Category: community
The MVP Summit ends, but the experience continues
Looking forward to the MVP Summit
PacITPros February Meeting
Yesterday evening, I gave a short presentation at the monthly Pacific IT Professionals meeting on Windows Server 2008 Terminal Services. Highlights included some of the changes, feature improvements and cavats between Server 2003, Server 2008 and Server 2008 R2. If you attended and would like a copy of my slide deck, click here. Also look for a post tomorrow that covers some of the highlights of the presentation.
There were two other great presentations at the meeting. Ed Horley presented on Network Filtering and Joanie Rhine from Microsoft presented on the most recent Security Intelligence Report. Their presentations will be available on the PacITPros website.
Confessions of a new MVP
I confess. I’ve been a Microsoft MVP for less than 2 weeks and I didn’t realize what I was getting into. There is a well-known quote from “The Matrix” where Cypher says to Neo, “I know what you’re thinking, ’cause right now I’m thinking the same thing. Actually, I’ve been thinking it ever since I got here: Why oh why didn’t I take the BLUE pill?”
I thought I had a pretty good handle on what resources I had available to me as an IT professional. TechNet, conferences, white papers, sponsored webcasts, blogs, books, user groups, training classes… My schedule was easy to fill.
And then comes the MVP award. Sure, I could just hang my certificate in my cube and call it a day. After all, it’s an award for recognizing past contributions to the tech community. But turns out its more than just an award. It’s a door to a world of resources and information that I didn’t know existed.
Barely a week has passed and I find myself trying to be realistic about the amount of information I can actually consume in the next year. There are more webcasts and chats and online meetings and downloadable resources than I can even begin to get my head around. I feel like a kid in a candy store, or perhaps like someone in the TV aisle of Best Buy, trying to figure out where to focus my attention first.
I’m sure I’ll have a better handle on what direction I should be facing as I get more comfortable with the ins and outs of the program. I’m looking forward to being able to use this experience as a way to give back to all those who’ve helped me out of a jam with a timely blog post or magazine article. But until then it seems like I’m back at my first days as a high school freshman. Does anyone know the way to the cafeteria?
Don’t Forget – PacITPros Meeting on January 5th!
Tech Tidbits – PDFs on Kindle 2, Beta Exams
For those of you who like to be on the bleeding edge of Microsoft exam offerings, don’t miss out on the Microsoft Beta Exam Announcements blog. Right now there are 3 new beta exams available:
- 71-663 – Pro: Designing and Deploying Messaging Solutions with Microsoft Exchange Server 2010
- 71-580 – TS: Windows Mobile® 6.5, Application Development
- 71-579 – TS: Windows Mobile® 6.5, Configuring
Also, Amazon released a firmware update for the Kindle 2 that increases the battery life by several days and added support for native PDFs, which was originally only available in DX version. I don’t expect I’ll be dumping my Kindle “classic” immediately, but I will put a few whitepapers on my husband’s to see how it handles diagrams and other components that don’t convert well to the regular Kindle format.
Finally, don’t miss out the PacITPros December meeting. Check out www.pacitpros.org for details and to RSVP.
PacITPros – December Meeting
Don’t forget to check out the details for PacITPros December meeting. We’ll be hearing from StorageCraft about bare metal recovery and migrations between physical and virtual machines.
PacITPros – Certifications, BranchCache and Office 2010
PacITPros will be having the September meeting tomorrow night at 6:30pm.
There is quite the line up of topics – Ed Horley, Microsoft MVP in Enterprise Security, will be presenting on Windows Server 2008 R2 and Windows 7 as a “Better Together” story. Specifically, what items are available only from Windows S2K8R2 with Windows 7 and how they would be compelling to use.
I’ll be doing a short presentation of what’s new with Microsoft certification tracks (specifically info about the MCITP and MCTS certifications) and Kathy Jacobs, Microsoft MVP in OneNote, will be doing an overview of some of the cool new features in Office 2010. Plus with the VMWare conference going on right down the street, there is sure to be a lot of chatter about what’s going on over at the Moscone Center.
Customer Focus Design for Window Server with PacITPros
On May 5th, I helped organize a special event for the Pacific IT Pros user group in San Francisco. Customer Focused Design is a process used by Microsoft to collect feedback about features and requirements that need improvement in future product development.
The goal of this event was to provide Microsoft with feedback related to the future of the Windows Server operating system. The Customer Focused Design team was very appreciative of the time PacITPros spent brainstorming together to during the session. They saw a lot of really good ideas and value come out of the session. Overall, the three groups provided over 300 individual requirements and close to 50 high level requirements where improvements could be made.
That information was distilled into the following series of slides:Group 1 (Kevin Lane) – 15 high level requirements, with 97 individual sticky requirements.Group 2 (Robert DeLuca) – 18 high level requirements, with 54 individual sticky requirements.Group 3 (Pat Fetty) – 16 high level requirements, with 174 individual sticky requirements.
The slides highlight the following information:
“Customer Importance” – this provides the prioritization of the requirements that were generated.
“Current Ability” – This is the PacITPros ranking of Microsoft’s ability to deliver this requirement right now based on the technology Microsoft provides in Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2008R2. The ranking numbers are:
1 = Microsoft doesn’t deliver this at all
2-3 = you can do this with significant workarounds and/or 3rd party solutions
4-7 = Mircosoft delivers this with minimal workarounds or other applications
8-9 = Microsoft delivers this with no workarounds
10 = Microsoft couldn’t do this any better
“Improvement Pareto” – The requirements and the ability rankings are calculated together to determine the improvement areas needed for focus. Areas with high importance but low ability are areas that Microsoft needs to put some work into. Areas that are low mean that Microsoft needs less investment and effort to deliver what is needed.
Kudos to all the PacITPros members who participated. This was a hands-on way to have our voices heard directly by Microsoft.