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Test post from the iPhone #
Test post using BlogWriter Lite.

If you are reading this then it works! I might need to buy the full version.
Wednesday, October 08, 2008 7:45:25 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
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LinkedIn Group for Tablet Developers#

I was just doing an overdue Inbox cleanout when I came across a comment notification I got ages ago that I should of posted about before now.

Folks: if you are a TabletPC developer or user please join us in the Linkedin TabletPC Enthusiast group: http://www.linkedin.com/groups?gid=66744

This is an official Linkedin.com professional networking group. Sole purpose is to identify TabletPC developers and users and grow our community. No cost. See Linkedin.com for more information about how Linkedin.com and groups work.

Sounds good - I've signed up. If there is one thing we all need it is more people writing cool tablet applications!

Tuesday, October 07, 2008 9:00:28 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
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Speaking at TechEd Australia#

I am going to be co-presenting a session on OCS Edge Services with my good friend and fellow MVP Derrick Buckley.  The session is on Friday the 5th of September at 11:45.  Here's the details.

UNC316

Office Communications Server 2007 Security: Architecture and Edge Services

One of the core value propositions for Office Communications Server (OCS) 2007, is the fact that unified communications can be used anywhere - at work, at home, or on the road. In this session, we discuss the edge aspects of OCS 2007 for voice, media conferencing, remote access, public internet connectivity and federation, along with the edge server roles. We discuss various edge server deployment topologies. We also discuss NAT and firewall traversal with discussion on how OCS 2007 uses ICE, STUN and TURN for audio and video.

If you are coming to TechEd in Sydney this year then make sure you get it in your session builder now!

Thursday, August 21, 2008 8:21:49 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
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iHave succumb...#

When the first generation iPhone was released I looked at it and thought it was cool, but I said at the time there was no way I was going to give up push email.

When the 3G version has released with Exchange ActiveSync support I decided to buy one and try it out.  Initially it looked like I was going to have to wait a while as the Telcos in Australia were only selling them on a plan, except for Optus which had a pre-pay option available.  That is they said they had a pre-pay option available but if you went into an Optus shop and tried to buy one you would be told that they did not have enough stock and were only selling them on plan. 

Then - the week before last - I got word that some Telstra dealers were selling the phones "outright".  I put it in quotes because unlike every other phone you can buy from Telstra outright the iPhone comes locked to the Telstra network and you have to pay AU$150 Telstra Tax to get it unlocked for use on any network.  None the less I trundled down to the local JB Hi-Fi and picked up a 16GB iPhone.

So why have I not posted about this before now?  Well suffice to say that I have had a few issues.  In fact I am now on my third unit in a week and a half!

The first unit I got looked fine, but when I got it back to the office I found that it could not see or connect to any wireless networks.   It would just constantly search, even if I was standing within inches of the access point.  A colleague had also bought one and had no issues.  I tried the usual troubleshooting steps such as soft reset, hard reset and flashing the firmware, but to no avail.  Then next day I returned to the point of purchase and uttered the magic words "not fit for purpose" which under the local trading laws means they have to refund or replace it and got unit number two.

Unit number two functioned brilliantly - for almost a whole 24 hours.  Then on the first day I actually carried the device in my suit pocket it developed what appeared to be a small crack in LCD.  Not the glass over the LCD, but the display itself.  This manifested itself as a vertical line of dead pixels a few millimetres long surrounded by a cluster of off colour pixels around it.  this was centred in the bottom right corner of the display roughly where the "9" key sits when the phone keypad is up.  The real bummer is that I noticed this late on Thursday afternoon and I was leaving the next morning for a family holiday, so I was not going to be able to take it back again for more than a week.  The phone was still functional - so I took it with me.  Over the next week horizontal lines of dead pixels slowly crept across the screen from the original vertical line, eventually reaching both sides.

So today I took iPhone II back to Sydney's Apple store.  This is where the story improves greatly.  The service I got was excellent.  I approached one of the greeters at the door and asked how I submit an iPhone for warranty.  He said the best way was to make an appointment with one of the geniuses and walked me over to one of the Macs and booked a session starting in about 20 minutes.  I went up to the genius bar about 10 minutes later after grabbing an espresso and my pre-booked guru (Roger) was already free and waiting. 

