Wet String and Sellotape

Mike Pallot on the World of Technology and Microsoft Partners...less of the what and more on the impact on you! var sc_project=2367934; var sc_invisible=1; var sc_partition=22; var sc_security="a5e3d45f";

March, 2007

  • Great new look...just 'wash and go' for blogs!

     

    Huge huge thanks to my mate Matt for helping me make this blog look soooo much better! Really needed the 'pimp my blog' experience! If you fancy checking out Vista, Virtualisation and more then check out his blog Peering through Windows.

    Enjoy!

  • Green Computing: Check out the Vista green credentials!!

     

    Real stats on how to save money and help save the environment:

    · Reduce the carbon dioxide generated by an organisation, equal to 45 tonnes per year for a business with 200 desktop PCs. 

    · Deliver savings on energy bills of up to £46 per desktop PC per year.

    Enough said, read this:

    http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/2007/mar07/03-21vistapowermgmt.mspx

    Enjoy!

  • Comcast to switch from Google to Microsoft - more to it methinks!

    Just seen this post over on LiveSide 'Comcast unhappy with Google, may use MS Search?' Now it would be very easy for me to start crowing about the business proposition that Microsoft has, the account teams, the customer care, the security development lifecycle allowing us to compete strategically by business processes we follow etc but I smell procurement voodoo going on here!

    Allow me to digress for 30 seconds if I may: today I had a double glazing salesman over to check out my place for some new windows - now did I hand over a signed cheque with the first chap who walked in the door - nope I went to tender (short process took 2 days) and got a few quotes - then we all bartered.

    Now I imagine back in the 20th century when the first double glazing arrived, maybe people like me had no choice and so the salesman could be the King of armchair sales. Well, guess what - choice brings competition and a better commercial deal for customers - I am of course only talking about double glazing... :-)

    So what do I think about the Comcast article? Blimmin' great, it means we are at the table - who would have thought it from reading some of the blog posts over the weekend!

    Bring it on!!

  • More on presentations..had me in tears..

    Simple choice it's either me or the presenter...decisions decisions...

     

    Now this really made me laugh out loud, Rowan from Fortify your Oasis has some absolutely superb points to describe those less skilled presenters:

     

    • Ass Narcissism - "I’m just going to turn my back on you now and read all my slides off the screen. Enjoy the view!"
    • Tolstoy wannabe - "I know that I can fit the entire text of War & Peace onto the next three slides. Thank God for sub-bullets!"
    • Myopia - these presenters literally cannot see beyond the end of their nose and so fail to notice that their audience is either asleep or has gone home
    • Tunnel vision - those who can see only the one person in the audience who is smiling and nodding out of sympathy, not the other 99 who have fallen asleep/gone home
    • "I'm Eclipse Boy!" - "There must be some moth in my genetic heritage; but you can read the slide off my chest can’t you?"
    • Hypoempathy - presenters who use the phrase, “Now this is a very important point” more than once never ask themselves the essential question - important to who?
    • "Gotta sing, gotta dance" - "Sure, this topic could have been covered in an email, but what can I say? I just loooove being bathed in the glow of the data projector."
    • Slide amnesia - a subset of Ass Narcissism, when the presenter seems surprised that a certain slide has popped up on screen and is forced to read it out word for word …
    • Dispunctional - the presenter has no concept of time and is eating into the next presenter's slot or, worse yet, into coffee break
    • Complarrogance - a rare condition, characterised by all of the above symptoms

     

    The only one missing is:

    • Jazz Hands - those people who imitate a puppeteer on speed whilst presenting (aka me :-()

    Loving the work Rowan!

  • Time to stop the hype about Google?

    So I guess a few things have been niggling away at the back of my mind around the new kids on the block and I want to put a few ideas out there, around the whole experience piece:

    • I like to eat out in a restaurant cared for by an owner, chef and a good waiter and or waitress - I would struggle to have that same experience in a layby cafe
    • When I ask for replacement windows I like to have an experience whereby I get a service, including all the essential elements so that I have a set of fitted windows, with woodwork/metalwork of my choice with glazing that match by specification and fitted to my expectations - I wouldn't ask an art school graduate to do this role - the result might look cool but would it really deliver on the experience side?

