484 views
Nov 28

So it looks like the gloss is coming off the VMware IPO? now that we are back down to the $70 mark I wonder how many people will stop and remember that this was an IPO of only $29?

Let’s be honest here, regardless of the hype surrounding the stock and the IPO, most companies and advisors do not normally release a stock for IPO and price it at 30% or 50% of value? It was priced at $29 for a reason and now we are starting to come back to that.

If anything I feel sorry for those that are not intimately familiar with IT and VMware and bought in above $100 - but in all fairness we are in turbulent times and with the credit squeeze from the sub-prime issue hanging over this and this has clearly exasperated the issue.

Market Scan
Storm Clouds Ahead For VMware

When VMware unveiled the second generation of its virtualization software two weeks ago, the company seemed to be building on the foundation investors have gone wild for since its initial public offering in August. But now, with more competitors cropping up that are adding their own virtualization software to their products, the question is whether VMware shares can continue to soar.

The answer on Monday seemed to be “no,” as the stock tumbled 9.4%, or $7.40, to $71.44 at the close. To be fair most business technology companies fell Monday, but none took a beating quite like VMware (nyse: VMW - news - people ). International Business Machines (nyse: IBM - news - people ) fell 2.0%, or $2.08, to $101.97; Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFT - news - people ) slid 3.3%, or $1.14, to $32.97; and Oracle (nasdaq: ORCL - news - people ) tumbled 3.0%, or 61 cents, to $19.70. One of the few bright spots in the sector was Sun Microsystems (nasdaq: JAVA - news - people ), whose shares jumped 1.4%, or 27 cents, to $19.43.

VMware’s "virtualization" software lets a single computer function like multiple machines, allowing companies to spend less on equipment and energy in their data centers. Right now VMware is the only company which concentrates solely on server virtualization, whereas its rivals bundle virtualization software with their products.

When it first had its IPO, VMware had near-exclusive claim on the idea of virtualization, but once its competitors caught on, investors realized the firm was going to be just one player in the larger virtualization market. Now virtualization software is being duplicated for free by Xen hypervisor and being added as a feature of products sold by Citrix and Oracle.

Canaccord Adams analyst Mark Kelleher said that the risk for VMware is that Microsoft decides to add virtualization as a feature for free in its products. “What you’ve seen is just some realization of where VMware fits in the world,” Kelleher said. “There’s a lot of competition coming into the market right now and I think some of that competition put a little more reality around VMware.”

….

Chowdhry says VMware is on borrowed time for one or two more quarters. “Then it will probably tank,” he said.

Storm Clouds Ahead For VMware - Forbes.com

written by dcaddick

473 views
Nov 27

Well, hang on a minute and let’s not get too carried away? It doesn’t "run" 45 times faster - what is explained here is a simple file copy, a large file copy sure, but essentially the basic File and Print server stuff that Novell used to own some 10 or 15 years back?

Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad that someone at Redmond has finally found the Turbo button, and what I would be curious about is "exactly how" that copy instruction was carried out, and how they took their measurements - they haven’t indicated wether this is on a 1G or 10G LAN for instance?

I’m sure it was done in a like for like manner, however the reason I ask is that there is a world of difference if for instance the new Server 2008 has been perhaps optimised for 10G? Was this carried out on a Server 2008 "Core"? was the copy initiated from Robocopy, command line, CtrlC-CtrlV, mouse - even these actions can tend to have an impact (especially over slower WAN links)  

I have no doubt that Server 2008 will be faster, but I’ll wait to see exactly how much faster? ;-) 

Microsoft Developers: Windows Server 2008 Runs 45 Times Faster Than ‘03

It’s not unheard of for some of the earliest adopters of Microsoft’s Vista this year to compare the experience to swimming in wet cement — slow and not very pretty.

But word is filtering out of the Redmond, Wash.-based software giant that indicates its new server could be considerably better. Ward Ralston at the Windows Server Division Weblog reports that "our MSN group who is dogfooding Windows Server 200 RC0" has achieved the kind of testing results that might prompt a double-take. In a side-by-side between Windows Server 2003 and Windows Server 2008, the group set out to transfer 10.8 GB of "VirtualEarth Stitch files" from one server to another, and back again.

