Migrating Two Non-Clustered Hyper-V Hosts To A Failover Cluster (With DataOn & Storage Spaces)

At work we have a small number of VMs to operate the business.  For our headcount, we actually would have lots of VMs, but distribution requires lots of systems for lots of vendors.  I generally have very little to do with our internal IT, but I’ll get involved with some engineering stuff from time to time.

2 non-clustered hosts (HP DL380 G6) were setup before I joined the company.  I upgraded/migrated those hosts to WS2012 earlier this year (networking = 4 * 1 GbE NIC team with virtualized converged networking for management OS and Live Migration). 

We decided to migrate the non-clustered hosts to create a Hyper-V cluster.  This was made feasibly affordable thanks to Storage Spaces, running on a shared JBOD.  We distribute DataOn, so we went with a single DNS-1640, to attached to both servers using the LSI 9207-8e dual port SAS card.

Yes, we’re doing the small biz option where two Hyper-V hosts are directly connected to a JBOD where Storage Spaces is running.  If we had more than 2 hosts, we would have used the SMB 3.0 architecture of Scale-Out File Server (SOFS).  Here is the process we have followed so far (all going perfectly up to now):

Step 1 – Upgrade RAM

Each host had enough RAM for it’s solo workload.  In a cluster, a single node must be capable of handling all VMs after a failover.  In our case, we doubled the RAM in each of the two servers.

Step 2 – Drain VMs from Host1

Using Shared-Nothing Live Migration, we moved VMs from Host1 to Host2.  This allows us to operate on a host for an extended period without affecting production VMs.

Note that this only worked because we had already upgraded the RAM (step 1) and we had sufficient free disk space in Host2.

Step 3 – Connect Host1

We added an LSI card into Host1.  We racked the JBOD.  And then we connected Host1 to the JBOD, one SAS cable going to port1/module1 in the JBOD, and the other SAS cable going to port1/module2 in the JBOD (for HA).

Host1 was booted up.  I downloaded the drivers, firmware, and BIOS from LSI for the adapter (never, ever use the drivers for anything that come on the Windows media if there is an OEM driver) and installed them.

Step 4 – Create Cluster

I installed two Windows features on Host1:

  • Failover Clustering
  • MPIO

I added SAS in MPIO, requiring a reboot.

Additional vNIC was added to the Management OS called Cluster2.  I then renamed the Live Migration network to Cluster 1.  QoS was configured so that the VMSwitch has 25% in the default bucket, and each of the 3 vNICs in the ManagementOS has 25% each.

SMB Multichannel constraints was configured for Cluster1 and Cluster2 for all servers.  That’s to control which NICs are used by SMB Multichannel (used by Redirected IO).

I then created a single node cluster and configured it.  Then it was time for more patching from Windows Update.

Step 5 – Hotfixes

I downloaded the recommended updates for WS2012 Hyper-V and Failover Clustering (not found on Windows Update) using a handy PowerShell script.  Then I installed them on & rebooted Host1.

Step 6 – Storage Spaces

In Failover Cluster manager I configured a new storage pool.  We’re still on WS2012 so a single hot spare disk was assigned.  Note that I strongly recommend WS2012 R2 and not assigning a hot spare; parallelized restore is a much faster and better option.

3 virtual disks (LUNs) were created:

  • Witness for the cluster
  • CSV1
  • CSV2

Rule of thumb: create 1 CSV per node in the cluster that is connected by SAS to the Storage Pool.

Step 7 – Configure Cluster Disks

The cluster is still single-node, so configuring a witness disk for quorum will cause alerts.  You can do it, but be aware of the alerts.

Each of the CSV virtual disks were converted to CSV and renamed to CSV1 and CSV2, including the mount points.

Step 8 – Test

Using Shared-Nothing Live Migration, a VM was moved to the cluster and placed on a CSV. 

This is where we are now, and we’re observing the performance/health of the new infrastructure.

Step 9 – Shared-Nothing Live Migration From Host2

All of the VMs will be moved from the D: of Host2 to the cluster and spread evenly across the two CSVs in the cluster, running on Host1.  This will leave Host1 drained.

Remember to reconfigure backups to backup VMs from the cluster!

