Showing posts with label Training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Training. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 July 2018

Hypervisor, Cluster, and Server Hardware Nomenclature (A quick what's what)

100 Level Post

When helping folks out there seems to be a bit of confusion on what means what when it comes to discussing the software or hardware.

So, here are some definitions to help clear the air.

  • NIC
    • Network Interface Card
    • The card can have one, two, four, or more ports
    • Get-NetAdapter
    • Get-NetLbfoTeam
  • Port
    • The ports on the NIC
  • pNIC
    • pNIC = NIC
    • A physical NIC in a hypervisor host or cluster node
  • vNIC
    • The virtual NIC in a Virtual Machine (VM)
    • In-Guest: Get-NetAdapter
    • In-Guest: Get-NetIPAddress
  • vSwitch
    • The Virtual Switch attached to a vNIC
    • Get-VMSwitch
  • Gb
    • Gigabit =/= Gigabyte (GB)
    • 1 billion bits
  • GB
    • Gigabyte =/= Gigabit (Gb)
    • 1 billion bytes
  • 10GbE
    • 10 Gigabit Ethernet
    • Throughput @ line speed ~ 1GB/Second (1 Gigabyte per Second)
  • 100GbE
    • 100 Gigabit Ethernet
    • Throughput @ line speed ~ 10GB/Second (10 Gigabytes per Second)
  • pCore
    • A physical Core on a CPU (Central Processing Unit)
  • vCPU
    • A virtual CPU assigned to a VM
    • Is _not_ a pCore or assigned to a specific pCore by the hypervisor!
    • Please read my Experts-Exchange article on Hyper-V especially the Virtual CPUs and CPU Cores section mid-way down it's free to access
    • Set-VMProcessor VMNAME -Count 2
  • NUMA
    • Non-Uniform Memory Access
    • A Memory Controller and the physical RAM (pRAM) attached to it is a NUMA node

A simple New-VM PowerShell script is here. This is our PowerShell Guide Series that has a number of PowerShell and CMD related scripts . Please check them out and back every once in a while as more scripts are on the works.

Think something should be in the above list? Please comment or feel free to ping us via email.

Philip Elder
Microsoft High Availability MVP
MPECS Inc.
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book
www.commodityclusters.com
Our Web Site
Our Cloud Service

Tuesday, 27 January 2015

Business Guidance Pearls Mentoring Opportunity

Our blog post on Some IT Pro Business Guidance Pearls has generated a _lot_ of questions! Thank you for that. :)

So, how about this?

Third Tier has a special on a block of 3 hours that ends in a few days.

Drop in to the Third Tier Help Desk, register, and purchase a time block. From there, open a ticket: Business Guidance Pearls Mentorship.

I would pick up the ticket and get in touch about scheduling our time together.

The structure would be:

  • 1 Hour: Practice Assessment and Goals
  • 1 Hour: Goals Roadmap
  • 1 Hour: Goals Implementation Steps

I was very fortunate to have a former employer that worked very hard to teach me how to run an I.T. business. By “run” we’re talking about a lot more than just the bookkeeping and cash flow aspects.

Believe me when I say this, you’d not regret any minute spent. We’d look at the big picture right through to the details to facilitate growth in your I.T. Pro practice.

Philip Elder
Microsoft Cluster MVP
MPECS Inc.
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

Chef de partie in the SMBKitchen ASP Project
Find out more at
Third Tier: Enterprise Solutions for Small Business

Saturday, 14 December 2013

SMB Kitchen: Hyper-V Q&A Chat this Tuesday December 17th at 1800 EDT and 1600MDT

SMB Kitchen subscribers please join me on Tuesday to have a chat about all things Hyper-V.

Hyper-V Deployment and Clustering

It's time to ask Phil Elder, Hyper-V Deployment and Clustering expert, anything you ever wanted to know on the topic. He's been deploying this stuff since Longhorn (which for those not in the know was the code name for Server 2008) which is when Hyper-V really came into its own. He's shed a lot of blood, sweat, tears and lab hours to get these deployments down to a science. So if you want to ask an expert about your configuration, upcoming project, performance issues, BIOS settings, hardware selection, Phil is your man.

