Speaking At Experts Live 2015 in The Netherlands

An awesome looking event called Experts Live 2015 will be running in The Netherlands (CineMex, Ede), covering many aspects of Microsoft infrastructure solutions:

  • Azure
  • Office 365
  • OMS (and more Azure)
  • Azure Stack and Windows Azure Pack
  • Hyper-V
  • Windows

I’ll be speaking as a part of the Hyper-V track:

  • Less known Hyper-V best practices: Mike Resseler, MVP
  • SMB Direct – The Secret Decoder Ring: Didier Van Hoyw, MVP
  • Notes from your Program Manager: Jeff Woolsey, Microsoft/Redmond
  • What’s New in Hyper-V 2016: Aidan Finn (Me!), MVP
  • Storage Spaces Direct and Hyper-V – The Perfect Couple?: Carsten Rachfahl, MVP
  • Would you like Nano Server with Containers?: Thomas Maurer, MVP

In other words, it’s a whole bunch of Hyper-V MVPs from around Europe plus one of the senior Windows Server PMs from Redmond; that’s quite a cast of characters! I would register if I wasn’t one of the speakers.

I had a great time the last time I presented at a Dutch community event during the lead-up to WS2012, so I’m really looking forward to this trip. Hopefully I’ll see you there!

Event: Taking The “Disaster” Out of “Disaster Recovery”

I’m going to be presenting another webcast for Petri.com, sponsored by Infrascale. In this event we’ll be talking about disaster recovery, how you can do it yourself, and how you can leverage cloud services, i.e. Disaster Recovery-as-a-Service (DRaaS).

The live webcast runs for an hour, starting at 13:00 EDT (18:00 UK/Ireland time).

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WPC – The Conference That Shapes Your World That You Don’t Know About

Today is day 1 of Microsoft’s annual conference for partners, WPC, aka Worldwide Partner Conference. At 1:45 PM (UK/Irish time) the day 1 keynote will begin and Microsoft will lay out their agenda for the coming year.

Events such as Build and conferences such as Ignite are where Microsoft talk technology. WPC (for Microsoft partners) and MGX (for MIcrosoft sales employees) are where they talk business. Today, we can expect Satya Nadella to take the stage and talk fluff about mobility of user experience, productivity, and services for several hours.  Tomorrow, COO Kevin Turner will fire up the troops and talk numbers and competition. He’s the guy overseeing the score charts that dictate Microsoft’s subsidiary business, so his voice is pretty important. There’s usually little news here, but sometimes there are interesting market share facts.

But in the midst of all the usual catchphrases, rapidly delivered demos by Julia White (breath!) and at various breakout sessions this week, Microsoft will talk about some important stuff. And this is the stuff that affects company strategy, licensing, and what Microsoft/partners will be talking to your boss about in the coming year. This is what I expect to be pushed:

  • Adoption, adoption, adoption: Microsoft used to recognise and measure sales of products. But in the era of the cloud, adoption is more important. There’s been many sneaky includes of cloud services in volume licensing deals to make red lights green, and Microsoft is stopping this.
  • Azure: It’s still really early days for Azure in the partner market. Will they sort out some of the pricing issues and deal with partner concerns like central management, and transitioning from MOSP (direct) billing subscriptions to Open?
  • Office 365: It’s been a huge success in Ireland, but not so in the rest of Europe, or in the USA I hear. Again, lots of people “bought” it but didn’t buy into it.
  • CSP: Microsoft will be putting a big push on Cloud Solution Provider as a new means to resell and distribute cloud services via “tier 1” and “tier 2” partners. There are serious issues with CSP, such as partner-provided 24*7 technical support and lack of subscription transitioning.
  • Surface & devices: What news will there be? Will Microsoft finally fix the one business problem that Surface has? Answer: a viable channel to business. You wouldn’t believe how much Surface business we turn away because of Microsoft’s own stupid rules.
  • Windows 10: This one will be tricky. As a distributor, Windows 10 is bad news for us (free is bad when you’re in the business of selling). I think Microsoft will encourage partners into selling deployment projects. I think partners will be looking for ways to block Windows 10 until business owners say they want it. BYOD is an American thing (source: IDC).

