Archive for February, 2007



27
Feb

UPDATE: Windows Vista Express Upgrades could begin shipping this week

If you purchased a PC before January 30 and took advantage of the Vista Express Upgrade program, you know by now that this program is everything else but “Express”. In fact, three of the five largest PC vendors in the U.S. have confirmed to TG Daily that - almost four weeks after the launch of the OS - no Vista Express Upgrades have shipped to their customers yet.

The Vista Express upgrade program appears to be causing headaches in all links that are involved in the supply chain - Microsoft’s chosen upgrade provider ModusLink, PC vendors and consumers. Ken Walker, as senior director responsible for the Vista rollout at Gateway, told TG daily in a conversation today that “probably no Vista Express Upgrades have been delivered to PC buyers yet.” This assumption was confirmed to TG Daily by two other large U.S. PC vendors.

Microsoft determined the rules of the upgrade, with the idea to outsource every step of the upgrade process to the PC vendor and the infrastructure provider ModusLink, which handles the sign-up and shipping of Vista Express Upgrades worldwide. In order to get the upgrade, PC buyers who qualify for the upgrade need to sign up online in what often has been described as a complicated and tiring process that could take more than 30 minutes to complete.

Recently, we have been getting emails from readers who told us that they have not yet received their Vista upgrade. It is quite apparent that users are getting increasingly frustrated in a situation where they expected to have a product on their doorstep on January 30 and it still has not arrived. The first assumption, of course, is that there is a hiccup or a delay in the supply chain, which, however, is not the case.

In fact, we were told by Walker that the Express Upgrade sign-up form states in the fine print that users should expect to see their Vista upgrade in the mail about eight to ten eights after retail availability of Vista. According to Walker, a substantial number of users have not noticed this fine print and begin shelling Gateway with questions about this issue - which, in the end, cannot be resolved by the PC vendor alone.

Here’s why: When the Express Upgrade finally reaches the customer, it typically will consist of a regular Windows Vista copy as well as a companion CD that contains certain upgrades that need to go along with Vista on a specific PC. Walker told us that the Gateway companion CD will ensure core functionality of a system as well as Internet connectivity, which will allow consumers to download driver updates for their computer. For example, these CDs will include BIOS updates especially for lower end systems with 512 MB main memory and shared memory graphics cards (to limit the graphics memory to 64 MB and allow Vista to actually boot.)

Technically, all Vista CDs are identical and only the product key decides which version if Vista is installed. The 5×5 character product key decides whether Vista Basis or Ultimate is installed and whether it will be installed as an upgrade or a full version of the operating system. The fact that BIOS upgrades are required for some computer systems also is the reason why there is an actual difference between a Windows Vista that comes pre-installed with a PC and the upgrade DVD: While the OEM version of Vista will be tied to the BIOS of a PC, the upgrade will not include a “BIOS lock.”

So, why is it exactly that the Express Upgrades won’t be shipping until two months after Vista launch? According to Walker, there apparently never has been a question about the delivery date of the media, as it was clear at least to Microsoft, ModusLink and vendors all along that these upgrades would eight to ten weeks after Vista launch. In that view, the supply chain is still on track and while Walker did not comment on the progress of other PC vendors, he said that “if everything worked perfect to create the companion CD,” first PC users could be seeing upgrade CDs in their mail by next week.

The true problem with the Vista Express Upgrade, however, appears to be a lack of communication between Microsoft, ModusLink, PC vendors and buyers. Beginning with the fact that Microsoft calls this program “Express Upgrade,” to the bottlenecks at ModusLink and to the lack of information on PC vendor sites, the program apparently has not been going as well as Microsoft promised. Interestingly, Gateway confirmed that the firm’s companion master CD is being finalized just now and will shipped to ModusLink within three to four days. This may seem a bit late, but in the light of the eight-to-ten-week shipment time frame of the upgrade packages, the company argues that it is well on track.