Need pointers in your deployment? Then this is the chat session you want to attend.

This would be a good time to jump in and get some guidance on the how/what/when/where and why Hyper-V.

Philip Elder
Microsoft MVP
MPECS Inc.
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

Chef de partie in the SMBKitchen
Find out more at
Third Tier: Enterprise Solutions for Small Business

Tuesday, 27 August 2013

Our Value to Our Clients is in Our Knowledge and Experience

(Posted to the SBS2K Yahoo Group)

When we look at SBS 2003 and the growth in product and features over its lifespan we have an idea of how the single box will perform.

SBS 2008 and Exchange 2007 we encountered an exponential growth in the need for disk I/O due to Exchange and RAM due to both Windows Server (Vista code) and Exchange.

Move to SBS 2010 and Exchange 2010 and if we were keeping an eye on the various product groups and their direction for the product we would have seen _before_ SBS 2011 STD ever RTMd that Exchange 2010 was designed to run on one SATA hard disk with everything in RAM. We would have then planned our deployments, both physical and then virtual as that became much more common, around the server products built-in.

The key to any single host design or cluster design is in what will be running on top of them. Obviously, but maybe not?

Here, our experience comes into play if we have been taking the SBS product and tearing it apart for the last ten years and three major product iterations. The inner-workings of SBS, Exchange, Active Directory, Group Policy, SharePoint, and so many other server feature sets were there for us to explore. Not only that, Microsoft gave us a really solid template to carry forward into our now stacked solution sets.

  • VM0: AD, DNS, DHCP
  • VM1: Exchange or LoB
  • VM2: SQL or LoB
  • VM3: RDS

Provisioning the above has not changed in a sense. We need to augment our host configuration for the extra 15GB of OS space per VM perhaps. But, for the most part our physical hardware will be similar in nature to what we would deploy for previous versions of SBS Standard _given the products running in the suite_.

The key in all of this is knowing how the various server products will behave given certain workloads.

SQL has an I/O tester. Exchange has a load tester called Jetstress. Those two utilities can help us understand what our small, medium, and large clients can expect for a given server topology. They can also help us to deliver a solution tailored to their specific needs.

Having a lab is key to getting to know the products and how to put them together.

Testing _every_ solution that goes out the door before actually setting up the client’s own solution set is also critical.

Knowledge is key to our value to our clients. Lose that and we’ve pretty much lost the game.

It takes lots of time. It can take a lot of money. But, in the end training and grinding away at configurations in a lab is key to our client’s success and to ours as well.

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

Chef de partie in the SMBKitchen
Find out more at
www.thirdtier.net/enterprise-solutions-for-small-business/

Windows Live Writer

Thursday, 22 August 2013

SMB Kitchen – Presenting at the SMB TechFest in Orange County, CA October 19th!

I’m excited to announce that I will be doing some presenting at the upcoming TechFest in Orange County, California! :)

Amy Babinchak will be delving into the changes we are seeing in our industry and how she is working those changes into her own IT practice Harbor Computer Services.

Boon Tee will be looking at Hyper-V Replica and how it can be deployed in all manner of businesses.

Susan Bradley is going to present on a wide variety of security issues that SMB faces today and some of the tools that can be used to address them.

I will be delving into the materials I have already posted to the SMB Kitchen on Hyper-V, clustering with Hyper-V, with a special focus on selling Hyper-V clusters into SMB starting at the 15 seat level and above.

We will also have a Q&A session at the end where folks will be able to ask us questions.

And, of course, we will have lots of time to kibitz throughout the event!

image

If you can please join Amy Babinchak, Boon Tee, Susan Bradley, and myself for an excellent business and technical focused non-marketing fluff day. I can guarantee you there will be pearls to be had! :D

Oh, and we will have whiteboards for discussion times! W00t!

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

Chef de partie in the SMB Kitchen
Find out more at
www.thirdtier.net/enterprise-solutions-for-small-business/

Windows Live Writer

Wednesday, 14 August 2013

Microsoft Slaughtering It’s Own Cash Cow?

We in SMB IT have been hearing the Microsoft Cloud Drums for quite a few years now.

