Thursday, December 31, 2009

SSDs And Their March Forward

I was lying in bed reading an article this morning on SSD technology and the economics of this compared to HDD and the author's comments on when and why we'll move from HDD to SSD.  I pretty much agreed with the article, however one area that people don't seem to have caught on when it comes to SSDs is that although everyone says "HDD will replace Tape for backups" it simply hasn't in the enterprise market and it won't - however SSD will.

This is the coment I made on that article:

Aside from the impact NAND SSDs are starting to have and will increasingly have in the hard drive space, one big area people continually seem unable to focus on, nor even recognise, is that they will be a disruptive technology when it comes to the backup and archive market which is currently dominated by tape drives and media.


People keep claiming that hard drive backups will replace tape backups and they've made nothing more than a dint in the backup market and barely a scratch in the archive market. Sure, Microsoft may have dropped tape support in their Windows Server 2008 operating system's native backup application, but pretty much anyone who uses tape drives for backup uses both a third party tape driver and third party backup application anyway. This change by Microsoft will have very little impact on the devices used for backups in the IT industry.

What *will* make an impact, in my opinion, is NAND SSD technology.

HDDs are too delicate to be taken seriously as a backup and archival technology in the enterprise arena. Sure, they are a cheap and viable option in the SMB market, but tape still has enough advantages down here to be a valid contender. However Flash will become a serious contender as capacities increase. One of the reasons was touched on in your article - IOPS. As the backup window decreases, the slow (relative) speed of tapes means that they can't be used directly for backups and an initial backup is made to HDD on either that server itself (on an additional spindle set) or to another dedicated backup server, then this is taken to tape. All of this adds cost and another layer of complexity which is, quite effectively, more cost.

When SSD capacity and cost starts coming into competition with tape drives (and this will happen before SSDs compete with HDDs due to the expense of tape drive systems), we'll find enterprises starting to look seriously at SSD as a cost effective replacement for tape for both backup and archival purposes.

Another reason for SSD being extremely useful for backups is the speed of restore which will vary from significantly faster to a few orders of magnitude faster.

So, both technically and economically, SSDs will play an increasingly important role as not only primary storage, but also as backup and archival storage in place of the Tape.
Then I got out of bed, put the kettle on for my first cuppa and posted this blog post.  :)



Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

(Trying to remember that he's on holidays.  As in *NOT WORK*.  Holidays.  He has 10-15 minutes work to do today and that's it, so why is he thinking about this stuff this early in the morning?)

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Encrypted Backups

Up until now, Windows Server Backup and Backup Assist couldn't encrypt backups.  And that hasn't changed at all!  :)  But what has changed is that the CRU Dataport 10 Secure and DataPort SecureDock devices (available through Datastor Australia) now work well with Backup Assist!

What this means is that using Backup Assist and a DataPort 10 Secure (or DataPort SecureDock) device, any backups written to the device are encrypted with 128-bit AES encryption - and this is whole drive encryption.  So if someone gets hold of a drive (ie, breaks into your house while you're at work and steals your offsite backup drives), then all they will see when they mount the drive in a computer is an uninitialized disk.  The only way to retrieve the data from the drive is through a DataPort 10 Secure or DataPort SecureDock device *and* using your hardware encryption token.

So, the upcoming Backup Assist 5.4, with its Hyper-V Granular Restore Console option and with the support for these secure CRU DataPort devices, will enably fully encrypted backups.  As a bonus, any additional data written to these drives, such as LOB database backups and/or accounting system backups will be AES encrypted!

This is great news for our clients - the reason I first spoke with Linus about this option was that we have a number of clients who have sensitive data (patient records, financial records, HR records, etc) that cannot really be stored offsite in an unencrypted format.  Previously, using Backup Assist, there was no real option to take this sort of data into account.  So I spoke with Linus, indicated the issue we have, worked with him on getting some DP 10 Secure devices to trial and then hounded him until he got it working!  (It didn't take much hounding, however, he's pretty responsive (and have I said yet that he's a nice bloke?) and easily saw the potential benefit.)

We've now got options.  We can use ShadowProtect where that's appropriate and Backup Assist where that's appropriate - we finally have real choice when it comes to fully encrypted backups!

Have a read of Linus' blog post on this enhancement to Backup Assist here.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie
(Who is still supposed to be on holidays but has been working on this and a number of server sales - when this is all done today, he really, REALLY should take tomorrow and a few days after it off and have a real break!)

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Immortality

Do you want to know what's REALLY going through my mind?  Immortality.  And how much of a crock it is.  :)  I was sitting by the pool eating a nice hot (as in chilli hot) pizza, partaking in some Jim and this thought crossed my mind, so I couldn't resist blogging it.  :)

The only things we *KNOW* are immortal are...  cancer cells.  Yes, cancer cells.  The most well known immortal cells are known as HeLa Cells which is a line of cells derived from the Cervical Cencer cells of a Henrietta Lacks who died back in 1951 aged 31.

A normal human cell will divide around 40 - 60 times before it stops dividing, becomes senescent and eventually dies.  That's regular human mortality.  HeLa Cells don't do this - they don't enter senescence.  They are immortal.

And as far as immortality goes, the reason these cells are immortal is that they don't suffer from the regular telomere shortening that occurs upon every cell division.  They achieve this by having an active Telomerase enzyme during cell division which prevents this shortening of the telomeres.

Aha, yes - telomeres are the protective ends of our chromosomes.  They act in a way similar to how melting the end of a nylon rope protects it from fraying.  When the melted section is shortened and worn away, the rope frays.  In a similar process, as our telomeres shorten to a crucial length, those cells no longer divide and eventually die.

So, as far as immortality goes, the idea of an immortal being is cancerous (on so many levels) and not something we should really aspire to, let alone worship!  :)

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie
(who is on holidays, so this sort of thing, instead of IT, is entering his mind once again!)

NetBIOS Attacks

OK, here's another silly "let's make life simple for stupid sysadmins" setting that can be easily used by a malicious attacker to gain knowledge of data that should have been secure - including ssl-encrypted data.

This information is *especially* important for any notebooks you may have that are used in hotels or other public locations.  It is less relevant for machines that remain connected in the office - though if you have WiFi that's not running 802.1x and/or network points that are able to be used by malicious people, you may also want to seriously consider the scenarios I refer to.

Hands up if, by default, you disable the "Automatically detect settings" option in the LAN Settings part of Internet Explorer?  OK, so I don't see any hands...

Have a read of this post to get a bit of background on how NetBIOS works.  Now have a read of this post to see how it can be exploited even more readily.  And then have a read of this post to see some examples of this exploit in action.

Microsoft gives a way to disable this ON YOUR LAN, but this in no way will help when the laptop is off your LAN and in a hotel - which is the main cause of concern for this exploit.

And if you think that this is only a newly discovered exploit, have a read of this post from January 2008 discussing this issue.

Maybe, if Microsoft won't do it, we need to do it for them - use GPO to disable this setting.  Of course, if a laptop with "Automatically detect settings" disabled is connected to a network where the user isn't given proxy details and the owner of the network only knows "just set your computer to automatically detect the proxy" then I suggest this is a location that you DEFINITELY shouldn't be using - find another hotel where they have at least some vague idea about the services they are providing!  :)

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie
(who is on holidays and REALLY shouldn't be thinking about this stuff!)

Monday, December 28, 2009

FSM Appears On Mars

As it is still around FSMas time, I thought it only appropriate that the FSM has showed me this image of himself on Mars.  Obviously, the guys at NASA, being scientists and not true believers, needed to come up with some sham scientific-style explanation for the impression, however we true believers know that science is a crock and His Noodliness is real, simply because he says he is.  We don't need any real proof of this, however this image goes a long way to proving what we already know as fact.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Thoughts On Various Imaging Solutions

ShadowProtect, Windows/SBS Backup, Backup Assist, Acronis TrueImage, R-Drive Image, Macrium Reflect, Image for Windows, DriveImage XML and a number of similar products exist and will all provide faster recovery times on the same hardware than a file-based backup and server rebuild could possibly enable. Some of these products also enable Hardware Independent Restore (HIR) as well, enabling you to restore an Open License/Open Business/FPP licensed (but not an OEM) Server or Desktop OS from one piece of hardware to another - ShadowProtect and Acronis being the most common two for this, however Backup Assist can also manage HIR quite nicely.


Now, there's 2 main ways that these products handle Full + Incremental backups - most of them create a single full image and then create additional incrementals, each building upon the full + previous incremental (or they handle full + isolated differentials), however Windows/SBS Backup (and therefore Backup Assist as it uses the Windows backup engine) creates a full backup that is the current/latest backup and negative incrementals (or decrementals) which are what was changed to go back in time. Basically the two methods are diametrically opposed in their thinking - most products give you a full that requires all incrementals (or the latest differential) to get you back to "latest" whereas Win/SBS backup and Backup Assist only require restoration of the last full backup to get you where you want to be.

Now, this difference in methodologies doesn't mean one is more right nor more wrong - it is just a difference in approach.

If you're looking into image backups as a (or part of a) backup strategy, I'd strongly recommend having a separate spindle in the server itself and then having the removable hard drives located in whoever's computer is tasked with taking the backups offsite - this works for all products that are *not* based on the Windows Backup engine as it requires Volume Shadow Copy snapshots to be present, and these are not copied across from the internal HDD to a removable HDD using RoboCopy. This is a much, much better option than having users add/remove hardware at the server directly - it is never really a good move to have users physically touching the server if you can possibly help it as their grubby, greasy hands, swine flu sneezing and dandruff will often make a server feel uncomfortable. OK, maybe not quite like that, but you know what I mean... :) Have the snapshots on the extra spindle then copied using some form of magic (robocopy, richcopy, goodsync, etc) across the network to these removable HDD units overnight and they will appear ready and willing for removal when the users rock up to work, bleary-eyed from a hard night on the turps.