On Windows Server 2003, the data took five hours, 40 minutes and 30 seconds to transfer once, and more than six hours to transfer back again.

On Windows Server 2008, the same data took seven minutes and 45 seconds to transfer one way, and eight minutes and 10 seconds to transfer back. The Microsoft people spare you the task of doing all that math: "The improvement observed was ~45 times faster over windows 2003."

If the numbers are consistent and no other glitches come up (this software has been in beta for a few years now), it could prove compelling when it is launched - - an event now slated for the first quarter of next year.

Microsoft Developers: Windows Server 2008 Runs 45 Times Faster Than ‘03 - The Chart - IT Channel News And Views by CRN and VARBusiness

written by dcaddick

1,175 views
Nov 23

I have now been blogging since June 2005 and back around the middle of the year I started realising that my original blog at geekswithblogs.net/wallabyfan had got to the point where it was attracting 8,000 - 10,000 hits a month, I also started reading reports that advertising via web was really taking off and that it was possible to earn something of an income from either a Blog or a Web Site, and so from that I started looking at possibilities.

Don’t get me wrong, geekswithblogs.net is a really good and a great place to get started, but the thing is that they are in control and there is no real avenue to add your own advertising if that’s the way you want to go.  

Which blogging software to use?

So the first thing I did was to research whether to build on WordPress or MovableType ? so you probably find the following links useful:
http://www.millennialgrowth.com/2007/08/10/new-to-blogging-heres-what-ive-learned
http://mashable.com/2007/08/15/movable-type-wordpress
http://mashable.com/2007/08/16/wordpress-god300-tools-for-running-your-wordpress-blog

Great Chart – comparing Blogging Software
http://asymptomatic.net/blogbreakdown.htm

Great links comparing Blog platforms
http://sachistudio.com/2007/03/17/comparing-blog-platforms

WordPress Admin Demo (see what it looks like from the Admin’s perspective)
http://www.opensourcecms.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2143

WordPress and MovableType User Demo’s
http://demos.vortexhost.com/wordpress/
http://www.movabletype.com/blog/2007/07/mt4-time-to-give-it-a-try.html
http://www.movabletype4.org
http://www.webpronews.com/expertarticles/2006/03/10/best-movabletype-plugins
http://www.staggernation.com/mtplugins/BigPAPI

Which Host?

So that’s the choice of blogging tool taken care of, so as far as a Hosting company went, after it was all said and done I found the deal at www.onyxservers.com too good to pass up…

Not only do they offer a 3 Month Free trial but it is quite cheap, and if you’d like a deal then please feel free to use the following promotional code as this entitles you to a 40% discount to once you reach the end of the 3 month trial.

Promo code: techagil3332
Special discount for TechAgility.info visitors (40% off Supreme 1000 or Supreme 3000 web
hosting plan)

onyxservers : hosting features

FREE web site migration!

Not happy with your current web host? Switch to OnyxServers and we will move your entire web site for free and with no downtime! This includes moving your web site files, any scripts, and/or MySQL databases. Click here to learn more about this incredible offer!

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Host your web site using the Supreme 1000 plan for three months, absolutely free! No gimmicks, no obligations, no phone calls, and no credit card information required! Click here to order your trial web hosting account.

So by copying some of the more popular articles from my old blog by using Windows Live Writer (best blogging tool by a long way) I was able to quickly have a base to start with and now after only 2 months I’m starting to see the traffic already reach 3 - 4,000 a month. After that you need to start looking at making the links work? but that’s a story for another article?  ;-))

written by dcaddick

1,964 views
Nov 23

So how bad can it get? I’d suggest you hold on to your seats and buckle up, things could get bumpy from here in? Do check out Jim Rogers comments at the bottom of the post.

“This is worse than the S&L crisis. This is the first time – this is the worst credit bubble we’ve ever had in American history. No – never in American history have people been able to buy a house with no money down…never. That’s never happened anytime in the world. So, we have the worst credit bubble. It’s going to take a long time to work its way out. You don’t cure a bubble in five or six months… It takes five or six years.”