Don’t expect anything of value on Windows Server or System Center.

BTW, this would be a nice time to announce the RTM of Windows 10. But really, I expect this to be a blog post, maybe on Friday morning (10-11am) Redmond time.

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5nine Webinar on Hyper-V Security Best Practices

5nine, an advertiser on this site, is running a webinar this week on implementing Hyper-V security best practices for  Hosting and VDI and Service Providers.

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The content:

Many hosting, VDI and service providers have embraced virtualization and now see its incredible benefits! However, they often trust their tenants too much and lack appropriate security protection for viruses, malware, and other types of distributed attacks.

Do you know the best way to avoid these security breaches?

 

The speakers:

Join 5nine’s virtualization expert Symon Perriman (5nine Software’s VP of Business Development and former Microsoft worldwide virtualization lead), and Alex Karavanov (5nine Software’s Director of Solutions Engineering) to learn the best practices for providing multi-layered and multi-tenant protection and compliance for Hyper-V, System Center Virtual Machine Manager (SCVMM) and Azure Pack (WAP).

Looking Back on Microsoft Ignite 2015

I’m back from Chicago and, damn, am I jet lagged. I slept from 05:30 until the alarm went off at 07:00 this morning, and I’m sitting here in work, dying. But it was worth it. Ignite was a huge event, in more ways than one.

The public claims was that 23,500 delegates attended this conference. It sure felt like it at times:

  • The keynote was nuts and I’m glad we went in early.
  • Getting food was … more on this later.

Satya Nadella set the tone immediately in the keynote. This was a time of hybrid solutions and Microsoft needed IT pros to be the agents of change, be it on premises, in the public cloud, or both. It’s been years since Microsoft reached out to IT pros like this, and it was good to see. And then the announcements came flooding out. Unfortunately, the keynote clocked in at around 3 hours, and that was 1.5 hours too long. The content was good and, IMO, was right to focus on integrated solutions instead of products, but it was just too long. I’d say 60% of the audience left the main hall before the end. There was a queue to get out with around 40 minutes to go.

Windows Server 2016 and System Center 2016 were the main pieces for me, along with lots of Azure-ness. Of great interest is Azure Stack, which is very early in development, but is the on-premises/hosted version of Azure that will be able to directly manage WS2016 without System Center, although System Center will be required for HNV, etc. Lots of what I’ve known for some time was made public and I can finally talk about those things 🙂 Storage Spaces Direct (S2D) and virtual TPM are right up there for me. And finally Microsoft started to talk about the enterprise story for Windows 10.

I attended as many sessions as I could, with some meetings here and there. I mostly attended Windows Server sessions which I found very interesting. I’m always working with the latest or vNext so the content suited me perfectly. However, I can understand why some folks might have been disappointed by the low amount of vCurrent information. I understand Microsoft talking a lot about vNext (the repetition of contained content might be questioned), because there is a lot to get ready for, and as I said, this is the information I am after when I go to an event because it prepares me for my teaching and writing.

The Wi-Fi was terrible. I know; it’s always bad at these events but this was just shocking. If I was the manufacturer of the WAPs then I’d be begging the organisers not to advertise my brand. Speakers normally have a dedicated network, but from what I could tell, this didn’t help. Many of the demos I saw failed because of remote access issues.

I spoke twice at the conference. My first session was The Hidden Treasures of Windows Server 2012 R2 Hyper-V. I managed to fill the room, and I was told that there was a queue to get in (very cool!). I was very worried about my 13 demos, all of which were remotely accessed from Dublin. I had bought a USB 3.0 to Ethernet adapter in Best Buy the night before and that appeared to sort out any issues. I really enjoyed this session. I was nervous when I spoke in Barcelona at TechEd Europe 2014, but I was comfortable this time around, and I even threw in a few jokes that weren’t rehearsed – some folks even laughed! Thankfully, the scores and comments have been good (so far) in the feedback.

imageThe view from where I presented 

After that I went to the Petri meetup and writers dinner. That was a fun night out with the gang from Petri.com and Thurrott.com. Thanks to Stephen and Paul for the lift!

