Ted Haggard Hawks Software January 19, 2007
Posted by techgrrl in in my opinion.4 comments
I attended the launch event for Windows Vista here in Indianapolis earlier this week. As I was listening to the speakers present, I was very much put in the mind of the clips of Pastor Ted Haggard in the movie Jesus Camp. The presenters that Microsoft uses often have the word ‘evangelist’ in their job titles, as in Product Evangelist. I understand what they’re trying to say with this kind of job title, but I can’t help but wonder if the individuals who fill these roles have taken the title literally.
I would describe both of the presenters that I saw as having that typical Christian appearance. They had on their business casual uniform and clean cut haircuts. They reminded me of some of the young men from Haggard’s New Life Church who took on new roles after Haggard left the church. Their appearance alone isn’t what cinches the deal for me. It’s also the way that they presented themselves and their content. The morning presenter was a little on the goofy side, very similar to the DJ Smiley who works on WZPL here in Indy. As I understand it, Smiley comes from an evangelical backgroud. The style of the afternoon presenter closely resembled the style of Ted Haggard. He told similar kinds of jokes and used gimmicks to capture the attention (and hopefully allegiance) of the audience. I wish I had some specific examples, but I didn’t write any down. This was just my impression sitting in the audience.
I’ve been concerned for awhile about the use of evangelism to sell products and recruit employees. When The Home Depot came to Indy a few years back, they used an evalengical approach to recruit people. From what I’ve been told by people who attended some of these sessions, they found themselves drawn in and saying ‘yes’ even though they knew rationally that it was too good to be true. I wonder if the evangelical style causes people to suspend their rational selves and allow faith to take over. If it happens at church, it seems like it could happen at a seminar too.
If Microsoft and other large companies have to resort to this kind of trickery and gimmicks to sell their wares, then this is capitalism at its worst. To evoke the behavioral patterns that people display at church in the marketplace is manipulative and irresponsible. I don’t think these individual presenters are to blame. Rather, I think the language of evangelism took over and influenced Microsoft’s systemic behavior as it relates to their hiring and retention practices. One way to know for sure – How much diversity is there among the group of presenters and product evangelists? If they all look the same, then that’s a problem.
When people stop thinking critically and instead give themselves over to whichever company ignites their passions, then we’re opening ourselves up to manipulation. If it’s happening in selling and recruiting, then this has a significant impact on our economy. Employees can be convinced to give up good paying jobs with benefits to take jobs with companies they “believe” in. Business people can be convinced to buy products that their companies don’t need simply because they want to belong and squelch that uneasy feeling of uncertainty that happens when you step outside the group. It makes me nervous for our future.
Home Server Away From Home January 9, 2007
Posted by techgrrl in Uncategorized.1 comment so far
As you can tell, I’m pretty enamored with Windows Home Server. I got a better demo today of the remote access features. You can access the shared resources of the Home Server via a browser using HTTPS. According to a rep at the HP booth, the end user will have to be sophisticated enough to figure out how to configure their home network so that the Home Server is visible from the Internet. Also, if the home doesn’t have a static IP address (and I don’t think many do), then you’ll have to use some kind of Dynamic DNS solution. The HP rep seemed to think that a “service” of some kind would be available to assist the home user with this task.
Because remote access uses HTTPS, there’s no support for WebDAV and Web Folders. This means you can’t access files remotely using File | Open in your favorite Windows application. You have to go through the browser. The remote access features include the ability to use Remote Desktop in the browser to remote control clients PCs on the home network.
Speaking of Remote Desktop, you can access the Windows Home Server desktop console using Remote Desktop. Most home users won’t use this feature, but if you want to use your Home Server to serve up something like a custom Web application, then presumably you could do that. You can see some screen shots of Windows Home Server at these sites:
Bringing the Server Home January 9, 2007
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Microsoft Home Server is a new network operating system from Microsoft that’s intended for use with home networks. Home Server won’t be offered as a stand-alone operating system. Instead, you’ll have to buy it already installed on an appliance. The first of these devices is the HP MediaSmart server. The HP appliance should be available by the second half of 2007, but no price point has been announced yet. Other manufacturers have designs in the works, but no products have been announced yet.