Step 10 – Finish The Job

We will:

  1. Reconfigure the networking of Host2 as above (I’ve saved the PowerShell)
  2. Insert the LSI card in Host2 and connect it to the JBOD
  3. Install all the LSI drivers & updates on Host2 as we did on Host1
  4. Add the Failover Cluster and MPIO roles to Host2
  5. Add Host2 as a node in the cluster
  6. Patch up Host2
  7. Test Live Migration
  8. Plan out VM failover prioritization
  9. Configure Cluster Aware Updating self-updating for lunch time on the second Monday of every month – that’s a full month after Patch Tuesday, giving MSFT plenty of time to fix any broken updates (I’m thinking of Cumulative Updates/Update Rollups).

And that should be that!

Another Windows Phone Hatchet Job? – Lumia 1020

I’m using this phone for 3 weeks.  Camera: excellent.  Social experience: excellent.  Apps: need some work but improving.  Only issue I’m having is when I’m listening to something in the car on the phone, I get a text, and the audio stops until I acknowledge the text – that’s a little unsafe.

Best thing I can say: this is the longest I’ve used Windows Phone as my personal handset without once getting annoyed at it :D  I’ve no plans to switch off of it for now.

I think that counts as high praise!?!?!?

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Toshiba Encore Windows 8.1 8” Tablet – Initial Impression

After the Dell Venue 8 Pro tablet debacle, I was hesitant about getting another Windows 8.1 mini tablet.  But I do need something for work (I’d be murderfied if I used the Android-powered Lenovo Yoga 8 at a MSFT event – not kidding!), so I decided to get the Toshiba Encore 32 GB 8” tablet, running Windows 8.1 (the consumer product, not RT).  Note: I work for a Toshiba distributor, and I was lucky enough to get one of the very limited stock.

Encore Series Tablets

Available from:

Appearance

The tablet is just over 10mm thick.  That’s thinker than an iPad mini, but not unreasonable.  The portrait mode works and feels natural, but more on that later.  The back is a tough plastic of some kind, not the Samsung shiny/bendy/slippery kind, but a pleasant & textured kind.

Screen

It’s a 1280 * 800 IPS display.  It seems to do the trick.  Don’t get overly caught up on pixel counts.  The original iPad mini has a lower screen resolution.  It’s all about pixels per inch (PPI).  You don’t see those pixels with the normal human eye on a screen this size.  It would be very different on a 10” device.  Multitouch support is there as you would expect.  Note that Windows 8.1 defaults to portrait mode.

Controls

You get a capacitive Windows button at the front of base of the tablet.  It has a reassuring buzz response like you get on most Windows phones.  The power button and volume rocker are on the top right edge, slightly protruding.  I’d like them flush to avoid accidental pushes, but it’s not a big deal.

Performance

You get the new Intel “Bay Trail” quad core Atom CPU, with 8 logical processors.  This is noticeably better than the previous generation “Clover Trail” CPU.  The tablet is responsive and plays games like Hills Of Glory very well.  Browsing was good.  Video play is good.

Battery

I’ve not done any formal test but I think I’d get 7 hours from the battery.  I’d like more, but this is a consumption device.  You pick it up and use it lightly for short periods of time.

Expansion

You get the expected Micro-SD slot, found uncovered on the top-left edge.  This allows up to 64 GB of expansion.  You’ll need this slot if you go with the 32 GB, which has just 10 GB free out of the box.  I think most people should go for the 64 GB model once it appears.  The price point of the 32 GB 8” tablets (all brands) will draw consumers to that size.

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The device is powered via Micro-USB at the top.  There is the usual audio jack on the top.

This tablet has something that I have not seen in others, and is definitely not in the Dell Venue 8 Pro.  There is a Micro-HDMI port for connecting another display.  That will be useful for PowerPoint.  However, I have not found it useful for video.  When you play a video it plays on the main display (the tablet).  Without a Bluetooth mouse, there is no way to project the video to another display.  This is a flaw in the Windows 8.1 video app rather than in the tablet itself.   A way around will be Miracast, but that has challenges all of it’s own.

There is no support for a digitizer.  You can use one of those tablet pens – not as good, but this is primarily a consumer device where stylus support is not required.  Yes, the Dell Venue 8 Pro has a stylus option, but it sucks the big one.

Software

You get some of the usual Toshiba bits, including manuals (uninstalled), Toshiba Today (or something), McAfee 30 day trial (uninstalled), and a third-party cra-app store (uninstalled).