If you're looking at replicating this same backup strategy to a cloud-based service (including to a large system on your own site) then you should look at using an Incrementals Forever strategy as this will reduce the size of data streamed across the Internet. Using Win/SBS Backup and/or Backup Assist won't work well in this scenario because of its "full = latest" strategy, unfortunately. ShadowProtect (and likely Acronis) will work rather well. One good thing with ShadowProtect (and I assume Acronis have this feature, too) is a handy little util that will look at an incremental and the whole tree back to the full backup and verify it. Another good thing is the ability to roll up daily, weekly, monthly, wheneverly incrementals into a big single incremental to save the need to keep multiple incrementals and need to restore them all, however there is no *need* to do this as the latest incremental will cause all prior backups right back to the full to be used for the restore.

So, having a client use, say, hourly incrementals between 8AM and 6PM weekdays that are based off a single full backup, then a midnightly incremental, and rolled up on Sunday to a single incremental will keep the file manageability down to a sane level, will mean you can push the daily backups up to an online bit bucket using rsync, and if this system is on your site (or a hosted server somewhere) then you can schedule image verifications daily and be notified if there are any issues as and when they occur.

All up, Image backups have many ways they can be used and offer a good form of onsite/offsite/online backup in almost a single process.

I'd *still* perform file backups onto a different media (such as DVD-RAM or Amazon S3) of what I call the client's "bankrupt data" - the data that if they cannot get back almost immediately, can send them into bankruptcy - their accounting data and quite possibly a LOB application's data.

Regards,
 
The Outspoken Wookie

Hyper-V Guest Licensing (including Hyper-V R2)

Some people are still confused with how Hyper-V Guest Licensing works.  This also goes for Hyper-V R2 which hasn't changed *at all* as far as how it can be licensed goes.  So here's a first post on this topic.  If there's more clarification needed, I'll likely post again with all of the questions covered that may arise from this post:

Hyper-V Guest Licensing really isn't in any state of flux - nothing's changed since it was first spoken about. (Well, the price changed, but that's irrelevant to Licensing concerns.)

Now, there's three ways to obtain Hyper-V and Hyper-V R2 and these will change the answer to your question:

1. Hyper-V Server 2008 R2 is a stand-alone hypervisor that is available for free. It is very much like ESXi in that it installs directly onto hardware (let's ignore the embedded ESXi variants for now). It is licensed for installation onto any compatible hardware, basically, and doesn't need any other OS License with it. Any and all OSes you wish to install on top of Hyper-V Server require their own licenses, whatever they may be.

2. Install Windows Server 2008 Standard (or better) x64 Core (or GUI) and then install the Hyper-V role onto this OS. If done this way, the Hyper-V role comes as part of a Licensed Microsoft Windows Server operating system. There are 3 main variants on this theme:

    2.1 Windows Server 2008 R2 Standard - One Physical and up to One Virtual License

        2.1.1 If the Host WS2K8 R2 Std OS that the Hyper-V role is installed on (W2K8 R2 Std Physical License) performs additional functions such as RODC, AD, DHC, DNS and/or other non-virtualization roles, then the License for WS2K8 R2 Std is completely in use and any guests need to be licensed separately.

        2.1.2 If the Host WS2K8 R2 Std OS that the Hyper-V role is installed on (W2K8 R2 Std Physical License) performs no additional non-virtualization-related roles, then the WS2K8 R2 Std Physical License has been used *only* to provide a host environment, so the single WS2K8 R2 Virtual License can be used for any roles you so choose (except, obviously, Hyper-V). Any additional guests need to be licensed separately.

    2.2 Windows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise - One Physical and up to 4 Virtual Licenses

        2.2.1 If the Host WS2K8 R2 Ent OS that the Hyper-V role is installed on (W2K8 R2 Ent Physical License) performs additional functions such as RODC, AD, DHC, DNS and/or other non-virtualization roles, then the Physical License for WS2K8 R2 Ent is completely in use and there are only 3 of the 4 WS2K8 R2 Ent Virtual Licenses available for use. Any additional guests need to be licensed separately.

        2.2.2 If the Host WS2K8 R2 Ent OS that the Hyper-V role is installed on (W2K8 R2 Ent Physical License) performs no additional non-virtualization-related roles, then the WS2K8 R2 Ent Physical License has been used *only* to provide a host environment, so the 4 WS2K8 R2 Ent Virtual Licenses can be used for any roles you so choose (except, obviously, Hyper-V). Any additional guests need to be licensed separately.

    2.3 Windows Server R2 2008 DataCenter - One Physical and unlimited Virtual Licenses

        2.3.1 Regardless of whether the Host WS2K8 R2 DataCenter OS that the Hyper-V role is installed on (W2K8 R2 DC Physical License) performs additional functions such as RODC, AD, DHC, DNS and/or other non-virtualization roles or not, then the unlimited WS2K8 R2 DC Virtual Licenses can be used for any roles you so choose (except, obviously, Hyper-V). Any additional guests need to be licensed separately - such as SBS 2008 and/or EBS 2008 or RedHat Enterprise.

3. If you buy SBS 2003 Premium Edition or EBS 2008 Premium Edition you are supplied a Primary OS (SBS/EBS) and an additional Server + SQL License (and in EBS you also have the Management instance and the Messaging instance).  This Primary OS instance cannot be used as a Hyper-V Host and this is detailed in the EULA.  The additional Server License that comes with Premium can (as in can) be used as both a Hyper-V Host and Guest.  So, in these environments, and we'll stick with SBS here for ease of describing how this would work, here's your options:

    3.1 SBS 2008 Standard Edition

        3.1.1 Install SBS 2008 Standard on Physical - no Hyper-V in use, so we don't care about its Licensing  :)

        3.1.2 Install Hyper-V R2 Server (as mentioned above in Point 1.) and run SBS 2008 Standard as a virtual guest using the SBS 2008 Standard License.

        3.1.3 Purchase an additional Windows Server 2008 R2 (or WS2K8) License and use that as the Hyper-V Host, then install SBS 2008 Std as a virtual guest using the SBS 2008 Standard License.

    3.2 SBS 2008 Premium Edition

        3.2.1 Install SBS 2008 PE Primary Server instance in hardware on one machine and the Secondary Server Instance in hardware on a second machine - we're not using Hyper-V, so we don't care about its Licensing

        3.2.2 Install Secondary Server Instance as Hyper-V Host and then virtualize both SBS 2008 Primary and Secondary Server Instances.  This is very similar to 2.1.2 above - the Secondary Server Instance is providing only virtualization-related services, so it can be used as a licensed virtual guest, in addition to this the SBS 2008 Primary Server Instance (the bit with SBS, Exchange, CompanyWeb, etc) is also virtualized using its virtual key (included with the OS).

        3.2.3 On a second physical server, install Secondary Server Instance as Hyper-V host providing only virtualization services, then virtualize it as a guest and then run the SBS 2008 Primary Instance on the main server.  The second physical server is properly licensed, however here's the options for the main server:

            3.2.3.1 The SBS 2008 Primary Instance can run on hardware, Hyper-V not in play

            3.2.3.2 Hyper-V R2 Server can be used as the host (see Points 1. and 3.1.2 above) and the SBS 2008 Primary Instance as a licensed virtual guest.

            3.2.3.3 An additional License of WS2K8R2 can be purchased and the SBS 2008 Primary Instance as a licensed virtual guest (see Points 2.1.1 and 3.1.3 above).

Now, the only real clarification to this is that Virtual guests can run the OS as Licensed and any other lower product. So, if you have a WS2K8 R2 Ent License, the WS2K8 R2 Ent guests can be WS2K8 R2 Ent, WS2K8 R2 Std, WS2K8 Ent, WS2K8 Std, WS2K3 Ent, WS2K3 Std and so on. If you have a WS2K8 R2 Std License, you cannot run WS2K8 R2 Ent guests unless they are separately licensed. If you wish to run NOWS SBE, SUSE Linux, Free BSD, SBS 2003 or any other OS then you need to be separately licensed for that OS as applicable.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Drool...

I sooooooo want a RAID 10 array of these in the new DL380 Server we're getting for the office: pureSilicon Nitro N1 SSDs

Yes, the 1 TB units of course!  :)

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Australian Facist Party

It appears that The Australian Facist Party - or at least one of its elite members, Senator Stephen Conroy - has managed to twist the arm of the auDA into deregistering a website - http://www.stephenconroy.com.au/ - because it contained the most sane and technologically literate Senator's name.

Now, auDA has policies that need to be complied with, sure, and the owners of the site had phenomenally limited time given to them to prove that they complied before the site and domain was taken off the air.  A variant is now available at http://www.stephen-conroy.com/ where an article outlining the recent actions is available on the main page.  It also has a YouTube video that someone seems to have shot with a hidden camera in Senator Stephen Conroy's office when this website was brought to his attention.  :)

If you're interested in an organization that will aim to protect sensibility, freedom of culture, the protection of civil liberties and inalienable rights of the nation's citizens and to protect the freedoms of the newly evolging global information society, you may want to have a look at http://pirateparty.org.au/.

Regards

The Outspoken Wookie

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Microsoft Clusterfu^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^HLicensing Site Still Not Functional

Well, in a move that doesn't bode well for Microsoft's ability to host our emails and data, Microsoft's Volume Licensing site underwant an upgrade last week, was due back online on 6 December, and now on 18 December, it still isn't fully functional.

It is bad enough not being able to install software and obtain keys easily with this site being down (and being given the runaround from MS Licensing staff who don't know what to do in this situation), but imagine if this was an Azure, BPOS or other MS Hosted platfowm where they botched an upgrade this badle and took your business data offline for the best part of a fortnight - would your business survive if Microsoft made your data totally unavailable for a week?  A fortnight?  Even a day or two?

Microsoft has some *serious* learning to do over this complete clusterfuck of an upgrade before they start seriously asking for us to host our business critical data with them.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

CERN and LHC Take A Festivus Break

Well, all's good with the LHC over at CERN.  On November 23 it created history with its first collision, on 30 Nov it created more history with a world record collision at 1.18 TeV.  It has been creating collisions at 2.38 TeV for the past week or so and has now been closed for a shortened winter maintenance window to allow some system enhancements and tests before reopening for physics in February and aiming at 7 TeV collisions in early 2010.

