November 2009 - Posts

PDC 2009 PowerPoint slides now online

Apparently my photo generated PowerPoint decks are not that great (day job safe...for now anyways Smile)

For those interested, the real slides and videos are now online.

Microsoft Unified Communications: Developer Platform Futures presented by Chris Mayo  WMV WMVHigh MP4 Slides

Integrating and Extending the Microsoft Office Communicator Experience with Windows Presentation Foundation and Microsoft Silverlight presented by David Ollason

 WMV

WMVHigh MP4 Slides

Posted 25 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
Opportunities for Office Communicator 14 integration

Today’s session focussed on the extendibility within the wave 14 communications platform was presented by David Ollason (Principal Lead Program Manager at Microsoft). David explained these development opportunities and gave examples; tools in scope were WPF and Silverlight (no surprises here).

As with yesterday’s session my trusty BlackBerry was used to take pictures in low light conditions, you may have noticed that I have taken the liberty of playing about with contrast/brightness settings (it kinda helped, a bit!) I also had a better seat today so a reduced camera angle J

Firstly we were informed that everything we were about to see was (as with yesterday) running on pre-alpha w14 code, the mention of 2010 was also heard – logically it has always been suggested that w14 is likely to become Office Communications Server 2010.

We were next introduced to a web/Silverlight application that directly interrogated OC 2010 information (see picture).

Followed by a WPF application (see picture).

Hopefully you can follow the theme of the presentation by following the slides presented below.

 

Silverlight example

WPF example

That's it for today...

Posted 18 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
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Enabling OCS 2007 R2 presence within Exchange 2010 OWA

Brett Johnson has posted a "how-to" guide on enabling Communicator presence within Exchange 2010 OWA, interestingly a local installation of the client is not required (comms is carried by OCS web services).

Source: here 

Posted 18 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
OCS & Communicator Wave 14 development futures (and some sneak peeks)

Today I attended a session run by Chris Mayo (UC Technical Evangelist at Microsoft). The session’s topic, development platform futures with Microsoft’s unified communications platform, namely Office Communications Server.

The interesting little nugget that I picked up on was that everything discussed or demonstrated was running on pre-alpha wave 14 code and...(wait for it) there was no NDA this time!

You may recall a week back I attended a Microsoft Messaging and Mobility / Unified Communications User Group, at this session Yancey Smith mentioned Chris would be running his overview on OCS W14.

Below are a number of key slides presented, including a few sneak peeks of the Communicator 14 UI. (excuse the quality, these were taken at an angle with my BlackBerry Bold 9700)

Some very interesting integration already performed (in alpha) by the product group included:

·         A service desk IM bot that could be used to route a call to a relevant (and available) support analyst based on presence/availability and skill i.e. Wintel or Exchange expert.

·         A virtual executive assistant that can be commanded by IM/ voice (or DTMF tones) to find available meeting rooms at a specific location.

 

W14 MOC

More W14 MOC

The Helpdesk bot demo

In case you were not already aware this was not ready for prduction use!

A Microsoft timeline including W14

That's all folks!

Posted 17 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | 2 comment(s)
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Pre-pidded Exchange 2010 reported to run in evaluation mode

Yesterday (during Stephen Elop's TechED keynote) I upgraded my release candidate of Exchange 2010 to RTM, thankfully this went without a hitch. However, like the rest of the community it appears that the "pre-pidded" copy of Exchange released to TechNet and MSDN installs as an evaluation copy.

My initial thoughts were that this was an "upgrade" glitch, then I found posts on the TechNet Forums and EHLO referring to the same issue during a clean installation. Recent feedback from an Exchange team member clarifies (update: hrmm, not entirely) the situation:

Taken from EHLO:

Exchange said:

Everyone asking about the "pre-pidded" TechNet version, few things:

- Exchange 2010 licensing warning is a licensing warning only, like it used to be with Exchange 2007. The server - when installed - does not have a product PID. A PID needs to be entered post setup, and the PID will determine the version of the server. Once the evaluation period is over, the product will still work the same, with same limitations of the non-licensed server. It is not a "time bomb" but rather a licensing warning. The details around keys mentioned here still apply: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb232170.aspx

- Please post a comment on this: I am guessing that somewhere, we mention that the TechNet version is Pre-pidded or else not so many of you would be asking about this. Can you tell us exactly where we say this, so we can correct this? We do not have a pre-pidded version.
Update 2:
Taken from EHLO:
NOTE TO ALL: it might take us a day or two to sort this out, but your servers will keep working. Even if the counter reaches zero (0) - there is no loss of functionality or service disruption that you will experience.
Update 3:
Taken from EHLO:
OK, this should now be fixed. Please log back into MSDN / TechNet and you should now see the keys at the Exchange 2010 download. You can use the key with the download that you already have.

