Category Archives: Musings

Optimizing Communication and Collaboration workshops get started

So, you might have seen Gary or Ed mention this, but now that it’s underway I have time to talk about it too. 3sharp is presenting a 10-city roadshow called “Optimizing Communication and Collaboration with Microsoft Technologies“. The thrust behind the roadshow is simple: you can get a lot of mileage from Microsoft’s investment in communications and collaboration technologies by deploying them in parallel with– not necessarily as a replacement for– whatever you’re currently using. The structure of the events is simple: if you’re a developer, you go to John’s excellent class on how to extend Notes apps by having them produce, or consume, data from .NET web services; if you’re a technical decision maker, you come hear the Burton Group’s forecast on market dynamics in the C&C space, then I get to explain the pieces of MS’ collaboration strategy, with copious use of demos.

Our first event in Dallas this week went really well. My content was well-received; it was obvious to the attendees that we’re not suggesting they rip-and-replace their existing infrastructures (well, maybe if you’re using OCS). Instead, we’re making a solid case for extending their business systems with Microsoft’s collaboration and communications platform. Next stop: Waltham! (Personal to Ed Brill: the Chicago show got moved to 4/21, so please adjust your calendar!)

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Great weekend

Last week was hectic; I headed out to Dallas for the first event in our “Optimizing Collaboration and Communications” event, then came back just in time to walk into a huge deadline for a paper I’m writing on an unreleased MS product. Over the weekend, though, the weather fairies were merciful and we had two gorgeous days of blue skies and warm sun. I got the boys’ bikes down from their rack; Thomas broke out his Christmas rollerblades, and we got some quality outdoor playtime in. It was wonderful, although this week we’re likely to have snow again. I’m ready for summer.

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Too busy to blog

I’ve been too busy to blog in a few weeks now. Between finishing up the Exchange Cookbook, working on a big roadshow at work, and dealing with a variety of home issues (ranging from sick kids to a surprise visit from Arlene’s friend Pauline to hitting the library’s annual fundraiser) I just haven’t had time. I’m trying to slowly get back in the habit, though…

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Adzilla: worse than Autolink?

Lots of discussion about Autolink, which is good. So far, though, I haven’t seen very much discussion around Adzilla. Their white paper for service providers describes their services for stripping banner ads (and other ad-related content) and letting the ISP insert its own ads. Yikes. I can’t imagine that content providers are going to be too happy about that. Imagine going to CNN.com and seeing locally-inserted ads from your cable modem provider.

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Fix for Entourage transaction log problem

Back in November, I wrote about a problem with Entourage and Exchange transaction logs— sending a message that was larger than the Exchange global message size limit would cause Entourage to resubmit the message each time it tried to send mail, and this would lead to a flood of transaction log files. There’s now a server-side hotfix for this problem: MS KB 889525 (An e-mail message stays in the Outbox and the Exchange Server 2003 transaction log files grow when an Entourage user tries to send a message that exceeds the size limit in Global Settings).

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Microsoft Security Response Center blog

Dang, I never thought I’d see this happen: the Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC) has a blog. Pretty cool, and definitely good news for MS’ ongoing attempts to broaden the degree of security communications.

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Go, Lance, go!

Great news this morning: Lance Armstrong is riding in the Tour de France this summer, seeking his seventh Tour title. I’ll be watching!

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Adomo’s DEMO appearance

The Weblogs Inc folks covered Adomo’s unveiling here (including a picture that’s just begging for a caption). I suggested that the Adomo folks contact Robert Scoble before the show; their product is a natural for discussion on his blog, since it’s a) MS-centric b) built with .NET and c) very, very cool. I don’t know if they did, and now he’s offline. However, he gave them (and everyone else) the same advice.

