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Wednesday, July 9, 2008
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Mitchell Ashley: Converging on Microsoft

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EMC Puts Microsoft Exec In VMware CEO Seat

News from Microsoft WPC, Houston, TX: What happens when your over inflated stock price of $120 per share dips down to 1/3rd its value (and still might be over inflated)?

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Join The Microsoft Bloggers Network

Are you someone who blogs about Microsoft? Maybe you're an end user, developer, mobile user, Xbox player, admin, security researcher, writer, author, detractor or enthusiast who blogs about Microsoft related topics regularly or on occasion? Want a way to increase the exposure and readership of your blog? That's what the Microsoft Bloggers Network is all about.

In addition to their very popular (and free) RSS feed aggregation service for blogs, Feedburner has something called Feedburner networks. FBN's are self organized groups of bloggers' feeds aggregated into one combined feed. What are the benefits? Here's Feedburner's description:

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Meet Me In Houston At Microsoft WPC

This week I'm attending the Microsoft WPC, Worldwide Partner Conference, in Houston Texas. It's going to be a hot one, oh and the conference should be really good too, lol. If you are in town for the conference, stop by, introduce yourself and say hello. I'll be at the Absolute Performance booth (#1081, right next to the Microsoft Software+Services partner hosting area and the OpSource booth), one of my companies who is also a Microsoft NXT partner for Software + Services, and also covering the show for Network World. If you are a blogger, I'd also like to tell you about the Feedburner network I've started, the Microsoft Blogger's Network.

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Live Mesh & Virtualization Saves Gas

I came across an interesting blog post by Brian Loesgen over the weekend about his experiences with Live Mesh. What caught my eye was his own use case of Live Mesh for software development. Besides sharing personal files, Brian uses Live Mesh to share his software development files between home computers and computers he's using when he is offsite working from wherever work happens to be. One thing to note too is that Brian uses virtual machines for his development rather than physical machines. Another smart move. Obviously Live Mesh's Community Technology Preview version, a.k.a.

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5 Things You Need To Know About Hyper-V

I was fortunate to receive a Twitter message from the Microsoft virtualization team after writing my blog post A Weekend With Hyper-V. If you aren't familiar with the Windows Virtualization Team Blog, you can find it at http://blogs.technet.com/virtualization.

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7 skills for IT fame and fortune

With the economic downturn on everyone's mind, assumptions about job security come under question, and everyone starts reexamining their skills. There are lots and lots of valuable jobs performed in IT, but some skills are valued even more highly than others. With all the upheaval we're experiencing in IT, many new skills are in high demand or rapidly increasing in value. Here are my Top 7 skills that could help you not only keep that job, but secure an even better new job, positioning you to work on the next generation of IT applications and software products in the era of Web-delivered online applications.

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iPhone's A Useless Brick With Me (AT&T)

Rumor's are that big brother Apple will be sending the new iPhone 3Gs to AT&T stores already bricked, according to this CNET news article. Only AT&T stores will have a special version of iTunes that can unbrick iPhone 3Gs at the AT&T store. (Now, there's another brilliant idea - take iTunes software that runs slow as a ton of bricks and have it unbrick phones. Doh!) So, any dreams of just buying an iPhone 3G any other way than at an AT&T store sans the 2 year contract is pretty much nil.

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A Weekend With Hyper-V

This weekend I spent a good bit of time working with Microsoft's Hyper-V in the Converging Network Labs, following my daughter's baby shower on Saturday (which went swimmingly well thanks to all hard work my wife put into the event.) I installed the release version of Hyper-V on an Intel Q6600 Quad/8GB memory system running of course the Windows Server 2008 64-bit operating system. This is the full Windows Server install, with the Windows management interface, rather than the slimmed down Windows Server 2008 CORE version. I have to say my overall impressions are good, but mixed in some respects given what Hyper-V is all by itself. I'll say a bit more in just a bit.

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Limitations Won't Dampen Hyper-V

Thursday was Hyper-V "hyperventilate day" as everyone reported about Hyper-V's release. I'm sure Windows Server 2008 machines all over the world will be downloading Hyper-V via Windows Update come the 2nd week in July. You can manually download Hyper-V until then. I'm excited to start working with the final bits on my servers as well, something I'll be doing after finishing this blog post.

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Citrix CTO Simon Crosby Scheduled for Podcast Interview

Well, I'm happy to inform you that I've been contacted by Citrix Virtualizaiton CTO Simon Crosby's PR person and Simon is scheduled to record a podcast early next week. I'm excited to have Simon on so we can talk Xen, Red Hat, oVirt, Hyper-V and VMware. If all goes well, it's possible the podcast could be up mid week before the July 4 holidays. Wish me luck with that.

If you have a specific question (no personal attacks, please) you'd like asked of Simon, drop a comment on this blog post. Where possible and appropriate, I'll try to ask him questions I receive. And I have have tons of my own questions so I don't think I'll fall short of things to ask Simon. Thanks.