In the first year or two the call was along the lines of how great Microsoft’s new Cloud was to be and how we were all going to do well selling it.

Well, in SMB IT that pretty much fell flat on its face once it became apparent the SMB IT Provider was not be be billing the customer Microsoft was.

Plus, where was the SMB IT Provider supposed to fit in to the picture anyway?

The drums kept beating but the SMB IT Solution Provider did not listen.

Microsoft made some changes in their sales model for the Microsoft Cloud product line that allowed the SMB IT Provider to bill their clients, but uptake was probably very slow if at all.

Off to conferences and Webinars we go where “Partners” trumpet their great success selling Microsoft and other Cloud Vendor’s wares. How great their success was they were proclaiming but in the end we received a lot of fluff with little substance.

The drums are still beating today. However, they no longer beat for us to take up the call and sell Microsoft Cloud.

IMNSHO, they now beat the message to the end customer to avoid working with us altogether.

You don’t need the SMB IT Provider! You can do it all yourself! We’re making it really easy for you!

To be fair, Microsoft pushed really hard to get the SMB IT Provider on board with training and certification. They spent hundreds of thousands if not millions on getting us to on-board with the Small Business Specialist Community and the certification structures it required.

Those of us that took up to that beat, that is the SBSC and all it entailed, did really well and Microsoft took great pains to support us.

Unfortunately, in the end, the folks that drove Microsoft to create the SBSC and make efforts to bring things up to par kept on doing what they were doing: Giving Microsoft and other legitimate SMB IT Providers a black eye.

As much as the “Trusted Advisor” role has been poo poo’d by many behind the Cloud drum beating we are the ones that the SMB Business Owner will listen to over commercials, surveys, and Consumer Reports.

Yes, the ones responsible for the black eyes for both Microsoft and those SMB IT Providers doing the right thing will be the ones most hurt by their customers bailing away from the pain they’ve been in for however many years by adopting the Cloud over on-premises.

Why would those customers, that is the ones that have been repeatedly burned, trust us anyway? And why would they trust Microsoft to provide a Cloud service that say Google or Amazon may be able to do just as well if not better?

While we and our client population may not be in the majority as far as SMB IT, we do represent a substantial number of small to medium businesses and the directions they take with the IT infrastructure.

A sales driver within SMB is the excited Geek coming in with a new product that perfectly fits in to their client’s business model. In fact, the Geek would have a demo prepared that directly relates to _that specific client_ without even thinking about it.

That situation translates into sales. _Lots_ of sales. And business owners talk.

Perhaps I’m overestimating our worth here? Maybe I am but then again, maybe I am not.

The drums today are beating “You SMB Business go Cloud. Period.”

We are cautioning our clients that a hybrid approach may be a better rule of thumb for so many reasons. Think PRISM for one and the Patriot Act for another.

Now, given the Microsoft’s position for us is all-in for the Cloud one has to wonder how long it will be before Microsoft removes the “choice” in SME and Enterprise environments?

Meaning, how long before Microsoft makes on-premises a lot more expensive than their Cloud offerings to in effect remove that option?

Certainly the restructuring that has happened around a services model this new Microsoft fiscal year may indicate such.

Most certainly Microsoft is at a crossroads.

Depending on the tact they take over the next 12 to 24 months we could see a vastly different company down the road that may in fact be more like Apple was before it was bailed out or like RIM is today.

Drum beating the message and forcing us in SMB into a direction because as single units we are essentially powerless against them is one thing (though we’ve been seeing that we are not so powerless after all over this last year or so).

However, trying the same tact with SME and Enterprise businesses may well fall flat on its face.

No one person or business has ever liked being shoe-horned into an option.

If given no option by a vendor, then it is more likely that another will be found, or much to the possible surprise of Microsoft, and others before them, the business may carry on and/or build what is needed from within.

Most certainly changes are afoot and we need to be very aware of what is happening around us!

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

Chef de partie in the SMBKitchen
Find out more at
www.thirdtier.net/enterprise-solutions-for-small-business/

Windows Live Writer

Friday, 2 August 2013

A Really Good Read on the State of IT and Cloud Outsourcing

It seems that Aidan Finn and I are somewhat on the same page as far as how the Cloud has been significantly strong due to the “Bad IT Pro”.