Walker declined to put the blame for the late deliveries of the upgrades on a single source or company, but mentioned that “we all fell down a bit.” He described the transition to Vista as the most significant update since Windows 95 and said that the industry probably became somewhat “complacent” about the fact that PCs are easy to use. “Sometimes,” he said, “this upgrade process is rocket science.”

In our conversation, Walker pointed to two key problem areas that would have needed improvement in the Vista upgrade process. First, he believes that the communications process in the supply chain as well as the communication to the customer raised expectations, which the products and companies were not able to keep. “If we explain to people that it takes time to get something from A to B, I’m sure they would understand. But we did not communicate this message properly.”

The second area that could see improvement, in Walkers opinion, focused on the supply chain management firm ModusLink. “The sign-up process brought a lot of challenges and frustration,” he said.

Strangely, Microsoft relies on ModusLink as the only company to handle the upgrade process, perhaps in the hopes to cut redundancies and channel all requests through one streamlined system. However, this did not only put all OEMs at ModusLink’s mercy, Walker said, the online sign-up was also overwhelmed at times and simply broke down. “It has happened time and time again, and sometimes not because of really logical reasons,” he said. A particular problem appeared to be the slow speed and insufficient navigation of the sign-up site, which caused users to use the “back” and “forward” buttons of their browsers - which deleted previously entered data and locked users out of the sign-up process as an application for the upgrade is a one-time deal. “We contacted ModusLink in these cases and it often took between 24 and 72 hours, until users were able to re-apply for the upgrade,” Walker said.

With these experiences made, Walker feels that a “more robust sign-up process” should have been put into place and alternative sign-up methods, perhaps postcards, would have been a good idea. “We understand the frustration customers feel and we know how annoying this sign-process can be,” Walker said.

Microsoft so far has not commented on the status of the Express Upgrade program, but the firm told us that the Vista Express upgrade program was designed as an “OEM fulfillment program” which did not require the participation of Microsoft itself.

Source: TGDaily.com

27
Feb

WS UploadService

WS UploadService is a web service written for Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 and Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 and is meant for uploading documents into SharePoint. The zip file contains the web service and its related files. It also contains an installer to help you install the service easily on your server. Please read “Readme.txt” before installing the service. Note: Run “UploadServiceCopier.exe” to install the service. Running “setup.exe” directly will not install the service.

Download release 1.0 Beta

27
Feb

Upcoming BPEL strategic and technical webcasts

These are sponsored by OASIS, not Microsoft:

WS-BPEL is central for defining SOA business processes. Members of the OASIS WS-BPEL Technical Committee will present this free webinar that will help business analysts and managers to better understand the technology and business value offered by this cornerstone specification.

March 12th: The Business Value of WS-BPEL for Business Analysts and Managers

March 13th: WS-BPEL Technical Overview for Developers and Architects

27
Feb

Random Sharepoint (MOSS) 2007 links

Supercharge your SharePoint Wiki - Adding Columns and Creating Dynamic Tables

Inserting data into Hyperlink column in MOSS

RAPID for SharePoint - classification framework for taxonomies

Creating A MOSS Training Portal

Using the AJAX Control Toolkit in SharePoint

Content Deployment – Step By Step Tutorial

SQL Server 2005 Maintenance Plans and MOSS 2007 Databases

SharePoint Content Migration Object Model and Content Migration Packages

Overview: Estimate performance and capacity requirements (Office SharePoint Server)

Estimate performance and capacity requirements for Windows SharePoint Services collaboration environments (Office SharePoint Server)

Estimate performance and capacity requirements for portal collaboration environments

Estimate performance and capacity requirements for search environments

Estimate performance and capacity requirements for Excel Services environments

SharePoint 2007 Workflow with Visual Studio 2005 + InfoPath 2007 (RTM VERSION!)