Part of the cost of the tablet is a full OEM edition of Office 2013 Home & Student.  Who really wants to work on Office on an 8” device?  Maybe you want to view some stuff or make a quick edit?  It’ll do that.  But maybe you want to try use a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse and connect a monitor via Micro-HDMI?  Then you have a lightweight productivity solution.  I haven’t tried it, but I used my Clover Trail tablet for a lot of Office stuff, so with the right peripherals, the Toshiba Encore might do a good job.

On the App side, Windows is still lagging way behind.  I have maybe 3-4 times more apps installed on my Lenovo Yoga 8 (Android 4.2).

Experience

I used the tablet quite a bit over the weekend after getting it on Thursday.  Social media was the main thing, and a little browsing and surfing.  In other words, just as it is meant to be used.  It worked very well, especially when I was using it to keep up with other games while watching the NFL action last night.

Satellite S50 Series

Summary

This is a very nice device, and it’s working out much better than the questionable quality Dell Venue 8 Pro.  The Lenovo Yoga 8 will continue to be my entertainment device, but the Toshiba Encore will be my work tablet.  I’ll post more when I have a chance to push the tablet a bit.

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Dell Management Packs Now Support Microsoft System Center 2012 R2

Thanks Florian Klaffenbach for the heads up on this.  Dell have announced that they support System Center 2012 R2:

  • Dell Server Management Pack Suite ― Discover, inventory and monitor Dell PowerEdge servers (agent-based option with Windows/OpenManage Server Administrator and agent-free option using WSMAN for 12th Generation of Dell PowerEdge Servers), Chassis Management Controllers using SNMP &  iDRACs using SNMP.   Download: version 5.1 , Documentation
  • Dell Client Management Pack –Discover, inventory and monitor Dell Client PCs running Windows and OpenManage Client Instrumentation (OMCI) ― Download: Dell Client Management Pack version 5.0 , Documentation
  • Dell Printer Management Pack –Discover, inventory and monitor Dell Printers using SNMP ― Download version 5.0, Documentation
  • •Dell MD Storage Array Management Pack Suite –Discover, inventory and monitor Dell PowerVault MD Storage arrays ― Download version 5.0, Documentation
  • Dell EqualLogic Management Pack Suite–Inventory and monitor Dell EqualLogic storage arrays using SNMP― Download version 5.0, Documentation
  • The latest releases of all the listed Dell Management Packs will work as-is for System Center 2012 R2 Operations Manager; the only exception is that the Chassis Modular Server Correlation feature of the Server MP Suite is not supported on R2 (110032 in the online Release Notes).
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And My Next Ultrabook Is …

I recently posted what I wanted in a new ultrabook to replace my nearly 2 year old, non-touch, Asus UX31E.  I’ve waited, watched the market, and even considered buying in the USA when I was over there.  But even a month after Windows 8.1 GA, the same disappointing spec and overpriced machines are all that are on the market.  If you want a non-touch Ultrabook, it appears that the MacBook Air is the most economical option, even if you upgrade the RAM and SSD.

The family of devices that has caught my attention is the Lenovo Yoga series.  In fact, it was when researching them that I found out about the (Android) Yoga Tablet 8.  I was going to hold out for the Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro but two things happened:

  • There is no supply anywhere of this convertible ultrabook.
  • I discovered the ThinkPad S1 Yoga

ThinkPad are more business oriented machines, built to last.  Sounds ideal for lugging around in a camera bag through airports.  The Yoga is also available in this family.  I customized the spec, meaning it will take an additional 1-2 weeks to build and ship:

  • Intel Core i5-4200U Processor (3MB Cache, up to 2.60GHz)
  • Intel HD Graphics 4400
  • 8GB PC3-12800 DDR3L on MB
  • Windows 8.1 64
  • Touch & Pen, FHD (1920 x 1080)
  • Backlit keyboard
  • ClickPad without NFC antenna & module
  • 1TB Hard Disk Drive, 5400rpm with 16GB M.2 Solid State Drive Double

I thought about going with the 256 GB SSD.  But then I considered that I’m tired of lugging around USB 3.0 caddies when I go on photo trips.  The capacity of a 1 TB drive is going to be useful to me, and that little bit of cache will boost performance a bit.

I went with the touch/pen option because I really do use a stylus.  I use a whiteboard app quite a bit when I’m teaching.  It’s a hell of a lot easier to explain Hyper-V Replica or SOFS data flow via a “white board” on the projector than on a “small” flipchart or animated PowerPoint slide.