I spoke again on Thursday afternoon in one of the community theatres. I was scheduled to talk at 12:05, and I was there early to set up. Just as I was about to start talking, some dude came up and claimed he had the same slot on the same stage to talk about Skype. He complained to the staff, and he was let speak instead of me. So I removed my stuff as most of the audience left. Someone wondered why he didn’t do his session using Skype instead. After quite some ordeal, I was rescheduled and the Ignite team let everyone who had enrolled for my slot about the new time – very efficiently too, I should add. I got going later in the day and had a great time talking about using Azure Site Recovery to create DR solutions for small to mid-size businesses. Thank you to those who helped sort out the double-booking (very professionally) and to those who made the time to come listen – I think I went up against some of the big hitters in that time slot!

Part of attending an event like this is networking. I got to meet lots of old friends which was awesome. It’s always good to chat with Microsoft product group members, the folks from Channel 9, fellow MVPs, and delegates who are there to learn like me.

We enjoyed the city too. I was at Ignite with my fiancée and we wandered Chicago the weekend before the conference, making the most of the citypass vouchers we bought online. Our feet were falling off of us by Sunday night, and we saw quite a bit. We were in a really nice location on N. Michigan Avenue so we were surrounded by lots to do and see. There was the obligatory trip to The Cheescake Factory, an awesome experience at the Gibsons steakhouse, and a yum breakfast with fab service at The Original Pancake House.

Logistics-wise, this was a conference of two tales. On the positive side, the Microsoft staff (purple shirts) were both friendly and efficient. They stood in strategic locations helping delegates find their rooms. At each room the teams were quick to smile and say hi. They were in great spirits too after the party when they were running the baggage check. For me, the buses ran fine, and the private road to the conference centre bypassed the worst of the traffic – we were probably in one of the furthest hotels, about 35 minutes away.

On the negative side, (I’ve already talked about the shocking Wi-Fi) was the food and everything about it. The local staff treated delegates like prisoners. My fiancée was screamed at for trying to go to the loo, accused of breaking a line for food that she had no intention of eating. The local staff were horrible, as was the supplied conference food. I know these are protected unionised people but Microsoft needs to do something. We chose to eat at the McDonalds in the centre instead. Yes, the queues were mental but the staff were quick – there was a rumour that they ran out of food one day!!!

Would I do Ignite again in 2016 in Chicago? Yes. I was there for the content which was there for me in great amounts (I have lots of videos to watch), I enjoyed the company and the city. Are there things I would like to see improved? Sure there are, and hopefully they will be fixed. I can confirm that everyone in Microsoft that I talked to had heard the complaints, including that article. But you know what, the reason I go to a conference is to get content and that content was there for me.

Before I wrap up, there are some thanks to give:

  • Ben, Sarah and Rick who helped out with getting my Hyper-V session organized.
  • Manoj who helped sort out the schedule conflict with my ASR session.
  • Those very generous people who offered me their phones for Wi-Fi access to do my remote demos when I was worried about the demo network.
  • My fiancée for here support and critique as I rehearsed and paced in our hotel room on Monday night.

So … when does registration for Ignite 2016 start?

Ignite 2015–Keynote

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The room is huge. The screens feature a sports-style “before the event” set of reports and interviews to entertain the audience – necessary because the wifi is frakked. Brad Anderson goes through lots of stats, including that there are 24,000 IT pros attending Ignite – which is actually small for this venue according to a taxi driver we talked to over the weekend.

Here goes the start of Ignite – Spark the Future

Here goes the start of Ignite – Spark the Future

Rapper, Common, opens the show, walking through the crowd, evangelizing us to spark the future and to drive change.