Indeed, if we in the SMB community especially had a majority of IT Pros that fit into the “Good IT Pro” category as defined by Aidan the Cloud would probably have little place in the small to medium business.

Now, have a listen to my interview podcast with Robert Crane of CIAOPS in Australia that was done in December of 2012:

Robert and I have a pretty good parlay around the Cloud versus on-premises situation in SMB IT with my touching on the need to be trained, keep up on the tech, and work hard at IT!

Ultimately, it is our responsibility to make sure our skill-set is up to the task of providing the best IT Solutions for our clients. This task costs in both time and money with the investment, yes it _is_ an investment to get trained, paying off in ways we sometimes are not able to anticipate!

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

Chef de partie in the SMBKitchen
Find out more at
www.thirdtier.net/enterprise-solutions-for-small-business/

Windows Live Writer

Tuesday, 25 June 2013

SMBKitchen: Just Released: Hyper-V Cluster Configuration Considerations

This chapter, just released to the SMBKitchen Project’s knowledgebase, is jam packed with pearls that were the result of _months_ of trial and error plus sifting through all of the very incomplete and lacking vendor documentation.

image

Covered are all of the key elements required for setting up a Hyper-V Cluster on the Intel Modular Server with or without Direct Attached Storage via two SAS Controllers.

Also covered are the key elements required for setting up a cluster on a two or more node setup that utilize SAS based DAS intelligent storage. This configuration is the one we have been running with and is now our main focus as the Intel Modular Server has been retired.

image

This document covers a lot of different areas including node configuration, storage, networking, and more.

Cluster for highly available virtual machines, and now that we have the 2012 R2 bits, for Storage Spaces are an important part of our SMB business strategy going forward into the On-Premises and Hybrid future.

Coming soon for the SMBKitchen project will be a series of How-To videos on everything from teaming in Windows Server 2012 via PowerShell to configuring RemoteFX. There are plans to do cluster How-To videos as well.

Tie that into the author’s chats we have once a month that give subscribers front-line access to the authors and I am sure that we are providing great value for the subscription dollars! :)

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

Chef de partie in the SMBKitchen
Find out more at
www.thirdtier.net/enterprise-solutions-for-small-business/

Windows Live Writer

Tuesday, 23 April 2013

How to Acquire an SMBKitchen Project Subscription

We’ve received a number of questions about the subscription for the SMBKitchen Project.

First, the subscription cost is $180 for the _calendar_ year. That cost is broken down over twelve months. So, subscribe in January and the cost is distributed across the 12 months. Subscribe this month and the January through April payments will be required. From there the cost will be distributed over the remaining months at $15/Month.

The fee covers all content on the site, live author’s chats where our subscribers get Q&A time with us, freedom to ask the authors questions on subscription content, and so much more.

The sign-up process is as follows:

  1. Click into the SMBKitchen Project site.
  2. Click the Sign up for a subscription link.
  3. Click the Register button.
    • image
  4. Put your name, e-mail address, and password to access the site in.
    • image
  5. An activation e-mail will be sent to that address. Please confirm.
  6. Log on to the site.
    • image
  7. Click the Payments button.
    • image
  8. Click the Make a Purchase button.
    • image
  9. Click the Subscription button.
    • image
  10. Change the Subscription option to 1.
    • image
    • Scroll down a bit to see the option to purchase additional months up front.
    • image
  11. Click the Check out with PayPal button.
    1. From there the routine is straight forward.

A Welcome Letter, and Article Summary, and an Invitation to the next SMBKitchen Project event will arrive in your Inbox shortly after that.

image

Each category will have a number of articles, how to videos, author chats, and other content for you to access.

Our goal with this project is to give current IT solution providers the best possible tool set to provide on-premises and hybrid on-premises/Cloud solutions that can be delivered today and tomorrow.

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

Chef de partie in the SMBKitchen
Find out more at
www.thirdtier.net/enterprise-solutions-for-small-business/

Windows Live Writer

Friday, 8 February 2013

Undertaking a New Authorship and Mentoring Role

I will be taking part in a new effort by Third Tier called the SMBKitchen.

