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Thanks for screwing us Sirius / XM

ramblings, tech 0 Comment »

I’ve been an XM subscriber for almost 5 years.  I pay my bill on time each month. I bought a second radio for my girlfriend’s car. Everything was great.  I was getting good service at a fair price. Then came the merger.

On July 28th, 2008 XM and Sirius officially completed the process of merging the two companies. The two companies claimed there would be a great cost benefit to satellite radio subscribers. Since then, they have raised the monthly price of secondary radios from $6.99 to $8.99, started charging $2.99/month for the “high quality” Internet stream, and still charge extra fees for “premium package” stations previously only offered on the “other” satellite radio providers system. Read the rest of this entry »

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February 4th, 2010  
Tags: satellite, Sirius, XM



4 must have Firefox Add-ons for the Sys Admin

microsoft, ramblings, tech 1 Comment »

Now before I get into it here it should be known that I have nothing against Internet Explorer.  I think it does a great job and it performs well considering the types of strain some sites put it under – specifically such as ActiveX IE-only sites.

The primary reason I use Firefox as my main browser is that there are many extensions for it that make my life easier as a systems admin…and yes I know there are a thousand other lists on other blogs about “must have Firefox plug-ins”.  This is by no means a complete list and this post is partially to share my experience with the world as well as a reference for me if my laptop ever explodes and I need to re-install them :-x

Check out the staples in my Firefox plug-in collection after the jump.

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January 20th, 2010  
Tags: Add-ons, Firefox, tool



Running 32bit applications on a 64bit IIS7.5 platform

microsoft, tech 0 Comment »

As I continue to attempt getting all old IIS6 sites running properly in IIS 7.5 (Windows Server 2003 R2 64bit), the next issue didn’t occur much past my last post.  After creating my new Data Source (DSN), I opened up the migrated site and received the following error:

Microsoft OLE DB Provider for ODBC Drivers error ‘80004005′
[Microsoft][ODBC Driver Manager] The specified DSN contains an architecture mismatch between the Driver and Application
/path/to/dsn.asp, line 6

Well that’s interesting.  It’s mostly interesting because of what was actually on line 6 of this file:

Conn.Open “dsn=dsnName;uid=user;pwd=pass;”

Googling kept pointing me to it being a 32bit application running in 64bit mode.  All the resolutions were mostly explaining that the application needs to be recompiled, yadda, yadda.  Obviously this .asp file isn’t a “32bit file”, and well what am I supposed to tell my customers, that they need to only use 64bit .mdb files?

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December 4th, 2009  
Tags: 32bit windows, 64bit, application pool, DSN, IIS, microsoft, ODBC, windows server 2003 r2



Where did all the ODBC Drivers go from Windows Server 2008 64bit

microsoft, tech 1 Comment »

So I’m in the process of moving all the sites leftover on my old 32bit Windows Server 2003 web servers running IIS6. I’m moving everything to Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2 64bit.  I am pretty sure I’m going to end up choosing the Web Edition of Windows Server 2008.  So far it seems to do everything I need at a huge discount to Standard Edition.

I would have expected there to be no problems with most of them. I started out with a dinky little site that uses a small Microsoft Access Database.  This site uses a standard DSN to access the .mdb. I proceed to go to the Administrative Tools and open the ODBC Data Source Administrator window and add a new DSN for the .mdb and lo and behold I see the following nearly empty window:

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December 4th, 2009  
Tags: 32bit windows, 64bit windows, DSN, IIS, IIS7.5, microsoft, ODBC, web edition, web servers, Windows, Windows Server 2008



Digsby and Ubertwitter – People just love to complain about free stuff

ramblings, tech 2 Comments »

Over the past couple months there have have been at least two instances where a good number of Internet users and socialites alike that have been complaining about some recent changes to two of the hottest social networking apps out there:  Ubertwitter and Digsby.

Ubertwitter is a Twitter client for the Blackberry.  In my opinion it far exceeds the quality of any other Blackberry Twitter client currently available, and I’m not alone. Since it first became available a few months back it has caught on like wild fire. Other Blackberry client features pale in comparison to Ubertwitter. Then about a month ago an upgrade added a small advertisement to the top of the Twitter feed.  Advertisements were added without letting users know beforehand. Kicking and screaming ensued (READ)They then began to offer users the choice to pay $4.99 to get rid of the ads altogether.