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Satya Nadella

The Microsoft CEO comes out to laucnh Ignite. He tells us that this was an important time to bring more IT pros together, thus the conference merger that makes Ignite. It makes sense – Microsoft products are not vertical solutions; they’re integrated. This is more than technology; it’s how we do business, partner, and meet the real world needs of our customers.

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What is mobile first, cloud first. Mobile first is not about the monbility of  a single device. What matters is the mobility of our experiences across all devices. Cloud first is the back-end enabler that adds intelligence. We are not there yet – there’s years of evolution.

There will be more devices than people on the planet – see IoT. Cloud will be required to support them.

There is a tension to manage this changing IT landscape. They want to enable users to have friction free and mobile choice computing, while maintaining security and privacy. Business needs to choose SaaS of choice, but with control and efficiency. We will manage the data deluge. Big data is not equal to big insights, but that’s what Mirosoft is chasing. There are questions about what clouds you will work with – the diversity of workloads will drive decisions about hybrid computing. Here lies the opportunity for IT.

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And here is where Microsoft wants to win with 3 interlocking ambitions:

1) The era of more personal computing
2) Reinventing the process of how we work
3) Building intelligence the intelligent backend for these applications

Creating more personal computing.  What matters most is the mobility of experience. Human interaction should be natural. They are investing in mouse, keyboard, hologram, ink and touch.

We will see Surface Hub and HoloLens, samples of new types of devices that will change how we work. Innovation of silicon hardware and software together enables this. The most profound change is the new generation of Windows, Windows 10 delivered as a service.

Announcing a new capability in Windows 10. Windows Update today has great reach in consumer world. A new business capability will drive improvement for business users. Details not shared.

He wants to reinvent productivity and business process. New tools like Cortana (5 countries only), Sway, Delve, PowerBI and sales productivity (CRM online). Microsoft is building a control plane to enforce compliance.

Announcing Office 2016 public preview. Skype for Business Broadcasting. Office Delve organizational something.

Building the intelligent cloud:

Having data alone is useless. You need the tooling to get insights. The data center must be transformed to enable choice between public and private cloud, and to enable tiering across the two.

There are some server announcements. Server & System Center 2016 preview. SQL Server 2016 preview too. The Operations Management Suite is one IT control plane for all virtual machines and servers irrespective of which data center they are in: server health availability, backup, orchestration. Avcanced Threat Analytics is a new security solution.

The CEO of Real Madrid is brought out to share their story. FC Barcelona fans storm out in a huff.

Real Madrid is a members club with 90,000 owners that requires great social media. They are using big data analysis for partner operations, player analystics, and fan engagement. They used Microsoft technology to transform their business.

Satya wants to close out by talking about the rest of the keynote.

Joe Belfiore

His mission: your end users are going to love and desire Windows 10.

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Need to make it easy for XP/Windows 7 users to get a familiar experience with a balance of things are where they expect them, and new features with help.

There are new ways to interact: with Edge, pen, Cortana, and the security improvements make Windows 10 more human friendly.

Straight into the demos, starting with the beginning for Windows 7 users. The start menu must balance familiarty and new features. They think they are near the final design now. Jump lists are back in for Windows 7 users. Live Tiles are there for Windows 8 users in the menu – this is a more natural approach on the PC for Windows 7 users IMO.

The task bar has a button for ALT-TAB to switch between apps. Only 5-10% of users use ALT-TAB. Universal Apps work just like programs from the user perspective. Now some new stuff. CTRL Windows plus arrow flips between desktops. You can drag and drop apps to another desktop now (applause).

Cortana. Boo! 5 countries that it will support care. I fall asleep. Cortana via PowerBI and Azure AD can tell Joe how many people were registered for Ignite as of a week ago. Very useful demo of real business usage: simple questions asked of the PC, and useful answers pulled from big data.