I ordered this ultrabook on Friday night and should have it sometime before Christmas.  It’s not a perfect machine and I’ve had to make compromises.  I’ll not get the battery life promised by Haswell.  I’ll still have to carry a USB-VGA dongle.  But it does have Miracast (I hope to blog my experience soon).

FYI, I did consider:

  • A customized MacBook Air because of the battery but there’s no touch
  • An Asus or Samsung but they focus too much on uselessly high screen resolutions that increase price with undersized disks
  • Toshiba ultrabook but they don’t do touch on the new 13/14 inch models

I’ll let you know how the Lenovo goes once I have it and have had the chance to spend some time on it.

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Nokia Lumia 1020 – First Impressions

Uh oh!  Someone in Microsoft just shat themselves; Aidan has gone and started blogging about Windows Phone again.  FYI – it led to *ahem* interesting emails the last time around.

I had some credit on the Amazon.com store so I figured I’d use it to buy the Dell 8” tablet.  That all fell apart – it’s a longer story but suffice to say, Amazon didn’t have stock.  So I looked at the 1020, loved the pictures that I saw people posting, I’m a big photography enthusiast and I thought “that might be the hardware for me”.   In the end, it cost me very little to get a grey market model from Amazon.com while I stayed in Bellevue near MSFT HQ.

The phone was delivered on Wednesday afternoon.  It had a little bit of charge and it made it through to after midnight while I was out and about and constantly playing with the phone.

First off, the camera is as advertised.  I haven’t had too much opportunity to play – photography is justifiably banned on Microsoft campuses and that’s where I’ve spent most of my time this week.  Some test shots in low light reveal very high quality images, that even a compact camera don’t appear to rival – I need to spend more time testing and comparing on a full sized monitor rather than on small LCD screens.

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The start of the Xbox One queues at Microsoft Store, Bellevue, WA, USA

This is not just a point and click camera phone.  When you see real camera controls such as ISO then you know that this is a serious camera that needs to be learned.  I’ve been living in the Canon DLSR world for years so I know my manual controls inside-out and they’re second nature to me when in the field.  I’ll need to learn the controls interface on this camera to make the most of it.

It’s a Nokia Lumia so the build and screen are superb.  They got that stuff very right in their re-invention process.  I like the button layout, with the power button being right under my finger when I hold the phone in my left hand.  The form factor is a little odd with the bulge.  This phone isn’t for everyone, but photography enthusiasts will accept it for wheat they get from the unusually large phone camera and 41 MP sensor.

The large camera requires a bulge on the back

The only hiccup that I’ve experienced has been surprising.  When connecting to my Office 365 account (P1 plan) the thing won’t just connect.  I’ve had to hack around with settings just as if it was an Android phone.  I got my email configured but Office 365 isn’t set up.

Edit: I connected to Office 365 with no problems a few days later.  Remember the Azure/DNS issue last week?  That probably affected me at the time.

The normal apps are mostly all there.  I’ve yet to dig into the edge stuff like scheduled do not disturb and so on.  Podcasts … that will decide if this phone becomes something I use just on travel or if it becomes my mainstream phone.  Right now, the HTC One rules.  Dogcatcher makes podcasting pretty easy (it’s not perfect) on Android.  The stupid policies of Microsoft hamper the podcast experience of Windows Phone users outside the big countries – – but Microsoft seem to use The Curse Of Zune to needlessly ruin lots of products.

Let’s see how I’m feeling in a few week’s time.

And in the meantime, if anyone in Microsoft wants to reach out then you can find my contact details pretty easily.  This is your opportunity to try shape my opinion.  I’d hate for you to go whining around on internal mail lists afterwards – yeah, I know all about it.

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Lenovo Yoga Tablet 8 – Mystical, Under-Promised & Over Delivered

I bought this €229 Android (4.2 Jelly Bean) tablet a few weeks ago and gave you my first impressions of it when it was delivered.  I thought it was good back then, and to quote 49ers head coach Jim Harbaugh, I think it is freakin’ mystical now.

This is not a product tablet.  This is a pure consumption tablet.  Lenovo’s designers sat down and decided to produce a lightweight device that was for surfing, social media, occasional emails, and for travel entertainment.  I think that last one was very important to them.

