System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008 R2 SP1 & 2012 Béta Available

Good news, today March 2nd, 2011 System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008 R2 SP1 went RTM. I’ll update this short post with the download link when it becomes available ==> UPDATE: download it here from Microsoft (Evaluation) or from your TechNet subscription or licensing site. Seems like we got all host & guest updates to W2K8R2SP1 done exactly on time to get this one installed and have a state of the art, up to date infrastructure. Today the 2012 Beta version became available for download (here) and the documentation site went life (here). Things are moving in the system center space. Busy times ahead! Yet 2 more  VMs to test with I the lab … and than Denali is coming.

No TechEd Europe 2011

Well it’s official. There will be no TechEd Europe in 2011. A quote from a Microsoft mail for Tech Days Belgium “… Since you have been attending TechEd Europe previously we wanted to inform you in person that Tech∙Ed Europe will not return in autumn 2011, but later in 2012.  …“

We’ve lost IT Forum a couple of years back and with no TechEd Europe in 2011 this means a barren landscape void of any major international Microsoft technical events in Europe. I think that’s a shame. The opportunities to network & interact with Microsoft employees, engage in passionate interactive discussion about technologies, solutions and  possibilities  with colleagues and peers from around the continent are sadly missing from my agenda this year. I always enjoyed to learn about their creative solutions to similar problems in an environment that is focused on what we love to do, where learning opportunities are abundant and the atmosphere is all about technology. I haven’t missed one in 10 years, sometimes against the odds.

To me TechEd is a key moment in the year. I use it to check my compass and adjust my bearings when needed. A good technical conference is a great place for both advancing what your are doing and reflecting on what can be done and remains to be done. Communication of visions, roadmaps and technology are paramount and I feel that I have lost the one event left we had as technologists in the Microsoft ecosystem in Europe that was our place to go and do that. As a good colleague touched upon. What’s Microsoft’s strategy and approach to what & when to communicate with it’s European audience? Local Events only? They are good, needed and of high quality but no substitute.  I’ll need to find another way to zero in my course this year.

Kick Starting Your Windows 7 Deployments With Mastering Windows 7 Deployment

I have to hand it to Aidan Finn, he doesn’t stop at sharing information via his blogs or the community. He joined forces with Darril Gibson & Kenneth van Surksum went the extra mile. The wrote a readable, useful book Mastering Windows 7 Deployment about a subject on which consolidated documentation is scarce, scattered around the internet or written badly so you still can’t figure it out or is to boring you just don’t read it. If I need to define the goal of this book: get people a good head start for Windows 7 deployments in a planned and organized fashion.

This is not a book for the absolute newbie who doesn’t know the difference between a local and a domain account. It isn’t targeted at the WDS/MDT experts who’ve solved, fixed and worked around any and all PXE boot, network errors, cryptic WDS or MDT deployment errors & configuration challenges known to man kind. In that case this stuff is known to you (or should be). The point is those experts have already learnt a lot the hard way and they put in a considerable effort to do so. But knowledge needs to be transferred and spread around and to do that you need to cover the basics and work up from there, showing progress and results. The progress and results motivate people.

In that respect, this books get’s you started on that path from chapter one and by page 5 you’re already being guided into auditing & reporting via MAPS to prepare a roll out proposal. The effort put into discussing the Application Compatibility Toolkit (ACT) is important. I remember the work that we needed to do for Vista x64 bit and how that paid off when deploying Windows 7. What surprises me it that a lot of IT Pro’s don’t even know about the ACT, file and registry virtualization or shims. I recommend another blog on this subject http://blogs.msdn.com/b/cjacks/ , Chris Jackson, the “App Compat Guy” and a very good conference speaker on the subject. The scenarios with the User State Migration Tool will benefit system administrators who dread touching end users their PC and the precious data it might contain. If so, I hope you are backing up the data on those workstations, if not than that is really scary.

Perhaps some readers will already be using certain tools touched upon in the book but not others. In that case this is a great way to start with them and see where they fit in and what they can do for you. We did Vista x64 bit deployments in 2008 with WDS; rolled out Windows 7 x64 in 2010 using WDS/MDT and I still found this book interesting enough to buy some copies and add it to the toolkit of my team. What I’d like to add as a useful hint: look into disable rearming by using <SkipRearm>1</SkipRearm> in the unattended XML file you can pass to sysprep as in “/generalize /quiet /unattend:<file_name.xml” so you don’t run into a when you do it more than 4 times on the same image (An error message occurs when you run "Sysprep /generalize" in Windows Vista or Windows 7: "A fatal error occurred while trying to Sysprep the machine").

The Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT) sections point you directly to some gems we found very useful in our deployments. That you can pre stage computers in the MDT database to help make the roll outs as “light touch” as possible is cool, but that you can automate that with the MDT PowerShell module makes it really very valuable. See http://blogs.technet.com/b/mniehaus/archive/2009/05/15/manipulating-the-microsoft-deployment-toolkit-database-using-powershell.aspx for more details. Michael Niehaus is to MDT what Chris Jason is to ACT. As identifier we use the MAC address as we get that on a label on the PC and we can easily get a list of those to mass import them together with creating the computer objects in Active Directory. We also added driver profiles depending on the client make & model. When you combine this with boot from PXE provided by WDS to boot to an MDT WinPE, and remember WDS also gives you multicast, you have a real sweet solution going. This is the route we went last year and has served us well (we came from a pure WDS solutions, and RIS before that when we still did XP rollouts but that was more than 4 years ago Open-mouthed smile … time flies.

Task sequencer is a gem that we indeed also use to roll out certain default software like 7zip, a pdf reader, ISO burner, anti malware, etc. The fact that these are not in the image makes it very easy to deploy newer versions as they come available.

The chapter on KMS, VAMT, volume licensing will be of use to people who have never dealt with it coming from Windows 2003/XP

This book will come into its own for any SME or enterprise departmental system administrator with who needs to be launched swiftly and on his or her way to their targets, which are smooth Windows 7 deployments. A lot of production system administrators are in the progress of looking at Windows 7 and might have a lot of experience with Windows XP and Windows 2003 but not with Windows 2008(R2) and Vista/Windows 7. If you’re in that bracket you’re definitely going to get a kick start with this book and it contains some neat tips and tricks to get over some initial gotchas. Don’t think that this is for big enterprises only. Apart from the system center products most tools are free downloads or a part of the Windows server license you already own.

As always, the only way to understand technologies is to work with them, use them. That’s the way to gain insight, experience, and context. So play with this stuff in a lab. Run into a bunch issues and fix them. If you need to get up to speed with all this stuff then you should dig into this book with a hands on approach. The book will also help you make more sense of other information out there and you’ll be able to put that into context better. As a bonus, I’m pretty sure that anything you learn from it will help you with deploying Windows vNext as well.

Exchange 2010 SP1 Rollup 3 Pulled – BlackBerrys sending duplicate messages

Just a quick notification. Due to the duplicate message issue with RIM Blackberry devices and Exchange 2010 Sp1 Rollup 3 Microsoft is temporarily pulling RU3. If you don’t use BES and have no other issues, don’t sweat it. If you wanted RU for UDP support with Outlook 2003 or to fix the DAG Copies GUI bug you’ll have to wait especially if you have Blackberry devices. More the the Exchange Team Blog here.