Next on to Edge, the new browser, a universal app with protections and high performance. Joe talks about extension support. He has a BBC Mundo (Spanish) page. He goes into reading mode and a translator extension automatically translates the page into his native language.

He has a phone and PC. Outlook mail is open on both. Both are similar looking – it is literally the same code. Same with Word. Adaptive UI capabilities in Windows re-lays out an app for the screen size and input methods. Everywhere from HoloLens and phone to massive Surface Hub: 1 app.

Continuum transforms your device for mobile scenarios without compromise. he opens apps on dekstop mode in a Surface Pro 3. Takes off the keyboard. A popup asks if he wants to go into tablet mode. And the primary app now goes full screen. He can still swipe from left to switch apps. The Action Center is there. And the start menu is a full screen.

Continuum also goes the other way. There’s an 8” Lenovo tablet where the default usage is in tablet mode. The start screen scrolls vertically like on the phone.  Same task switching and menu buttons. There is a system-wide back button for app navigation, like in Android. The tablet can run Win32 apps. He docks it, and the machine goes into PC mode with a nice big desktop on the monitor. The apps are now in Windows on the desktop. Users get natural UI for the way the device is currently being used.

Now: Windows Phone docks via MiraCast and Bluetooth (simulation now due to lack of phone hardware) but you get a desktop on a monitor and can run apps on the phone via the mouse and keyboard. It’s the same programs as on a tablet or PC: Universal Apps. The Start Menu is the start screen of the phone. This will revolutionise mobile computing IMO. The phone is the dominant form factor and Microsoft is the first to offer this package.

Joe promises that users will love Windows. Security will “smile and wink at them” while keeping your business secure.

Windows Hello and Microsoft Passport demo combination. Passport replaces passwords. It enables 2-factor authentication (e.g. phone and PC). Hello uses biometrics with special hardware. He has covered a camera with a black cloth. He pulls the cloth, and is logged in instantly.

BitLocker is up next. You get more control over how data moves between apps. He has a “secret” doc in Word. The default save action is to save and encrypt the document. Some docs are green (encrypted) and black (not encrypted).. Selects some old docs in File Explorer and encrypts them. Files can be shared via USB key but the docs remain encrypted and useable by authorised users. IT gets tools to set the right policies to make actions default and/or natural. This supports third party apps.

Gurdeep Singh Pall

Another corporate VP, wanting to talk to us about reinventing productivity. 20 years ago he worked on TCP-IP to work on pre-Internet slow networks.

If the rate of change on the outside exceeds the rate of change on the inside, the end is near – Jack Welch. Once, companies stayed 75 years on the Fortune 500. Now they stay there for 15 years. The Miillenials are the carriers of that change. By 2020, the majority of workers will be post-Internet millenials. They work different, the talk different, they use different.

  • Work is what you do, not where you go.
  • Individual productivity is important, but teams of people accomplish things.

Serial workflow of the past will not succeed in the future (is that now?). Microsoft considers themselves the custodians of productivity:

  • Teams: very dynamic and needs to be simple to create/disband teams via self-service. This is empowered by O365 via groups.
  • Work from anywhere: Focused on mobile experience. The phone is not mobile – it cannot move without you. The experience is important: across all devices. Skype had 500 million downloads on Google play on Valentines day.
  • Meetings: Most meetings have remote attendees. The remote person is usually the special guest so they cannot be second class. Video is a huge bet for Microsoft: Skype for Business. Half of all Skype calls are video – bringing that experience to work. 55% of communications is body language. Average meeting takes 30 minutes to get going. They want to eliminate that with Surface Hub and partners. “Stop using Webex and other tech from the last decade and use your money on better things” – after showing HoloLens video.
  • Content co-creation; Office 2016. Innate collaboration built-in.
  • Intelligence: 4.4 zetabytes in 2013. 44 zetabytes in 2020. That data will inundate you! Requires intelligence. This is where things like Delve and PowerBI become important.