Roger was brilliant. He didn't accuse me of dropping the phone, trying to fold it or using it as a hammer.  He just took me at my word that I had not abused the phone (which was true, btw) and said "it shouldn't do that - I'll just check stock and see if we can swap it out now for you."  It was in stock, he did swap it out and because I had already unlocked phone II from Telstra he unlocked phone III on the spot as well.  He even took the time to ring me to ensure that the unlock had gone through and gave me a sticker with the new IMIE number on it to stick on the original box.

This iPhone is the first Apple product I have ever bought.  Had they not handled my screen issue so well it may well of been the last.  While it has not been smooth sailing I am willing to write this off as bad luck, especially since everyone else I know who has one has had no hardware issues at all.  The good service I received as a decidedly unhappy customer has gone a long way making me a happy camper again.

Monday, August 18, 2008 10:35:55 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
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Australia takes out the 2008 Imagine Cup Software Design competition#

Nick Randolph has posted that the Australians have won the Imagine Cup for 2008.

Australia took out the2008 Imagine Cup Software Design competition.  Team SOAK took on a fierce competition and came out successful - well done guys!

Well done team SOAK. A huge effort.

Check out Nick's post for a raft of phone from the final day.

Friday, July 11, 2008 8:14:06 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
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Sydney Windows Infrastructure Group Meeting Next Week#

I've just had a reminder of the next meeting of SWIG from my friend Derrick, who runs it.

See you all at SWIG on Tuesday for great talks, prizes and free food and drink.....

We have a great talk on preparing for your Windows 2008 MCITP exam with Ken Schaefer

Ken’s Bio - Ken Schaefer is a systems engineer consultant for global systems integrator Avanade. Avanade is a joint partnership between Microsoft and Accenture and focuses on enterprise projects across the Microsoft product stack.

Ken has worked with IIS for around 10 years, and been a Microsoft MVP for IIS since 2003. He has presented at numerous Microsoft Tech.Ed events across the US, Australia and Asia, written articles for Microsoft TechNet and spent countless hours talking about IIS at other events, user group meetings and roadshows. He was lead author for Professional IIS 7 (Wrox/Wiley) and co-author of Securing IIS 6.0 (Syngress Press)

He is currently an MCITP (Win2k8 EA), MCSE+Security, MCDBA, MCTS and holds a Masters in Business and Technology from UNSW. Ken blogs about IIS at http://adopenstatic.com/blog

I have yet to finalise the second talk but am hoping for a confirmation on a Hyper V talk!

We also have a Demo from Chris Mohan on File Server Resource Manager for Windows 2008. Have a look at Chris’s blog - http://www.chris-mohan.com/

I will send an update soon

See you on Tuesday
Derrick Buckley

Should be good. Details are:

When: Tue 15/07/2008

Where: Healey Room, AMP, 50 Bridge Street, Sydney

See you there!

Wednesday, July 09, 2008 8:33:15 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
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Automating Tablet Builds - The Infrastructure#

As I previously mentioned I am putting together a Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT) environment to enable me to rebuild my Vista machines at will. 

I now have  a Windows 2008 Server machine running inside of Virtual PC that is a self contained MDT environment.

To do this I had to configure the Server with the following services.

  • Active Directory - I promoted it to a domain controller in its own domain.
  • DNS - required by AD
  • DHCP - to give out addresses, required by WDS.
  • Windows Deployment Services (WDS) - this is an optional Windows Component you can add on Windows Server.  WDS responds to network boot PXE requests from clients and sends them a Windows Pre-installation Environment (PE) boot image.
  • MDT.

There are a number of other components that MDT needs to be able to deploy anything, but it is ridiculously easy to add these in.  The main management console of MDT is the Deployment Workbench, which contains a node in the navigation pane called components.  Clicking on that shows the current install status of the various things you need and you can download and install them inside the Deployment Workbench.  Click the image below to see what this looks like.

image

Once all the required software is in place it is a matter of creating a distribution share, adding the OS images (which you can do by right clicking Operating Systems and selecting New..  You then just pop in the CD and follow the prompts in the wizard.) and creating a build.