The HP MediaSmart server along with other servers running Microsoft Home Server is intended to be used as a headless appliance that resides in an out-of-the-way place such as a closet. The box is called headless because there’s no monitor attached to it. You interact with the device using client PCs. The HP box is a small black box slightly taller and skinnier than a Shuttle PC. It has bays for four SATA drives, four USB ports in the back, plus two SATA ports in the back. There’s an ethernet port in the back to attach the device to the home network. The server is a networked attached storage (NAS) device with no hardware management capabilities. You just slide or plug in your SATA or USB drives and the device creates a giant pool of storage with no drive letters.
Home users interact with the server using shared folders, similar to a file server. The OS, even though it’s based on Windows Server 2003, doesn’t support centralized authentication. There’s no Active Directory to manage. Instead, the OS has a feature called Users and Accounts which is conceptually similar to user management in Windows XP. The OS synchronizes the usernames and passwords from client PCs with the Home Server. From what I could tell, there doesn’t appear to be any centralized account management. This seems akin to the classic security mode that people are using currently with peer to peer to networks. In a peer to peer network of Windows XP computers, each computer has its own set of local accounts. By creating accounts on each computer with the same username and password, you can authenticate on all your computers. For example, I have a Windows XP machine that I utilize as a file server. I have a user account with the same username and password on my laptop and the file server. I can access file shares on my file server without entering a username and password. Windows Home Server seems to work similar to this.
Home Server supports remote access to file shares via the Internet. Each Home Server gets a unique Web address that users can use to access the content from their server via the Web. I’m not sure if you can use Web Folders or if you’re restricted to using the browser only.
A big feature of the Home Server is the ability to perform centralized backup and restore. The server performs a full backup of the entire client PC. Their new backup technology can perform a full backup of an 80GB hard drive in about 25 minutes. Incremental backups only backs up the blocks that have changed across the entire network. In other words, if two client PCs have the same movie, it only gets backed up once. You can restore an entire PC or select individual files to restore. The server automatically supports disk mirroring. When a user places a file on the server, the file is automatically copied to two hard disks. There’s no user configuration required for mirroring, and the disks don’t have to be the same size.
The administrator experience on Home Server consists of a single console application that’s installed on a client PC. It’s used to monitor the health of the network and the server and to manage file shares. The console application is extensible which means that third parties could add additional features to the server.
You can find more information about Windows Home Server at these sites:
Microsoft Mashups January 8, 2007
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I attended Bill Gates’ keynote speech last night at the 2007 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas. The speech droned on for one and a half hours about all the seemingly wonderful things Microsoft is doing in the consumer electronics space. There were several good product announcements, but to me all those take a back seat to what’s really exciting about Microsoft technologies. Essentially, all the new products that Microsoft is releasing are mashups of existing technologies.
Microsoft creates great platforms. Whether it’s desktop or server operating systems, game consoles, information technology (IT) infrastructure, development environments and runtime engines, or business productivity suites, Microsoft’s platforms have matured to the point where they now create an ecosystem of platforms. By decoupling features from specific products and creating engines to host those features, products and platforms no longer exist in silos. Take a look at some of the product announcements made last night and think about these how products are enabled by platforms:
- Xbox Live on Vista – Vista includes a user interface that looks and behaves very similar to the Xbox dashboard. A Vista user can connect to Xbox live and invite other people in their social network to play online games.
- Flight simulation of 3D maps on Windows Live using an Xbox 360 controller – The demonstration of 3D maps on Windows Live was a big yawner until the demonstrator picked up an Xbox 360 controller and started “driving” down the virtual Las Vegas strip. That’s just cool.
- TV, movies, and other entertainment offerings on Xbox Live – Not only can you get movies and music from Xbox Live, Microsoft plans to offer IP TV – streaming television over broadband – via Xbox Live. This bullet is only news to me because I’m probably the only person in the world who thinks a media PC is a custom built home theatre PC (HTPC). RIP All-in-Wonder!
- Windows Home Server – Microsoft has been quietly working on a Windows Home Server appliance that will be used for centralized storage and backup for all the PCs and digital media that folks are now managing in their homes. The lead partner is HP, but several other partners have designs in the works. I’m fairly certain this is Vista-based, not Windows Server-based. I’m excited about this because I believe there’s a need for it. I personally probably won’t buy something like this, but I recognize that most home users aren’t sophisticated enough to demote their old HTPCs to media servers.
Of course, the product/platform that I really care about is SharePoint. I’m happy to say that when Gates talked about the biggest releases for Microsoft, he said Vista, Office 2007, and SharePoint all in one breath. While most people in that audience have no idea what SharePoint is, I’m pleased to hear Gates dropping the SharePoint name every chance he gets.