    You get the point so I wont labour it any further, the key here is the experience of the end user. Often the areas that count are the back up and support to make that experience worthwhile and memorable. So how is this relevant to Google around Enterprise Search?

    • Their business is 80% direct but who cares and why is this important:

    The beauty of a channel business (like Microsoft's which is 97% indirect) is the ability of a company to get their software tailored for the vertical and or target audience be they small businesses, legal firms, finance analysts or any other of the myriad of businesses that our partners sell into. What does this mean? The customer gets what they want in the format they desire - in short - it's all about a better user experience.

    I hear what you are probably thinking - sometimes I want to speak to the horses mouth - dealing direct with a business is a great way to get future insight. At Microsoft that is easyish (no rose tinted spectacles here) but in the areas of security, specifically the ways we make software and the way in which we stand behind what we do this is really really important. So what is our experience for customers and partners: in short it's as businesses expect:

    'Microsoft products are supported by Customer Support and Service and the MSRR (Security response) team. Through those two channels they have the support structure needed to address any service request that comes to us at any hour of the day from anywhere in the world'

    Why do we do this at a huge cost to ourselves but equally huge value to our customers? - simple:

      • We make software - software is our business - it's all we do - so we care

    Beware the company who sells you one thing in order to get something else - maybe they just want to get to know you so they can sell more of another service. In this hypothetical example ( :-)) - this could be an advertising business who uses software as a tactic to get more of their core strategy into a market - advertising.

    Why?

    The software business is worth around $140bn globally, the advertising business around $580bn - now ask yourself do Google really care about the software you consume from them?

    Sound far fetched? - check this out:

    Worry 2: Service level agreements. Since I put Microsoft Office on my PC I know it's going to work. For a hosted service, even one run by Google, I want to see what the SLA looks like. The issue: When I read the terms and clicked on the SLA link I got a 404 error. For this experiment, I overlooked that small item and continued the sign up. If I were a small business I wouldn't have.

    Some of the related links you might like to review can be found here:

    Enjoy your Friday!

  • Fancy a Revolution anyone?

     

    Was on the tube yesterday and saw this rather cool ad about the Information Revolution, Steve also captured this in his blog: Get a free Information Revolution t-shirt as did Valley Wag with a slightly more jaded view point.

    Some great videos from people talking about the information revolution and the benefits and concerns that we could all have in this field, check out the following neat video from a journalist talking on the topic:

    http://www.information-revolution.org/videos.php?video=journo.flv&id_num=5&textVid=0

    Of course if you do want the T-Shirt then grab one here: http://www.information-revolution.org/requestshirt.php

    Interesting stuff for the future of your rights, be they copyright or just personal rights. So i guess questions I could ask would be as follows:

    1. Could these view points be aimed at any successful company?(I remember the passport days and the trouble Microsoft got in when we asked everyone to sign in using Passport - privacy and trust issues aplenty)
    2. Does the rise of the Search Engine make the importance, availability and prevalence of personal data on the web all the more important?
    3. Should Government respond through policy or how can we control what people know versus have access to?
    4. Should we all just chill out and let the market determine what happens ?(guess we should ask Amnesty for some stories there)

    A hugely interesting topic and not one I want to take this blog into too far, but keen to highlight the topical nature of the technology areas I work within and the nature of future access to information.

    Enjoy!

  • MCP Magazine on 'Why Quickstart... and Search Specialisation coming!'

    My colleague Sol pointed out this article which gives a nice summary of the Quickstart and some of the reasons why this was created and how the Partner Programme will be taking up the mantle from July 07 onwards:

    http://mcpmag.com/features/article.asp?EditorialsID=703

    The article also alludes to some of the challenges around Quickstart which will be ironed out with the Partner Programme for example Partner Networking.

    Top Tip: if you want to be in the Search Specialisation from July onwards then make sure you have all your search specialists registered in Quickstart and that they have taken the courses and material as well as the certification exam :-)

    What will this get you:

    1. Help position your business for when customers come looking for search trained partners

    2. Help us to offer you marketing, incentives and technical training courses

    3. Help us to network your business with likeminded companies

    Look forward to seeing you in there!