Sure as an investor in residential property I have been able to buy a House with no money down, but only by providing additional security from another investment property, so this is an entirely new issue and much more serious. So now that the US has woken up to the fact that Credit was way too easy then how long will it be (or how far south with the Dow Jones go?) before it get’s better?

Interestingly enough we have a Federal Election here in Australia this weekend and with John Howard banging on about how well the Liberals have been looking after the economy over the last 11 years if the US hadn’t had a holiday today and the NYSE was open with the Dow Jones going further south then that would have probably paid into his hands? But as it is it would appear the Polls are sharply divided on whether it will be a photo finish or a landslide…

Emergency US Interest Rate Cut Rumoured as Freddie Mac Posts $5b Loss

Posted by Bill Bonner on Nov 22nd, 2007

Poor Freddie (NYSE:FRE). The federally-chartered lender announced a loss of nearly US$5 billion. You’d think it had lit up a cigarette in a sushi joint. Suddenly, everyone was jumping all over it. Investors spanked the company…the shares fell 30% after the firm announced a cut of as much as 50% in the dividend. Sister Fannie (NYSE:FNM) didn’t get away either. Her shares went down 22%.

Meanwhile, the US dollar went down again – hitting another record low against the euro. Years ago, we guessed it would drop to US$1.50 per euro. Today, it is at US$1.48.

Yesterday, a rumour made the rounds…that the Fed was getting ready for an emergency cut. “The Fed will keep its options open,” said Neil Mellor of the Bank of New York Mellon. But an emergency cut seems unlikely. Instead, the futures market is giving a 90% probability of another cut at the Fed’s regular meeting on December 11th.

….

“We aren’t happy about this,” he told a conference call. Then, he went on to describe what it was he wasn’t happy about. As the Financial Times put it:

“Mr. Styron blamed the meltdown in the US mortgage market and the attendant decline in the value of mortgage-related shares.”

Who could have seen that coming, he seemed to ask?

….

Not the rating agencies. Last month, Fitch said it was caught off guard by “the unprecedented reversal in home prices”. What’s the matter with these people? What’s unprecedented about house prices going down? Funny how no one took these guys aside and whispered in their ear:

“Pssst…markets go up AND down. And by the way, when you lend out money recklessly…you gotta expect trouble.”

Apparently, no one said a thing. It is as if these guys had come to Wall Street on the back of a turnip truck…and signed up for work the next day.

….

And this from our old friend Jim Rogers:

“This is worse than the S&L crisis. This is the first time – this is the worst credit bubble we’ve ever had in American history. No – never in American history have people been able to buy a house with no money down…never. That’s never happened anytime in the world. So, we have the worst credit bubble. It’s going to take a long time to work its way out. You don’t cure a bubble in five or six months… It takes five or six years.”

Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning Australia

P.S. to get The Daily Reckoning direct to your inbox sign up to our free e-mail newsletter or if you prefer to use RSS, subscribe to the Daily Reckoning RSS feed.

Emergency US Interest Rate Cut Rumoured as Freddie Mac Posts $5b Loss

written by dcaddick

1,507 views
Nov 19

Well for those of us that are interested and have been following the US Dollars performance this is hardly a surprise? Is this the beginning of the end for the US Dollar? is it past it’s use by date?

Weak US Dollar May Lead OPEC to Price Oil in Basket of Currencies

Posted by Dan Denning on Nov 19th, 2007

Well it finally happened. Behind closed doors, at a meeting closed to the public, OPEC’s ministers discussed whether to price oil in a basket of currencies instead of the late, great US dollar.

The conversation was supposed to be private. But audio and video from the conference room were left on. The media had a chance to hear Saudi foreign minister Saudi Al Faisal say, “Just indicating that we have charged finance ministers with studying this issue … would mean a decision taken by OPEC would have the opposite effect and the media would pick up on this point.”

Boy was he right. The media had a field day reporting about the feud between OPEC’s largest producer (Saudi Arabia) and OPEC’s largest provocateurs (Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and Mahmoud Adhmadinejad for Iran). This is better than reality TV. And there’s a lot more at stake!

Al Faisal, according to the Reuters’ translation, said that making public OPEC’s concerns about a weak dollar would have a negative affect. “And then perhaps we would find that the dollar had collapsed, instead of us having done something in the interest of our countries.”