That sort of collision energy requires around 6000 Amps of current in the superconducting magnets surrounding the beams - a serious amount of power, and this is what the enhancements are being put in place for.  Testing of each beam at 3.5 TeV will begin in January in preparation for full commissioning and operation in February 2010 at 3.5 TeV/beam (a 7 TeV collision).

Out of interest, each of the hadron groups that are moving at very nearly light speed through the LHC's superconducting magnetic path carry about as much energy as your average passenger jet at cruise speed.  That's quite a punch they are packing!  So, should a condition arise where one or both of these beams need to be dumped - such as a "quench" situation in which the temperature of the superconducting components rises to 8K (from its normal temperature of 1.9K or -271.25 degrees Celsius) they are dumped ito one of a number of 7m long graphite blocks which are encased in steel, then water cooled and further wrapped in 750 tonnes of iron shielding and concrete.  Basically, this will result in an event that the CERN guys notice but no-one above the LHC would even be aware of.  And it would all be over rather quickly!  :)

No, not life as we know it - the proton or ion beam dumping.  That would be over rather quickly.  The LHC isn't going to create a black hole that wil consume the Earth nor open doors to extra-dimensional space that will allow creatures that look like a red, pulsating Cheese Burglar to come through and enslave us all.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Friday, December 18, 2009

The Physics of Santa

OK, so a fat man in a red suit is supposed to use flying male reindeer to deliver presents to the world's good Christian (and a few other religions, less a few Christian sects/denominations who don't celebate anything) children on December 24th?  Really?

Well, the thing with reindeer is that the male reindeer (the older ones, at least) drop their antlers in December (the younger males around March and the females around June-July) which means that as time goes by, assuming that reindeer live for over 2000 (or so) years, Rudolph wouldn't have antlers around Christmas time.  He may have when he was younger, or maybe Rudolph is actually female?  Either way, Rudolph isn't quite what he's made out to be.  Oh, yeah, and there's that flying thing, too!

So, the antler and flight issues aside, have you thought about how much energy one man would need to be able to travel around the entire planet - not just in a circle, stopping house-to-house to climb down a chimney (if one exists), deliver presents, drink milk/beer and eat cookies/whatever, possibly say hello in a special Santa way to mummy, and then head to the next house?

A relatively decent overview of the forces involved (though this does talk about "centrifugal" instead of the actual "centripetal" force involved) can be found at Snopes and many other places on the Intarweb.

A humorous, yet ludicrous account of how Santa may actually exist can be found here.

So, if we can encourage our children to believe in old, male, fully antlered, flying reindeer being able to pull a man around 121 million kilometers in one day (admittedly, with extended hours due to the rotation of the Earth) and a rabbit that delivers chocolate eggs, no wonder we can have them believe in a supernatural being that cares about our plight yet lets us make our own choices.

Personally, I'd rather believe in sanity, science and things that can actually exist.

Happy Festivus to all.  Maybe we should all look towards having a HumanLight party which happens to approximately fall on the approximate day of Festivus - the 23rd December, to celebrate sanity and the belief in human beings having morals and good intentions without needing a supernatural prod in the right direction.  This would encourage our children to grow up to believe in themselves, to believe in reason, to do good to others because it is simply the right thing to do.

As atheists, there's only one more God that we don't believe in compared to Christians, and here is the list.  So, you can see that we have a great deal in common and a small amount that we disagree on.

So, to all, I wish you a happy and safe holiday season and a happy and prosperous 2010.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

ShadowProtect Update

Thanks to Robert Crane for bringing this to our attention.  I believe the Australian ShadowProtect guys will release something later on, but the US guys released this earlier this week:

Critical Update Available for ShadowProtect 3.x Customers


Valued Partners:

StorageCraft would like to announce the availability of ShadowProtect 3.5.1 for download now. This software patch fixes a rare issue found in ShadowProtect 3.x which affects some incremental backup images, but not full backup image files. This issue causes some incremental image files not to include all of the file system changes made since the last backup image. Any affected file will show chkdsk errors when mounted. This rare issue occurs on some systems running Windows Vista, Windows 7 and Windows 2008 R2 – but is not limited to these systems.

If you are running ShadowProtect 3.x, StorageCraft recommends that you download ShadowProtect 3.5.1, run the patch, reboot your system and begin a new backup image set – starting with a new full image of your system. To download this ShadowProtect update, please select:

ShadowProtect Server Edition:
http://www.storagecraft.com/downloads/ENU_Server_Setup_3.5.1.exe

ShadowProtect Small Business Server Edition:
http://www.storagecraft.com/downloads/ENU_SBS_Setup_3.5.1.exe

ShadowProtect Desktop Edition:
http://www.storagecraft.com/downloads/ENU_Desktop_Setup_3.5.1.exe

The ShadowProtect 3.5.1 update does not affect your current ShadowProtect 3.5 recovery CD. Therefore, a new .iso download is not necessary.

If you have additional questions regarding this update, please visit the StorageCraft Support Center:

http://forum.storagecraft.com/community/

For more information about this update, please refer to the ShadowProtect 3.5.1 readme file.

http://www.storagecraft.com/documents/readme_3_5_1.rtf



Thanks,
The StorageCraft Team

So, I hope that people other than US folks get to read this critical information - critical in that it fixes an issue whereby SP incremental backups are not backing up changed files properly.  I do wonder why StorageCraft Australia still hasn't released information about this update to their users!

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Beta Testing Office 2010

Well, sad to say, but I have finally gone back to Office 2007 because the Outlook 2010 beta was SO FUCKING UNSTABLE it felt like I was beta testing F^HVista all over again.

COME ON GUYS - I sent probably 50 reports of Outlook 2010 crashing and didn't get a single response.  And I KNOW I'm not the only one seeing this instability.

The rest of the product is nice.  Some of the new features in Outlook 2010 are definitely nice, however having it crash on me all the time was simply unbearable and resulted in a great amount of lost productivity and increased frustration - neither of which are efficient.

So, when Microsoft gets their act together and can release a Beta product that's not at Alpha levels of stability, I'll try it again.  But in the meantime, I'm quite happy with Office 2007.

Speaking of Office 2010, have a read of the First Look: Microsoft Office 2010 eBook if you want to know more about what Office 2010 will have to offer (once they get Outlook 2010 stable).

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Adobe AIR - clueless...

Now, aside from the recently announced vulnerability in various Adobe products that is addressed in the current release (1.5.3) of Adobe AIR, it seems that Adobe coders still show little awareness of the environment in which they operate.

Proof of this is given in the following tale...

I decided that I'd swap around my Windows 7 licenses - I have a FPP Windows 7 Ultimate (from Beta testing the product) and numerous Windows 7 Pro upgrades (via MAPS).  Originally, as I was beta testing mainly on my desktop, and during beta testing we had access to Win 7 Ultimate (and Home Premium for an upgrade test, but I'll ignore that) I therefore decided that I'd run my Ultimate license on my desktop and Pro on the laptop.  Now I've decided to swap them around as we'll be implementing DirectAccess here soon and this requires Win 7 Ultimate or Enterprise to take advantage of it, so having Ultimate on my laptop makes a lot more sense than on my desktop as it lives in the office.

So, as one of the applications I use is TweetDeck, I went to reinstall that on my freshly rebuilt desktop PC running Win 7 Pro x64 using the online installer on TweetDeck's home page.  No go - it bombs out with the following error message after AIR requests elevation and successfully installs:

Sorry, an error has occurred.


The application could not be installed because the AIR file is
damaged. Try obtaining a new AIR file from the application
author.
So I figured I'd look further into this.  I uninstalled AIR manually, downloaded the AIR installer and installed it successfully (it asks for elevation during the install procedure, as expected).  So fine, AIR installs two different ways, as expected.
 
Then I downloaded the TweetDeck AIR application and went to install that - double clicking on the app (or right-clicking and choosing Install) gives the same result and same error message - the AIR file is apparently damaged.
 
So, I noticed that the AIR package doesn't ask for elevation during the install unlike the AIR product itself.  Hhmmm, does this mean that Adobe's AIR fails to recognise that it is running in a Windows 7 (and Windows F^HVista would also see the same issue) environment and because it fails to prompt for elevation, it fails the install?  Maybe...
 
I went back to the TweetDeck page, but this time after opening MSIE with "Run as administrator" and agreeing to the elevation request.  The TweetDeck AIR pachage installed without any issue.  Go Adobe!  :(
 
This means that, because of the poor design of Adobe AIR, it won't install any packages properly in a normal and secure Windows 7 (or F^HVista) environment (ie one with UAC enabled).  Also, because AIR isn't an application you can run yourself, you can't run it elevated to have it install any packages properly.  Go Adobe - brilliant effort.  Extra Brownie Points for you this time!  :(  And not only that, Adobe can't even get their error message right - the AIR file is not damaged, as they report, but their product is!
 
So, if you need to install AIR packages and they are available on a website, if you "Run as adinistrator" an MSIE session, this is a way to work around this issue until Adobe coders get hit hard with a cluestick!
 
Regards,
 
The Outspoken Wookie

Saturday, December 12, 2009

MS Security Intelligence Report V7

OK, so if 69.2% of all spam blocked by Forefront Online Protection for Exchange in the first half of 2009 was for Pharmacy products (both sexual and non-sexual) and Non-Pharmacy product advertisements, SOMEONE must be buying this shit for spammers to see this as a viable market.

So, who is it that's buying this shit?

Please, I want to know if you've bought anything that was sent to you by a spammer as I need to know the types of people that we need to introduce International legislation for, banning you from using computers and electronic mail devices.  Your stupidity is making life less enjoyable for the rest of us and you need to be stopped!