Julia White

The fast-talking Julia White comes out to demo the previous 5 concepts with Microsoft tech. Delve is first, pulling in information from Office 365 and SalesForce (possible via API). Office 365 is the YouTube of the enterprise. Office 365 groups is a dynamic team with content gathered in one place via Delve. Skype for Business has federation and consumer connectivity.

Sneak Peek of a feature coming to O365 later this year. It’s a dashboard of social interaction to breakdown how time us being used, connections made, interactions, etc. She can see that lots of time is used on meetings and dives into that to get analysis. Outlook supports O365 groups for meeting invitations. When she clicks attach, the most recently used docs are in a nice jump list – TIME SAVER!

Does a Skype for Business video meeting. Opens Word and shares a doc so everyone can co-create. Nothing new about the concept but … now this works with the desktop app via Office 2016.  Now we’re cooking with diesel.

Sway is coming to O365 business and education plans in June. Julia has the Surface Hub out on stage. Feature list: all that’s missing is coffee maker. Does some whiteboard notes on the device. Adds in a person mid-meeting. Does stuff with PowerBI to visualise data. Hard to keep up because … well .. she talks fast.

Skype Broadcast is shown. There’s a sentiment chart for what’s happening at the moment. The producer view enables you to switch between feeds, etc. It’s a part of Skype and O365.

Lots of productivity solutions made from integrated solutions.

Back to Gurdeep.

Once again, we get the "IT is at the interaction" slide gluing togther the 3 concepts from Satya’s keynote. We are Q in James Bond. Take the products to our users and make them productive.

Brad Anderson

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Essential features in cloud and computing:

  • Tustworthy
  • Flexible
  • Integrated
  • Intelligent

The nature of threats has changed. Damage and theft are caused primarily by compromised identity. 

Security starts with the device. Your ID managment, Azure AD, stretches ID to the cloud so you can control ID policy. EMS provides a way to manage devices and applications that empowers users but keeps security and protection under IT control. This is a modern architecture for what the user and business both want: mobile first and cloud first.

MSFT offers defense in depth. Protect:

  • device
  • apps
  • files
  • identity (the glue)

Windows 10 was designed for enterprise defence against modern attack methods. There are a variety of uses cases: factory automation, IoT, personal phones, etc.

Brad opens an email on Windows 7. It looks legit. Some code will execute: the firewall and antimalware services are turned off. Same attack on Windows 10. Device Guard prevents this unauthorised code from running.

There is a full set of MDM features for ConfigMgr and Intune.

Application management is about separating personal from corporate apps and data. Feedback was that users wanted Outlook support. He has an iPad running with Outlook. The demo gods descend and prevent Outlook from starting – it freezes and crashes. Intune can now enforce policies in Outlook. He copies text from an email and attemps to paste it in. Paste works fine. Now he opens Twitter and the paste option is missing. Policy prevents data from moving from corporate to personal apps.

Feedback: users want to use apps for personal and professional stuff. IT can allow this now.

Data Leakage Protection (DLP) is in Windows 10 too. The message for this allows users to override the block, but this is logged for later auditing. This works in programs natively: no wrapping required.

They want people to distribute apps via the Windows Store. RDS is also available. Now he’s showing off azure RemoteApp. We get a demo on the iPad with a Windows touch app.

Files can be self-protecting: Azure Rights Management. Telemetry is sent to a central management site so IT/security/auditors can track file usage and transport. In a demo we see a person tried to open a file unsuccessfully a number of times. A world map shows good/failed opens with names and a timeline.  The business can track the usage of their sensitive information.

On to identity. AD is the traditional system we have used on premises. Cloud App Discovery finds the SaaS apps that people are using, and therefore  using bad ID. You can bring these apps under the control of Azure AD for single/shared sign-in with IT control over shadow IT. If a person leaves the company, they lose access to SalesForce.

