Community Event: From The Desktop to the Cloud: Let’s Manage, Monitor and Deploy

We’ve just announced the details of the latest user group event in Dublin … it’s a biggie!  I’ll be presenting two of the deployment sessions, on MAP and MDT.

Join us at the Guinness Store House on February 24th at 09:00 for a full day of action packed sessions covering everything from the desktop to The Cloud, and maybe even a pint of Guinness afterwards.

We have our a fantastic range of speakers ranging from MVPs to Microsoft Staff and leading industry specialists to deliver our sessions ensuring a truly unique experience.  During this day, you will have the choice of attending sessions of your choice, covering topics such as Windows 7/Office 2010 deployment, management using System Center, and cloud computing for the IT pro (no developer content – we promise!).

We have our a fantastic range of speakers ranging from MVPs to Microsoft staff and leading industry specialists to deliver our sessions ensuring a truly unique experience. During this day, you will have the choice of attending sessions of your choice, covering topics such as Windows 7/Office 2010 deployment, management using System Center, and cloud computing for the IT pro (no developer content – we promise!).

We promised bigger and better and we meant it.  This session will feature 3 tracks, each with four sessions.  The tracks are:

  1. The Cloud: Managed by Microsoft Ireland
  2. Windows 7/Office 2010 Deployment: Managed by the Windows User Group
  3. Systems Management: Managed by the System Center User Group

You can learn more about the event, tracks, sessions, and speaker on the Windows User Group site.

You can register here.  Please only register if you seriously intend to go; Spaces are limited and we want to make sure as many can attend as possible.

The Twitter tag for the event is #ugfeb24.

Opalis & How Something Isn’t Finished Until It’s Documented

I mentioned in a blog post last night that I started out my career as a dev (eek!).  One of the things that was drilled into us in college was that something was not finished until it was documented.

I recently tried to get System Center Opalis up an running in a lab.  The newest release, 6.3, added support for Windows Server 2008 R2 so I thought I’d fire it up in a lab.  It did not go well.

It appears (assuming I understood the v6.3 documentation correctly) that you install v6.3 by installing v6.2 and hacking it with some files from the 6.3 zip file.  OK!  You then install two types of agent.  One coordinates tasks that run on various machines, and another runs the tasks on those various machines.  The management agent deployed OK.  But the other one … all I could get was a useless error telling me that it failed to install.  No codes, nothing to check, etc.  I did the usuals like very domain admin rights, and disabling firewalls but still no joy.  I checked online and there was nothing to help.  Seeing as it was just a lab that I was trying to do something quickly on, I didn’t bother hitting the TechNet forums.

And there-in lies the problem.  I know that most customers don’t search too hard for solutions.  If they try something, and it doesn’t do the basics cleanly, then it’s on to the next alternative.

To me, Opalis is an unfinished product.  And that’s a pity.  Because the idea of Opalis is pretty damned good.  But it fails at the final hurdle.  I wonder if this is why there’s lots of talk about the MS acquisition of the Novel PlateSpin resources?  Opalis is so un-MS-like as a product.  It’s like MOM 2000 … nice idea but maybe some of us will wait until the recently added Microsoft logo actually means something more than IP ownership.

By the way, here’s a step-by-step video for Opalis.

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