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Uganda's Appalling Human Rights

Now, I'm not homosexual nor do I play one on television, but I have no problem with how anyone chooses (or other) to express their sexuality.  What I DO have a problem with is this.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Midas and Klark Teknik = Behringer? Say It Isn't So

It seems that both the Midas (maker of some fine broadcast, recording and live sound mixing consoles) and Klark Teknik (maker of some fine signal processing equipment) business components of Bosch Communications Systems have been sold to the Music Group, who owns Behringer.

This truly is a sad day for quality audio products.

Behringer makes *some* good gear, but the rest is simply not up to the standards that professional sound engineers require.  Their original Composer Pro (now superceded) and their current ADA8000 are nice (for the price), however that's about all of the Behringer kit I'd consider buying.

Let's see if the Music Group rolls Midas and Klark Teknik down to Behringer's standard or pushes Behringer's standards up towards Midas and KT.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Wednesday, December 09, 2009

Email Insanity

Whilst I was emailing a friend about email and other things, I thought I'd check and see how many emails I've actually received since 13 November 2009 (and it is now 12 December, 2009).

Can you guess how many?  1000?  I wish!  5000 - not even close!  7000, getting hot...  7425 - that's right, almost 7500 emails in a month.  If I had a dollar for each email I received...

Now, how many have I sent?  745!  That's simply ridiculous!

OK, I think it is time for this insanity to stop.  Well, at least slow down somewhat.

Starting right now - bugger going for a walk tonight, I'm culling the number of mailing lists and email lists I'm on back to something actually *sensible*.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Motion: The Catholic Church is a force for good in the world

This was an Intelligence Squared Debate presented from London by Zeinab Badawi that was broadcast on the BBC.  The 1 hour 3 minute debate in its entirety can be found here.  The presenters are the Archbishop of Abuja (Nigeria) John Onaiyekan and Ann Widdecombe, British Conservative MP for the affirmative and Stephen Fry (need I say more?) and Christopher Hitchens (need I say more?).

The whole shebang as edited for television runs for approximately 46 minutes and is split into 5 parts.  Clicking on the first part will play, and leave you with a link to the second, third, fourth and fifth parts.

There was a poll of the audience prior to entry and then there was another poll taken after the debate and Q & A from the floor (during closing arguments) with the results shown towards the end - this was partially edited from the televised version for reasons of time limits.  And yes, due to the relative merit of the arguments presented there was a significant swing between polls.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Monday, December 07, 2009

It looks like we're all screwed

Just in case anyone doesn't realise it, we're all screwed.  Well, we're all screwed if we don't find, build or terraform a habitable location off this planet.  Now, assuming we don't fuck up the environment bad enough in the foreseeable future to cause massive changes in life on this planet as we know it, we don't have that long (relatively speaking) to get off this dump and move somewhere with a better view.

Humans (Homo sapiens sapiens) have existed on this planet for approximately 200,000 years.  The planet itself has been hanging around about 4.5 billion years - quite some time after the Big Bang at around 13.7 billion years ago.  The Sun will finally become a White Dwarf in about 7 billion years.

Now, that seems a fair way off, however things are a little more desperate than that - as the Sun continues to burn its Hydrogen core, it will collapse due to gravity which will cause it to heat up, eventually burning off its remaining Hydrogen, causing it to expand into a Red Giant, heating up further to burn off Helium resulting in its eventual collapse into a White Dwarf.

All that collapsing and expanding happens up until this 7 billion year mark.  We've only got about a billion years left before we likely have no oceans due to the Sun's impending death.  And that's not the worst of it - about half a billion years away, the Sun would have increased in intensity enough to warm the planet so much that the decrease in CO2 as the planet becomes more and more desert-like will make it difficult for the remaining plants to survive.  That's just half the time between now and when the oceans eventually evaporate into space.

So, we really have a fair bit less than half a billion years left on this planet.  Considering we, as a species, have been here for 200,000 years and we have, say 400,000,000 years left before things start getting a little warm and desolate, that's not a lot of time left in the overall scheme of things (after all, the Earth is approximately 4,500,000,000 years old - it is therefore about 90% of the way through its habitable lifespan).

Humans spent approximately 190,000 years trying to move things with difficulty until they invented the wheel.  Roughly another 700 years elapsed until we had the Industrial Revolution, and then another hundred and fifty odd years until we finally had a controlled, powered, sustained heavier than air flight.  Another 58 years or so and we finally put a man into Space in 1961, and then in November 2000, we had the first manned crew of the ISS (sure, Salyut 1 was officially the first space station, back in 1971).

So, for roughly 199,500 years, man didn't have machines that did much, then in the last 500 years we've put people permanently into Space, landed on the Moon and Mars, investigated many other bodies in our Solar System and really are doing quite well.  We've got 20 times the amount of time humans have existed before we need to leave this planet for a better place to live.  I'm pretty sure that if we survive our own willingness to kill each other for religious or other reasons, we should easily be able to survive as a race when our home planet is finally consumed by the Sun and spewed into the Solar System as various forms of ash.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

AASFSHNR Reaches US$1.25m for Kiva

On October 8th, I reported the good news that our Kiva AASFSHNR Lending Team had been the first team to pass US$1m in loans.  It took us about 13.5 months to make it to the US$1m mark and it has taken us less than 2 months to make it to the current mark of just over US$1.25m.

We're currently discussing a goal for the end of 2010 to be around the US$2.5 to US$3m mark and at the rate we've reached US$1.25m in loans, that should be easily achievable and hopefully easily surpassed.

Kiva has a total loaned amount of just over US$106m to microfinance borrowers witha  current repayment rate ov over 98%, which is awesome.  I wonder how many other finance institutions can claim repayment rates of above 98%?  :)  And remember this is microfinance - we're funcing loans for people in need of loans that the regular finance system will not loan to - including (but not limited to) entrepeneurs in Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Benin, Costa Rica, Ghana, Honduras, Lebanon, Mali, Mongolia, Nicaragua, Peru, Rwanda, Senegal, Sudan, Uganda, Vietnam and even the United States who are looking to improve their businesses and/or family homes.

If you'd like an invite to Kiva, let me know and I'll send one to you.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Friday, December 04, 2009

Windows Experience Index - Win7

Here's the link to the new Windows 8 Experience Index post.

The WEI scoring system has changed a fair bit since it was introduced in Windows F^HVista and the version that's in Windows 7 is a result of the responses of many reports to Microsoft from users and beta testers around the world.  One of the changes is that the WEI scores in Windows 7 now go from a bottom-feeding 1.0 all the way up to 7.9.

For a decent read about what the Windows Experience Index involves, have a read of this. It doesn't go into a lot of technical depth, however it is enlightening.

Now, I have a few computers here right now that I'm running Windows 7 on and below I've listed the scores as well as scores from other people's computers that I've been able to verify. I'm particularly interested in the CPU and RAM scores for use in regular daily office use. Not that CPU usage is really ever an issue (on modern PCs), but more so as a comparison between netbooks, notebooks and desktops.  The component/figure in bold is the base score (determined by the lowest subscore).  Also, as more figures are obtained, I'll add them to this table.

(If you want to send me details to add to this list, please send the following:
* Screen capture of Control Panel\System and Security\System
* Screen capture of Control Panel\All Control Panel Items\Performance Information and Tools
* Screen Capture of Device Manager showing your HDDs (and highlighting the Primary HDD if you have more than 1 installed)
* A zipped HTML output from CPU-z
as all of the above give me the detail I need to complete this table.)