“They get our oil and give us a worthless piece of paper,’” said Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in public. “The dollar has no economic value.” And his sidekick Hugo Chavez, the lumbering socialist buffoon from Venezuela who’s expertly monopolised his country’s oil wealth and turned it into a political war chest added that OPEC should, “set itself up as an active geopolitical agent”.

Note to Chavez: OPEC has always been an active geopolitical agent, you moron. Oil wealth has turned the nomadic tribes of the desert in Saudi Arabia into accumulators of massive wealth and leverage over the global economy. Saudi King Abdullah realizes that what is good for global growth is good for OPEC. And that US$200 oil would not be good for global growth, thus, not good for OPEC.

more at source…  Weak US Dollar May Lead OPEC to Price Oil in Basket of Currencies

written by dcaddick

362 views
Nov 19

So not only has Asus finally managed to roll out the Eee PC, but it seems like there will be a slightly larger model, and they are releasing news about an up and coming UMPC that does look like it might have legs?

Engadget: Asus confirms the 8GB 10-inch Eee PC

Posted Nov 14th 2007 11:06AM by Nilay Patel
Filed under: Laptops

Asus has been coyly hinting at a spec-bumped Eee PC for a while now, but it looks like the wink-and-nudge days are over — German Asus spokesman Holger Schmidt said that an 8GB Eee PC with a 10-inch screen would ship in 2008, as well as that equally-rumored but far less sexy desktop Eee. See, sometimes dreams do come true.
[Read link is in German]

Asus confirms the 8GB 10-inch Eee PC - Engadget

ASUS’ R50A set to "redefine mobile"

Posted Nov 14th 2007 7:56AM by Thomas Ricker
Filed under: GPS, Handhelds, Laptops, Tablet PCs

All we have is this picture for now and the promise of more around CES in January, but that’s Asus’ R50A right there. It’s listed as a UMPC and said to "redefine mobile" with full PC and GPS functionality. Funny, we thought that’s what those gen one UMPCs were supposed to do 1.5 years ago. Anyway, this looks to be the R3 we’ve already peeped sporting a 4.8-inch display with abiggie1024 x 600 resolution.

ASUS’ R50A set to "redefine mobile"

written by dcaddick

902 views
Nov 18

Judging by my limited experiences with Vista the "security" sounds like it might be a case of how much security you need to turn off until your Server actually communicates with the other devices and runs the Applications correctly?

Other than that I’m looking forward to seeing just how much can be accomplished with Power Shell, it’s certainly got my Brother excited ;-)

10 things to consider when making a Windows Server 2008 upgrade decision

Windows Server 2008 is expected to officially launch in February of next year, but many companies are already preparing for the next generation of Windows server software and trying to decide whether, and when, to upgrade. Release candidate evaluations are available from the Microsoft Web site and many IT departments are already trying it out in their testbed labs. Exciting-sounding new features and promised improvements on the old ones make the upgrade tempting.

In this article, we’ll look at 10 things you should consider in making the upgrade decision, including eight good reasons to upgrade as soon as possible and two equally good reasons you might just want to hold off for a while.

Note: This information is also available as a PDF download.

Reasons to upgrade

First, let’s take a look at some reasons to upgrade your network infrastructure and/or individual servers to Windows Server 2008.

Reason #1 to upgrade: Security, security, security

The most compelling reason to upgrade to Windows 2008 sooner rather than later is really at least half a dozen reasons, but they all add up to one thing: improved security. And just as the most important factor in buying real estate is location, in today’s interconnected IT world, the most important factor for most of us in selecting an operating system is security.

Here are some of Windows Server 2008’s new or improved security mechanisms:

  • Network Access Protection (NAP) provides a way for administrators to exert more control over which computers connect to the network by checking for compliance with security policies and isolating those that don’t have the proper service packs and updates installed, antivirus and firewall software installed and enabled, proper configuration settings, and so forth.
  • Read-only Domain Controller gives you a way to restrict the replication of the complete Active Directory database when deploying AD. This is useful when you need to run additional applications on a DC or it’s in a place that’s not physically secure, because changes can’t be made to the AD database through it.
  • Federated Rights Management Services allows for better protection of sensitive data by integrating RMS with AD FS so companies with federated relationships can exchange protected files.
  • BitLocker full disk encryption (also supported by Vista Enterprise and Ultimate editions) enables you to prevent unauthorized persons from booting into the server even if they have physical access.
  • Secure Sockets Tunneling Protocol (SSTP) remote access VPN allows you to create an SSL VPN with strong authentication and transport-level security that will pass through firewalls that block PPTP and L2TP traffic.
  • Improved certificate services offer enhancements such as support for enrolling routers and other network devices for certificates, health monitoring of CAs with PKIView, support for Online Certificate Status Protocol for better management of revocation information, and improvements to Web enrollment.