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NameVoyager: track name popularity over time

This is really cool: NameVoyager is a web site that tracks the popularity of baby names over time. Type in a name, and get a “stripe” that changes in thickness to reflect the US Census data that reflects how popular that name was. For example, try “Hunter” (which spiked upward sharply starting in the mid-80s) or “Eugene”, which had its heyday in about 1919 and has been trending down ever since. Each name is also shown with its incidence per million babies; “Raphael” scores about 85 for 2003, while “Charles” hits right around 5,000 per million in the same year. Alas, “Rusty”, “Daisy”, and “Ibuprofen” are still pretty rare names. (The site has a pretty interesting companion blog, too.)

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Nokia licenses Exchange ActiveSync and Windows Media

Now this is a surprise, and a pleasant one. Nokia announced that they’re licensing Exchange ActiveSync for their Series 60 and Series 80-based phones. This is excellent news for the Exchange team; clearly their effort to get EAS more widely deployed is bearing fruit. (Nokia also licensed Flash.. just what I want on my phone, not.) Interestingly, the WIndows Mobile team has been busy at 3GSM World too; they announced that Flextronics, a large original device manufacturer (ODM), will be building “Peabody”, a new, lower-cost, reference platform for Windows Mobile devices. It should be interesting to see how this plays out.

Update: it turns out that Nokia is also licensing a bunch of Windows Media technologies, including Windows Media DRM and the Media Transfer Protocol. Take that, Apple and your not-yet-shipping Motorola iTunes phone!

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Adomo: integated voicemail for Exchange

Today a startup named Adomo is launching their new product, Adomo Voice Messaging. They briefed me on it a month or so ago, and I’ve been eagerly waiting for today (the start of the DEMO 2005 conference) for the embargo to lift so I could talk about it. What they’re essentially trying to do is build a comprehensive unified messaging (UM) solution that uses Exchange not just as a message store (like Cisco’s Unity) but as the communications backbone. I think they’re on the right track, taking what I privately label the CommVault approach: they’re leveraging Exchange as much as possible, instead of building a product and trying to make it work, not very well, with multiple back ends.

The Adomo system has three parts: an appliance (running their own *NIX variant, I forget which– maybe FreeBSD?) that handles up to 36 ports from the PBX, a connector that ties the appliance to the Exchange message store, and a really slick speech-based auto-attendant. You can chain appliances to use more than 36 ports, and Adomo’s literature shows smaller 12- and 24-port appliances being used in remote offices. Adomo claims that a single 36-port appliance is enough to serve between 1800 and 3600 users, depending on usage; they’re purposefully targeting organizations with more than 500 users. The appliance compresses incoming messages using the GSM codec (which means that you can listen to messages on pretty much any Windows, Mac OS X, or Linux machine– the codec is ubiquitous, unlike Cisco’s ACELP implementation) and sends them to the Exchange connector.

The Exchange connector is where the action happens: incoming messages are directed to the user’s mailbox, where they appear as regular email messages. This is particularly important because it allows you to deploy their solution without any desktop changes: there are no required plugins or Outlook bits to add, and VM attachments are available on any device that can handle email attachments (including handhelds, OWA, and so on). Messages are delivered using an Exchange form that includes buttons that let you play your VM on your phone, call the sender, and take other appropriate actions; Adomo has promised tighter integration with Outlook for future versions, but the existing integration is pretty darn good.

One of Adomo’s big selling points is that you don’t have to touch the Exchange server or Active Directory to implement their product. You only need one connector per Exchange organization. The connector doesn’t have to be on an Exchange server, and there are no AD schema changes required. You provision user accounts for voicemail by specifying the associated phone numbers, so there’s no need for a separate user management tool. Adomo hasn’t said which AD attributes they use, but their literature does claim that you can do all the provisioning through AD Users and Computers or through scripts.

Messages appear with Caller ID data, and the connector is smart enough to match that data against the user’s Contacts folder so that messages appear with the correct sender information. That makes it easy to prioritize and handle VMs (either manually or with rules) in the same way you would any other email. In addition to the ubiquitous “message waiting” light, the connector can send SMS messages to a mobile phone or alerts (including the Caller ID number in the subject line) to BlackBerry or other non-audio-capable devices.