Digsby is the hottest IM/Social Network aggregator on the market (w00t upstate NY!).  I first started using Digsby back when they were only allowing users to download it with private invitation codes – I don’t remember where I found that code, but I haven’t looked back since!

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September 18th, 2009  
Tags: Social, Twitter



Outlook 2007 Active Directory account lockout (resolved)

microsoft, tech 0 Comment »

The problem was painfully obvious: Since installing Outlook 2007 my Active Directory account name continues to get locked out.

It seems as though this problem is caused by my local computer account name (which I am logged in as), is the same as the one in my Active Directory.  Outlook must be trying to unsuccessfully authenticate to AD using “username” instead of “domain\username”.  This seems odd to me, however since I changed my local Vista username to something different the problem hasn’t shown itself.

Thanks to Matt  / webdevmatt.com for the suggestion

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August 14th, 2009  
Tags: microsoft, Outlook



The painful irony that is a Twitter outage

ramblings, tech 0 Comment »

So this morning, like many other users on the web noticed Twitter was down.  Checking the Twitter Status Page first showed they were aware of an issue and investigating. Then several minutes later the page was updated with the following message:

We are defending against a denial-of-service attack, and will update status again shortly.
Update: the site is back up, but we are continuing to defend against and recover from this attack.

ScreenHunter_010

I sent an email to the guys over at Internet Storm Center (ISC) notifying them of the outage, probably just as many other ISC readers had done. When they updated their site with the information about the possible DD0S attack directed at Twitter I had a good and painful laugh at what I saw.


The share to Facebook and Twitter buttons sitting there, mocking me as only as a Social Network can do. How do I get the word out that Twitter is down if Twitter is down?!? It’s a paradox of the worst kind.

With the reports that Facebook is also having problems is my only choice to blow the dust off my Digg account and hope that it gains some attention and gets bumped up? Time for the next new idea? Social fads are only as good as the networks running them.

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August 6th, 2009  
Tags: Facebook, Social, Twitter



Office 2010 Technical Preview – Outlook: Day 1

microsoft, ramblings, tech 1 Comment »

I got around to installing the Microsoft Office 2010 Technical Preview yesterday. All in all I’m very impressed with what I’m seeing.  I’ve beta tested Office 2003 and Office 2007, as well as run all their Technical Previews and I think I can already say this one runs much smoother than any I’ve tested in the past.   It runs fast, smooth, and as desired with only a few problems so far.

64bit
This is long overdue. I live out of Outlook and it gets put to the test on a daily basis. Any bit of extra power I can get out of Outlook is a huge plus in my book.  Granted there aren’t many functions that will make use of 64bit processing, but again every bit counts.

Splash
The first thing you’ll notice upon launching Outlook 2010 is the new splash screen. I know it seems insignificant, and this change lacks any sort of functionality, however it’s nice to see all aspects of the product being improved.  One very small thing the splash screen does do is show the progress of the startup process, which might prove to be helpful in the future.o2010_splash

Outlook takes a while to load up the first time.  It seems to have sped up with each subsequent launch.  I suspect that is due to caching and indexing finally completing.

Ribbon
Microsoft did what I thought they should have done with Outlook 2007 – give the same style ribbon that the rest of the Office products received with Office 2007.  This is long overdue in my opinion.

o2010_plain_ribbon

Quick Steps
One of the cooler things with this release is the inclusion of “Quick Steps”.  Thnk of them as customizable repeat actions. You can create a quick step to take care of things you do all the time, such as forward an email to a specific person or manager, reply or reply all to a message with a Meeting Request, move a message to a specific folder and much more.  You can even create a quick step, that will with on click, Reply (all) to a message, change the subject and insert predefined text in the body. I know this was all possible with rules and templates with previous Outlook versions, but never this simple and quick.

o2010_quicksteps

My one hope for Quick Steps is that Microsoft opens up the Quick Steps to allow users to create Quick Steps with much more detailed actions that they don’t offer by default. Currently they only give a short list of very basic functions.  You can’t tease me with an awesome idea like this and not expect me to want more :)

Search
Search within Outlook 2010 looks to be much more useful to the common user. Microsoft has including some predefined search criteria options which made often made it a pain to do more complex searches within Outlook 2007. It seems so simple, but we never had it like this before. I think Microsoft is really starting to listen.

o2010_searchtools

Active Directory Authentication
The only, and potentially fatal problem I’ve had so far is since I’ve installed Outlook 2010 my Active Directory account seems to be getting locked out.  Its happened twice within the last day.  I’ll open Outlook and it will keep asking me for my username and password.  Then, I’ll log onto my Domain Controller and see that my account has been locked out – and yes I am typing the right password.  I’m not sure what is Outlook is trying to do, but it’s doing it unsuccessfully. My Domain Security Policy is vanilla, so Outlook is failing at authenticating something the magic number of times. I hope this is a bug that Micrsoft has assigned some resources to.

