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    August 10

    Schmap Calgary Eighth Edition: Photo Inclusion

    One of photos was included in this online guide under the Edworthy Park/Douglas Fir Trail section.
    April 29

    Dell Mini9 Update

    The good:  After updating my BIOS from A01 to A04, I am please to report that many of the issues I was having in regards to the system recovering from sleep mode and/or crashing with a blue screen of death have disappeared.

    The bad:  I ran into a drive space issue when I tried to install both Garmin’s City Navigator 2008 and Topo Canada v4.  Topo Canada is huge, measuring over 5GB, which takes up more than 1/3 of my drive space.  Once I moved some photos from the Mini9 to my desktop machine I was able to squeeze both products on, but I am giving serious thought to getting a larger SSD.

    I guess with the upcoming release of the Windows 7 RC, I will be reloading my machine anyway, so that should help clear out a lot of the bloat that I have accumulated on the Mini9 since I installed it last.  I’m also planning on putting Windows 7 RC onto my desktop machine so I can give Homegroups and Media Center a real test.

    On a side note, I managed to grab some more spare parts for my Dell PowerEdge 2650 – after the upgrades the machine will have 10GB of RAM and just over 1TB of disk space.  I’ll blow away the current ESXi install and start fresh, including a new file server build with larger capacity.  Oh, how I wish ESXi supported USB pass-through so I could just pop a 1TB USB drive on the server and be done with it.

    February 10

    Windows 7 on the Dell Mini9

    It’s no secret that I have been a big fan of Windows Vista and I don’t think it deserves the bad reputation it has earned.  That said, there was no way I was going to try running it on my Dell Mini9 with only 1GB of RAM.  However, in the couple of months I have had this machine the experience of using Windows XP has been painful for me.  XP is showing its age and it is time for it to be retired to Microsoft’s Operating System Hall of Fame. 

    With all the positive reviews Windows 7 (aka Windows 6.1) has been getting, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that I would be giving it a try.  I downloaded the Beta as soon as it was released and immediately installed it into a virtual machine at home and on an aging Dell GX240 at work.  It certainly seemed to be useable enough on those low resource platforms so running on my shiny Dell Mini9 shouldn’t be a problem.  Plenty of bloggers have written about their experiences and they seem to be almost universally positive, so what do I have to lose?

    Well, I guess the first thing I have to lose is access to my system for awhile.  I’m not worried about the data because most of it is either stored in the cloud or on my file server at home.  My settings?  Well, I reload my OS enough that I’m not afraid of doing some manual work to get things back to the way I like.  Knowing the Beta will expire in August means I know up front that I’ll be looking at doing another reload after my vacation this year, unless Microsoft allows us to install the Release Candidate over the Beta when the time comes.

    The technical steps of preparing a USB drive to host a bootable partition is documented in plenty of places on the Web already, so I won’t go through them here.  Basically, you need to get a primary partition formatted in FAT32 marked as Active and then copy the contents of the Windows 7 ISO onto the drive.  That’s where we pick up my experience:

    17:58:  System is booting from USB key.  I missed the option to press ‘2’ so I got as far as the TrueCrypt password screen.  (Yes, I encrypt my laptops and USB keys.)  I hit ESC to go to the Boot Manager where I selected the USB device. 

    18:10:  Hmm, I knew this USB key was cheap (Just $9.99 at Future Shop) but I didn’t think it would be THIS slow.  My machine is still sitting at the black TrueCrypt screen saying “Booting…”  As a test I pulled the key out of the Mini9 and nothing appeared to happen.  Maybe I should have removed TrueCrypt first?  Let’s try again.

    18:12:  I reconfigured my BIOS so it boots from the USB device first and then from the harddrive.  Much better results as immediately I see the “Windows is loading files” screen.   Oh well, those wasted 14 minutes gave me time to type the introduction to this post.

    18:13:  First Windows 7 setup screen appears.  Other than changing my Time/Currency format to English (Canada) I’ll take the defaults.

    18:15:  Clicking on “Install Now”.  I see “Setup is Starting…”.  I have accepted the License Agreement without reading it, just like everyone does.  I also selected the Custom install option like every good techie should.

    18:16:  Time to configure my partitions.  I’ll leave the 30MB OEM partition in place and select to install in the 14.3GB location.  (Disk 0, Partition 2)

    18:17:  File copy has started.

    18:19  File copy has completed.  System is now expanding the files.

    18:21:  Files are 5% expanded.  I’m now reminding myself how much I hate the new Win7 Taskbar.  I remain determined to use Windows7 with its default settings as much as possible so I am getting the same experience the typical user would see.  I’m still not going to use IE though – Firefox all the way.  I’ll also be using Thunderbird for accessing my three GMail accounts – I tried Windows Live Mail when I first got the Mini9 and found it painfully slow when used with GMail.