These are only a few of the specific security mechanisms in Server 2008, which also includes the new Windows firewall first introduced in Vista, Windows Defender, service hardening, User Account Control (UAC), and more.

Reason #2 to upgrade: Virtualization

Virtualization is all the rage for businesses from enterprises down to small businesses. Running servers in virtual machines (VMs) allows you to have the logical separation you need so that your Exchange mail server, your Web server(s), your file server(s), etc., have the security benefits of running on separate operating systems. But you also get the cost savings of running all those separate computers on a single physical machine.

Server consolidation is one of the biggest uses for virtualization technology, but it’s not the only one. VMs also make it much easier to test new operating systems or applications or to run multiple operating systems (such as XP and Vista) simultaneously.

Microsoft’s hypervisor virtualization technology has been in the works for quite some time. Code named “Viridian,” it has been announced as Hyper-V and will be available both as an add-on for Server 2008 and a stand-alone server product. Hyper-V can run a variety of operating systems in virtual machines, including 32- and 64-bit Windows and Linux.

Reason #3 to upgrade: Performance

Server 2008 includes numerous enhancements to increase server and networking performance. The “next generation” TCP/IP stack in Server 2008 (and Vista) include TCP receive window auto-tuning and compound TCP (CTCP), which maximizes the throughput on connections with large receive windows. Wireless networking performance has also been greatly increased.

Windows System Resource Manager (WSRM) is integrated in Server 2008 and can enhance performance by allocating resources according to your needs. With increased performance for Storage Area Networks (SAN) and Direct Attached Storage (DAS) in clustering, better virtualization performance with Hyper-V, performance enhancements to IIS, better PKI performance in checking for revoked certificates, better performance for remote terminal services users with TS Gateway and other performance enhancements, better performance is a good reason to upgrade to Server 2008.

Reason #4 to upgrade: Server Core

Server 2008 gives you two installation options: You can install the full operating system with the familiar graphical interface and built-in applications, such as Internet Explorer, or you can install just the Server Core, a more minimalist environment for command-line administration. Server Core includes the important subsystems — networking, file system, security subsystem, RDP, WMI, etc. — but doesn’t include the desktop shell, most applications (IE, mail, WordPad, etc.) or the .NET framework. You do get a few GUI utilities, such as Task Manager, Regedit, and Notepad (for editing scripts, viewing log files, etc.). Server Core provides a more secure environment (fewer applications and services to exploit), easier management, and better performance.

Reason #5 to upgrade: Server Manager

Server Manager is a new administrative tool in Server 2008 that’s like a much more sophisticated version of the familiar Computer Manager MMC. You can use it to assign roles to the server (Web server, file server, etc.), configure settings, and so forth. It provides a centralized place for managing most aspects of your server. Server Manager is exclusive to Windows Server 2008 and won’t run on previous versions of Windows, not even Vista. For those who prefer to work in the “dark place,” there’s a command-line version of Server Manager, ServerManagerCmd.exe. It’s especially useful for automating the deployment of multiple servers that are configured alike.

Reason #6 to upgrade: IIS 7.0

The latest version of Internet Information Services (IIS) provides many improvements over its predecessor. This application is now modular, and you can install only the components you need. That makes it more secure, increases performance, and makes it easier to manage. For example, if you don’t need FTP services, don’t install them.

IIS has been designed to be as secure as possible out of the box. That is, most components are not installed unless you explicitly choose to install them. ASP, ASP.NET, and similar services are not installed by default. Other security enhancements include built-in URL filtering, a new and more secure account for anonymous users, automatic sandboxing (isolation) of applications on the server, and more.