    Enjoy!

  • Google maps and the top supercomputers worldwide - check out the ww distribution - one laptop per child will become one cluster per family??

    So this caught my eye today, click on the link below and you will see the distribution of top 500 SuperComputers around the world. Things that I found interesting:

    1. The distribution between Northern and Southern hemisphere
    2. The huge opportunity to take supercomputing and clustering far far far further - look at the huge scope for internationalising and trading skills worldwide!

    the map can be found here: http://www.top500.org/lists/2006/11/top100map

    The map does take a while to load so if you get bored waiting here are a couple of screenshots (sorry for the quality...)

    Enjoy!

  • Intel Servers that sapp less juice...

     

    Finding the energy performance of your servers gets you down, let alone costs you an arm and a leg, Intel may just have the answer?

    http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/070312/20070312005400.html?.v=1

    Press Release

    Source: Intel Corporation

    Intel Marks Energy-Efficient Milestone with 50-Watt, High-Performing Quad-Core Server Processors

    SANTA CLARA, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Further expanding its quad-core processor family line-up, Intel Corporation today announced two energy-efficient 50-watt server processors that represent a 35- to nearly 60-percent decrease in power from Intel's existing 80- and 120-watt quad-core server products.

    Very interesting for HPC and Search server farms...huge implications for businesses in high density areas with energy capacity challenges!

  • HPC training...free...come and get it!

    Just a quick one to point out the brand spanking new training available next week, mostly full already but there will be some more in May so get ready!

    Agenda as follows:

    If you fancy it then just click here and join in! If you are not already a certified or registered partner then you will need to join here at this website.

     

    Enjoy!

  • Windows Live deal with lenovo and nokia!

    Great deal been announced to highlight Live Services on OEM laptops starting with Lenovo - covered well by my friends over on LiveSide:

    Microsoft announces Windows Live deal with Lenovo

    Also, in the press here:

    Lenovo loads up on Windows Live Search

    But I guess the deal that we all heard less about was this one which could indeed give greater scale and coverage than even the Lenovo deal:

    Nokia to put Microsoft search on mobiles

    Really nice to see our friends over on Live delivering the goods and hitting scale through OEM!

  • Progress: activity doesn't always equal better experience :-)

    Made me smile, feels like this sometimes in business :-)

  • Great ballmer video on Google and joining Microsoft

    Nice refreshing video here showing you a relaxed Steve and his views on Google as well as his joining process into Microsoft:

    Ballmer: Google's growth strategy is 'insane'

    Kind of cool and candid - hope you all have a great weekend!

    Enjoy!

  • Career Manifesto...get on the bus or...

    I really like the Execupundit blog and came across this Career Manifesto. Some great words of wisdom from Michael Wade. Some of the most frustrating things I find in business, both the one I work in but also people I meet from other companies (ironically called representatives ;-)), are comments like the following:

    1. Well the Director hasn't arranged a meeting with me yet?
    2. Nobody understands the impact of my role and they are focussed on the wrong things
    3. What world are 'that' team in?
    4. How could you possibly work for 'that' company and sleep at night?

    My favorite is the following: 'I have had such a hard day' - yeah, really, well tell that to the children who don't have a bed to sleep on at night or the person who has just had their house repossessed, or the mother who has just lost her child. Sometimes a sense of perspective can be an amazing thing.

    I am reading a book by Daniel Goleman called Social Intelligence at the moment, a great read, taking longer than I want (and yes Steve aware you want to read it this year...! :-)) One of the most interesting insights is the manner in which a bad atmosphere and or friction/pressure in an environment can adversely affect your health.

    If you don't like it, don't get on with it - then it really can eat away at you - have the courage to get off the bus and stop being a mood hoover, you might just save your own sanity. 

  • More on the UK CCS user conference...

     

    You are cordially invited to join Microsoft, industry experts and your peers as Microsoft presents the UK User Group meeting for CCS, 27 April 2007 in Reading.

    Are you doing clusters on Windows?