Another cool thing with MDT is you can import drivers in much the same way as operating systems.  These can be added to the build so that they are inject into the image before the hardware detection takes place, so if you have more recent drivers than those included with Vista you can insert them and it will never load the older driver.  Much cleaner.

To do this you right click on the Out-of-Box drivers node in the Deployment Workbench and select New...  This will launch a driver import wizard.

image

You fill in a path and optionally assign one or more groups that the drivers will belong to and then click Finish.  MDT will search the directory and any sub directories and import any drivers it finds.  Also by default, when you build your boot image it will include all Network and Storage drivers so that you should have the bare requirements to perform a network install once the Windows PE image boots.

I've got my build going on the Acer laptop I've been testing against to the base OS level with no input required from me beyond pressing F12 to initiate the network boot.  Now it is time to start working on the applications.

The MDT Team has a blog - so if you want to find out more that might be a good place to start.

Monday, July 07, 2008 9:36:45 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
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Congratulations to some new MVPs#

It is time for another round of MVP awards and some great people have been recognised by Microsoft for their tireless contributions to the technical communities. 

Sierra Modro and Matt Faulkner- both from GottaBeMobile.com have both been awarded a Tablet PC MVPs.  Welcome to the team guys - it is well deserved for both of you!

Also awarded was my good friend and colleague here in Sydney - Derrick Buckley.  Derrick runs the Sydney Windows Infrastructure User Group and was awarded as a Communications Server MVP. If you are in Sydney, head along to SWIUG some time as there is always great content there.

Great stuff from all of you - keep up the good work!

Wednesday, July 02, 2008 9:54:48 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
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Going to build my tablets automatically#

Two of my machines are in desperate need of a rebuild.  Because it has been on my to-do list for a while I am going to look at Microsoft's updated desktop deployment solution accelerator - the Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT).

I have used the previous solution (BDD 2007) to automate Vista builds in the past.  The constraint with BDD was that it could only do the desktop OS. 

MDT is an updated version of BDD that can deploy desktop and server operating systems.  There was a wealth of information in BDD, so I am looking forward to getting hands on with MDT to see what is there.  From the overview blurb:

Microsoft Deployment provides proven tools and practices with which IT professionals can:

  • Create a software and hardware inventory to assist in deployment planning.

  • Test applications for compatibility with Windows operating systems and mitigate compatibility issues discovered during the process.

  • Set up an initial lab environment with imaging and deployment servers.

  • Customize, package, and deploy applications.

  • Automate image creation and deployment.

  • Manage processes and technologies to produce comprehensive and integrated Lite Touch Installation (LTI) and Zero Touch Installation (ZTI) deployments.

  • During deployment, migrate users’ documents and settings to their new computer configurations.

  • During deployment, Microsoft Deployment supports the installation of all Roles such as Active Directory® Domain Services (AD DS), Domain Name System (DNS) server, Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server, Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS), Windows Deployment Services, Windows SharePoint® Services, Windows Internet Naming Service (WINS) server, and Windows Server® 2003 Terminal Services. Additionally, Microsoft Deployment supports the configuration of the AD DS role.

  • Ensure that computers are hardened to improve security within the environment.

Microsoft Deployment brings together time-honored and proven practices in addition to the following Microsoft technologies:

  • Application Compatibility Toolkit (ACT) 5.0 for gathering application inventory and for testing and mitigating application-compatibility issues

  • Windows User State Migration Tool (USMT) for migrating user settings and data

  • Windows Automated Installation Kit (Windows AIK) for configuring unattended Setup answer files (Unattend.xml) and capturing images

  • Windows Deployment Services for starting Windows Preinstallation Environment (Windows PE) on target computers across the network

  • Windows PE 2.0 for starting computers

As I write this I have a new Windows Server 2008 Standard virtual machine installing in Virtual PC that I plan to use as the deployment server.  After that is installed I'll be installing MDT.  Stay tuned.

Monday, June 23, 2008 10:29:58 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
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