The IIS management tool has gotten a makeover, too. It’s more intuitive and more task-oriented. And a new command-line tool, AppCmd.exe, replaces numerous administration scripts that were used in IIS 6. IIS 7 can also be managed with Windows PowerShell. PowerShell is the command-line interface and scripting language that was code named Monad, and it provides a more UNIX-like environment for IT pros who are comfortable with the command line. Many tasks can be performed more quickly at the command line, and can be automated through scripting.

PowerShell can be downloaded from the Microsoft Web site and run on Windows XP SP2, Server 2003 SP 1, Server 2003 R2, and Vista, as well as Server 2008, but it is especially designed to administer Server 2008 roles, such as Terminal Services and IIS 7.

Reason #7 to upgrade: Terminal Services enhancements

If your business relies on a thin client model based on Windows Terminal Services, you’ll find plenty of improvements in Server 2008. It starts with version 6.0 of the Remote Desktop Connection (RDC) client software, which is included in both Vista and Server 2008. This client lets you use network-level authentication (NLA), which authenticates clients before the user logs on. This provides better security by eliminating the window of opportunity during which attackers might intercept credentials or do other dirty deeds. Another security enhancement is server authentication, which prevents clients from connecting to a malicious terminal server that’s spoofing the real one.

There are also improvements to the user experience. Higher resolution (up to 4096 x 2048) is supported and you can configure customized widescreen aspects such as 16:10. A welcome improvement is the ability to spread the terminal session display across multiple monitors (so long as they all have the same resolution settings). 32-bit color depth is also supported, and you can now use ClearType font smoothing in terminal sessions. Things are looking good.

Other improvements to Terminal Services include Display Data Prioritization (which provides better network utilization) and the ability to use desktop themes and even the Aero interface in terminal sessions. Printing is easier, too.

Server 2008 Terminal Services users with domain accounts can log on once (single sign-on) if they’re using Windows Vista as the client OS. And there are many other under-the-hood improvements that make Terminal Services better for both users and administrators.

Reason #8 to upgrade: Active Directory enhancements

With Server 2008, Microsoft has consolidated services that were separate in previous versions of the operating system. Active Directory is now integrated with the following:

  • Certificate Services (which is now called Active Directory Certificate Services, or AD CS, and offers many improvements)
  • Active Directory Rights Management Services (AD RMS), which provides control over what recipients of documents and e-mail messages can do with those files
  • Active Directory Federation Services (AD FS), which provides for identity management across a federation

Improvements to Active Directory itself include enhancements to the auditing service, granular password and account lockout policies, and the ability to restart the directory services without rebooting the domain controller in Restore mode. Last but not least, Server 2008 gives us the Read Only Domain Controller (RODC), which can be deployed in locations without the best physical security.

Reasons to wait

All of the above are reasons you may be chomping at the bit to roll out Server 2008. On the other hand, there are also a few good reasons you might want to wait before upgrading.

Reason #1 to wait: Compatibility issues

As with Vista, because of the new security architecture in Server 2008 there are likely to be some applications that won’t run on it. These include many antivirus and other security applications that access the kernel, backup programs, and applications that check the operating system version prior to installation. Programs that interact with IIS may also have problems, since it has so many changes.

You’ll want to check out all your mission-critical applications in a testbed environment before making the decision to deploy Server 2008. Don’t just test whether they’ll install; some apps may appear to install with no problem but then have problems working properly. If your important business applications won’t run stably on Server 2008, you’ll have to wait until the application vendor makes upgrades or patches available or switch to different applications before you can make the operating system upgrade.

Reason #2 to wait: Cost factors

If you have many servers, the licensing cost of upgrading to Server 2008 could be significant. You’ll want to take an inventory and determine just what that cost will be and whether the benefits are worth it, given your specific needs. And don’t forget that the cost of the software isn’t the only consideration here.

Let’s face it: There’s a price for increased functionality with every new operating system, and part of that price almost always comes in increased hardware requirements. Just as Windows Vista requires more powerful computers than XP to run properly, Server 2008 makes greater hardware demands than Server 2003. Microsoft specifies a minimum 1GHz processor (1.4 GHz for the 64-bit version) and recommends a 2GHz or better machine. For Itanium, an Itanium 2 processor is required. Although 512 MB of RAM is specified as the minimum, a more realistic recommendation is 2 GB or more, and you’ll need from 10 to 40 GB of available disk space.