    Come and spend a day with the users and developers of Microsoft Compute Cluster Server

    On April 27, Microsoft is hosting the first UK user group for High productivity Computing using Microsoft's Compute Cluster Server, Microsoft's cluster operating system.  The day will feature presentations from users and developers, including the Microsoft development team, Microsoft Research and meetings with key Microsoft executives.  Users from engineering, finance, academia and manufacturing will be present.

    Come and exchange experience and practices with your peers, and Microsoft. 

    This is being organised by the UK Microsoft HPC User Group, chaired by Professor Simon Cox, School of Engineering Sciences, University of Southampton.

    Networking:
    This is an excellent opportunity for networking among your peers. Several members of the CCS development team will be on hand to discuss their work and receive your feedback, first hand.

    Register by April 20th, at this link:

    We look forward to seeing you there! 

    microsoft

  • Compliance a headache - check this out...!

    Many of you will know about the huge benefit of Excel Services in the Financial Services Sector - fancy knowing more then check out this paper from HCL about their plans around Excel Services for Financial customers - great for use in a clustered environment too!

    “Within Financial Services and other industries, Excel is the glue that links the
    majority of the business processes of an organisation together. However, it has been
    the curse of the compliance department. Excel Services is now redefining the way
    that financial services companies build solutions and manage their compliance
    requirements, making like easier for the industry “, says James Burns, CTO Financial
    Services, Microsoft UK.

    http://www.hcltech.com/pdf/Enabling%20Compliance.pdf

    Enjoy!

  • Another reason why Compute Cluster Server...

    So many years ago, Microsoft used to have a hard time around Security, it's been really great to see our progress in this area and now it's actually becoming quite a key differentiator for us. Check out the great post below from Jeff Jones - I used to work with him when I developed the security channel some years ago:

    http://blogs.csoonline.com/windows_vista_90_day_vulnerability_report

     

    The bit I liked was this:

     

    90 Day Vulnerability Chart for Windows Vista, Mac OS X, and Linux

     

    Hmm maybe those Apple stores had better stop crowing about the reason you choose Mac OS is for security and a hassle free life - guys and girls come on in the water is warm!

     

    So what does this mean for clustering and HPC - well many of you are looking at Microsoft for departmental reasons and many for the first time for high performance computing - don't let security put you off actually it should only turn you on to Microsoft!

    Don't believe just me on this, after all, even Symantec are highlighting the Microsoft progress.. http://www.internetnews.com/security/article.php/3667201

    Enjoy!

  • Presentation help...

    How many presentations have I sat in, that to be quiet frank bore the pants of everyone watching and listening? Hmmm and how many have I been presenting... :-)

    Whilst looking for ways to brighten up both this blog and my presentations I came across this great site: http://www.thesimplegallery.com/pictures.php check it out and add a little sparkle to your presentations!

    Enjoy!

  • Giving...fancy joining in?

     

    So I was having a look around at a few blogs over the weekend and I read the following really interesting post:

    http://www.trizle.com/how-giving-rocks/ 

    It made me think about using this blog to highlight a charity a few mates and I run in our spare time called the Silicon Cup - the idea is simple:

    • 2 days of sailing per year in one huge event
    • The IT Industry at large with their vendors, suppliers and customers - Vodafone, O2, Accenture, Doherty, TBS, SUN and IBM - you name it they come
    • 800ish people, 80ish yachts ranging from World Class yachts to very very simple sailing boats racing and partying for 2 days
    • Best value corporate hospitality money can buy

    So far we have raised around £200,000 for children's charities over the last few years, if you fancy 2 great fun days in September and want to give something back then please get in touch with myself through the blog or directly through the Silicon Cup website - thanks!

  • For all those people who think that bosses are perfect - remember we are all learning...

    I was just reading a new blog that I have recently subscribed to called Execupundit.com - it's truly a great place to read some pragmatic cool advice and the following really got me thinking:

    http://www.execupundit.com/2007/02/note-from-boss-to-employees-what-some.html

    Sure we are all guilty of sometimes getting frustrated that our boss isn't perfect or doesn't see the full picture (whilst we hide their reading glasses through not communicating well enough :-))

    Hmmmm note to self - must try harder, wishing you all a cool weekend! Am off to flog myself with some birch for previously committed offences to past and present bosses...lol

    Enjoy!

