flatness produces a kind of cutting-edge crispness that feels both incredibly modern and playful. Text is big, and beautiful. The result is a feat no phone has performed before: Making the iPhone's interface feel staid.

    If you want to know what it feels like, the Zune HD provides a taste: Interface elements that run off the screen; beautiful, oversized text and graphics; flipping, panning, scrolling, zooming from screen to screen; broken hearts. Some people might think it's gratuitous, but I think it feels natural and just…fun. There's an incredible sense of joie de vivre that's just not in any other phone. It makes you wish that this was aesthetic direction all of Microsoft was going in.

    Here are Engadget’s impressions, after having some hands-on time with Windows Phone:

    The design and layout of 7 Series' UI (internally called Metro) is really quite original, utilizing what one of the designers (Albert Shum, formerly of Nike) calls an "authentically digital" and "chromeless" experience. What does that mean? Well we can tell you what it doesn't mean -- no shaded icons, no faux 3D or drop shadows, no busy backgrounds (no backgrounds at all), and very little visual flair besides clean typography and transition animations. The whole look is strangely reminiscent of a terminal display (maybe Microsoft is recalling its DOS roots here) -- almost Tron-like in its primary color simplicity. To us, it's rather exciting. This OS looks nothing like anything else on the market, and we think that's to its advantage. Admittedly, we could stand for a little more information available within single views, and we have yet to see how the phone will handle things like notifications, but the design of the interface is definitely in a class of its own.

    (In another article, Engadget simply summed it up with “Microsoft is playing to win”.)

    Watch this Space!

    We’ll have more announcements about Windows Phone over the next few weeks, so keep an eye on this blog!

    [This article also appears in Global Nerdy.]

  • “Security Bulletins for the Regular IT Guy” Podcast – 2/9/2010

    Over pints Pierre Roman, Bruce Cowper and Rick Claus decided they would put together a concise and timely podcast each “Update Tuesday”. The object is to keep it simple by letting you know in plain non technical language what the updates are, what they resolve and why you should care.

    Have a listen directly from the embedded Silverlight player OR subscribe to the feed and download it to your iTunes / Zune software. 

    Get Microsoft Silverlight

    As always - if you have suggestions on making it better - please pass on your comments. Mail Rick directly  – rick.claus@microsoft.com

    Direct Download:

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    Subscribe to the podcast: (so you don't miss an episode)

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    Disclaimer: This podcast was produced with the best information available to us at the time of recording. Your primary source for all things Security Bulletin related should always be the Microsoft Security Response Center blog.

    In Depth Webcast on this months bulletins will take place: Wednesday, Feb 10 - 11:00 a.m. PST (UTC -8). (Registration link): 

     

    Bulletins discussed for February 9th, 2010:

    Podcast Participants: Pierre Roman, Bruce Cowper and Rick Claus.

    Additional Technical Show Notes:

    • Recorded at Starbucks across from 100 Queen Street (Microsoft Ottawa office). 
    • Beverage of choice for this edition: Chai Latte, Grande Vanilla and Venti Vanilla latte. 

    PodSafe music from PodSafe Music Network @ http://music.podshow.com/. Artist: Derek K Miller, song - “You’re the Big Sky - rock guitar instrumental”

    Rick
    IT Pro Team Blog | IT Managers Blog |Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn

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  • RunAs Radio – Rodney Talks about Office 2010

    As part of EnergizeIT 2010 we have partnered with RunAs Radio to produce some podcasts on Office 2010.  The first podcast of this 4 part series was posted yesterday.  If you don’t already subscribe to RunAs Radio I encourage you to do so.  It is a great podcast aimed directly at IT professionals.

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    Richard and Greg talk to Rodney Buike about the upcoming Office 2010. While he couldn't commit to a launch date (go search online, there's lots of rumors), it is safe to say that Office 2010 will ship in 2010. Rodney digs into the relevant changes in the suite, including the focus on Microsoft's "three screens" strategy, providing equal access online, on the desktop and on mobile devices. Check out the Office Product team blog at http://blogs.technet.com/office2010 and the Outlook 2010 Beta at http://www.microsoft.com/office/2010/.

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