How to spend your 40th birthday

 Okay, so I didn’t do much of anything on my 40th, which was nice (except for the client who kept calling about unimportant stuff no many how many times I told them I was taking the day off unless it was an emergency).
 
The one thing I wanted to do was to get to Clearwater Beach and go to my favorite beach bar "Britt’s".  Unfortunately, due to all of the construction going on over there, the Britt’s that I enjoyed is gone.  They still have the "other" Britt’s, which has the pizza I so enjoy (New York style – fold it and let the grease run out) so it wasn’t a complete washout. 
 
Oh yeah, and I drank some… 🙂
 
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Vista – it’s the little things that make it so nice.

I’ve been using Vista on my desktop since it was officially released at the consumer level.  I didn’t blog about it, but my upgrade on my desktop workstation did not go well.  Generally, unless you have a large IT department doing the work, my advice is get Vista with a new machine.
 
Yesterday I caved and purchased the new Apple aluminum keyboard and a Mighty Mouse.  These two things are pretty expensive considering that they are both wired, but I absolutely love the feel of the flat keyboard, and I thought I might as well make it a matching set.
 
The important part is that I wasn’t originally planning on using these devices on my Vista laptop.  Rather, I was going to use them on my Mac Mini which I keep around just to be cool like Steve Jobs .  However, at some point last night I decided to plug them into my laptop to see if they would work.  Well, Vista picked them up and they work quite nicely.  Without installing any software the keyboard is working, and the mouse and its weird buttons and scroll ball (on top) are working fine.  The special function keys (volume, etc) aren’t working yet, but I believe Apple has a driver out there somewhere.
 
After that went smoothly, I was playing around with Flip-3D in Vista and I noticed that when I did it, my MSN Live Messenger window automatically indicated that I was ‘busy’.  This isn’t a Vista feature, but it’s a nice bit of integration between Vista and Messenger.  There is a setting that you can turn off that prevents the ‘busy’ flag from being set whenever you are running a full screen app (which Flip-3D apparently counts as) or in presentation mode.
 
Finally, things like the breadcrumbs in Explorer, the search in the start menu (I haven’t organized the start menu ever – no need, just type a few letters), the previews in the task bar and the previews when using Alt-Tab just make Vista a nice place to spend time.
 
Maybe another day and I’ll post about the Vista annoyances… can you say UAC?  I knew you could!
<span class="entry-utility-prep entry-utility-prep-cat-links">Posted in</span> Computers and Internet | 3 Comments

New Sharepoint 2007 Training

The (in)famous Ted Pattison has just announced that The Ted Pattison Group will be hosting a new training class for Sharepoint 2007, starting August 27th.  This class will focus on creating solutions in Microsoft Office Sharepoint Server, without using programming.  See the details at: http://tedpattison.net/Courses/SSE301.aspx.
 
I’ve been to Ted’s training and found it very helpful.  If you use Sharepoint 2007 in your business (either Sharepoint Services, or Sharepoint Server), I strongly recommend you take the time and go to one of his classes.  You will learn a lot, and by taking the four days out of your schedule, you’ll be able to focus on Sharepoint, and not the daily interruptions that plague us all.
 
Have fun!
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What’s the weirdest thing you’ve found in your hard drive?

When I say "in your hard drive", I mean that quite literally.
 
We are destroying some drives for a medical customer.  Since we do not have the proper SCSI card to actually connect the drives, we’ve decided to physically destroy the drives.  One of them had a stripped screw, and we ended up folding back the metal cover over the drive platters to get access to them. 
 
Amazingly, when we flipped back the cover, we saw that one of the drive platters had a large X written on it with a black marker!  See the attached photo.
 
That’s the strangest thing I’ve ever found *in* a hard drive.
 
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Ever had a truly busted SQL Server 2000 install?

Recently, while installing CRM on a client’s server, we discovered a "broken" SQL Server installation.  Enterprise Manager wouldn’t run, and certain SQL Services were no longer working.  In order to clear this up, I tried to do an uninstall and reinstall of SQL Server.  Unfortunately, during the uninstall, it errored out.  So I was left with a SQL Server install that wouldn’t uninstall, and wouldn’t run.  In trying to reinstall it, it would not allow an installation as the default instance.
 
Fortunately, Microsoft has a document on how to repair a disaster of this level.  Take a looksee at http://support.microsoft.com/kb/290991 and follow the instructions very carefully.  After doing all those things, you too can have a working SQL Server 2000 installation. 
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A great quote!

Once again I went down a rabbit hole on the Internet.  Eventually I ended up at http://www.actsofgord.com and read about a video game store owner’s experiences…  Many of those revolved around being sued, or suing people…
 
Here’s the great quote: "I remember a happier time when people used to threaten to sue because they were in the right.". 
 
Ah so true.  Now people sue just to inflict their will on others, or extort money from them.  These days when I hear about another lawsuit, be it class action or otherwise, the first thing I think of is "who has the most money?".  Chances are, if it’s a lawsuit between individuals or companies whoever has the most money will prevail.  If it’s a class action lawsuit, then the only people who benefit are the lawyers. It’s a very sad state of affairs. 
 
I do like Intel’s policy on lawsuits.  As I recall, they never settle.  That means that the lawyers who are planning on suing know they have to be in it for the long haul, not just hope that Intel will throw them a few hundred thousand dollars to make them go away.
 