Advanced Threat Analytics allows IT to track log-ins. For example, a user logs into machines in 2 countries at the same time. MSFT are searching for ID that is for sale in the dark web to alert you. This works with Azure AD and on-premises AD (via acquisition). There’s an on-premises demo. A developer is trying to access LOB apps that are outisde his scope of work. All of this is audited and presented in a dashboard. His device tried to run a couple of attacks against a DC. There was a brute force attack on his account that succeeded. All of this is shown in a timeline in the dashboard. (applause).

Here comes Terry Myerson to talk about how Windows 10 adds more.

Terry Myerson

He’s talking about a new update mechanism for Windows 10. The room is starting to empty. This keynote is too long. @cloud_girl_mwh tells me that the floor at the back is full of people sitting on the floor – not enough space.

858 million diverse Windows devices will be updated by Windows Update. Android: Google takes no responsibility for updating their devices: up to the telephone companies who rarely issue updates.

Windows 10 is introducing long-term servicing branches. Only security updates will be in the long-term branches, keeping mission critical devices secure. Consumers will get Windows as a Service, continually getting innovation. They’ll get security updates from Windows Update and feature updates. They’ll also spread this out over more than just 1 day per month. There will be distribution rings. Some want it fast, and others are more cautious. Windows Update for Consumers will offer this, as in the preview.

They want to address issues with updates for business customers doing selective patching. This can leave security holes and configuration fragmentation. The process is thankless and tiresome. Today they are announcing Windows Update for Business: best of both worlds. IT control over the automated process of delivering innovation and security updates. Free for Windows 10 Pro and Enterprise.

  • Distribution rings
  • Maintenance windows
  • peer-peer delivery: better usage of bandwidth for remote sites
  • Integrates with existing tools (Intune and SCCM) for single pane of glass management

At this point 1/5 of the room has emptied. There’s a huge queue of people at the back trying to exit the room.

System Center 2012 SCCM will offer support for Windows 10.

40% of IT spend is in shadow IT on SaaS apps, outside of the control of IT. Microsoft is offering a solution to bring these under IT control.

Stretch database. Stretch SQL Server from your data center into Azure. You can stretch a part of a table (cold data) and place it in the cloud where storage is cheap.

Onto Windows Server and System Center and Azure. The Azure Pack is evolving. People want all of Azure in the data center. The Azure Stack provides the entire IaaS and PaaS environment in private or hosted deployments. Customers can have their own cloud-inspired infrastructure. This includes service load balancing.

Windows Server 2016 technical preview 2 is out today. System Center 2016 preview is out next week. Micro applications are possible on Windows Server in 2016. This is Docker on Windows. There is desired configuration management on Linux.

Here comes Jeff Woolsey

Jeff Woolsey

He’s doing an Azure Stack demo. He shows RBAC in Azure. Now he shows the on-premises Azure Stack. This has the same blade-based Ibiza UI as Azure. The UI looks identical. RBAC, blob storage, etc, all there. Software defined networking from Azure fabric comes to Windows Server 2016. We see JSON based IaaS template deployment.

Back to Brad.

Microsoft Operations management Suite (OMS) gives you any location/cloud/OS/application management: DR, Hyper-V, VMware, backup, etc. This is EMS for data centers. Here’s Jeff to demo.

OMS will be avaialble for free this week. It appears to be a re-labelled Operational Insights. You can link things like SCOM or Azure Storage Accounts. He can import custom logs. Marketing has definitely made over Operational Insights. This is probably still not a SCOM replacement – probably still needed to aggregate health/performance stuff (guess). Data analytics is done by Hadoop in the back.

Back to Brad.

And that was it. In my opinion:

  • I would have like to have seen more Windows Server & System Center
  • The types of demo were prefect: solutions from integrated products.
  • There were lots of announcements
  • It was 1 hour too long.