Many servers currently running Server 2003 don’t meet those criteria, so you may have to factor in the cost of buying new server systems or performing hardware upgrades to your existing servers to run Server 2008.

» 10 things to consider when making a Windows Server 2008 upgrade decision | 10 Things | TechRepublic.com

written by dcaddick

925 views
Nov 17

With all the computing power available it’s so disappointing to see it being sucked up by ever bigger bloatware, so it’s refreshing to see Microsoft focusing on getting things thin and efficient.

And from this I picked up the interesting news regarding Microsoft’s research into the concept of a Singularity based O/S

Singularity Overview

Singularity is a research project focused on the construction of dependable systems through innovation in the areas of systems, languages, and tools. We are building a research operating system prototype (called Singularity), extending programming languages, and developing new techniques and tools for specifying and verifying program behavior.

Advances in languages, compilers, and tools open the possibility of significantly improving software. For example, Singularity uses type-safe languages and an abstract instruction set to enable what we call Software Isolated Processes (SIPs). SIPs provide the strong isolation guarantees of OS processes (isolated object space, separate GCs, separate runtimes) without the overhead of hardware-enforced protection domains. In the current Singularity prototype SIPs are extremely cheap; they run in ring 0 in the kernel’s address space.

Singularity uses these advances to build more reliable systems and applications. For example, because SIPs are so cheap to create and enforce, Singularity runs each program, device driver, or system extension in its own SIP. SIPs are not allowed to share memory or modify their own code. As a result, we can make strong reliability guarantees about the code running in a SIP. We can verify much broader properties about a SIP at compile or install time than can be done for code running in traditional OS processes. Broader application of static verification is critical to predicting system behavior and providing users with strong guarantees about reliability.

Stripped-down ‘MinWin’ kernel to be at the core of Windows 7 and more

Posted by Mary Jo Foley @ 4:03 am

Microsoft has created a stripped-down version of the Windows core, called MinWin, that will be at the heart of future Windows products, starting with Windows 7, the Windows client release due in 2010.

While the Windows team has been working for years on reducing the dependencies in Windows which have made the operating system increasingly bloated and difficult to maintain and upgrade, it’s only been recently that the team has been able to create a separate, usuable new core.

Going forward, MinWin will be at the heart of future versions of Windows Media Center, Windows Server, embedded Windows products and more.

Microsoft Distinguished Engineer Eric Traut described some of the work the Microsoft Core OS team has done to build the MinWin core during a recent talk he gave at the University of Illinois. The full video of Traut’s talk is here. Blogger Long Zheng clipped out the piece of Traut’s talk which highlighted how the MinWin core will work in Windows 7 and posted it to his site.

MinWin is internal-only and “won’t be productized but it will be the basis for future products,” Traut said. But “it’s proof there is a really nice little core inside Windows.”

MinWin is 25 MB on disk; Vista is 4 GB, Traut said. (The slimmed-down Windows Server 2008 core is still 1.5 GB in size.) The MinWin kernel does not include a graphics subsystem in its current build, but does incorporate a “very simple HTTP server,” Traut said. The MinWin core is 100 files total, while all of Windows is 5,000 files in size.

Traut said he is running a team of 200 Windows engineers working on the core kernel and Windows virtual technologies.

Traut acknowledged tat the Windows kernel is between twelve and fifteen years old right now. He said that Microsoft is operating under the premise that “at some point, we’ll have to replace it (the kernel),” given that it “doesn’t have an unlimited life span.

Traut did not mention Singularity — Microsoft Research’s built-from-scratch microkernel-based operating system — during his talk.

» Stripped-down ‘MinWin’ kernel to be at the core of Windows 7 and more | All about Microsoft | ZDNet.com

written by dcaddick

245 views
Nov 17

Question:
As the US Dollar starts to unwind and loose intrinsic value compared to all other currencies is it still reasonable to claim shock at "Record" high values of Gold and Oil if these prices are in US Dollars?

