This is neat: Microsoft product manager Jamie Stark is more-or-less-liveblogging the unveiling of OCS 2007 R2 from VoiceCon in Amsterdam.
Exchange 2007 SP1 rollup 4 released
Microsoft today released rollup 4 for Exchange 2007 Service Pack 1. This is the real RU4, not the broken version that was accidentally released through Microsoft Update on September 9th. Among other things, this rollup fixes some pesky Exchange Web Services bugs.
Comments Off on Exchange 2007 SP1 rollup 4 released
Filed under UC&C
No Exchange 14 for you
So, Jim has ratted me out: he noticed that I’m scheduled to give an Exchange 14-related session at Exchange Connections in November. In a probably-feeble attempt to avoid the wrath of Microsoft’s NDA police, the truth is, I submitted that session proposal nearly six months ago. At that time, I had the expectation that I’d be free to talk about Exchange 14 by November. However, the product is still under NDA, and probably still will be by then, so I’ll be presenting another session instead, topic TBD. Sorry to disappoint…
Filed under General Tech Stuff, UC&C
Still here, just quiet
It’s hard to believe it’s been two weeks since my last posting here (and, at that, it was a short rumination on vegetables.) Since my last post, a lot has happened:
- I decided to forgo my spot in the first Microsoft Certified Master: Exchange class. This was a very difficult decision, but it turned out to be a good one because…
- Mom sold her house in Perrysburg. It closes in late October, which means we essentially have a month to help her get packed up, moved out, and down to Louisiana. We’ve been busy with various house-related tasks, like turning the lights on for showings and so forth.
- I got some kind of stomach flu of doom that made me sicker than I’ve been in 20 years. I’m talking full-blown, flat-out, can’t-hardly-get-out-of-bed sick. Fortunately, it only lasted a couple of days, but it was rough during that time. The kids and I have all intermittently had snuffles, too
- We got our hardwood– all 1900+ square feet of it– refinished. This sounds easier than it is; it involved compressing several rooms worth of furniture into the living room, master bedroom, and kitchen, then living in it for two weeks. The results are beautiful but we’re all eager to get everything put back where it belongs.
Of course, it wasn’t all drudgery; I watched the LSU-Auburn game with Mom, Arlene, and the boys, played a bit of Rock Band 2, and so on. I hope to get back on a more regular posting schedule. There are certainly a lot of developments in the unified communications world to talk about!
Comments Off on Still here, just quiet
Filed under General Stuff
Vegetables shrink your brain
From the “I knew it” department: eating vegetables makes your brain shrink.
Filed under General Stuff
The Basement
I grew up in Louisiana. In a state where people are buried above ground to keep their corpses from floating off, basements aren’t very common. My grandparents live in Alexandria, in the central part of the state. Their house had a basement, the entrance to which was a 3′ x 6′ trap door behind the wet bar. Entering the basement was always a big event. There were all sorts of wonderful things down there: mysterious jars of cannery products, stacks of yellowed old newspapers, piles of ancient National Geographic back issues, and so on. That’s what I thought a basement should be like: rare, mysterious, a little scary, but ultimately familiar.
When my parents moved to Perrysburg, the house they bought had a big unfinished basement. Dad quickly filled it with woodworking tools, a huge L-shaped workbench, and a small finished office stuffed with every kind of ham radio you can imagine. Many of the tools in the basement were familiar: there was the old red air compressor that I’d used for hundreds of hours while refinishing and repainting cars, and the ancient Zenith Transoceanic that we used to listen to the BBC and WWV while out at the fishing camp he built way down on the bayou. There was scrap wood, and an old dresser from my boyhood that had repurposed for component storage, and a bookshelf full of solvents and cleaners and various other hazards. In short, it was a familiar place for both of us, filled with things we understood and knew the measure of. We spent probably a hundred hours building a bed for David (a project which, truth be told, would have taken him maybe 15 hours had he done it without my inexpert help).
Of course, the basement was more than a workshop; it was somewhat of a gathering place. Julie, Tim, Arlene, and I would go down there at Christmas time to wrap presents, safe from the running feet and peeping eyes of the kids. Traditionally we’d go out shopping with the old man on Christmas Eve and come back laden with his selections, which of course he wasn’t going to wrap himself. The boys would go downstairs and sit on his lap while he twiddled radio knobs, asking questions so fast that he couldn’t finish the answer to one before the next one popped out.
Now, a year after his death, the basement is mostly empty. The woodworking tools are gone, parceled out to people with the knowledge and space to use them. The remaining radios sit silent. The workbench is mostly clean, although both the air compressor and the Zenith remain. I took the tools and supplies that I could use, knowing that as I maintain and use them that I’m preserving some small part of the things he taught me. It’s a lonely place now, and one that I avoid. I miss him terribly sometimes, but never more so when I go down those steps, past the framed pictures of Tim and I in dress blues, under the “I (heart) my truck” license plate, and into that basement: no longer mysterious, no longer even familiar.