Conclusion
Other than the major problem with my Active Directory account getting locked out Microsoft is right on track with this one.  The interface is clean and fast and there few improvements I’ve seen thus far scream the fact that Microsoft is putting in a lot of effort.

I don’t usually have much of a need for the other Office apps, but when I do I usually work in them all day for a special project. I hope to get some alone time with Visio 2007 next week.

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July 16th, 2009  
Tags: email, microsoft, microsoft office, Outlook



Sage Timberline running on VMware ESX 4

ramblings, tech, vmware 0 Comment »

A few months ago I started the process of getting all my ducks in a row for a migration that involved moving all physical servers a customer had to a VMware ESX environment. This environment wasn’t anything special: 60 users running Microsoft Active Directory, Exchange 2003, Blackberry Enterprise Server and Sage Timberline Office as their accounting app.

The Microsoft parts were easy.  I was sure there would be no problem those. My one concern was with the Sage Timberline software package. This program never ran particularly well, and its obvious it is running using very old programming languages much like alot of the LOB apps companies use these days.

I needed to make sure this package would both a) run within a VMware environment and b) be supported by Sage from a technical perspective. When I called the Sage Customer Support desk and asked their response was:

Sage Timberline Office is not supported running as a virtual machine, however we will troubleshoot any issues you have to a reasonable extent, while not allowing any support calls to be escalated to the engineering department.”

That actually sounds pretty fair. The woman I spoke with sounded fairly knowledgable about the Sage product and had been one of the technicians to previously work with another Sage customer that had issues running their software in a virtual environment. I asked her what the specific issues encountered were and all she really could tell me was that the Pervasive Database performed very badly and lots of unexpected things would happen while using the software.

So here I was – ready to get a signature for a proposal that would cost my customer 10’s of thousands of dollars and I had no factual evidence that showed that the accounting package they used would even work. If there were ever going to be a problem with this software it would be related to performance alone, right? There only about 10 users that access this application, so that shouldn’t really be an issue, right?

Well it turns out Sage Timberline Accounting software runs just fine in a virtual environment. It runs better running in VMware ESX 4 than it ever did on its own dedicated Dell Poweredge 1650 with RAID5.

I guess the moral of the story is that if it should work and it isn’t, you’re probably doing something wrong. Fight through the problems with a sense of resolve, do your research, follow guidelines and procedures and most things will run just fine in a virtual environment….and never take no for an answer.

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June 25th, 2009  
Tags: ESX, vmware



FAILED: A system error encountered during an operation

tech, vmware 0 Comment »

Anyone familiar with ESX will know how finicky it and vCenter can be about name resolution for all parties involved.  I typically make my VI and vCenter Server HOSTS file identical.  This usually solves all my HA problems and other weird issues that arise.

Today I realized it’s also beneficial to duplicate the HOSTS file on a machine that is being converted from physical to virtual using vCenter Converter (the machine I am converting). Before I appended those entries to the I was receiving “FAILED: A system error encountered during an operation.” each time I tried running the conversion.  The error cleared up right away.

I still don’t know why this continues to be an issue. The infrastructures are setup as vanilla and as “by the book” as possible.  DNS and WINS are always setup and working properly.  Short name and FQDN resolution always works from every host and client on the network.

I suppose it isn’t the end of the world. Seems like it should be an easy thing for VMware to “fix”…then again maybe they don’t consider it to be broken.

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June 22nd, 2009  
Tags: ESX, HOSTS, vCenter, VI



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About Me

My name is Michael Varre and I'm a Systems Administrator for a small company in Syracuse, NY.

You'll find a variety of Technology related rants, raves, how-to's and general thoughts here at jirc.com.Read more

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