Wrap SharePoint Menu Items with Custom HTML

 

 

27
Feb

The best things about Windows Vista

Check out VistaJuice.com if you are still contemplating the upgrade to Windows Vista. One of the best posts I’ve seen so far :-)

Which one’s the best? Also on VistaJuice.com, check this post! (Need I say more?)

27
Feb

Some Good Windows Vista Sidebar Gadgets, Issue #1

from InsideMicrosoft by Nathan Weinberg:

Here are some Windows Vista Sidebar Gadgets that have caught my eye:

Donavon West created these cool Gadgets, which work in Vista, Live.com, Live Spaces Google Homepage, or any web page. They feature three major candidates for President of the United States in 2008, Hillary, Obama, and McCain:

 

 

 

How’s about this Gadget, which lets you search for a wifi hotspot in your area.

Continue at source

27
Feb

InfoPath 2007 Sample: Training Labs

Step-by-step training and downloadable samples illustrating Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007 features.

Download

27
Feb

Learning Essentials 2.0 for Microsoft Office

With Learning Essentials, educators and students can get started, stay organized, and successfully complete high-quality work. Educators can create effective instructional resources, complete administrative tasks, and implement new teaching strategies. Using the Content Development Kit, educators can create additional templates and tutorials that integrate with familiar Microsoft Office applications. And students can use templates with project assistance to coach them through a variety of assignments.

The English, French, German, Italian, Norwegian, and Spanish versions of Learning Essentials also support SCORM standards. SCORM Tools seamlessly convert Microsoft Office documents into standards-based e-learning content that can be managed and reused by any SCORM-conformant learning management system.

Learning Essentials is a free download for schools that license Microsoft Office.

Note: Learning Essentials is customized with appropriate content for International (LrngEssl2_Intl_English.exe) and North American (LRNGESSL20.exe) English. Choose the download that is most relevant for you.

Download

26
Feb

Hamad releases high-resolution Vista wallpapers

Long Zheng interviewed Hamad Darwish, the Flickr photographer commissioned to shoot Windows Vista wallpapers.

Today he put up the high-res versions of the pictures he promised that didn’t make the Vista cut. Visit his home page to get them now

26
Feb

Windows For Warships Nearly Ready

Analysis Everyone knows the differences between Windows and other operating systems. Steve Jobs has recently spent colossal sums telling us that most malware is written for Windows; also that using Windows is no fun and, even worse, seems to involve wearing a tie.

Those acquainted with the more foam-lipped Linux fanciers will also be familiar with the position that Windows use is morally corrupt, indicative of sexual perversion, and causes cancer.

A lot of customers keep buying from Microsoft, however. One may want to deploy a particular kind of hardware, perhaps used only by a few organisations. It may well be that you can only get the associated software from the hardware maker, and the vendor in question doesn’t provide anything other than Windows-based machines.

One type of hardware where this is happening more and more is warships.

This shift has already been heavily criticised. Nonetheless, BAE Systems subsidiary Insyte, the UK’s sole provider of warship command systems, has decided to standardise on Win2k (this was during the company’s former incarnation as AMS).

Type 45 Destroyer

The Type 45 destroyers now being launched will run Windows for Warships: and that’s not all. The attack submarine Torbay has been retrofitted with Microsoft-based command systems, and as time goes by the rest of the British submarine fleet will get the same treatment, including the Vanguard class (V class). The V boats carry the UK’s nuclear weapons and are armed with Trident ICBMs, tipped with multiple H-bomb warheads.

All this raises a number of worrying issues. First up is basic reliability and usability. Most of us have stared in helpless despair at the dreaded blue screen; how much worse would you feel if that wasn’t just your desktop gone but your combat display, and it really was the screen of death?

Surely we can’t have our jolly tars let down by possibly untrustworthy, difficult to use kit such as Windows? Especially when you reflect that cost is not an issue. When you’re buying destroyers at £1bn per hull, the price difference between 26 PCs and the same number of Sun workstations barely shows up.

Continue at source