I am fortunate to be working alongside some of the smartest and greatest folks in SMB IT for this project.

My role will be to develop Hyper-V clustering related content along with business principles and prospect opportunity development and sales closing.

If you haven't seen the video of my presentation at SMB Nation fall please check it out on our YouTube Channel. It provides a pretty good overview of the direction our own company is taking and is quite in line with our thoughts and directions with the SMBKitchen project.

Yes, the SMBKitchen subscription based.

So, what does that mean for this blog? No changes.

We will still develop and publish all of our great guides on new products and processes along with our frank reviews of products and services that we work with on a regular basis.

Guides we are working on:

  • SBS 2003 Migration to Windows Server 2012 Essentials (WS2012E) with Exchange 2013
  • SBS 2007/2011 Migration to WS2102E with Exchange 2013
  • SBS Migration to the Stack
    • Windows Server 2012 Standard with Exchange 2013

What the SMBKitchen project does afford me though is an opportunity to put some serious time into developing video tutorials, in-depth knowledgebase structures based on our guides and more that I just could not justify time wise for the blog.

We have a mortgage to pay, mouths to feed, and all of the other aspects of living expenses that many of us deal with on a day to day basis from _one_ income. Tied into that is our responsibility to our clients to provide them the best possible IT solution for their needs.

I believe that the SMBKitchen project will provide awesome returns for IT Professionals looking to take your IT Practice to the next level with all of the changes happening in our industry. If I didn't believe that this post would never have happened.

As I state in my SMB Nation presentation, our goal here at MPECS Inc. is to be the best On-Premises IT Solution Provider. Period. SMBKitchen just happens to fit right into that vision!

We have a bright future ahead of us but it is going to take some serious slogging to get through the Cloud fluff to the good stuff! :)

Thanks for reading and have a great weekend!

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

Chef de partie in the SMBKitchen
Find out more at
www.thirdtier.net/enterprise-solutions-for-small-business/

Windows Live Writer

Monday, 28 January 2013

Learning Group Policy the Jeremy Moskowitz Way

Look what arrived in the mail:

WP_20130128_010

Jeremy’s new _signed_ Group Policy book. :)

Jeremy is the best source for anything Group Policy. We’d surely love to attend one of his full week brain busting GP courses but timing for us has been difficult.

We highly recommend picking up a copy of this book. It is a handy reference and one of the best ways to learn Group Policy outside of one of his courses.

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

Windows Live Writer

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

A Ford Dealership Experience Exemplifies What SMB IT _Can_ Be Like for Clients/Customers – Painful

This is a really good read:

It really brings out the customer’s experience in our own industry with folks that cobble together IT “Solutions” that end up causing them more pain and grief than anything with the, “Oh, it’s Microsoft’s fault that things are broken” being the mantra from the consultant.

Microsoft, having lived with this black eye for so many years has moved very solidly in favour of eliminating the SMB IT Solution set altogether, or at least as much as possible, with the Big Cloud Push.

But, it’s not like Microsoft did not _try_ and do anything about it beforehand.

Remember the SBSC? The Small Business Specialist Community was a _huge_ investment by Microsoft in us and the solution set.

Get trained, get certified, get noticed was essentially the SBSC mantra with a lot of resources to back it up from Microsoft.

It certainly worked for us. We got trained, got certified, and received the logo and the great communication from within Microsoft and the SBSC program.

And, it did indeed differentiate the small business IT Solution Providers that were serious about providing the best solution to their clients from those that flew by the seat of their pants cobbling things together.

Going forward, the on-premises solution set will not be going away. In fact, the on-premises solution set will become all the more important to those businesses that require data ownership to be in-house among other reasons.

Our plan is to continue to get training on the Microsoft products, and certification on key products, we need to build our solution sets.

  • Windows Server 2012
  • System Center 2012
    • Microsoft Private Cloud
  • Microsoft Exchange 2013
    • E-mail infrastructure.
    • Building highly available Exchange environments.
  • SharePoint Server 2013
    • SharePoint Foundation 2013
  • SQL Server

Those clients/customers that have had an IT experience similar the Ford dealership provided to their customer are ripe for the Cloud. And, quite frankly who could blame them?

