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May 03 Looking for Virtualization Candidates in Your Server Room?
Video Demo of the MAP Tool: Get Download of the MAP Tool: Cheers, March 10 Straight Talk on Windows Vista DeploymentMicrosoft Technical Fellow and desktop guru, Mark Russinovich, recently hosted a live, interactive virtual roundtable broadcast on Windows Vista adoption and deployment. Mark and a panel of independent industry experts and IT pros from organizations that have already deployed Windows Vista openly discussed known challenges, solutions and workarounds, and sharing tips & tricks.
Watch the on-demand replay now or access the on demand link anytime by visiting the Springboard Series online HERE.
To get the free Windows Vista deployment tools mentioned during the round-table, visit these links:
Enjoy! Baldwin Ng March 02 Windows Server 2008 Launch & Solution AcceleratorsHi there,
In case you didn't hear, Windows Server 2008 is already launched! Check out some of these sites and blogs to learn more. See how
"Server Unleashed" Web Site:
Windows Server 2008 Solution Accelerators:
Virtualization Solution Accelerators:
Microsoft Assessment and Planning Blog:
Download Microsoft Assessment and Planning:
January 22 Microsoft Announcing Virtualization Solution AcceleratorsHello,
Microsoft Solution Accelerators Team is developing a series of automated tools and technical guidance, called Solution Accelerators, that will be released by the end of February as part of the Windows Server Launch.
Please CLICK HERE to read my latest blog post on Virtualization Solution Accelerators from earlier today.
Thank you,
Baldwin Ng
Sr. Product Manager, Virtualization Solution Accelerators
August 18 More about Windows Vista Hardware AssessmentHi all,
If you are interested in learning more about Windows Vista Hardware Assessment 2.1, you can check out my blog, video demo or TechNet radio interview here. To get the Windows Vista Hardware Assessment for free, click HERE.
Radio Interview by TechNet Radio IT Evangelist, Chris Avis:
On12 Video Demo:
Virtual WPC Demo:
Blog Post:
Email me if you have questions about this tool. We'll be happy to help at: wvhafdbk@microsoft.com
Baldwin Ng
August 17 Windows Vista Hardware Assessment 2.1 Released!Hi all,
Our team has just released the Windows Vista Hardware Assessment version 2.1 this morning. To read more about new features of this version, please check out my Windows Vista Team Blog post here:
Cheeers,
Baldwin July 25 Windows Vista Hardwre Assessment 2.0 Now AvailableHi folks,
Yes, the wait is over. The new and improved Windows Vista Hardware Assessment 2.0, one of the top solution accelerators for the Windows Vista OS, is now available for free download at: http://www.microsoft.com/technet/wvha .
For more detailed coverage, please read my Windows Vista Team Blog post here:
Cheers! Baldwin February 21 Windows Vista Hardware Assessment 1.0 Released!The Windows Vista Hardware Assessment 1.0 has just been released! If you haven't heard about this network-wide assessment tool for Windows Vista, you should definitely check it out, download and test drive it.
This is a tool that consists of three different components including an agent-less inventory engine, analytics engine to assess Windows Vista readiness around hardware and device compatibility. In addition, it automatically generates a set of network-wide readiness reports for each in a form of Microsoft Word and Excel documents.
If you are thinking about Windows Vista migration and want to know how many of your existing PCs will be capable of running Windows Vista to only very minor upgrades, download this tool now and see it for yourself. For an in-depth look, I've posted a detailed blog here on the Windows Vista Team Blog.
Baldwin
February 04 Windows Vista Hardware Assessment Beta ReleaseIs your business ready for Windows Vista upgrades? Are you wondering if your existing PCs' hardware and device drives compatible with the new OS?
Check out this new tool called Windows Vista Hardware Assessment. It is a network-wide assessment tool that inventory and report on the readiness of your PC hardware. The best part is its agent-less inventory engine that does not require any use of software agents and it aggregates the reporting for you automatically in Word and Excel. Imagine doing PC readiness tests from a single PC that's networked with the rest of your network instead of doing it one by one and repeat that a few thousands of times!
The Public Beta was released on January 30th and you can download this tool now !
Interested in joining a live webcast on Windows Vista Hardware Assessment? Sign up for the February 20th (1:00pm PST) webcast now.
Baldwin Ng (Product Manager, Microsoft Solution Accelerators Team)
PS: Windows Vista Hardware Assessment was previously known as Windows Vista Readiness Assessment.
December 11 Vista's 'Bounce' To Add 100,000 U.S. IT Jobs, Says ReportThe IDC report estimated that the total job impact of Vista would be in the 1.8 million range over the course of 2007, but the majority of those jobs will be carryovers from earlier editions of Windows.
By Gregg Keizer
InformationWeek Dec 11, 2006 04:32 PM
Microsoft's Windows Vista will give a 100,000-job "bounce" to U.S. IT employment next year, a study released Monday said.
The report, which was done by research firm IDC and commissioned by Microsoft, is similar to one published in September by IDC that claimed Vista would create 50,000 new jobs in Europe. Microsoft released that report in the midst of tense negotiations with the European Union's antitrust agency over possible infringements of a 2004 ruling by Vista.