    18:24:  System shows the files are 24% expanded.  I finally break down and turn on Party Shuffle in iTunes on my Vista desktop.  First song is “Master Charge” by Albert Collins, a good blues tune.  I also sign onto Windows Live Messenger.  I must be getting bored.

    18:31:  File expansion is at 50%.  iTunes has decided my next song should be “Roundabout” by Yes.

    18:43:  The iTunes Genius has moved me on to “China Grove” by the Doobie Brothers, one of the few songs in my library worthy of a 5-star rating.  Oh yeah, the Windows install?  95% expanded and counting.

    18:47:  Files are 100% expanded.  That took 28 minutes or so.  On to the remaining stages of installation!

    18:48:  Features are installed.  Now we’re Installing Updates…whoops, they are done and the system is restarting!  USB key has been removed so system will boot from the solid state drive.  (I still want to call it a hard drive though!)  The boring/tedious portion of Windows 7 setup is done in roughly 30 minutes – not too shabby.

    18:50:  “Completing Installation…”  iTunes has moved on to “All Right Now” by Free, which is coincidentally how much I paid for my operating system.

    18:53:  At this point in any OS installation/reload I start to get those nagging doubts:  “Did I really backup everything I needed?  That seemed too simple…”

    18:55:  “White Room” by Cream.  Oh yeah, still sitting at the “Completing Installation” screen.  If it weren’t for the three periods cycling on and off I would think the system was hung.  I guess the tedious part of the install wasn’t quite done yet.  At least in the “old days” I would have the whirling sound of a HDD to let me know the system was actually doing something.  The silence of these new drives is really disconcerting.

    18:57:  Screen just went black and then flashed back on.  Must been installing the video driver.  I’m now disconcerted that I used the word “disconcerting” in a blog post.

    18:59:  After minutes of debating I decide “White Room” deserves a 4-star rating in my iTunes library.  Looks like another Yes song is next in the queue.  Oo, the screen on the Mini9 just got a lot brighter.  Still signs of life from my little friend.  We’re now into “Owner of a Lonely Heart.”

    19:02:  Windows7 is rebooting.  “Setup will continue after your system restarts.”

    19:03:  “Setup is preparing your computer for first use.”  I just had a flashback to Windows 95 and the “Getting ready to run Windows 95 for the first time” message.  Now we’re checking my video performance.  The LCD screen is much darker now than it was during the final stages of setup.  Time to set up a user account!

    19:05:  I’m such a rebel – I’ve decided not to create a password to use with my account.  Knowing that I’ll be running TrueCrypt again before long I prefer to type in my TrueCrypt password at boot time and have the machine take me straight through to the desktop.

    19:06:  Enter your product key.  Ah crap, I think I have it somewhere.  Time to look…

    19:08:  I found a copy of my product key in a Notepad file stored on the same network share where I put the Win7 ISO file.  I’m so pleased with myself I dislocate my shoulder patting myself on the back.  Time to get the install rolling again as I’m almost an hour in to the install process now.  (By the way, “Layla” by Derek and the Dominos is definitely a 5-star rating.)

    19:10:  Yes, yes, use the recommended settings for Windows Updates.  Time Zone?  Did Microsoft move its headquarters?  Every Windows install I remember defaulted to the Pacific Time Zone but Windows7 starts off in Eastern Time. 

    19:11:  Impressive!  Windows7 has detected my wireless network straight out of the box and is letting me connect to it before I even reach my Desktop.  Now that’s a nice touch!

    19:12:  Impressed that I was able to type my WPA2 key in correctly with just one attempt on the small keyboard.  I’m now debating whether to load my desktop machine with Windows7 so I can really play with this “Home group” stuff.

    19:14:  Cool, the Mini9 has detected that my Win7 VM has a Homegroup already configured.  Now if I could only remember the password I set on it when I installed the VM I would be set.

    19:17:  Every Homegroup password I typed is wrong.  (Also a little disturbing that they appear in plaintext on the screen.)  Time to logon to my VM (creatively called “Beta” and see if I can find where to change it.)

    19:19:  Using the Search function in Windows7 I was able to quickly locate the Homegroup applet in the Control Panel on my existing Win7 machine.  A quick password change (looks like I never set one the first time and the system created one for me which is why I couldn’t remember it!) and I’m ready to get back to the install.

    19:21:  A little “Tush” from ZZ Top while Windows7 finalizes my settings and drops me on my new Desktop.

    19:25:  I am at the Desktop and ready to rock!

    And that’s it!  The default installation is taking up about 6.9GB of space on my hard drive.  The whole process could easily be done in under an hour if you are prepared with your product key and password(s) and you aren’t spending time typing about the whole experience. 