Even if the value of Gold or Oil didn’t change over the last 12 months it would have appeared to have risen being based on US Dollar price? right?

Why the Euro is Garbage and Only Gold is Absolute

Posted by Dan Denning on Nov 16th, 2007

How about the gold market? Nature’s currency, gold, fell over US$27 in New York trading and is back under US$800 at US$787.30. Uh oh. What gives?

Another point we made last night is to underscore the fundamental structural change in the currency markets. The US dollar has fallen…and it cannot get up. There will be rallies. But even if the dollar rallies against the euro, so what?

The euro is also garbage, we pointed out. It’s simply another currency not backed by anything tangible. It’s risen by virtue of the fact that it is not the US dollar. But it too, is un-backed paper liability. And it’s not even backed by a real country! It’s backed by 12 member nations whose various economic fortunes may one day force them to abandon the common currency in order to set interest rates that are more appropriate than those set in Brussels. Europe has a North-South divide.

But back to gold. In a world of paper money relativity, gold is a physical absolute. That is why people have been treating it as money for thousands of years. That alone makes it compelling. But as we said, the bear market in the US dollar is a terminal bear market.

The US government will either have to greatly devalue the currency to pay off its debts, or default on those debts. Neither is good for confidence in the currency. In the meantime, things priced in dollars (commodities) will continue to go up as the supply of dollars increases faster than the supply of tangible goods.

Dan Denning
The Daily Reckoning Australia

Why the Euro is Garbage and Only Gold is Absolute

written by dcaddick

631 views
Nov 16

Back when I was focused on Citrix Servers and helping people get the best out of existing Terminal Server and Citrix Server installations it was somewhat surprising how many Applications AND Developers all do their own thing in whatever way they like with no regards to Standards like these.

There was similar material from Microsoft regarding Server 2003 and I always kept the details in template email ready for when asked. Anyway, these links below should start you off in the right place?

Windows Server Software Logo Program Online Forum

  • Participate in the Windows Server Software Logo Program Online Forum where you can chat with other developers, post questions, and discuss technical topics, problems, and suggestions.  This forum is monitored by Microsoft staff who can answer both business and technical questions.

Windows Server 2008 Home page

  • Home page for the Windows Server 2008 operating system.

Get Windows Server 2008 RC0

  • Download an evaluation copy of Windows Server 2008 RC0.

Certification Tool for x86

  • The tool to run Windows Server 2008 certification in-house, the same tool the test vendors use.

Certification Tool for x64

  • The tool to run Windows Server 2008 certification in-house, the same tool the test vendors use.

Works with Tool

  • This highly-automated tool will help you quickly determine baseline compatibility with Windows Server 2008

System State Analyzer Tool

  • Create two snapshots of fixed drives, registry settings, drivers, and services at different points in time and compare them to view differences.

Windows Server 2008 Application Compatibility Cookbook

  • The Cookbook covers the most common application compatibility issues and provides tips how to modify your applications or redesign them to help provide a quality experience with Windows Server 2008 and/or the Windows Vista operating system.

Top 10 Steps for Developing Applications on Windows Server 2008

  • This document details the top 10 issues to avoid when developing applications for Windows Server 2008.

Windows Server 2008 Software Logo Specifications

  • Technical requirements of a server application and its client components must meet in order to become Certified for Windows Server.

Windows Server 2008 Software Logo Test Framework

  • The Framework describes tests that verify an application’s compliance with Works with Windows Server 2008 requirements.

Windows Server 2008 Works with Specifications

  • Technical specification outlining requirements that allow server applications to receive the Works with Windows Server 2008 designation.

Windows Server 2008 Works with Test Framework

  • Includes detailed information for technical managers and testers preparing software applications for the Works with Windows Server 2008 program detailed information verification tests.

Windows Server 2008 Technical Library

  • Microsoft TechNet page with detailed information on Windows Server 2008 technologies.

Developer Curriculum for Windows Server 2008

  • Designed for software developers and solution architects, this fast-paced seminar series provides on-demand webcasts and labcasts about the new features and technologies in Windows Server 2008.

Microsoft ISV Zone

  • Portal for ISV developer training and events on MSDN.

Microsoft INNOVATE ON Windows Server

written by dcaddick