Source: here

Posted 10 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
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OCS 2007 R2 cumulative update installer

The OCS 2007 R2 cumulative update installer has been already mentioned on a couple of UC community sites, however an official mention has been made over at the OCS team blog.

Source: here

Posted 10 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
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Exchange 2010 released to web

Heads-up! Exchange 2010 has just been released to web. I'm currently downloading it from TechNet, but by the looks of it so is everyone else.

Posted 9 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
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iPhone, you got "Rick Rolled"

Every now and then an amusing exploit surfaces in the world of computing, this one is by no means an exception. If you have a Jailbroken iPhone and installed SSH, you should change the default SSH password or you too could find your Jesus phone wallpaper changed to none other than 80's pop icon Rick Astley.

Brilliant!

Source: here

Posted 8 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
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Microsoft Messaging and Mobility / Unified Communications User Group - November 2009

 

Yesterday I attended a UK Unified Communications & Exchange user group meeting (thanks to Nathan and Russ for setting this up, definitely time well spent!) The kind folks at Microsoft hosted the event at the London, Victoria offices.

Astrid McClean (Exchange TPM) and Yancey Smith (OCS DPM) stopped by on their way through to TechEd Europe and unfortunately they brought their NDAs with them – but wait there are a few Exchange 2010 titbits worth sharing... (in no particular order)

Exchange Control Panel (ECP)

A lot of effort has gone into developing a new web based UI for both end users and service desk administrators, allowing delegation of common Exchange chores. This web based console can either be accessed via Outlook 2010 or directly in a web browser via https://hostname/owa/ecp typo this should acually read https://hostname/ecp (thanks to Arman for spotting this grave error!). The ECP shares OWA code, but is a separate application.

Other noteworthy features include:

·         Creation and modification of distribution lists with built in workflows for approvals (the Exchange 2010 arbitration engine is much improved and supports Outlook 2007)

·         Joining distribution lists also via workflow

·         Message tracking

·         Modification of user details (e-mail address, telephone numbers etc.)

·         Ability to set “Out of Office” for other users – yay!

Exchange Management Console (EMC)

·         Ability to execute more PowerShell Cmdlets i.e. archiving and high availability

·         Select multiple mailboxes for bulk updates (happiness resonated amongst the user group guys)

·         Role based access control (RBAC) which makes it easier to delegate and customise the UI

·         Manage multiple Exchange forests (hybrid management)

·         PowerShell script visibility, not per execution but view all previously run tasks

Exchange Management Shell (EMS)

As the Exchange team decided on restricting remote administration tools to x64 clients (a few gasps were heard amongst the user group folks, myself included!) improvements to PowerShell are evident. Astrid mentioned that by making the decision to completely drop 32bit code regression testing was cut in half, she went on to state that “a change in this decision is unlikely, but not impossible”.

Other pointers:

·         The shell is now “Firewall friendly” – connectivity is over HTTP/HTTPS

·         The shell can be run remotely without a local install of Exchange 2010 Cmdlets

·         All PowerShell executions are logged

Other miscellaneous Exchange nuggets worth mentioning:

·         Exchange 2010 has much better compliance controls

o   “User hold” option allows full auditing of a single user

o   By using the discovery mailbox and defining key words your compliance officer can view suspect activity without granting full rights to specific user mailbox

·         RBAC consists of 60+ out of the box role groups and you can pick and choose which ones to assign depending on specific administrative tasks, these can be customised further via PowerShell

·         Adoption of PowerShell and ECP are pretty much mandatory for administrators running 32bit clients (otherwise RDP is your friend, but far from ideal)

Interesting Exchange 2010 facts:

·         The Exchange 2010 Operations Manager management pack contains a default logo in the top left hand corner of any reports, this can’t be changed and was spotted after RTM – this is confirmed to be addressed as a high priority in SP1!