SystemComponentScore
Laz' Sandy Bridge Desktop
CPU @ x45 = 4.50 GHz
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7 2600 @ 4.50 GHz
RAM - 2*4 GB CMZ8GX3M2A1600C8 (833 MHz)
Graphics - MSI R5970-P2D2G 2GB
Gaming Graphics - MSI R5970-P2D2G 2GB
Primary SSD - A-RAM AR120GBE Elite 120GB
7.8
7.8
7.7
7.7
7.9
Laz' Sandy Bridge Desktop
CPU @ x45 = 4.50 GHz
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7 2600 @ 4.50 GHz
RAM - 2*4 GB CMZ8GX3M2A1600C8 (833 MHz)
Graphics - MSI R5970-P2D2G 2GB
Gaming Graphics - MSI R5970-P2D2G 2GB
Primary HDD - Seagate Momentus XT 500GB
7.8
7.8
7.7
7.7
5.9
Georgia's 2600K Gamer
Not overclocked
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7 2600 @ 3.40 GHz
RAM - 2*4 GB F3-17000CL9-4GBXM (800 MHz)
Graphics - NVIDIA GeForce GTX 460 1GB
Gaming Graphics - NVIDIA GeForce GTX 460 1GB
Primary HDD-WD3200AAKS-OOB3A0 320GB
7.7
7.8
7.6
7.6
5.9
Dell 9010 SFF
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7 3770 @ 3.40 GHz
RAM - 2*4 GB HMT351U6CFR8C-PB (800 MHz)
Graphics - Intel HD4000 64MB
Gaming Graphics - Intel HD4000 64MB
Pri SSD - Samsung PM830 2.5" 7 128GB
7.7
7.7
6.5
6.5
7.9
Hilton's Desktop
Bus Speed O/C to 166 MHz
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7 920 @ 2.67 GHz
RAM - 3*2 GB Corsair CM3X2G1600C7 (833 MHz)
Graphics - 2 * Gigabyte HD4850 Fanless
Gaming Graphics - 2 * GV-R485MC-1GI
Primary HDD - Samsung HD103UJ 1 TB
7.6
7.9
7.3
7.3
5.9
Nick's General Melchett
Desktop PC
Win 7 Ultimate x64
CPU - Core i7 2600 @ 3.40 GHz
RAM - 4*4 GB GSKill F3-12800CL9 (667 MHz)
Graphics - Radeon HD5750 1GB
Gaming Graphics - Radeon HD5750 1GB
Primary HDD - WD10EACS 1 TB
7.6
7.9
7.2
7.2
5.9
Laz' Sandy Bridge Desktop
Everything at defaults
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7 2600 @ 3.40 GHz
RAM - 2*4 GB CMZ8GX3M2A1600C8 (833 MHz)
Graphics - MSI R5970-P2D2G 2GB
Gaming Graphics - MSI R5970-P2D2G 2GB
Primary HDD - Seagate Momentus XT 500GB
7.6
7.8
7.7
7.7
5.9
Nick's General Melchett
Upgraded Video, SSD
Win 7 Ultimate x64
CPU - Core i7 2600 @ 3.40 GHz
RAM - 4*4 GB GSkill F3-12800CL9 (667MHz)
Graphics - Radeon HD6870 1GB
Gaming Graphics - Radeon HD6850 1GB
Primary SSD - Crucial CTFDDAC 256 GB
7.6
7.6
7.8
7.8
7.9
Dell Optiplex 990SF
Onboard Intel Video, HDD
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7 2600 @ 3.40 GHz
RAM - 2*4 GB Samsung PC3-10700 (667MHz)
Graphics - Intel OnBoard 1GB
Gaming Graphics - Intekl OnBoard 1GB
Primary HDD - Hitachi HTS757550A9E364 500GB
7.6
7.6
5.5
4.9
5.9
Bill’s Dell M6600
Stock purchase from Dell
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU – Intel i7-2720QM @ 2.20GHz (800MHz)
RAM – 2 x 4 GB Nanya PC3-12800 (800MHz)
Graphics – nVidia Quadro 3000M
Gaming Graphics – nVidia Quadro 3000M
Primary SSD – Samsung PM830 256 GB SSD
7.5
7.7
7.1
7.1
7.9
Anthony’s Dell M6600
Stock purchase from Dell
Win 7 Ultimate x64
CPU – Intel i7-2729QM @ 2.20GHz (800MHz)
RAM – 2 x 4 GB DDR3 2 1066MHz
Graphics – nVidia Quadro 3000M
Gaming Graphics – nVidia Quadro 3000M
Primary SSD – Samsung SATA 2 256 GB SSD
7.5
7.6
7.1
7.1
7.6
Luke's Gaming PC
Win 7 Pro x64
SSDs as supplied in RAID-0
CPU - Core i7-950 @ 3.07 GHz
RAM-3*4GB CorsairCMX6GX3M3C1600C7 667MHz
Graphics - nVidia GTX 460 (768MB)
Gaming Graphics - nVidia GTX 460
Primary SSD - Kingston SNVP325S2128GB
7.5
7.5
7.4
7.4
6.9
HP Z400 Workstation
Win 7 Default Install
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Xeon W3550 @ 3.07 GHz
RAM - 3*2 GB Hyundai PC3-10700 (667 MHz)
Graphics - nVidia Quadro FX 1800 (768MB)
Gaming Graphics - nVidia Quadro FX 1800
Primary HDD-Seagate ST3500418AS 500 GB
7.4
7.7
6.7
6.7
5.9
Derek's Desktop
Autotune O/C to 145 MHz bus
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i5 750 @ 2.67 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB Corsair CMG4GX3M2A1600C7
Graphics - Gigabyte HD5750 (GV-R575D5-1GD)
Gaming Graphics - Gigabyte HD5750
Primary HDD - Samsung HD103UJ 1 TB
7.4
7.6
7.3
7.3
5.9
Nathan's AMD Desktop
(Updated RAM, Video)
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - AMD Phenom II X4 965 @ 3.40 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB Kingston PC3-10700 (667 MHz)
RAM - 2*4 GB Corsair PC3-10700H (667 MHz)
Graphics - ATI Radeon HD5770 1GB
Gaming Graphics - ATI Radeon HD5770 1GB
Pri HDD - Hitachi HDS721010CLA332 1 TB
7.4
7.5