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

Windows Live Writer

Thursday, 13 September 2012

SMB Nation Fall

I will be speaking at the upcoming SMB Nation Fall Conference.

For those that are planning on attending please note that the Early Bird discount ends tomorrow. So, save a few dollars for an evening event and pick up a conference ticket now.

image

We will have a good sit-down session together to discuss where we are going and what we are doing about the current state of IT in SMB.

My goal with this session is to get the brain juices flowing to inspire hope for the future of our SMB IT Business.

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

*Our original iMac was stolen (previous blog post). We now have a new MacBook Pro courtesy of Vlad Mazek, owner of OWN.

Windows Live Writer

Tuesday, 11 September 2012

Michigan IT Pros and Dayton User group Hosting Windows 2012 Early Experts JAM Session

In the area? Looking to get some skills on the new Windows Server 2012 platform, then this could be for you.

Michigan IT Pros are pleased to join the Dayton usergroup in hosting a JAM session for the Early Experts program in Windows Server 2012.

The Windows Server 2012 "Early Experts" Challenge provides a FREE study group with certification exam preparation materials for quickly learning about the latest version of Windows Server! Currently, our study group is targeting Exam 70-410: Installing and Configuring Windows Server 2012 from Sept through Nov 2012

We will meet each third Thursday of the month to gather together and join a Lync meeting for instructor lead training. Each student is required to setup their own lab using the provided Azure lab environment. Ideally you should have your lab setup prior to attending this event.

To setup your lab go to http://blogs.technet.com/b/keithmayer/p/earlyexpertlabsetup.aspx#.UEoh8EDD-P8 for instructions for setting up your own virtual lab.

Please tell your friends! Space is limited to 20.

I personally learn better at in-person training events. Thus the trek to Florida for MEC later on this month.

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

*Our original iMac was stolen (previous blog post). We now have a new MacBook Pro courtesy of Vlad Mazek, owner of OWN.

Windows Live Writer

Monday, 27 August 2012

SMB Nation Fall: Taking My IT Support Business to the Next Level

It's official, I will be at SMB Nation's fall conference in Las Vegas.

image

The following blog posts are an outline of the planned discussion:

Believe me when I say that we have been going through a lot of soul searching in the last six to nine months. We MVPs were just as much in the dark about the goings on around SBS and the product group's directions as all y'all out there.

As of today we see a lot of opportunity for us in the current SMB IT environment for those that have honed their skillset and are continually working on them.

We see an even larger opportunity for the IT Support Shop that provides a consistent On-Premises IT Solution experience for their clients. Let's talk about that.

Let's talk about the real-world experience of Cloud, Hybrid, and On-Premises IT Solutions for our clients. While our client's preferences at this time are for On-Premises we do have a number of clients that are Hybrid and a few that are almost completely in the Cloud.

The goal for the session will be to have a fairly solid understanding of what our client's options are, what our options are as the IT Solution Provider, and to have a big to medium picture road map in place for us going forward.

  • On-Premises, Hybrid, and Cloud Solutions
    • What are they and how do they work for our clients and us?
  • Vehicles to specialize
    • Training, Certification, More
  • Business Plan
    • 1 Year, 3 Years, 5 Years
    • Where do I want my clients to be in 5 years?
    • Where do I want to be in 5 years?

With all of the angst over the changes, the Cloud being pushed really hard, and uncertainty all around we need some hope. And hope is what we intend to bring about in this session.

Thanks for reading! :)

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

*Our original iMac was stolen (previous blog post). We now have a new MacBook Pro courtesy of Vlad Mazek, owner of OWN.

Windows Live Writer

Tuesday, 21 August 2012

Going to attend the Microsoft Exchange Conference in Orlando

As part of our need to develop our skill set on the various products we will be configuring for our clients going forward we are starting with the one that can be the most challenging: Exchange

image

We will spend time on Exchange 15 (2013) learning how to install and configure the product. We will also be able to spend time with Exchange 2010 and its configuration.

We will also be looking to explore the built-in Exchange high availability features and their configuration. Multi-site Exchange configurations can be an important offering for a larger client with multiple sites looking to provide e-mail resiliency.