  • Free, Simple business advice simply spoken..

    Want to freshen your skills and get a reality check - read on! Came across this site a few weeks back and have been meaning to share with you all - Trizle

    The whole blog is an interesting one with some really cool advice around lots of areas, I had a scoot around it this morning and came up with my top 7 (no reason why 7, might be lucky!) and grouped them for you:

    Team Dynamics:

    Business Dynamics:

    Winning:

    Great practical, straight talking advice, if you run teams, run channels or just like winning this is for you!

    Enjoy!

  • More free training for CCS...

     

    Following on from the huge take-up in training mentioned last week: HPC training...free...come and get it! we have laid on the following extra dates for you all:

    https://training.Partner.microsoft.com/plc/details.aspx?publisher=12&delivery=229208 - April

    https://training.Partner.microsoft.com/plc/details.aspx?publisher=12&delivery=229148 - May

    The agenda is the same as before - just more spaces for the crew!

    See you there!

  • HPC User Group - roll up, roll up!

    Just a quick post this one - anyone fancy joining the first HPC User group then great event here to come along to: 

    Timings

    08:30 Registration

    09:15   Introductions

    09:30   TBD- Windows Compute Cluster Server introduction

    10:00   Prof Simon Cox- Tools, Technologies and Platforms for High Productivity Computing"

    10:30   Break

    10:45   Prof Mike Giles- Monte Carlo calculations in finance"

    11:15   Graham Twaddle, Corporate Modelling- “Clusters as Mainframes: Batch Processing”

    11:45   Ryan Waite- Microsoft Roundtable

    12:30   Lunch

    13:30   Fabrizio Gagliardi- Technical Computing at Microsoft

    14:00   Prof Andy Keane- CFD and design optimisation on Compute Cluster Server"

    14:30   Break

    15:00   CFD on CCS, TBD

    15:30   Ryan Waite- Compute Cluster Futures

    16:00   Close

     Fancy it then register here: http://msevents.microsoft.com/CUI/EventDetail.aspx?EventID=1032334086&Culture=en-GB

     See you there!

  • So what does medstory give you...?

    I did a simple search for 'Pathology' - check out the manner in which the search results were returned:

    You can view the results here: http://www.medstory.com/app?service=external&page=Search&c=true&s=Web&tc=h1&q=pathology 

    From here you can go to the individual links under the categories highlighted above - all within medical taxonomies - nice! 

  • Announcing: Brilliant oil and gas whitepaper on industry use of Microsoft CCS for high performance computing

    Really cool news for all of you working in the HPC space with Microsoft. we have just announced a whitepaper at our Global Energy Forum in Houston, Texas. For those who like brief papers just read the text below -it is 58 pages but written in pure gold dust! Many of the learning's and observations are applicable elsewhere:

    Survey: http://www.microsoft.com/industry/manufacturing/oilandgas/default.mspx

    News release: http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2007/mar07/03-07GEF2007PR.mspx

    Better Access to High-Performance Computing Could Increase Oil and Gas Production, Reports Microsoft Survey

    Survey of more than 100 oil and gas experts shows industry rapidly moving toward enabling geoscientists to control their own technical computing environments.

    HOUSTON — March 7, 2007 — Empowering geoscientists with more deskside high-performance computing power could increase oil and gas production overall, reports a new survey released today by Microsoft Corp. at the Microsoft® 2007 Global Energy Forum.

    The Microsoft High-Performance Computing Oil and Gas Industry Survey 2007, sponsored by Microsoft and conducted by Houston-based Gelb Consulting Group Inc., shows a trend toward geoscientists in the oil and gas industry taking more personal control of their technical computing environments.

    “Clearly, this research shows that oil and gas experts know the impact their work has on their companies’ success,” said Craig Hodges, director of the U.S. Energy Industry Unit at Microsoft. “They appreciate having computing power at their fingertips and also require smoother integration with the applications they use in analyzing and reporting the information on which they make critical decisions.”

    Nice to see the deskside control of clusters occurring, and even better to see the OEM development of green computing allowing businesses to leverage the deskside clusters in the full data centre environment.

    Enjoy!