Filed under Friends & Family, Musings
HOWTO block those pesky iPhones from Exchange ActiveSync
Great article on the Exchange team blog from mobility guy Adam Glick: it’s all about how to block classes of devices that you don’t want connecting to your Exchange server. You can already turn Exchange ActiveSync on and off for individual users, and you can allow or deny individual devices for those users. However, those solutions are best if you want to block a known-bad user or a known-bad device. If you want to block, say, all iPhones (or all BlackBerry devices, or all Nokias, or whatever), Adam outlines an easy solution for doing so.
Custom number normalization and the OCS Address Book Service
I’ve written about phone number normalization a bit before, but OCS MVP Jeff Schertz has a more detailed how-to guide. It’s interesting that the documentation for LCS on this topic was poor, and it didn’t get any better for OCS 2007. Maybe it’ll improve for R2?
Comments Off on Custom number normalization and the OCS Address Book Service
Filed under UC&C
Collecting Exchange transaction log information
Fellow Exchange MVP Jason Sherry has written a very useful script that will gather a bunch of information about your transaction logs, including how many of them you have across your servers and the rate of growth in log creation. This is a great way to keep tabs on what your logs are doing.
Comments Off on Collecting Exchange transaction log information
Filed under UC&C
Good two-part article on IMAP-to-Exchange migration
The folks at Red Line Software have a nice two-part series on how to use the Microsoft Transporter tool to perform IMAP-based migrations. This is not always as obvious a process as it might seem, so if you’re contemplating having to do this, check these articles: part 1 and part 2.
Comments Off on Good two-part article on IMAP-to-Exchange migration
Filed under UC&C
Oracle failed to produce CEO’s e-mail
Cue the tiny violins: a federal judge ruled that Oracle “destroyed or failed to preserve Chief Executive Larry Ellison’s e-mail files sought as evidence in a class-action lawsuit filed in 2001 against the software maker.” The alleged destruction (or failure, depending on how you look at it) happened in 2006– well after Oracle touted archiving features in Oracle Collaboration Suite. Ooops.
Comments Off on Oracle failed to produce CEO’s e-mail
Filed under General Tech Stuff, Oops!, Security
Toledo shrinks, Huntsville expands
Via USA Today, this note on the Huntsville airport: not only is HSV expanding, but they’ve got contingency plans for a “sudden-growth scenario” like the arrival of a low-cost carrier. On the other hand, TOL has lost all its Delta service, meaning that I’ll be making the drive to DTW much more often (well, at least until the DL-NW merger). This is probably a pretty good symbol of the overall difference between the local economies in both cities.
Comments Off on Toledo shrinks, Huntsville expands
Filed under Travel
ISA and TMG announce virtualization plans
A few weeks ago, I wrote a column highlighting Microsoft’s announcement of their Exchange 2007 virtualization strategy. I just found out that the team that owns the Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server and Forefront Threat Management Gateway (TMG) has announced their virtualization policy… and it’s a good one! Basically, they’ll support ISA and TMG on virtualization solutions that are part of the Server Virtualization Validation Program (SVVP)– including Hyper-V.
The full document is here. Here’s the money graf:
… if a hardware virtualization platform is listed as “validated” with the SVVP (not “under evaluation”), Microsoft ISA Server and Forefront TMG will be supported for production use on that platform within the limits prescribed in the Microsoft Product Support Lifecycle, Non-Microsoft hardware virtualization policies and the system requirements for that product version and edition.
This will make both ISA and TMG much more palatable to a wide variety of customers, particularly in the SMB space. I’m looking forward to redeploying ISA (which I haven’t been using for a few years) now that it won’t cost me a server’s worth of electricity to use.
Update: this VMware press release says that VMware ESX has passed the SVVP. This is huge news given that it essentially means Microsoft is now supporting Exchange, ISA, and TMG on the most widely deployed virtualization platforms– welcome air cover for all the folks who have been doing it for a while now 🙂
Comments Off on ISA and TMG announce virtualization plans
Filed under General Tech Stuff, Security
Switcheasy Capsule Rebel
I recently needed a case for my iPhone 3G. I had a CaseLogic slip case for my original iPhone, and it was a solid “OK”: a little clunky, a little ugly, but enough to get the job done. I wanted something with less bulk. On the advice of a few iPhone-toting friends, I decided to try the Switcheasy Capsule Rebel. Verdict: I love it. It looks great, and it provides an excellent tactile feel. It doesn’t feel slippery, slimy, or slick. Highly recommended.
Comments Off on Switcheasy Capsule Rebel
Filed under Reviews
Heavy snoring a risk factor for carotid athersclerosis
Wow! This puts Arlene’s complaints about my snoring in a whole new light. Apparently, heavy snoring is a risk factor for carotid atherosclerosis, as measured by an Austrian research team. Better keep an eye on that (or an ear!)
Comments Off on Heavy snoring a risk factor for carotid athersclerosis
Filed under General Stuff, Musings