In the end, it is time to put some time and money on the line to gain skills.

Doing this is very important for both our company but also our clients.

When discussing the "Why" a prospective client should be dealing with us having a repertoire of training and certification demonstrates very clearly to them that we are serious about the solutions we deliver.

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

*Our original iMac was stolen (previous blog post). We now have a new MacBook Pro courtesy of Vlad Mazek, owner of OWN.

Windows Live Writer

Tuesday, 26 June 2012

Some Tech Podcasts For You

These come courtesy of fellow MVP Tim Barrett of NoGeekLeftBehind.

There are days where radio, Zune HD tunes, 8Tracks, and satellite just do not cut it when moving between clients.

Having podcasts on the go really can help especially when it comes to working on a new project that requires a lot of knowledge gathering.

Thanks Tim! :)

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

*Our original iMac was stolen (previous blog post). We now have a new MacBook Pro courtesy of Vlad Mazek, owner of OWN.

Windows Live Writer

Tuesday, 11 October 2011

How To: Adobe Acrobat: Rotate Pages and Save Them

We received a document that was scanned into PDF upside down.

When we saved the PDF into our SharePoint site and opened it we then went to View –> Rotate View –> Clockwise. We then saved the PDF and re-opened it. But the pages were upside down when we opened it.

After some searching we came up with the following method for Acrobat X:

  1. Open the PDF document.
  2. Click on Tools
    • image
  3. Click on Pages to open its menu.
  4. Click on Rotate.
    • image
  5. Set the Direction for the rotation and click OK.
    • image
  6. Save the PDF.
  7. Close it then re-open it.

The pages will now display correctly.

Hat Tip: AcrobatUsers.com Save rotated page.

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

*Our original iMac was stolen (previous blog post). We now have a new MacBook Pro courtesy of Vlad Mazek, owner of OWN.

Windows Live Writer

Wednesday, 25 May 2011

SBS 2011 Setup Guide v1.9.0 Release and SBS 2003 to SBS 2011 Migration Guide v1.0.0 Released

We published our SBS 2003 to SBS 2011 Migration Guide and also updated our SBS 2011 Setup Guide extensively.

SBS 2003 to SBS 2011 Migration Guide

Well, we finally got around to updating our SBS 2003 to SBS 2008 Migration Guide with specifics for migrating to SBS 2011 instead of SBS 2008! :)

One of the significant changes between the previous guide and this one was the inclusion of screenshot snips of the various menu items and screens that are unique to this particular process. We also broke out the various migration steps with the how-to steps to make things easier in the long run.

As always, it is _very_ important to read the migration documentation thoroughly before actually running through migrating a production environment.

From there, with permission virtualize a client’s production SBS 2003 or the IT shop’s SBS 2003 and _run the migration virtually_ at least _three_ times before doing so on a production system.

Please take our guides and make them your own. Update them, tweak them, do whatever it takes to make a process manual that allows your technicians to run through an SBS 2003 to SBS 2011 Migration _consistently_ and without error!

SBS 2011 Setup Guide

While running through this last weekend’s SBS 2003 to SBS 2011 migration we reworked a number of things in our Setup Guide to streamline things between setting SBS 2011 up fresh or for using the Guide while running a migration.

One of the significant updates that was added was something that Michael B. Smith mentioned should be a part of any Exchange related setup which was to enable Single Item Recovery in Exchange Server 2010 which is currently found at step 43 in the Guide.

We also reworked a number of steps and added a number of informational bullets to some of the steps such as the first one explaining how we configure the Windows Time service for standalone or clustered SBS VMs.

Conclusion

As always, make sure to test everything found in our guides. They are not meant to replace a good foundation of knowledge that comes by reading the “WHY” we do things the way we do. We do indeed follow our guides for the various SBS related processes we run through, however we know why we are doing what we do.

And, while we try and fill in those “Why” blanks it is ultimately working with the products, blowing them up in a lab, making Group Policy customizations that blow up in a lab, and so much more when working with production boxes that bring us to where we are at now.