All The Details On My Two Ignite Sessions

Thanks (I think!!!) to John at MicroWarehouse (my employer) for sticking this on the company website:

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I think he even Photoshop slimmed me Smile

Here’s the details of both my sessions:

The Hidden Treasures of Windows Server 2012 R2 Hyper-V

  • When: 5:00PM – 6:15PM, Tuesday, May 5th
  • Where: E451A
  • Session code: BRK3506

My first session is a 75 minute level 300 session focusing on lesser known features of the version of Hyper-V that you can deploy now, and leaves you in the best position to upgrade to vNext. Don’t worry if you’ve seen by TEE14 session; this one is 50% different with some very useful stuff that I’ve never presented on or blogged about before.

It’s one thing to hear about and see a great demo of a Hyper-V feature. But how do you put them into practice? This session takes you through some of those lesser-known elements of Hyper-V that have made for great demonstrations, introduces you to some of the lesser-known features, and shows you best practices, how to increase serviceability and uptime, and design/usage tips for making the most of your investment in Hyper-V.

 

End-to-End Azure Site Recovery Solutions for Small & Medium Enterprises

  • When: 12:05PM – 12:25PM, Thursday, May 7th
  • Where: EXPO: Lounge C Theater
  • Session Code: THR0903

My second session is 20 minutes on Azure DR solutions for SMEs in the community theatre. I’ve done lots of lab and proof-of-concept work with ASR in the SME space and this presentation focuses on the stuff that no one talks about – it’s easy to replicate VMs, but what about establishing services, accessing failed over VMs, and more?!?!?

In this session I will share some tips and lessons that I have learned from working with Azure Site Recovery services to provide a complete disaster recovery solution in Azure for Hyper-V virtual machines in a small/medium enterprise.

Reminder: Webinar on ODX for Hyper-V and VAAI for vSphere Storage Enhancement

Here’s a reminder of the webinar by StarWind that I am co-presenting with Max Kolomyeytsev. We’ll be talking about offloading storage operations to a SAN using ODX for Wnidows Server & Hyper-V and VAAI for vSphere. It’s a great piece of functionality and there are some things to know before using it. The session starts at tomorrow at 19:00 UK/IE time, 20:00 CET, and 14:00 EST. Hopefully we’ll see you there!

Register here.

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Altaro Webinar Recording and Slides – What’s New in Hyper-V vNext

I recently co-presented a webinar by Altaro with Rick Claus (Microsoft) and Andrew Syrewicze (MVP) on what’s coming in the next version of Windows Server Hyper-V. Altaro has a recording of the webinar online. That page will be updated soon with a written Q&A from the ssession; we had A LOT of questions and Altaro asked me to write out responses which I did last Friday night. You can also download a PDF copy of the slides from the session.

Thank you to everyone that joined us. We had a great number of people tuned in – I was stunned when the folks at Altaro broke down the numbers. Hopefully, I’ll see some of you tomorrow night in the webinar I am co-presenting for StarWind on using ODX or VAAI to enhance storage performance for Hyper-V or vSphere respectively.

I Have A Second Session At Microsoft Ignite

I already has a session called The Hidden Treasures of Windows Server 2012 R2 Hyper-V at Microsoft Ignite. And this week I found out that I was awarded a second session. This one will be a community/theatre session run at lunch time. It is called End-to-End Azure Site Recovery Solutions for Small & Medium Enterprises (session code THR0903):

In this session I will share some tips and lessons that I have learned from working with Azure Site Recovery services to provide a complete disaster recovery solution in Azure for Hyper-V virtual machines in a small/medium enterprise.

Personally, along with Azure AD, I think ASR is a hot “on ramp” feature of Azure because it extends existing investments and offers an affordable solution to an old business problem. I’ve been working with Azure for DR purposes in the SME space for a while and I’ve picked up quite a few tips from the ASR/HVR team, and I’ve learned a few things while working on customer site, all of which I aim to share in this session.

This community session isn’t on the session builder yet is on the Session Builder now, starting at 12:05 on Thursday May 7th in Expo:Lounge C Theater. It’s a short session so I won’t be impacting too much on your lunch break, and this is a session that will prep you for a nice post-conference briefing with your boss & colleagues upon your return on the following Monday 🙂

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