"One of the reasons why we commissioned this [new] report was because of requests from our partners," says Mike Burk, a program manager with the Vista team. U.S. partners, he says, wanted data on the impact of Vista on the overall Microsoft ecosystem.
TO READ MORE, CLICK HERE: http://www.informationweek.com/management/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=196603200&subSection=Global
November 28 Hawks won Packers...in the snowIt was a great game, one of the best I've seen for years. To top it off, the Hawks won 34-24 against the team that Mike H used to coach that are used to snowy home games - the GB Packers!
Read more here:
Hasselbeck: Playing in the snow was fun
9:51 AM PST on Tuesday, November 28, 2006
Associated Press
SEATTLE - Seahawks quarterback Matt Hasselbeck said Tuesday that playing Green Bay in the snow in the Monday night football game was fun.
Steady snow began falling 20 minutes before kickoff at Qwest Field in Seattle. The temperature at kickoff was 34 degrees.
The Seahawks played indoors in the Kingdome until 1999.
My hats off to a True Seahawks Fan (from Portland)!Greg is indeed a true Seahawks fan! My hats off to him and his family who endured the 15-hour drive home last night from the Seahawks game (coldest in franchise history!).
Here's their story...
B November 14 Samsung Blackjack from Cingular (Windows Mobile Device)Here's another blackberry killer. I looks rather slim and with the Windows Mobile OS and Samsung's top-notch manufacturing, I think I might just get this for Christmas. :-)
B Small price to pay (to cheat)? NO!!One of the University of Washington professors recently conducted a research project to look at how companies that cooked their books would be valued over the past 25 years. The results are probably not shocking to most, but to those who thought they could get away with it, THINK AGAIN.
Great research and very timely!
B ========
Reputation outweighs regulation in preventing future Enron-style scandals
The financial value of a law-abiding reputation -- not tighter government regulations -- is the best way to prevent future scandals like those enveloping energy giant Enron and its auditor Arthur Andersen, a University of Washington researcher says. And Jonathan Karpoff believes this will hold true despite the call by many financial and political leaders for Congress to pass tighter accounting regulations and reforms. Karpoff, a finance professor in the University of Washington Business School, bases his views on the dramatic results of a study he conducted on the reputational effect that white-collar crime -- including financial reporting fraud -- has on company stock values. Karpoff and John Lott, a fellow researcher at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, discovered that the "enforcement effect" of reputation encourages firms not to commit fraud and penalizes firms when they do. Fraud allegations have been at the root of the Enron scandal. "We found that arbitrary, large increases in criminal penalties for fraud can do more harm than good, because they squeeze out reputation as a policer of fraud and increase consumer costs," Karpoff says. "The Enron scandal is more likely leading to companies willing to pay more for quality audits, and that will drive the accounting market -- not government imposed regulations." Karpoff contends that the two companies' executives underestimated the value of reputation and that naivete contributed to their downfall. "Even after restating its profits, Enron still made $880 million in 2000. Even if half of that is bogus, Enron had a core of profitable operations," he says. "The reason for the firm's complete meltdown is that much of its credible business activity depended on a good reputation. Buyers and sellers of electricity, for example, lost confidence that Enron would uphold its side of any deals. So even this legitimate part of the firm's business sunk with the firm's lost reputation." Likewise, Arthur Andersen is in the business of providing assurances of quality. As an auditor, its whole business is based on its credibility, Karpoff says. "But," Karpoff says, "it has dug a huge hole for itself." The researchers studied data on 132 cases of alleged and actual corporate fraud, including stakeholder, government, financial reporting (misleading accounting practices) and regulatory violations (currency transaction reporting), from 1978 through 1987. They compared stock values following initial press reports of allegations or investigations of corporate fraud against private parties with those after the penalties that resulted. They found an average decrease of $60.8 million in the values of the affected companies' stock. Criminal fines, restitution, civil penalties and other legal costs accounted for only 5.5 percent of the drop. The rest was due to lost future sales or higher costs. This finding is especially relevant to Enron today, Karpoff says, because it explains Enron's meltdown and the downward spiral of fewer customers for Arthur Andersen. "These results indicate that firms committing fraud face market penalties that far outweigh any prospective legal penalties," Karpoff says. The research, published in the Journal of Law and Economics in 1993, has been supported by follow-up papers using current data. While neither laws nor reputation will ever completely prevent fraud, Karpoff argues his research shows reputational costs will provide even more of a deterrent now because of the recent scandal. "The theory is that when something bad happens we need more regulations. But the fact is millions of business transactions occur daily without any direct government oversight. What keeps people honest as they engage in business transactions? Our research indicates that it is largely the discipline provided by the market," Karpoff says. The latest scandal, however, will influence other company executive behavior. "What will happen is that some accounting firms will develop stronger reputations for providing honest results to their clients," Karpoff says. "Their reputations will cost more to clients, but some firms will find it worthwhile to pay more because they want to convince investors that their books are not cooked." Most importantly, Karpoff hopes his research may slow a rush to judgment that could lead to counterproductive statutes. "Everybody's knee-jerk reaction in a case like this is that we need more government regulation," Karpoff says. "I would argue that we don't because the costs of such regulations are substantial and the benefits are small. The perceived benefit -- that the incidence of fraud will decrease dramatically -- is vastly overstated. As it is, businesses have to keep their noses clean in order to make a profit." ### For more information contact Karpoff at (206) 685-4954 or karpoff@u.washington.edu. iPod here I come!Microsoft hits play on Zune By TODD BISHOP Microsoft Corp. began its challenge to Apple Computer's iPod on Monday with a little help from the world's richest music fan. In a collision of two worlds, Bill Gates appeared on stage with KEXP-FM disc jockey John Richards, between songs by progressive rock band Secret Machines, to promote the new Zune music player in downtown Seattle. The first Zune device, which goes on sale today in the U.S., is the beginning of "a vision that will carry us forward for years," the Microsoft chairman said, before demonstrating the Zune's wireless song-swapping feature. http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/292229_msftzune14.html
November 12 More New Sounds from Windows VistaCheck 'em out here and you'll see the difference between what's different between Windows XP and Windows Vista:
B The Johnny GameA fun game after 2 hours of bible study...called the Johnny Game. I think it was named after Uncle Johnny from our church in Rochester, NY back in college.