You’ll not that there’s an unusual cylinder along the edge of the device.  This is the battery.  It allowed Lenovo to do several things:

  • Put in a larger battery than usual (more later).
  • A mini kick stand rotates out of the back of the tablet for when you want to watch video or rest the device down.
  • The very thin device is formed to provide a comfortable hand grip for when you hold the device in portrait mode.

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The form factor works perfectly.  I’ve had it resting on the kickstand almost all of the time since I got the tablet.  And it sits very nicely on an airplane tray/table allowing me to watch a movie even when I have a meal in front of me.

The build is an aluminium frame and lower half, and a high quality textured plastic (not tacky Samsung plastic) upper back.  The screen is excellent – 1280 * 800 is perfectly acceptable on an 8” device.  It’s all about pixels per inch rather than pixel counts when you are talking about display, as any professional printer will tell you.  device is solid.

The processor is running at just 1.2 GHz but that’s a deliberate choice by Lenovo to provide better battery life.  It runs Plants VS Zombies 2 perfectly fine and I am not planning on running AutoCAD on this thing.  It is a companion device designed for consumption, which Lenovo got 100% correct in my opinion.

Why did I buy this tablet when I was going to get a Windows tablet for work?  I had no plans on buying it.  But then I saw it on the Lenovo site and saw the battery life: “Up to 16 hours”.  That got me straight away.  Imagine flying to the USA west coast from Europe with a hop through London, without fearing that the battery would die half way there.  No running to find the 3 power sockets in the terminal at Chicago O’Hare.  No squeezing out the last drop of juice at the gate in Heathrow before boarding the 747.  The promise was too much. How did it do?

Last week I flew from Berlin to San Francisco via London Heathrow.  That’s a 1.5 hour hop followed by an 11+ hours flight, with 3 hours in London.  The battery was at 100% when I left the hotel in Berlin.  I used the tablet in airplane mode to watch video for almost every second of the flight, probably around 11 hours of video play time.  I did not go near a power socket on the journey.  I checked into my hotel in San Francisco and the battery was at 54%.  When you do the maths, the tablet would have played video for 23 hours!!!

What!!!!  23 hours of video play potential.  That promised 16 hours is a lie.  A good lie by marketing!!!!  I’ve talked with some of my fellow MVPs about this and we’re in agreement – we think Lenovo played it very safe, promising a still amazing “up to 16 hours” and delivering way beyond this.  Who would believe a statement of “up to 23 hours”?  Does this tablet drain power from dark matter in the cosmos?  By the way, the Yoga Tablet 10 has a bigger battery and promises “up to 18 hours”.

The only downside I can find are the speakers.  Every portable device will suck in comparison with the HTC One (Android phone) on this front.  I have no idea how HTC manage to do what they have done.  The speakers on the Yoga are tinny.  I cranked up the output using the supplied Dolby app.  But to be honest, my Bose headphones are plugged in most of the time, and the laptop’s volume only needed to be on 8/14 during a flight for perfect loudness.

I’ve been using the Yoga during my sleep deprived jetlag zombie hours while over here.  Surfing (Dolphin), social media (Facebook and Tweetcaster), media (Netflix and MX Player), all work superbly.  I’ve checked into flights, used the alarm, and kept up email.  Whatever I want, it’s there in the Google Play store.  And the tablet is siting on the kickstand by the bed whenever I wake up at the wee hours of the morning.

I am blown away by the Lenovo Yoga Tablet 8.  It contrasts 100% with my poor quality experience with the Dell Venue 8 Pro.  To me, the Lenovo Tablet 8 has set the bar for a mini consumption tablet.  The form factor, the quality, the build, don’t forget the huge Android app catalog, and the price make this a player in the market that you cannot overlook.

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Dell Venue 8 Pro – First and LAST Impressions

While in the USA, I picked up this Windows 8.1 8” tablet at Fry’s in Renton, just south of Bellevue/Redmond in Washington State.  My intention is to use a Windows 8.1 tablet as a presentation device for the next few years.  It would connect via Miracast to a Viewsonic WPG-370, which then outputs via VHA or HDMI to a display device such as a projector.