Here are two good places to start on filling in the “Why”:

Another good place is to purchase Jeff Middleton’s Swing Migration Kit for SBS 2003 to SBS 2011:

The knowledge and skills we gleaned from learning the methodologies found in Jeff’s kit have literally saved client networks from total loss do to tandem hardware and backup failures.

There is the Official SBS blog that we frequent a lot:

There are some official Microsoft training resources also available:

And, one final note. I will not be publishing a book on SBS 2011. There is just not enough time in the day to spend with my family, run our business, and keep up with the ongoing technology changes around us. So, this blog will be the writing release I need.

If you are so inclined, you can buy Monique and me a coffee: paypal@mpecsinc.ca :)

Otherwise, this blog has always been and hopefully will always be our gift to you as a way of sharing what little we know. ;0)

Thank you for reading!

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

*Our original iMac was stolen (previous blog post). We now have a new MacBook Pro courtesy of Vlad Mazek, owner of OWN.

Windows Live Writer

Thursday, 28 April 2011

Intel TST & Microsoft TS2 Registration Now Open

We have been attending Intel’s Technical Solutions Training (TST) events for quite a few years now.

This year, the desktop and server events are being held on the same day instead of being on separate dates/quarters. This makes it a lot easier for us to attend as we tended to miss the desktop TST sessions due to timing.

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The Web site for registration can be found here: Intel TST & Microsoft TS2 Building Solutions Together.

We will be attending both desktop and server TST events being held in Calgary on June 21st.

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Note that only US cities get the evening networking event.

The take home desktop configuration from the registration site:

As an added bonus, you will also get to keep this amazing desktop system featuring the Intel® Core™ i7 2600K, Antec* Skeleton Chassis and Microsoft Windows 7 Professional (NFR) at a value of $1,460!

  • Intel® Core™ i7 2600K
  • Intel® DH67CLB3 Desktop Board
  • Antec*  Skeleton Chassis
  • Blu-ray Optical Drive
  • Crucial* 8GB (2 x 4GB) DDR3 1333MHz Dual Channel Memory Kit
  • Intel® Solid State Drive 320, 80GB
  • Microsoft Window 7 Professional (NFR)

The take home server configuration from the registration site:

As an added bonus, you will also get to keep this incredibly powerful uni-processor server featuring the brand new Intel® Xeon® E3-1240 Processor, 2 - 1TB Western Digital Enterprise Drives (w/ 64MB cache!), and Microsoft Windows Small Business Server 2011 Standard (NFR), a total value of $1,940!

  • Intel® S1200BTL Server Board
  • Intel® P4304 Server Chassis (pedestal)
  • Intel® Xeon® E3-1240 Processor
  • 16GB Memory Kit (4 X 4GB) ECC UDIMMS
  • 2@1TB SATA HDDs
  • DVD-RW Optical Drive
  • Microsoft Small Business Server 2011 Standard (NFR)

Registration costs are as follows:

  • Intel Desktop TST AM: $600.
  • Intel Server TST PM: $650.

Hopefully there will be an opportunity to help facilitate the afternoon session that is based on Small Business Server 2011!

For the desktop build we will bring a flash drive with Windows 7 Ultimate x64 and the most current drivers and BIOS for the board.

For the server build we would probably bring along the following hardware to augment the server’s configuration:

  • Intel RS2BL040 RAID Controller + Battery Backup
  • 4x (four) 300GB Seagate 15K SAS drives (or 450GB depending on what is available).
  • Intel Remote Management 4 for out-of-band KVM over IP management.
Remote Server Management

We are now installing Intel RMMs into our client’s servers because of the following feature set:

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Essentially we can manage the server as though sitting at the server’s console from anywhere as long as an Internet connection is alive at the client site. Note that a static IP is preferred for the RMM NIC.

We would also be bringing along a flash drive with the SBS 2011 OS, latest drivers, and the latest BIOS/Firmware updates on it too.

In the end, we benefit from the training plus we get to network with our fellow IT Solution Providers and IT Consultants. Walking away with a couple of systems and Microsoft software is indeed a bonus.

Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
Co-Author: SBS 2008 Blueprint Book

*Our original iMac was stolen (previous blog post). We now have a new MacBook Pro courtesy of Vlad Mazek, owner of OWN.

Windows Live Writer