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Rob Costello

UC and Infrastructure stuff, or whatever else comes my way.
Mobile twittererer? Try Twikini

I’ve been exploring a more synchronise communication tool lately that you may have heard of, it’s called Twitter.

The one thing I’ve struggled with is the need for a mobile client, but I think I’ve found the answer, it’s a nifty little Windows Mobile app called Twikini. It’s simple yet has all the features you need for tweeting on the go.

Highly recommend you check it…

http://www.trinketsoftware.com/Twikini

Twikini06

Live Mesh for MacOS & Mobile

Noticed on Nick’s blog we now have Live Mesh clients for Windows Mobile and MacOSX.  Check out his full post here…

Live Mesh: MacOS, Windows Mobile | www.nickhodge.com

Or to get your mobile meshing straight away use your phone browser to go to

http://m.mesh.com

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OCS 2007 R2 Announced

Ok, I know I’ve not blogged much lately and this post is a couple weeks behind, but it’s worth noting for historical reasons at least.  :)

On October 14 we announced at VoiceCon in Amsterdam the upcoming release of OCS 2007 R2.  For the full announcement check this out…

http://www.microsoft.com/Presspass/press/2008/oct08/10-14OCSR2PR.mspx

I’m really excited about this release, I’ve been involved with it early and can see we’ve really added some great new features that will really enable companies to reduce costs and empower users.

The Dial-in Conferencing and Response Group features are fantastic enhancements to our existing Voice capabilities and I can’t wait to see the impact this product has on the market in the coming years.

Really exciting stuff!  :-)

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Photosynth is cool

How cool is Photosynth!?!?!  We come out with some cool technologies sometimes, and this is definitely one of them.

 

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Daylight Savings Changes - October 2008

It's that time again, when Daylight Savings changes need to be applied.  Please read the guidance below and make sure you don't get caught out...

 

In October this year, we will again be experiencing Daylight Savings changes in Australia. These changes can have a significant impact on business performance if not dealt with proactively. These effects can range from the incorrect time display on the clock, to calendaring problems, to financial and reputation loss if business critical services fail.

Daylight saving now commences on the first Sunday in October and ends on the first Sunday in April in Australia Eastern (New South Wales, Victoria, Australian Capital Territory and Tasmania) and Central (South Australia). This change affects Microsoft Windows, Microsoft Office Outlook and other Microsoft, third party and custom applications.  Please find below some of the key things you need to know.

What is the impact of Daylight Savings changes?

Effects can range from the incorrect time display on the clock, to calendaring problems, to financial and reputation loss if business critical services fail.  

The 5th of October commences the second window of time zone harmonisation for this year, however, we expect a greater impact in October as the change is 21 days difference, whereas the adjustment earlier in the year was only 7 days.

What is affected?

- All Microsoft Windows PC, server and mobile devices in the affected time zones must be updated to ensure accuracy of internal time zone tables and correct operation of the system clock.

- Microsoft Office Outlook calendars may need to be adjusted. Client and Server-based tools are available to automate this service.

- Microsoft, third party and custom applications which schedule events at future dates should be reviewed to ensure they will operate correctly during the extended daylight saving period. Previously scheduled events may also need to be adjusted.

- Microsoft recommends that all PC and server systems are updated regardless of location to ensure consistency of operation.

What do I need to do?

Thorough planning and testing for these changes is critical to ensure the change results in minimal user impact, so to help customers prepare Microsoft has developed the Australia 2008 Daylight Saving Planning document which details the nature and impact of the DST changes, along with planning guidance to avoid user impact.

What if the systems have been previously patched?

Where servers, workstations and mobile devices have been added to the infrastructure, organisations will need to audit their environment to ensure all systems are patched according to the organisation’s Daylight Savings Plan.

Where the environment does not have a consistent Daylight Savings Time (DST) patch level, appointments may have been created with a mix of correct and incorrect DST transition dates.  Furthermore, Microsoft recommends customers update all systems to ensure consistency of operation, even if none of your systems are in the affected time zones.

Planning for Daylight Savings changes

Microsoft has revised the Australia 2008 Daylight Saving Planning Guide with learnings from the April transition and additional considerations for the October transition. Download the guide and update your daylight savings plan.

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BlackBerry Client for OCS 2007

How cool is this, now there's a OCS mobile client for Blackberry's.   Open-mouthed 

Check it out here...

BlackBerry - BlackBerry Client for use with Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007

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OCS 2007 Edge Planning Tool

Great new tool to assist in planning OCS Edge deployments.  Check it out here...