7.4
7.4
5.9
Dell Optiplex 790SF Desktop
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Intel Core i5-2400 @ 3.10 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB Samsung PC3-10700 (667 MHz)
Graphics - ATI Radeon HD6450 1 GB
Gaming Graphics - ATI Radeon HD6450 1 GB
Primary HDD - Seagate ST9250410AS 250 GB
7.4
7.5
5.1
6.3
5.9
Nathan's AMD Desktop
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - AMD Phenom II X4 965 @ 3.40 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB Kingston PC3-10700 (667 MHz)
Graphics - ATI Radeon HD4290
Gaming Graphics - ATI Radeon HD4290
Primary HDD - Hitachi HDS721010CLA332 1 TB
7.4
5.9
4.6
5.6
5.9
Derek's Desktop
(non-o/c)
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i5 750 @ 2.67 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB Corsair CMG4GX3M2A1600C7
Graphics - Gigabyte HD5750 (GV-R575D5-1GD)
Gaming Graphics - Gigabyte HD5750
Primary HDD - Samsung HD103UJ 1 TB
7.3
7.5
7.3
7.3
5.9
Rob's Desktop
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Core 2 Quad 9550 @ 2.83 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB Transcend PC2-6400 (400 MHz)
Graphics - nVidia GeForce GTX 260 (896 MB)
Gaming Graphics - nVidia GeForce GTX 260
Primary HDD - WDC WD3200AAKS 320 GB
7.3
7.3
7.2
7.2
5.9
Bill's Media PC
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core 2 Quad 9550 @ 2.83 GHz
RAM - 2*4 GB Kingston PC2-6400 (400)
Graphics - Gigabyte HD4550 (512MB)
Gaming Graphics - Gigabyte HD4550
Primary HDD - Samsung HD103UJ 1 TB
7.3
7.3
5.1
6.2
5.9
Georgia's Alien Gaming PC
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7 820 @ 1.73 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB Elpida PC3-10700 (667)
Graphics - NVIDIA GeForce GTX 260M (1GB)
Gaming Graphics - Gigabyte HD5750
Primary HDD-Seagate ST9500420AS 500 GB
7.2
7.4
6.8
6.8
5.9
Hilton's Streaming Slim PC
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core 2 Quad Q9400 @ 2.66 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB Kingston PC2-6400 (400 MHz)
Graphics - NVIDIA GeForce GT 240 (1GB)
Gaming Graphics - Galaxy GT240
Primary HDD - Seagate ST380817AS 80 GB
7.2
7.2
6.7
6.7
5.3
HP dc7900
Out of the box, or ATI 10.2
Win 7 Pro x86
Weird - faster RAM than in x64!!!
CPU - Core 2 Quad 9400 @ 2.66 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB HP RAM
Graphics - HP ATI Radeon HD 4550 256MB
Gaming Graphics - ATI Radeon HD 4550 256MB
Pri SSD - Samsung MMCRE64G5MXP-0VB 64 GB
7.2
7.2
5.1
6.2
5.9
HP dc7900
ATI 10.2 Driver
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core 2 Quad 9400 @ 2.66 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB HP RAM
Graphics - HP ATI Radeon HD 4550 256MB
Gaming Graphics - ATI Radeon HD 4550 256MB
Pri SSD - Samsung MMCRE64G5MXP-0VB 64 GB
7.2
5.9
5.1
6.2
5.9
HP dc7900
Out of the box
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core 2 Quad 9400 @ 2.66 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB HP RAM
Graphics - HP ATI Radeon HD 4550 256MB
Gaming Graphics - ATI Radeon HD 4550 256MB
Pri SSD - Samsung MMCRE64G5MXP-0VB 64 GB
7.2
5.9
4.5
6.2
5.9
Dell Latitude E6320 Notebook
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7-2620M @ 2.70 GHz
RAM - 2*4GB Samsung CH9 (667 MHz)
Graphics - Intel HD3000
Gaming Graphics - Intel HD3000
Primary SSD - Samsung PM810 240 GB
7.1
7.5
6.4
6.4
7.6
Dell XPS L501x Notebook
Win 7 Ult x64
CPU - Core i7-740QM @ 1.73 GHz
RAM - 2*4GB HMT351S6BFR8C-H9 (667 MHz)
Graphics - nVidia GeForce GT435M 2GB
Gaming Graphics - nVidia GeForce GT435M 2GB
Primary HDD - Toshiba MK6461GSY 640 GB
7.1
7.4
6.6
6.6
5.9
Dell Vostro 3700 Notebook
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7-720QM @ 1.60 GHz
RAM - 4+2 GB PC3-10700 (667 MHz)
Graphics - nVidia GeForce GT 330M 1GB
Gaming Graphics - nVidia GeForce GT 330M 1GB
Primary HDD - Toshiba MK5056GSY 500 GB
7.0
7.4
6.4
6.4
5.9
Andrew's Asus M60J Notebook
+Intel MLC SSD
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7 Q720 @ 1.60 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB Samsung PC3-8500F (533 MHz)
Graphics - nVidia GeForce GT 240M
Gaming Graphics - nVidia GeForce GT 240M
Primary SSD - Intel SSDSA2M160G2GN 160 GB
7.0
7.3
6.4
6.4
7.6
Andrew's Asus M60J Notebook
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i7 Q720 @ 1.60 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB Samsung PC3-8500F (533 MHz)
Graphics - nVidia GeForce GT 240M
Gaming Graphics - nVidia GeForce GT 240M
Primary HDD-Seagate ST9500325AS 500 GB
7.0
7.3
6.4
6.4
5.7
BillG's Media Center PC
Gigabyte H55N-USB3
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core i3 550 @ 3.20 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB Corsair PC3-10700H (667 MHz)
Graphics - Intel i3 Integrated
Gaming Graphics - Intel i3 Integrated
Primary HDD - Hitachi HTS725050A9A364 500 GB
7.0
5.9
4.9
5.2
5.9
Anthony’s Dell M6500
Stock purchase from Dell
Win 7 Ultimate x64
CPU – Intel i7-720QM @ 1.60Ghz
RAM – 4 x 2 GB 667 MHz DDR3
Graphics – nVidia Quadro FX 2800
Gaming Graphics – nVidia Quadro FX 2800
Pri SSD - Samsung PB22-J53 FDE 256 GB
6.9
7.4
6.8
6.8
7.3
Lyn's
Inspiron 15R Notebook
Win 7 HP x64
CPU - Core i5 2410M @ 2.30 GHz
RAM - 4 GB PC3-10700 (667 MHz) Samsung
Graphics - Intel HD 3000
Gaming Graphics - Intel HD 3000
Pri HDD - Seagate ST9640320AS 640GB 5400
6.9
5.9
4.7
6.1
5.9
Chris'
Lenovo T410 Notebook
Win 7 Ult x64
CPU - Core i7 620M @ 2.67 GHz
RAM - 4 GB PC2-8500F (533 MHz)
Graphics - nVidia NVS 3100M 256MB
Gaming Graphics - nVidia NVS 3100M 256MB
Pri SSD - Samsung MMCRE28G8MXP-0VB 128GB
6.8
5.9
5.0
5.9
6.9
Don's Asus U30Jc Notebook
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Intel Core i3-350M @ 2.27 GHz
RAM - 4 GB Kingston PC3-10700 (667 MHz)
Graphics - Intel GMA HD
Gaming Graphics - Intel GMA HD
Primary HDD - Seagate ST9320423AS 320 GB
6.3
5.9
4.6
5.1
5.9
Jim's HP 6730 Notebook
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Core 2 Duo T9600 @ 2.80 GHz
RAM - 4 GB PC2-6400 (400 MHz)
Graphics - Intel Mobile 4 Series Express
Gaming Graphics - Intel Mobile 4 Express
Primary HDD - WD WD3200BEKT-60F3T1 320 GB
6.3
5.5
4.1
3.4
5.9
Andrew's Toshiba Satellite A350
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Core 2 Duo P8700 @ 2.53 GHz
RAM - 2*2 GB PC2-6400 (400 MHz)
Graphics - ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3650
Gaming Graphics - ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3650
Pri HDD - Seagate ST95005620AS 500 GB NAND
6.1
6.1
5.2
6.1
5.9
Laz' Media Center PC
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Core 2 Duo E6750 @ 2.66 GHz
RAM - 2+1 GB PC2-5300 (333 MHz)
Graphics - NVIDIA GeForce 8600 GS
Gaming Graphics - NVIDIA GeForce 8600 GS
Primary HDD - Seagate ST3500830AS 500 GB
6.1
6.1
4.7
5.6
5.9
Daniel's Lenovo X200 Notebook
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core 2 Duo P8700 @ 2.53 GHz
RAM - 4 GB Micron PC3-8500 (1066 MHz) RAM
Graphics - Intel Mobile 4 Series Express
Gaming Graphics - Intel Mobile 4 Express
Primary HDD - Hitachi HTS723232L9SA60 320 GB
6.1
5.9
4.1
3.4
5.7
Andrew's Lenovo M57p
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Core 2 Duo E6750 @ 2.66 GHz
RAM - 4 GB PC2-5300 (333 MHz)
Graphics - Intel GMA 3100 (Q35 Express)
Gaming Graphics - Intel GMA 3100 (Q35 Express)
Primary HDD-Hitachi HDT725025VLA380 250 GB
6.1
5.9
2.3
3.2
5.4
Quark Automation Laptop
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core 2 Duo P8600 @ 2.40 GHz
RAM - 4 GB PC2-5400 (400 MHz)
Graphics - Intel GM45
Gaming Graphics - Intel GM45
Primary HDD - Seagate ST9320421ASG 320 GB
5.9
5.9
4.1
3.9
5.9
Don's Compaq dv6730 Laptop
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core 2 Duo P8400 @ 2.26 GHz
RAM - 4 GB OCZ PC2-5300 (333 MHz)
Graphics - ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3430
Gaming Graphics - ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3430
Primary HDD - Seagate ST9500420AS 500 GB
5.9
5.9
3.9
5.3
5.9
Laz's Old Desktop
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Core 2 Duo E6600 @ 2.40 GHz
RAM - 2+1 GB PC2-5300 (333 MHz)
Graphics - ATI HD4890
Gaming Graphics - ATI HD4890
Primary HDD-Seagate ST350064 1NS 500 GB
5.8
5.8
7.7
7.7
5.4
Rod's HP Elitebook 2530p
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Core 2 Duo L9600 @ 2.13 GHz
RAM - 2 GB Hyundai PC2-6400 (400 MHz)
Graphics - Intel Mobile 4 Series Chipset
Gaming Graphics - Intel Mobile 4 Series
Primary SSD - Intel SSDSA1M080G2HP 80 GB
5.6
5.5
3.5
3.3
7.7
Tony's Lenovo R61 Laptop
Win 7 Ult x64
CPU - Core 2 Duo T7500 @ 2.20 GHz
RAM - 4 GB PC2-5300 (333 MHz)
Graphics - Intel Mobile 965 Express
Gaming Graphics - Intel Mobile 965 Express
Primary HDD - WD3200BJKT-00F4T0 320 GB
5.5
5.5
3.5
5.8
5.9
Nathan's Latitude D620
Win 7 Ult x86
CPU - Core 2 Duo T7200 @ 2.00 GHz
RAM - 4 GB PC2-5300 (333 MHz)
Graphics - nVidia Quadro NVS 110M
Gaming Graphics - nVidia Quadro NVS 110M
Primary HDD - Seagate ST9120823AS 120 GB
5.0
5.0
3.7
3.5
5.2
Rachael's Acer
Aspire 5542G
Win 7 HP x64
CPU - AMD Athlon Dual Core M300 2.00 GHz
RAM - 4 GB Hyundai PC2-6400 (400 MHz)
Graphics - ATI Mobility Radeon HD4570
Gaming Graphics - ATI Mobility Radeon HD4570
Primary HDD-WD WD50 00BEVT-22ZATO 500 GB
4.9
7.0
4.9
6.3
5.9
Catherine's Compaq
Presario CQ61
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Celeron Dual Core T3100 @ 1.90 GHz
RAM - Single 2 GB PC2-6400 (400 MHz)
Graphics - nVidia GeForce Go 7300
Gaming Graphics - Mobile Intel 4 Series Express
Primary HDD - WD WD2500BEKT-60V5T1 250 GB
4.8
4.8
3.2
3.3
5.9
Alan's Old Pentium-D
Dell DXP051, 30s boot time
Win 7 Pro x64
CPU - Pentium D @ 2.80 GHz
RAM - 4*1 GB PC2-5300 (333 MHz)
Graphics - nVidia GeForce GTX 460
Gaming Graphics - nVidia GeForce GTX 460
Primary SSD - Intel SSDSA2M160G2GC 160 GB
4.5
5.6
7.1
7.1
7.6
Andrew's Toshiba
SatPro P100
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Core 2 Duo T5500 @ 1.66 GHz
RAM - 2 GB PC2-5300 (333 MHz)
Graphics - nVidia GeForce Go 7300
Gaming Graphics - nVidia GeForce Go 7300
Primary HDD - Fujitsu MHV2120BH PL 120 GB
4.5
4.5
3.6
3.4
4.5
Margaret's Acer
Travelmate 8371
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Core Duo U9400 @ 1.40 GHz
RAM - 4 GB Samsung PC3-8500F (533 MHz)
Graphics - Intel 4 Series Express
Gaming Graphics - Intel 4 Series Express
Primary HDD - Hitachi HTS545032B9A300 320 GB
4.3
4.9
3.2
3.2
5.3
Hilton's M400 Tablet
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Core Duo T2300E @ 1.66 GHz
RAM - 4 GB PC2-5300 (333 MHz)
Graphics - Intel 945
Gaming Graphics - Intel 945
Primary HDD - Hitachi HTS541080G9SA00 80 GB
4.1
4.7
3.6
3.2
4.3
Nathan's Dell Latitude 13
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Core 2 Duo U7300 @ 1.30 GHz
RAM - 1*4 GB Samsung PC3-10700 (667 MHz)
Graphics - Intel GS45 Mobile Series 4
Gaming Graphics - Intel GS45 Mobile Series 4
Primary HDD - Seagate ST9320423AS 320 GB
3.9
4.8
3.2
3.2
5.9
Pete's IBM T43 Laptop
Win 7 Ent x86
CPU - Pentium M 1.86 GHz
RAM - 1.5 GB PC2-4200 (266 MHz)
Graphics - Intel 915GM
Gaming Graphics - Intel 915GM
Primary HDD - Hitachi HTS541040G9AT00 40 GB
3.6
4.4
1.9
1.0
4.4
Hilton's N570 Slate
Win 7 Ultimate x86
CPU - Intel Atom N570 1.66 GHz
RAM - 2 GB PC3-8500F (533 MHz)
Graphics - Intel GMA 3150
Gaming Graphics - Intel GMA 3150
Primary SSD - KingSpec KSD-SMP.1-032MS 32GB
3.4
4.6
2.7
3.0
5.9
Hilton's M200 Tablet
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Pentium M 1.60 GHz
RAM - 2 GB Kingston PC2700 (166 MHz)
Graphics - GeForce FX Go5200
Gaming Graphics - GeForce FX Go5200
Primary HDD - Seagate ST9808211A 80 GB
3.0
4.1
1.0
2.4
4.1
Pete's IBM T41 Laptop
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Pentium M 1.60 GHz
RAM - 2 GB Kingston PC2700 (166 MHz)
Graphics - Standard VGA
Gaming Graphics - Standard VGA
Primary HDD - 7200 rpm
2.9
4.1
1.0
1.0
5.0
Andrew's HP Mini 5102
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Intel Atom N450 @ 1.66 GHz
RAM - 1*2 GB DDR3 (SO-DIMM)
Graphics - Mobile Intel GMA 3150
Gaming Graphics - Mobile Intel GMA 3150
Primary HDD - WD WD3200BEKT-60V5T1 320 GB
2.3
4.6
3.0
3.0
5.9
Nathan's Tega V2 Tablet
(2 Touch Points)
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Intel Atom N455 @ 1.66 GHz
RAM - 1*2 GB Samsung PC3-10700 (667) DDR3
Graphics - Mobile Intel GMA 3150
Gaming Graphics - Mobile Intel GMA 3150
Primary SSD - SanDisk SSD P4 64GB
2.3
4.6
3.0
3.0
5.9
Mark's Tega V2 Tablet
(2 Touch Points)
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Intel Atom N455 @ 1.66 GHz
RAM - 1*2 GB DDR3 (SO-DIMM)
Graphics - Mobile Intel GMA 3150
Gaming Graphics - Mobile Intel GMA 3150
Primary SSD - SanDisk pSSD-S2 64GB
2.3
4.5
3.1
3.0
5.3
John's HP Mini 5101
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Intel Atom N280 @ 1.66 GHz
RAM - 1*2 GB Samsung PC2-6400 (400 MHz)
Graphics - Mobile Intel GMA 950
Gaming Graphics - Mobile Intel GMA 950
Primary HDD - Seagate ST9320423AS 320 GB
2.3
4.5
2.0
3.0
5.9
Gary's HP Mini 2140
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Intel Atom N270 @ 1.60 GHz
RAM - 1*2 GB Samsung PC2-6400 (400 MHz)
Graphics - Mobile Intel GMA 945
Gaming Graphics - Mobile Intel GMA 945
Primary HDD - Hitachi HTS543216L9A300 160 GB
2.2
4.5
2.1
3.0
5.2
HP 2133 Mini-Note PC
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - VIA C7-M 1.60 GHz
RAM - 1*1 GB PC2-5300 (333 MHz)
Graphics - VIA Chrome9 HC
Gaming Graphics - VIA Chrome9 HC
Primary HDD - Fujitsu MHZ2120BH G2 120 GB
1.5
3.9
2.0
3.0
5.2
Fujitsu Lifebook U1010 Tablet
Win 7 Pro x86
CPU - Intel Atom 110 @ 800 MHz
RAM - 1*1 GB DDR2
Graphics - Intel 945GMA
Gaming Graphics - Intel 945GMA
Primary HDD - Toshiba MK4009GAL 40 GB
1.5
3.9
1.0
3.0
3.7
Toshiba Satellite Pro 4600 Laptop
Win 7 Ult x86
CPU - Pentium III E 900 MHz
RAM - 1*512 MB PC133 (333 MHz)
Graphics - Trident CyberBladeXP
Gaming Graphics - Trident CyberBladeXP
Primary HDD - Toshiba MK4026GAX 40 GB
1.3
1.5
1.0
1.0
4.3