I got the tablet.  It’s a little thicker than a mid-level Android tablet, such as the Lenovo Yoga Tablet 8, or an iPad Mini, but I forgive that because it is a Bay Trail device running Windows 8.1 (not RT).  The texture of the back is nice for holding.  Performance seemed much better than Clover Trail devices of the previous generation.  The display seemed fine.  Battery is on the weaker side, promising up to 10 hours, but offering less than that if you turn off the ever annoying auto screen brightness.

And so that leads me to the problem.  You need to charge this device.  I tried to charge it on Wednesday morning.  Nothing.  No indications in Windows.  No lights.  In fact … the centre receiver in the micro/mini-USB port in the tablet felt a little loose.  I double checked everything by using another power socket, lead, and charger.  Nothing.  I had enough just left to run hardware tests and update the firmware.  Nothing.  This tablet already had an issue.

In the end, I had to sit in traffic for 2 hours to return the device on the Thursday night after my final meetings.  Luckily (I’ll get to that) Fry’s didn’t have any more of this model in stock and I got the credit returned to my card.

Why luckily?  In my experience, the hardware problem that I had indicates a manufacturing or design flaw.  I have seen this sort of thing before in disk caddies.  The central receiver in the port is not soldered sufficiently enough to the board to sustain normal wear and tear.  It becomes lose and then won’t pass power to the board.  This makes me think that the Dell Venue 8 Pro has a serious design/manufacturing flaw that will lead to lots of returned devices in the coming months.  This is bad for Windows because this was only the second device of this type to become generally available after the widely disliked Acer W3 tablet (awful screen).  This gives a false impression that Windows 8.1 mini tablets cannot be good hardware.  Fortunately for Microsoft, Dell are not yet shipping the Venue 8 Pro worldwide.  It was restricted to the USA (and in limited numbers) this time last week when I last checked.

As I said, I will be switching to a Toshiba Encore.  That device will be shipping very soon and is of a much higher spec.  Note the “up to 14 hours” battery life, meaning with non-adjusted screen brightness you might get 10-12 hours which is the sweet spot.  I know that Toshiba see this as a very important device and they have not rushed it out.  I look forward to spending some time on it.

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First Impressions of Lenovo Yoga Tablet 8

Last Sunday morning, I was lying in bed in Rome, surfing the web and looking to see if Lenovo had started selling the new Yoga 2 in Ireland.  I saw something that caught my attention – a new tablet with 18 hours battery life!  Whoah!

I dug a little deeper and saw that Lenovo had just launched the Yoga Tablet 10 (up to 18 hours battery) and the Yoga Tablet 8 (up to 16 hours battery).  Both had low horsepower 1.2 GHz MTK quad-core ARM processors running Android Jelly Bean 4.2.  There’s 1 GB RAM and 16 GB internal storage with micro SD expansion.  The display is a 1280 * 800 IPS – not retina but fine enough for me.

But this is not the usual tablet.  Look at my photo – this thing is standing up by itself.

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What Lenovo appear to have done is designed a tablet for the person who is travelling a lot and is tired of hunting for that power supply that is used by the cleaners in the airport.

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The bulge at the bottom serves several purposes:

  • It is a rotating hinge (with just the right amount of friction) for a mini-kickstand.
  • This bulge contains the battery.  Combined with just 1.2 GHz CPU, this is how the device gets long battery life.
  • A low centre of gravity keeps the device stable when stood up.
  • If feels like a nice grip when held in portrait mode for reading.  There is an ergonomic slope to the grip for your fingers.

Don’t get me wrong; this is not a productivity device.  Anyone who thinks this type of device is for running Office is a muppet.  This is a consumption device.  It’s for the sofa while watching TV, for watching video while travelling, for checking your email or posting on social networks.  It does have Bluetooth 4.0 and supports a keyboard but you’ll not see me doing that!  There is Miracast support, by the way.

I went for the 8 inch version because that, to me, is the perfect size of a companion tablet.  I have a 16 GB Micro SD plugged into it at the moment with some videos and the picture looks very good.

Price:

  • 8” is €229.99 or 269.99 for the 3G version.
  • the 10” is €289.99 or €329.99 for the 3G version.

At that price, the device must feel cheap in your hands, right?  WRONG!  There is some textured plastic like material on the back, but it feels like a quality material rather than the “Samsung plastic”.  But the majority of the device is aluminium, and the build feels very solid out of the box.  We’ll see how the hinge holds up after 6 months!