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?familyid=149E5DD5-EAAE-46B6-AFBA-01C31E88A275&displaylang=en

Here's the blurb...

The Edge Planning Tool asks questions about your proposed or current edge server deployment. The tool uses your answers and Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007 best practices to generate the following reports:

  • Settings that you can use to configure your certificates, DNS services, and firewalls
  • Custom documentation for configuring your edge servers, reverse proxy, and next hop server
  • A comparison of your answers to Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007 best practices
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Exchange and Virtualisation

A lot of people are talking about the updated support policy on virtualisation support for Exchange 2007.  If you missed it check it out here...

Microsoft Support Policies and Recommendations for Exchange Servers in Hardware Virtualization Environments

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Long time no posts

So things have been pretty crazy of the last couple of months, hence the lack of blog entries.  Things have calmed down now, sort of, so hopefully I'll find more time for talking to the world... or anyone that will listen.  Personally a lot is going on, new house etc, you can catch up on that here... New House = Lots of projects.

When I say things have sort of calmed down, I mean I've been away for 5 weeks, in Seattle for work for a week, then off on holidays for the last 4 weeks.  Open-mouthed 

Well now I'm back on deck, so expect to see a few more posts popping up.

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Ninja's

Only 24hrs in the US till I saw this...

Ninjas

What's this twitter thing about?

I'm trying to get my head around Twitter.  I'm all signed up if anyone wants to follow me, not that I'll have much interesting going on, but if you want my site/name is http://twitter.com/robcost.  Let's see if I can get it working hey.

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Long time no blogs

So things have been pretty crazy of the last couple of months, hence the lack of blog entries.  Things have calmed down now, sort of, so hopefully I'll find more time talking to the world... or anyone that will listen.  Personally a lot is going on, new house etc, you can catch up on that here... New House = Lots of projects.

When I say things have sort of calmed down, I mean I'm now in Seattle for work this week, then off on holidays for the following 4 weeks.  Open-mouthed  If I find anything interesting to blog about during this time I will, but I'll more than likely just be blogging photo's of the trip to my personal site...  http://krudler.spaces.live.com/.

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Virtual Machine Library

How cool is this, ever wanted to find all the Virtual Machines we have for download for you to try out Microsoft products like Exchange, Biztalk, Vista, ILM etc etc.  Well here is the one address you'll need to find all our VHD goodness...

http://www.microsoft.com/vhd

 

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Hyper-V lab up and running

I wrote this a couple weeks back but forgot to post it... 

I've been pretty flat out the last couple of months, so haven't had much time for blogging and being a nerd at home, but I finally found some time to rebuild my lab at home to run on Hyper-V on a new machine.  I bought a bunch of hardware a few months back to upgrade my existing machine, and it just sat there.

My new lab machine is running Windows Server 2008 Core with Hyper-V on the following hardware:

  • Intel Quad-Core Q6600
  • 8GB RAM
  • Gigabyte GA-
  • 7 SATAII drives (1x250GB for OS, 2x500GB mirrored for VM's, 4x1TB RAID5 for "data")
  • ThermalTake Armor Case (it's huge!!!)

Had some fun getting Server 2008 Core up and running, as the drivers that come with the Gigabyte GA- are not signed, so had to go hunting for WHCL drivers for the onboard RAID controller.  Once that was installed then run though I was off to the races.  Configuring Server Core is easy if you follow the Step-By-Step guide here...

http://technet2.microsoft.com/windowsserver2008/en/library/47a23a74-e13c-46de-8d30-ad0afb1eaffc1033.mspx?mfr=true

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Powershell + WPF = Cool

James Brundage has a great series of posts over on the Windows Powershell blog about using WPF to create simple user interfaces for your Powershell scripts. 

Back when I was writing vbs scripts, I was on the bleeding edge of scripting, using IE as a crude UI for my logon scripts.  It worked, but it wasn't easy and it wasn't flexible.  Now with full access to the .net framework and WPF, simple UI's are looking like a snap.

If you're interested, check out the series here...

WPF & PowerShell – Part 1 ( Hello World & Welcome to the Week of WPF )

WPF & PowerShell – Part 2 (Exploring WPF (and the rest of .NET) with Scripts)

WPF & PowerShell -- Part 3 (Handling Events)

WPF & PowerShell -- Part 4 (XAML & Show-Control)

WPF & PowerShell - Part 5 ( Using WPF & PowerShell Modules)

WPF & PowerShell - Part 6 (Running Functions in the Background)

WPF & PowerShell - Part 7 (Sharing Hosts)

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