Wednesday, December 02, 2009

SBS 2008, WDS and Computer Names

Just in case anyone hasn't played with Windows Deployment Services under SBS 2008 using Windows 7 as the deployment option, you can configure WDS on SBS 2008 and remotely deploy Windows 7 to your client desktops a lot faster than installing via DVD.  What will happen is that the computer name of the deployed system will be in the form of UserNamex where UserName is the name of the administrator account used to deploy the image and "x" is an incremental number for the images deployed under this user.

Once the image has been deployed, the computer is joined to the domain, saving the need to run the Connect Wizard.

Now, as this isn't normally the way we like to name systems (and most people seem not to do this either), we need to rename that deployed computer so that it fits in without preferred naming scheme.  So, on the computer all you need to do is go to My Computer\Properties and click on the "Change settings" link for the Computer name, domain and workgroup settings, change it to what you need, then reboot the computer when prompted.  This will change the computer name and update the record in AD so that the system is seen by SBS 2008 with the new name, allowing Updates and all other SBS Console functionality to work as it did had you installed the computer manually and then run the Connect Wizard.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Office 2010 To Ship June 2010

According to Betanews, Microsoft Office 2010 will ship in June 2010.

I really hope they get Outlook 2010 a *lot* more stable before then because right now, it is next to useless.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Tuesday, December 01, 2009

Microsoft BPOS for Australian Partners

Register Now for upcoming Microsoft Online Services Events!

To help you understand the opportunity and discover the right strategy for your business, we are reaching out via webinars and face to face events and plan to continue to run these next year. We’d like to connect the community around this compelling new business trend and provide a forum to share information, provide training and best practices.

Please make sure you register for these upcoming events:

Date
Event Type
Description
Location
Registration Links
Time
2nd December
Webinar
Kick Start Event for channel partners – de-mystifying Microsoft Online Services
Live Meeting
http://bit.ly/LiveMeetingLink

(Login on the day via this link – live meeting link only)
2-3pm (AEDT)
9th December
Breakfast Event - Sydney
Community Breakfast – come together as a group to discuss face to face key topics around Online Services
Microsoft Office – Sydney
Theatre 1 - 1 Epping Road North Ryde
http://bit.ly/Syd_BPOSevent
8:30 am (rego) – 10:30am
10th December
Breakfast Event - Brisbane
Community Breakfast – come together as a group to discuss face to face key topics around Online Services
Microsoft Office – Brisbane
Theatre 2 - Level 9, Waterfront Place 1 Eagle Street Brisbane
http://bit.ly/Bris_BPOSevent
8:30 am (rego) – 10:30am
11th December
Breakfast Event - Melbourne
Community Breakfast – come together as a group to discuss face to face key topics around Online Services
Microsoft Office – Melbourne
Exhibition Room - Level 5, 4 Freshwater Place Southbank
http://bit.ly/Melb_BPOSevent
8:30 am (rego) – 10:30am


Proposed Agenda for Community Events:

Time
Agenda
8:30am
Registration – light refreshments will be served
9:00 - 9:45am
Presentation Topics:
  • Overview of Online Services key Features and upcoming roadmap
  • Key Business Models, how to sell to customers and sell against Google
  • Key Resources available to drive your S+S business
  • Introducing Telstra – who are your main Telstra contacts and how they can help accelerate your business
9:45 – 10:30
General discussion and Q&A
Break into table to discuss key issues

Check LinkedIn site for more information: http://www.linkedin.com/e/vgh/1898991 or contact me at ksaducas@microsoft.com.

We hope you can join us.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Monday, November 30, 2009

Windows 7 Family Pack in Australia

It seems that Microsoft Australia finally listened to the tide of complaints about the lack of a Windows 7 Family Pack here in Australia and has finally decided to release one.

Now, in the US, this costs US$149.99 for 3 * Windows 7 Home Premium Upgrade licenses.  Obviously Microsoft Australia thought they could suck more money out of Australians than their brethren could in America, so we have to pony up AU$249 for the same software.

Oh, well - at least we have the Family Pack available.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Forefront TMG 2010 Released

It appears that Microsoft has snuck out Forefront Threat Management Gateway 2010 on the quiet.  No fanfare, hardly any mention of it anywhere.  Andrew Nayler brought this to my attention on Sat, but I've not had time to blog it since...

It can be downloaded here and surprisingly there is no reference to Forefront TMG on the Microsoft Australia Forefront home page (maybe Microsoft Australia wasn't informed about the new release, either), however the US site mentions both Forefront TMG 2010 and also Forefront Protection 2010 for Exchange Server which has also been released on the sly.

It appears that part of "The New Efficiency" (which is what Microsoft's releasing all their new server software under now in an attempt to let business owners know that Microsoft software is no longer a business expense, but an efficiency investment) is not letting people know about new software releases.  I just don't get how this is "efficient" in any sense of the word!  :)

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Optus Shafts Australian Android Users

Optus users who buy an Android device eithther through Optus or elsewhere are having *all* paid apps blocked until Optus can try to force Google's hand and skim profits from Google.  Read more here.  The article also lists a workaround involving updating the phone's firmware with a real (ie, non-Optus firmware) and then running an enabler application.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Friday, November 27, 2009

ICANN Seems To Not Understand That HTTP != SMTP

If you have a read this news item, ICANN claims that domain redirection - which is used only for http traffic (ie, web sites) - ICANN offers a FUD reason why this is bad: "For example, users sending e-mail to a domain that does not exist should get an immediate error message."  Aahhh, since when does a http redirection affect smtp traffic?

The ICANN is trying harder and harder to make sure people know that they are still a necessary part of the Internet these days, and it is comments like this that show how little they actually understand of how the Internet works.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Teach Yourself Microsoft Dynamics CRM In 24 Hours

Anne Stanton has now released Teach yourself Microsoft Dynamics CRM in 24 Hours in collaboration with a couple of her contacts.  It is written for the IT Pro, the new technical or business user or the developer just trying to get a taste for what Dynamics CRM is all about. It also replaces CRM for Dummies (which didn’t quite make it).


The book is available through Sam's Publishing from informIT, Borders, Amazon, etc.

Anne definitely knows her shit when it comes to MS Dynamics CRM and her CRMLady blog is packed full of useful CRM-related information.
 
Regards,
 
The Outspoken Wookie

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

STS-129

Well, STS-129 and the ISS have closed the hatches and are preparing for a departure that's scheduled to take place at 19:53 today, Wed 25 November 2009 (Brisbane time).  The mission has gone well to date and aside from wishing I was up there with them, I am glad that the Atlantis crew are heading back home safely.  Atlantis is the one Orbiter that can't accept power from the ISS, so needs to have quicker missions due to needing to supply its own power throughout the entire mission.

Only 5 more Shuttle missions remain and I'm trying to work out how I can spend between February 2010 and whenever STS-133 eventually lands over in Florida without our clients noticing it too much...

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Do You Want Your Child To Become A Scientologist

Well if not - and what sane, caring parent would - then have a read of this article which may well be cause for concern.  These nutbags should be kept well away from children - nothing they do is good.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Are You A Virtualization Newbie?

And willing to admit it?  If so, let me know (privately if you want) as there's an opportunity for you to get hold of some training material before it is released as a "trial by fire" of the material (not of you).  :)

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Configure BitLocker Encryption On Non-TPM Windows Systems

Derek Schauland (MVP in File System Storage) tells you how you can configure BitLocker volume encryption on Windows systems that do not have the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) chip present and enabled.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

More Headlines

OK, this is simply unfair.  It appears that just because I've already posted some of the best news headlines that I've ever seen (earliest, first, second), news outlets continue to challenge these with attempts of their own.  This headline comes from Uganda, originally reported by Anorak on 5th October, 2009 (referring to a publication originally made on 2 October, 2008) - and it is another beauty!