·         The ability to create mailboxes within ECP was included and dropped when the developers realised that there was no easy way of setting/modifying permissions without a lot more coding

·         Finally Exchange 2010 is scheduled to go general release on Monday, this will coincide with the Exchange launch at TechEd Europe

The second half of this meeting was NDA’d and focussed on the next release of OCS. There are a few things that I can say as they are either “Bingable” or non-sensitive.

·         The next release of OCS is currently referred to as “OCS Wave 14” or “OCS W14”

·         OCS W14 is scheduled for release in 2010

·         This will be followed (logically) by Wave 15

·         In September 2009 Microsoft sent over 76m IMs via OCS

·         Surprisingly Microsoft has not yet deployed an XMPP federation (perhaps for compliance reasons?)

·         OCS Wave W14 looks, how can I put it? Fantastic!

Well that is all I can say folks, for those attending TechEd I’m sure there is much more information to come, thanks again to Nathan and Russ for facilitating the evening. 

Posted 7 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | 4 comment(s)
Confirmed, Google Voice will go global

In a recent letter written by Google addressed to the FCC, formatting errors uncovered by Business Week reveaved:

Google has signed contracts with a number of "international service providers for inputs to Google Voice." followed by the statement that "none of the contracted services have yet" been launched".

It is good to see that Google Voice is destined for use outside of the US, but where and when is still to be confirmed (or leaked!)

Source: here

Posted 5 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
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Exchange 2007 to be supported in Windows Server 2008 R2 after all...

The Exchange Team is listening, a statement made on their blog confirms that support for Exchange 2007 installed on Windows Server 2008 R2 wil be delivered via an update (release date to be confirmed).

Taken from the Exchange Blog:

We always talk about listening to customers and sometimes this is written off by many as 'marketing speak'.  In fact, we do take feedback seriously and no input is more important to our engineering processes than your voice.

Earlier this year we made a decision in one direction, and due to the feedback we have received on this blog and elsewhere, we have reconsidered.  In the coming calendar year we will issue an update for Exchange 2007 enabling full support of Windows Server 2008 R2.  We heard from many customers that this was important for streamlining their operations and reducing administrative challenges, so we have changed course and will add R2 support.  We are still working through the specifics and will let you know once we have more to share on the timing of this update.

So, keep the feedback coming.  We are listening.

Source: here

Posted 5 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
Free geographic PSTN-to-Skype service launches

When I am out of the country I often use various VoIP technologies to avoid the hefty international/roaming charges levied when abroad. However, sometimes I am without WiFi or a Skype enabled device and need to call home.

Skype offers a service called "Skype-in" which provides a personal landline number in a country of your choice, the disadvantages are both cost and a limit on 25 countries. Where as a new service provider "Ring2Skype" provides a bridge number in 100+ destinations with a personalised extension that routes into the Skype network - at no cost.

As you can see below I have setup both a US and UK based extension that permits me to use local phones at lower cost (sometimes in certain countries like the US, local calls are free).

If you are thinking of travelling or have friends or family abroad (without a computer - yes they do exist) I recommend you give it a try, we'll see if it stays free...

Source: here (thanks to Tom Keating for the heads-up)

Posted 4 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
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"Introducing Windows Server 2008 R2" available as a free eBook

Introducing Windows Server 2008 R2 is a deep-dive work, that'll get you up to speed on how R2's new features and capabilities work, including Hyper-V and RDS virtualization, management, IIS and the new Web application platform and, of course, all the synergistic goodness between Windows Server and Windows 7

Download the free eBook here

Posted 1 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
Exchange 2010 "New Efficiency" Slides

Harold Wong, an IT Pro Evangelist at Microsoft just posted up his "New Efficiency" decks. I saw these presented at the UK event and draw your attention specifically to the UC slides that can be viewed on SlideShare here

Source: here (and all decks)

Posted 1 Nov 2009 by Adam Jacobs | no comments
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