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Citrix Virtualization CTO Disputes Red Hat Hypervisor Strategy

My recent blog post "Red Hat Takes Hypervisor Control Back From Citrix" appears to have elicited a response from Simon Crosby, CTO for Virtualization at Citrix. I say appears because the comment isn't verified so I can't attest for sure it was posted by Simon, so keep that in mind as you read this blog post. (Too bad NWW doesn't use Intense Debate so comments could be authenticated. I guess that's for another upcoming blog post.) I take away three main points Simon is making in his comments: 1) oVirt (a.k.a.

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Parallels - Two Divergent Paths for Macs & Windows

More virtualization news following on the heels of Red Hat's announcement of its own virtualization technology, oVirt. We all know Parallels as that software that lets you run Windows XP or Vista on a Mac OS X desktop. Since being bought and combined with company SW Soft (maker of Virtuoso and Plesk used in hosting centers across the world), Parallels has now released a full hypervisor for the data center on Apple Xserves Intel hardware, Parallels Server for Mac (PSfM). PSfM runs Leopard Server, Windows and Linux operating systems.

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iPhone 3G Cheaper And Costs More?

The new iPhone 3G is cheaper, right? The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the Apple iPhone 3G smartphone may cost $200 less, but you'll pay $40 more by the end of the contract. The new iPhone 3G's $199 price makes it much easier to get a new iPhone but it also makes it easier to sign up for a 2 year AT&T contract. AT&T is charging an extra $10/month for the data plan with the 3G, thus the additional $40 iPhone users pay over the 2 year period (($10x24 months) - $200 savings).

I say, what's the big deal?

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How Apple Can Win The Browser Wars

Apple's definitely heading down the wrong path with the whole Spamafari browser install approach. The whole thing with Apple Updater covertly pushing Safari onto our PC desktops is way beyond uncool. The last thing I want is yet another browser competing to be my default browser, especially Safari, which has no discernable benefits over IE and Firefox on Windows. And now, Apple's taking another run at Windows by pushing back, claiming the "carpet bomb" bug is really a PC user and Windows problem. (See the "Saving untrusted files..." section.) Shez.

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Tough Week For Jerry At Yahoo

As hard as it is to watch, it's got to be infinitely tougher for Yahoo CEO, Jerry Yang, to go through. This week saw the exodus of more of Jerry's executive team, including most recently execs from the search business. That's tough, and the worst may not be over. And now, those who left earlier are venting their frustrations to the press about how Yang handled, or mishandled (depending on your viewpoint), his first year as CEO and most recently, Microsoft's unsolicited offer.

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Red Hat Takes Hypervisor Control Back From Citrix

Red Hat announced two important moves this week; open sourcing of Red Hat Network Satellite, and its own virtualization hypervisor oVirt. Open sourcing RHN Satellite is fundamentally about showing the industry Red Hat is still the keeper of the open source flame but the real strategic move is the development of oVirt. OVirt is built upon Kernel Virtual Mode, or KVM, which is virtualization built right into the Linux operating system, and has been maturing over the past two years. Until now Red Hat's virtualization strategy has been built around open source Xen, much like other players such as Oracle and Sun.

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Live Mesh Dumps UAC

Ozzie's already starting to buck trends at Microsoft. This week, Microsoft updated the Live Mesh "technical preview" with some bug fixes and feature fixes. If you didn't know, Live Mesh up until now required UAC be enabled in order for Live Mesh to install and operate. Unless you just came back from a long trip in deep space, you know that UAC is one of the most maligned aspects of Windows Vista. I call UAC, User Annoyance Catastrophe.

Good news. The latest version of Live Mesh no longer requires UAC be enabled if you have Vista SP1 installed. Yeah!

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iPhone's "Just Good Enough" Business Strategy

Opinions about the iPhone 3G and 2.0 software update are still rolling in more than a week after its announcement. Not to miss an opportunity to sell more reports, Gartner's even weighing in on how the iPhone will fare with business. While all of us debate the merits of the iPhone 2.0 software's Microsoft Exchange sync, downloadable third-party apps through the Apple Store (only, btw), and whether the iPhone is secure enough for the enterprise, meeting enterprise requirements doesn't really matter. Apple's got their sights on a whole different target. Consumers.

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Apple User Saves Microsoft From Collapse

At least that's what Microsoft is counting on, in a manner of speaking, as it pertains to its brand image. On my recent business trip I picked up a copy of Fast Company and read the article about marketing genius Alex Bogusky working on Microsoft's new marketing campaign. Apple's been very successful at portraying Windows as this moronic dude who gets his jollies by doing spreadsheets, and deep down wishes he could really be an Apple Mac.

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About Mitchell Ashley

Mitchell Ashley is CEO and Chief Strategist of Converging Network, LLC, providing product and technology strategies to emerging technology companies. A serial entrepreneur, Mitchell has created many successful products and services in the networking, security, convergence, Internet and IT industries. In addition to blogging for NetworkWorld, Mitchell regularly blogs at TheConvergingNetwork and co-hosts the widely popular Still Crazy After All These Years podcast.

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