As you can see, sometimes these things take a while to bubble to the top!  If you know of any more news headlines of this quality, please let me know so I can share them with the world!  :)

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Sunday, November 15, 2009

LCROSS Finds Water On The Moon

Back in September 2009, the LRO discovered the presence of Hydrogen at the Moon's south pole, indicating that there may be water in some of the many permanently shadowed craters.  Well, on 9th October 2009, LCROSS observed the impact of the spent Centaur rocket stage into the Cabeus crater, kicking up a plume of dust that was observed by the trailing LCROSS satellite and also Hubble as well as many telescopes on Earth.  The LCROSS impacted the Moon's surface abiut 5 minutes after the rocket stage, creating a smaller plume.

Well, on 13th November 2009 NASA scientists announced that there was indeed water detected in the plumes from the LCROSS impacts.

That opens the Moon back up as a possibly viable first base for our future space exploration - if there's water there then that will provide not only drinking water for residents, but also cooling and especially rocket fuel needs.  With the gravity of the Moon being about 16.7% of that on Earth that means that instead of needing to overcome 9.81 m/s/s of gravity on Earth, rockets launched from the moon will need to overcome a mere 1.63 m/s of gravity.

Now, the Moon's gravity isn't anywhere near as consistent as that on Earth.  And the gravitational pull of the Earth isn't all that consistent - the accepted nominal or average value at the Earth's surface is 9.80665 m/s/s, however this is 9.78033 m/s/s around the equator and 9.83217 m/s/s due mainly to the centrifugal force at the equator being greater than at the poles (actually, it is non'existent right at the poles) and it varies across the Earth's surface depending on what you're standing (or floating) on.  Now, because of this centrifugal force, the equator bulges outward a little, meaning that when you're standing at ocean/water level on the equator, you're further from the center of the Earth than someone standing on one of its poles at ocean/water level.  No, the Earth is not a (consistent) sphere, but it definitely isn't flat!  :)

Because the Moon doesn't spin on its poles as the Earth does, there's no centrifugal force as we experience here on Earth.  That means that there's no equatorial bulge and the resultant centrifugal variation across the entire surface.  However, the Moon has what's known as "Mascons" across the surface of the moon which can greatly affect its gravity, and these were discovered by NASA's Lunar Orbiter program due to errors in the navigation of these orbiters being greater than the mission specifications had catered for.

These mascons (mass concentrations) are often made up of the dense bodies of impacted asteroids, basaltic lava flows or iron-rich sediments lifting up from the Moon's core.  In 2011, NASA will launch its GRAIL mission to thoroughly measure the Moon's gravity field.  This will result in the Moon's gravity field being more closely mapped than that of the Earth!  The interest in mascons is due to their effect, as discovered with the Lunar Orbiters, on all missions around and to the surface of the Moon - and if we're going to be launching future space missions from the Moon, we need to know how these mascons will affect trajectories.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Friday, November 13, 2009

Second Greatest Ever Headline

Following really closely behind the Greatest Ever Headline is this, the Second Greatest Ever Headline.  Sure, Christian Scientists are a bag of nutters, but the CS Monitor is still a somewhat decent publication, not too heavily tainted by their other total and utter nonsense.

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Adobe Downsizes By 9%

Well, they downsized their staff by 9%, but I bet that does noting for their code bloat.  If the world truly was a fair place, those they let go would have been the coders who created the massive code bloat in their applications such as Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Reader.  An example of this code bloat is that Adobe Reader is 26.1 MB in size and chews resourses like a 90 year old man chews Viagra tablets before a trip to a brothel, whereas Foxit Reader is only 5.14 MB and equally light on system resources.  We all know Photoshop takes longer to load than a fuel tanker using only a shot glass - and it reduces available RAM like a nuclear reactor depletes Uranium*.

The whole idea of downsizing and tightening up the company needs to be linked with a downsizing and tightening up of their code - Adobe products (in particular Reader) have had huge numbers of security issue up to date.  I truly hope this series of layoffs results in better code from Adobe.

* Yes, I know that nucular (Dubyaspeak) reactors aren't the only source of Depleted Uranium.  Naturally occurring Uranium is about (from memory) 99.27% U238, 0.72% U235 and 0.01% U234 and through various forms of magic, Enriched Uranium (the product) is produced and sent to help charge our iPhones and Depleted Uranium (the byproduct), with about a third of the good stuff (U234 and U235) and less than 2/3 of the radiation of naturally occurring Uranium is then sent to be used for (surprisingly) radiation shielding material, amongst other things.

Nuclear reactors also produce Depleted Uranium from their Enriched Uranium fuel, however this spent nuclear fuel is slightly different to the other Depleted Uranium in that it contains U236 and a bunch of other useful stuff as a result of the nuclear fusion and is generally then sent of for further reprocessing.

Thus endeth the "Cursory overview of Uranium types".  :)

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Friday, November 06, 2009

Exchange 2007 Backflip - Will Run On WS2K8R2 Now

http://msexchangeteam.com/archive/2009/11/04/453026.aspx - does this mean SBS 2008 R2 and EBS 2008 R2 are now possible? We can but hope!

Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie

Thursday, November 05, 2009

MAPS Licensing

To be honest, I'm getting sick and fucking tired of butting heads with Susan Bradley over her loose interpretation of the MAPS EULA.  MAPS is for *internal* use only - not to be used with our clients, our customers, our friends, our brothers, sisters or great grand parents, our dogs or cats, not for emergencies nor because we don't agree with the restrictions in the EULA - and this is and always has been clear in intent and wording in the EULA.  This goes for both the media and the licenses for use of the applications on the media.

So, in another attempt to get the message across to those who don't want to comply with the MAPS agreement, here's what I received from MS Licensing Australia earlier today on this same point, and in particular about someone using their MAPS SCVMM License for managing their clients' virtual environments that is hosted in the reseller/paretner's data center:

I just had a chat to the Partner Regional Service Center and they confirmed that updates to the program have rolled out circa May 2009. It seems much of what we had previously referenced in the initiative addendum now is simply a part of, and subject to, the terms of the Microsoft Partner Programme Agreement, see here. In any case, I believe the update has made things substantially clearer than ever before, please see the following excerpt:


4.5 Software Benefits.


a. Company’s right to use Microsoft software offered to Company under the Program may be governed by a separate agreement or other use terms for the applicable software. IN THE EVENT OF A CONFLICT BETWEEN THIS SECTION 4.5 AND ANY SEPARATE AGREEMENT OR OTHER USE TERMS FOR THE APPLICABLE SOFTWARE, THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THIS SECTION 4.5 WILL CONTROL.


b. Company must not engage, or participate with any third party, in the unauthorized manufacture, duplication, delivery, transfer or use of counterfeit, pirated, unlicensed or illegal software or other Microsoft Materials and Company must not otherwise infringe any of Microsoft’s intellectual property rights. Company must reasonably cooperate with Microsoft and its affiliates in the investigation of counterfeit, pirated, unlicensed or illegal software and other Microsoft materials. As soon as Company becomes aware, Company must report to Microsoft any suspected counterfeiting, piracy or other copyright infringement in computer programs, manuals, course material, marketing materials or other copyrighted materials owned by Microsoft and/or its licensors.


c. The software licenses that Company receives under the Program may not be resold, transferred, or used except as expressly provided in this Agreement (see the Program Guide and Program Website for more details). Company must acquire a sufficient number of Microsoft software licenses through the Program and/or applicable Microsoft licensing programs to match (1) the quantities of the Microsoft software Company uses and (2) the maximum number of users and/or devices that may access or use the Microsoft software under Company’s agreements with Microsoft or a reseller. In addition, Microsoft may collect data from the Windows Genuine Advantage, Office Genuine Advantage and other similar programs to ensure that Company does not use or activate more software than authorized by this Agreement (see the Program Guide for more details). As detailed in Section 7, Verifying Compliance, of this Agreement, Microsoft may conduct audits to ensure Company’s compliance with all terms of this Agreement. To ensure compliance with this subsection, Microsoft may also (i) otherwise contact Company and (ii) take action to ensure that Company does not use more software than authorized by this Agreement.


d. The benefits Company receives under the Program, including software, are not intended for distribution to Company’s customers. Company’s customers must acquire a sufficient number of Microsoft licenses to match (a) the quantities of the licensed software Company may provide to its customers under a separate agreement, and (b) the maximum number of users and/or devices that may access or use the licensed software under the customer’s license agreement with Company or Microsoft. Company will inform Microsoft (1) of any known or suspected failure by a customer to possess sufficient numbers of Microsoft licenses, and (2) any known or suspected violations by a customer of any Microsoft license agreement.


e. Any software licenses that Company receives under the Program will be valid for the Term of this Agreement only.


Alternatively, the reference you may opt to use for simplicity is available from: https://partner.microsoft.com/Australia/40016470#licen, see:

Action Pack software is not provided for personal use, for hosting customer applications, or for installation at a customer site. It cannot be used, for example, to host a commercial website; this is considered a production environment outside the scope of the software's intended purpose.


As per either reference above, I believe it is now almost extremely clear that the software available through MAPS is only to be used by the Company. Unfortunately we do not have the ability to approve the use of MAPS license or even just the software obtained under MAPS for the use of a Company’s customer - they should look to separately license and fulfill their software requirement by their own means. It’s also worth noting that in section 4.5. b. the condition notes essentially state the Company must be responsible to keep the software available to them strictly under their own control, not to participate with a third party, and report to Microsoft any infringements. To disregard these rules is to risk breaching the agreement that governs the Company’s rights to the software to begin with.
So, I don't know how to make it any clearer.  MAPS is for INTERNAL use only - you cannot use its licenses, its media or any other part of it for anything other than internal use.  OK, except maybe for a coaster!  :)

And yes, this change from this material in an Addendum to being in the Agreement proper is partly because of my discussion with Microsoft over MAPS usage rights in the past and asking them to put this in plain, simple English.  Even plainer and simpler than it was before, which was pretty plain and simple!


Regards,

The Outspoken Wookie