Honolulu TS2 Seminar

As I posted earlier, Honolulu happened to be graced with a TS2 seminar 2 days ago. It’s about time!

Woody Walton was the presenter for the topics that included Managed Services, System Center Essentials, Exchange 2007/Communicator/etc. and Forefront line of products. He did an excellent job of getting the pertinent information out to the attendees.

Shaky hands, pardon me!

He demo’d System Center Essential 2007 for us, and although I have it in my Action Pack, I haven’t had the chance to install it and play with it yet. The demo got me drooling however, so that may be on the list to do once I finish an office move for one of my clients.

The majority of the Forefront presentation was on the Client Security offering. Since I’ve been using it in the home office, I had a good working knowledge of it already, and managed to net me a SBS 2003 neoprene CD holder for answering the only question presented to us. I r smart. He did let us know that the next line of Forefront products being developed are under the code name "Stirling", for those fascinated by code names.

He also gave us a live demo of the automated voice attendant used to access his e-mail, calendar, voicemail, etc. back in Redmond. I had only read about the feature so seeing it in action was pretty impressive. He did run into some problems with it recognizing his voice input since he was using speaker phone, but I got the gist of the usefulness of the offering. He also ran a video of a "Devil wears Prada" spoof demonstrating the power of the complete offering. Great display of the possible uses of the technology, and funny to boot. The Roundtable hardware looked very cool for those that teleconference with multiple people present in 1 room. Availability is very limited for the Roundtable device though.

Also covered were various VOIP phones, including the Catalina USB Phone and a phone with Communicator embedded, which traverses firewalls. He stated he has a co-worker that’s taken the phone overseas, plugged it into the hotel internet, and was then able to access his information back at the office. Very cool technology.

During our 1 break, I made it down to introduce myself and see if he recognized the Blue Monster, which I use on my business card. He hadn’t, so I explained to him the basics and gave him the info to find more on it. He was very intrigued, to say the least and said he’d definitely get more info on the little guy. I also made him aware that "Centro" had been given a name that morning, which he wasn’t aware of at the time. He probably wished I hadn’t told him, as he referred to it by the full name the rest of the seminar instead of "Centro" (luckily, he had covered what he needed of "Centro" before the break, so it wasn’t much). Sorry!

All in all, a great experience start to finish. Some of the attendees (Microsoft Partners) were making snide remarks and chuckles as he covered some of the material, so I can see now where Vlad gets his "riff-raff" from. A minor annoyance, but nothing that detracted from the entire experience.

On the way out, I talked with one of the guys that sat at the table (didn’t get the name as they were packing it up) and he said TS2 had plans to make it out at least twice a year now. Good news considering they hadn’t been out since I became a Partner over a year ago.

Here’s to seeing more events in Hawaii!

I have another post coming soon covering something I found very interesting in the IT market here in Hawaii. Surprised the hell out of me, for sure.

Tags: System Center Essential

Blue Monster turns 1

Congratulations to Steve Clayton and Hugh MacLeod for driving their vision of Microsoft forward for the past year.

Steve has a history of significant events in the Blue Monster’s trip from initial cartoon to having it’s own Facebook group with 1k+ members to winning awards with a Stormhoek wine bearing it’s name. Good times.

I, myself, carry Blue Monster business cards from Street Cards and that has led to some interesting conversations with clients and prospective clients. Having the conversation has definitely led to more project closings (the good kind of closing) for me than not. The little guy has led more of my meetings into a "what do you think about this" type, than the "here’s what I can do, this is how much it will cost" type, which lets me connect more on a personal level with prospective clients. Once most people see how passionate I am about the software I’m recommending, it changes perceptions of the "big bad bully" on the block.

Here’s to a long future for the Blue Monster.

Now I just need to get my hands on a Blue Monster sticker somehow to go along with my Blue Monster Lithograph hanging over my desk.

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Blue Monster gaining visibility

Since my last posting of the Friends of Blue Monster Facebook group, members have steadily increased to 357 members. I see that gaining some traction much faster now.

Channel 10 had a write up yesterday on the group, which has now made it to the front page of Techmeme. What has been a slowly spreading movement will be hitting tons of RSS readers, exposing it to those unaware of it’s existence for nearly a year now.

The Blue Monster is, of course, Hugh Macleod’s creation which was passed on to Steve Clayton of Microsoft UK who turned it viral within the offices of Microsoft UK. It has since spread it’s reach since then to non-’Softies to all corners of the globe and is poised with these developments to reach an even wider audience.

Looking forward to what the reactions will be!

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Friends of Blue Monster

Steve Clayton of Geek In Disguise has formed a Blue Monster Facebook group for those that are interested in the Blue Monster. It’s up to 184 members at the moment and discussion is already taking place on what it means to them and ways to possibly expand the reach of the viral Blue Monster.

For those that aren’t aware of what the Blue Monster is, feel free to check out the Blue Monster page on Steve’s site, as well as Hugh MacLeod’s page, who is responsible for the Monster’s visage. Steve is also working on an Office Live site for it, as well as a Live Earth Map so the reach of the Monster can be plotted.

Join in!

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