Here's how it works: you start with a small group of 2-3 to perform the demonstration. The rest of your group will watch the demonstration and mimick exactly. If you succeed, you move over to that demo team. Or you will have to keep guessing. :-)
Try it, it's fun. :-)
Baldwin
New Sound of Win-Dows Vis-Ta!Long process leads to short Vista sound
By Associated PressSEATTLE (AP) - Some people spend 18 months working on a whole album. At Microsoft Corp., that's how long it took to perfect just four seconds of sound. Of course, this isn't just any four-second clip. It's the sound - a soft da-dum, da-dumm, with a lush fade-out - that millions of computer users will hear every day, and perhaps thousands of times in total, when they turn on computers running Microsoft's forthcoming Windows Vista operating system. To get just the right sound - clean, simple, but with "some long-term legs," according to Microsoft's Steve Ball - the software maker recruited musician Robert Fripp. Fripp, best known for his work with the '70s rock band King Crimson, recorded hours of his signature layered, guitar-driven sound for the project, under the close direction of Ball and others at Microsoft. Then, it was Ball's job to sort through those hours of recordings to suss out just the right few seconds. Fripp's involvement is not surprising. His occasional collaborator, Brian Eno, recorded sounds for Windows 95. Also, Ball, the Microsoft group program manager for WAVE - Windows Audio Visual Excellence - has in the past been Fripp's student and business partner. Ball, a self-proclaimed renaissance man who is both an engineer and a musician, considered the work of about 10 musicians for the project. Some of those people were influential in the final four seconds as well. Redmond-based Microsoft seriously debated several other sounds before settling on the final startup sound about three weeks ago. The rejected sounds included a longer, lusher clip and a quick, techno-sounding piece. While many people liked an upbeat ditty with a clapping rhythm, it was eventually rejected as being too much like a commercial, and of sounding too "human" when paired with the new graphic for Windows Vista, Ball said. "There's nothing that's especially human about our new Windows animation," he said. The short startup clip that was eventually chosen is meant to evoke the rhythm of the words "Win-dows Vis-ta!" and Ball hopes the sound will serve as a calling card for the operating system. It also consists of four chords - one for every color in the new Windows graphic that appears as the sound plays. It's no coincidence that it's also four seconds long. There are 45 total Vista sounds that Microsoft has spent the last year and a half perfecting, including the dings you hear when get a new e-mail, receive an error message, or log off your computer. Generally, these are more muted, less jarring variations of the prompts familiar to Windows XP users. If it seems like overkill to go to all that trouble for a few seconds of sound, consider this: Microsoft estimates that sounds such as the e-mail alert will be played trillions of times in years to come. That's a lot of opportunity to annoy, offend -or, if the job is done right - please or appease computer users the world over. One major concern was that the startup sound not grow grating after a time. "You want a sound that people will love the first time they hear it, but it's a paradox to also say, 'Oh and by the way, we need people to love it the tenth, or the hundredth, or the thousandth time they hear it,"' Ball said. That's one reason he was glad to have 18 months to choose the clips. "We had time to live with the music," Ball said. Still, for all the time Ball has spent on the sounds, he says one measure of success would be if people noticed them very little, if at all. Ball is the first to admit that the percussive beeps in past Windows versions could be jarring to nearby workers or interrupt others in a meeting. With the number of intrusive sounds from cell phones, handheld devices and other gadgets only increasing, that's something Ball and his colleagues were keen to avoid with Vista. "We want you to know they're there, and you would miss them if they were gone, but we would like them to be just barely noticeable, almost like they are part of the environment or part of your wallpaper," he said. "We want them in the background, rather than the foreground." |
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