Any negatives?  Yes; the speakers are wimpy.  My HTC One phone shames most devices when it comes to speakers but it stomps all over the sound coming out of the Yoga Tablet.  That doesn’t bother me too much; I use Bose headphones when travelling.

I’m travelling quite a bit in the next two weeks (Dublin > Berlin > San Francisco > Seattle > Dublin) so I’ll be putting the Yoga Tablet to the test.  You’ll probably see a few tweets about it during that time.

Note: I am still getting a Windows 8” tablet.  Microsoft would murder me if I used an Android device at one of their events :)  Right now, the 64GB Dell Venue Pro 8 with stylus is my leading candidate.

Here’s Why I Cancelled My Xbox One Pre-Order

Sadly, I cancelled my Xbox One pre-order this morning.  I’d been thinking about this for a few weeks but 2 things pushed me over the edge over the last 24 hours.  Let me summarize all of the reasons:

Games

I don’t play a wide variety of games.  Madden lost me a few versions ago as the controls became over-fiddly.  Most of my gaming time has gone into Rockstar titles, including GTA IV and add-ons, Red Dead Redemption, and GTA V.  I detest random maze first person shooters, from Castle Wolfenstein onwards.  None of the titles for Xbox One grabs my interest.

Performance

I, like many, own a HD TV.  It cost me good money so I like to use feeds that offer 1080p.  It was a real kicker that games companies are announcing that their Xbox One versions will be crippled to 720p because they hardware just can’t keep up.  This morning, I read that Dead Rising 3 will not only be limited to 720p, but will also only run at 30 frames per second instead of the normally expected 60 FPS.   This is where the moron will comment that Dead Rising 3 is the sort of game that I just said I don’t play – true, but it is indicative that this hardware is insufficient for what it is being asked to do.

Clearly, the PS4 is trouncing the Xbox One as a games console.  That’s the purpose of the machine – I couldn’t give a flying fiddlers about Skype/streaming on Xbox because:

  • I rather do social media on a tablet/phone where I have comfort
  • Hardly any services exist outside of the USA
  • My Roku is waaaaay more reliable and simpler for media playback than anything Microsoft has offered so far

The Price

Xbox is inferior hardware to the PS4 – I’m not going to debate that because the results are already in.  The PS4 is $100/€100 cheaper.  Hmm.

Xbox sales started off slow due to stupid restriction policies that were later cancelled.  Then sales went up.  Now I am hearing anecdotal evidence that pre-order cancellations are rocketing.  It seems logical that if you do want to stick with the Xbox platform through the next generation, then you should wait until February when Microsoft will probably be forced to look at unbundling the Kinect and/or reducing the price.

Until then, I’m not willing to spend €500 for inferior hardware.

The Future of Xbox

You would think that Microsoft makes a fortune on Xbox.  The brand is very successful.  Gamers and non-gamers of different generations recognise the brand. Xbox loses a fortune for Microsoft every year.  I read last night that the $2billion/year that Microsoft makes from Android might be used to hide the Xbox losses (as well as those of Bing).  Wow!

I think there are three possible paths Microsoft might take with Xbox:

  1. Do nothing: This is what I call the Vista strategy.  Pretend that everything is fine and keep putting up blog posts to say something like “no, you’re the one with the performance issue”.
  2. Sell/Dump Xbox: Microsoft analyst, Rick Sherlund, says that Microsoft needs to sell off Xbox (and Bing).  If a new CEO does inspect the books and the headlines, then Xbox will look like a gangrenous limb that needs to be amputated.  Xbox is the very public brand that highlights many of the issues in Microsoft right now.
  3. Release Xbox One Point One: Can you imagine the hatred from Xbox One customers if Microsoft released a new console that had the hardware capable of doing what Microsoft is asking of it?  It’s possible that Microsoft could do this – but unlikely I think.

Under Ballmer, history shows us that path one will be taken (EDIT: It was).  What happens with a new CEO?  That depends.  If it’s Elop then I think he’ll do what Ballmer would do and ride Xbox to it’s death.  Other Microsoft candidates might do that, or path number 3.  I think an impartial external candidate (which I doubt will happen) would have the authority from the board (i.e. Bill Gates, which I doubt will happen) to make huge changes, including implementing path number 2.

I’m saddened by what’s happened to Xbox.  I hope there is a future for the console but I’m not very hopeful at the moment.  Here’s wishing that Microsoft proves me very wrong.