Here’s to my next lawsuit!
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Thousands of errors in the MSCRMExRouterService?

We run Microsoft Small Business Server in our business, and we receive daily reports from the server on its health.  Unfortunately, on Wednesday the email indicated thousands of critical errors.  It only took a moment to determine that these were coming from the MSCRMExRouterService (Exchange Router).
 
The Exchange Router takes emails delivered to the "internal" CRM mail box and determines if it should be moved into CRM.  For example, if the email has a CRM tracking token then the router will move the email into CRM.
 
When it is done checking on an email, that email is deleted from the mailbox.
 
In order to determine what was going on, I logged into the user account that hosts the internal CRM mailbox using Outlook Web Access.  As soon as I went in there it was clear what the problem was.  The single email that was in the inbox was unable to even be previewed in OWA!
 
It turns out that the email was corrupt and each time the routing service tried to handle it, it was throwing an exception and logging it.  The good news is that all other emails were being processed correctly.
 
After deleting that email the errors quit occuring and the world became safe for CRM once again!
<span class="entry-utility-prep entry-utility-prep-cat-links">Posted in</span> MS CRM | Leave a comment

Tampa Code Camp 2007 – a good time

Last Saturday, the Tampa Code Camp for 2007 was held at the St. Pete College EpiCenter.
 
At that event, for the first time, I did a presentation on Microsoft Dynamics CRM 3.0.  A good time was had by all!  Well, except for the minor projection issues, and the screen scaling issues.  Unfortunately, the session before mine ran long, and by the time I could take over the podium it was time for my session to start, so I didn’t have the opportunity to get everything set up before people were expecting things to get started.
 
Fortunately, everything got straightened out pretty quickly, and the session went well.
 
A few people left during the session, but from what I’ve observed at both Code Camps and other conferences, this is totally normal.  But having it happen to me for the first time was a bit disconcerting. 
 
At the end, I disclosed that we’re working on a Tampa Dynamics CRM User Group as well as the forthcoming training that we’re working with Dunn Training on (http://www.dunntraining.com).  More to come on both those fronts!
 
<span class="entry-utility-prep entry-utility-prep-cat-links">Posted in</span> MS CRM | Leave a comment

Lenovo’s enthusiasm is amazing – new T60 and then some.

I complain so often about poor customer service that I thought it would be worth it to call out a company that takes servicing their customers seriously.  On June 20th I ordered a new Thinkpad T60 from Lenovo, with some very high end specs.  It shipped on June 22nd from Hong Kong and was at my door on June 25th.  That’s only two days in manufacturing, and 3 days to travel half way around the world!
 
Later that day the docking station I ordered was delivered.
 
Two days later another docking station was delivered.
 
Two days later another Thinkpad arrived.
 
I just found out that another docking station shipped today for delivery in a few days.
 
Yikes!  While I enjoyed having a spare Thinkpad and docking station laying about for a few hours, a quick call to Lenovo took care of returning it (they did charge my card after all!), but I’m hoping they the airdrops of new and expensive equipment stop in the near future!
 
In all seriousness, kudos to Lenovo for delivering so quickly, and handling the return of the unordered equipment with absolutely no hassles.
 
The machine kicks some serious ass too.  A Core 2 Duo 2.33ghz processor plus a 7200 rpm drive and 3 gig of RAM makes Vista a very happy OS, and the machine beats the tar out of my old and full sized HP XW6200 workstation with a 3.2ghz XEON processor and 2 gig of RAM.
 
In short, the Thinkpads are still expensive, but hopefully worth it, and Lenovo’s customer service (so far) seems to have stayed top notch.
<span class="entry-utility-prep entry-utility-prep-cat-links">Posted in</span> Computers and Internet | Leave a comment

Urge, what are you doing with my hard drive?

I’ve been experimenting with subscription music services.  A while ago I started with Rhapsody, and while I despised their darn application (why not just be an add in in Windows Media Player?!), I enjoyed their service.  Unfortunately, after I converted to Windows Vista (super duper edition), I discovered that Rhapsody didn’t work with Vista.
 
So I cancelled my Rhapsody subscription which was a painless process, but it did require a phone call.  Kudo’s for Real (<shiver>) for making it easy to leave the services – it makes me more willing to go back to it.
 
I then joined Urge.  After a while, I kind of got used to the interface, but I still haven’t found an easy way to "tag" music that I want to listen to again, short of putting it into a big messy playlist.  Rhapsody had this part down pat.
 
Over the past month or so, I’ve noticed that my hard drive has been getting accessed nonstop.  At first I thought it was Vista doing some indexing stuff, but even after leaving the machine alone for 24 hours, the hard drive was still clicking.  I finally narrowed it down to Urge causing the problem.  A few seconds after I close Windows Meda Player, the hard drive quiets down.  I reopen WMP and it goes nuts again.  I uninstalled Urge and the problem went away.  I reinstalled Urge and it came back.
 
I have a fairly noisy 10,000 RPM drive, so having it clicking all the time is quite annoying.  I wish I knew if this is a problem that is going to be cleared up soon, or if I need to move back to Rhapsody…
<span class="entry-utility-prep entry-utility-prep-cat-links">Posted in</span> Computers and Internet | 1 Comment