It’s hard to do the auto-attendant justice in this form, but I’ll try. When you call in, the attendant answers and plays its recorded greeting. You can speak a name at any time, and their speech recognizer will attempt to find the name in the GAL (with conflict resolution, so it can ask the user which John Smith (“John Smith in Sales, or John Smith in Engineering?”) to connect to based on OU, domain, or group membership. This in itself is very cool; the cooler part is that the attendant has access to a wealth of user-specific data, including your schedule and presence data from LCS. Imagine being able to set a rule that says “if my wife calls on her cell phone, IM me to tell me; otherwise, dump all incoming calls to voicemail”. From a user perspective, imagine calling a contact and having the attendant tell you “Jane’s in a meeting until 3pm Central; do you want me to notify her that you’re calling?” (based, of course, on Jane’s decision to trust you with that information as a contact in her Contacts folder). There are almost limitless possibilities for future expansion here, particularly given that the Adomo solution can be used with SIP products (conveniently including LCS 2005).

Of course, given Adomo’s target market focus, their solution won’t work for everyone. First, it requires Exchange 2003. Second, they haven’t released pricing data (at least to me) but since their focus is on 500-plus seat organizations, it likely won’t be cheap. (One interesting note: Adomo’s pitch talks about the benefits of their product for organizations that sell hosted Exchange services– this could potentially be a nice revenue sweetener for hosting companies). However, in terms of functionality, their nearest competitor is the Wildfire service, which (last I checked) was $70-150/month/user– so they’ve definitely got some pricing maneuvering room. I think their product will be successful, but I’m sure it will be interesting to see how Microsoft’s announced UM support in Exchange 12 plays against Adomo’s solution, which now has a year or two to get traction before E12 ships.

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Information worker productivity, indeed

My to-do list for today was simple: finish a presentation on information worker productivity with Office 2003. Unfortunately, I got a long series of phone calls, critical emails, and other interruptions. Net result: this information worker’s productivity was unfortunately low. Oh, the irony.

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All sorts of good news

Wow, this has been a good-news week:

  • Carly Fiorina has finally been shown the door at H-P. Good riddance. She did more, faster, to ruin that company than any other CEO I can think of (including the stinkers in Byron’s book). Chris Larsen and I used to joke that when he graduated, he could start his own company named Hewlett, Packard, & Larsen– that’s how much he (and I!) relied on our H-P calculators. Now their core businesses are in shambles, except for their printing/imaging business. That generates 75% of their income, a far cry from the days when test equipment, servers, and other sectors were their strengths.
  • The FCC shot down digital must-carry. Good for them. There’s no reason to compel local cable systems to carry junk channels, and since broadcasters have already shown an inclination to use their DTV bandwidth to multicast shopping channels and other stuff that gets them paid, I say let them do it on their own dime.
  • I can upgrade my DirecTiVo unit to use release 4.x of the TiVo software. Home Media Option, here I come!
  • My friend, and fellow MVP, Martin Blackstone and his wife just had a new baby

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Surprise! MS buying Sybari

Interesting news: Microsoft is buying Sybari, makers of the outstanding Antigen line of anti-virus products (and some pretty good anti-spam tools, too). Interestingly, there are Antigen versions for Exchange, Live Communications Server, SharePoint, and even Domino; I expect that the breadth of their product line made them a more appealing target than some of their peers. It’ll be interesting to see how this acquisition works in conjunction with MS’ buy of GeCAD’s RAV technology. However, it will be even more interesting to see what effect this announcement has on the second-tier AV vendors– companies like Command and Panda have got to be sweating now. (Not to mention that many organizations who have stuck with products they don’t really like will now use this as an excuse to move!)

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Filter update for Exchange Intelligent Message Filter

I could snark about this filter update taking so long, but at least Microsoft’s making the IMF freely available– some messaging systems have no integrated spam filtering. Anyway, there’s now a filter update for the IMF available here.

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