    I may need to resort to compressing my drive again like it was under Windows XP.  I have a lot of mapping software that I use on this machine and that 16GB SSD is going to be tight.

    Windows Update has already downloaded 15.1MB of updates to apply:  4 important and 2 optional.

    The important updates are:

    - Creative Technology Ltd. – Streaming Media and Broadcast – Integrated Webcam

    - Update for Windows 7 Client Beta (KB961367)

    - Update for Windows 7 Client Beta (KB962236)

    - Definition Update for Windows Defender

    The optional updates are:

    - Intel Corporation driver update for Mobile Intel ® 945 Express Chipset Family (Prerelease WDDM 1.0 Driver)

    - Realtek – Network – Realtek RTL8102E Family PCI-E Fast Ethernet NIC (NDIS 6.0)

    (It would appear that Win7 has better driver support in Beta than Vista had upon release.  That doesn’t surprise me considering Vista was a major change in the driver model from XP whereas Win7 is a minor update to Vista.  That should go a LONG way to improving the public’s perception of Windows 7 right out of the box.)

    I’ll post more experiences as I go along.  Right now I have a lot of applications to install, only some of which I have tested on my other two Win7 machines.  Running compression on that drive is going to be a necessary evil – my XP machine was down to only 1GB free and that was compressed.  Dang.

    December 30

    Dell Mini9: Part II

    I've had the new system for almost a week now and I love it.  I have gotten used to the smaller keyboard much faster than I expected -- in fact using a full size keyboard now seems cumbersome because my fingers need to move so much further when typing.  I never typed with much more than four fingers and my thumbs anyway so I suspect the transition was much easier for me than someone who actually types correctly.

    That's not to say that there are no issues with typing on a keyboard that small.  First, Dell had to move some of the keys to non-standard locations which makes it difficult to type in the dark.  On a regular keyboard I am pretty much able to type away because I know where everything is, but with the small keyboard I have to stop and actually look for certain keys.  Which ones give me the biggest issues?

    Trying to type an apostrophe and quotation marks because they key has been moved from the left side of the Enter key down to the right of the spacebar.  I would have rather seen the colon and semicolon key moved to that location and kept the apostrophe and quotation marks key closer to its normal location.

    I also struggle with the idea of needing to use the function (Fn) key and the plus/equals key to get a backslash.  I use UNC paths (\\server\share) all the time to access locations on my network and having to do a two-key combination is a bit of a pain.  The forward slash key is exactly where you would expect to find it, as one would expect with a laptop designed heavily for Internet use.  By the way, don't run Internet Explorer in full-screen mode because there does not appear to be any F11 (or F12) key to get back to normal display.

    My only other challenges with typing are on the left side of the keyboard.  Having the Tab, Shift, and Caps Lock keys half the width of normal may save room, but I forever find myself typing Q, A or Z when aiming for those keys. 

    I have loaded up the unit with the software I have needed and disk space has not been an issue so far.  My system is running with slightly less than 10GB of disk space used, leaving me well over 4GB of free space.  If I get a new digital camera before vacation I may have issues offloading files from the camera to the local drive, but given how cheap SD cards are, I should be able to get around that easily enough.  Speaking of SD, having an integrated card reader was a great touch and one I wish my D620 had built-in.

    We took the unit on the road yesterday for the first time and I pleased to note we had no problems reading the screen outdoors in the sunlight.

    As for software, I have pretty much got my full load on there now:

    Truecrypt 6.1a:  Just finished encrypting the system drive.  Will be interesting to see if I see an impact on performance.
    FoxIt Reader:  Need something to read PDF files and this program can't be beat right now.
    Firefox 3:  I tried going "all Microsoft" but I missed my Firefox extensions.
    Thunderbird 2:  Windows Live Mail trying to access GMail via IMAP was painful.  Thunderbird is wonderful.
    Garmin Mapsource:  Loaded my City Navigator 2008 as well as the Topo Maps.  Back in business with my GPS!
    GPicSync 1.26:  Need something for geo-tagging my photos and this one is free and simple.
    Geocaching Swiss Army Knife:  This is THE application I need this system to run.  Can't geocache without it.
    TweetDeck:  Has become my Twitter client of choice.
    Virtual CloneDrive:  A must-have for a machine without an optical spindle -- load everything via ISO images.

    I also did my standard MS upgrades:  IE7, WindowsMedia Player 11, Windows Live Messenger (Beta) and Windows Live Photo Gallery.  This little unit just keeps humming along and has exceeded my expectations thus far.  When I do sit down to use my Dell Latitude D620 it seems like an absolute monster with the weight to match!

    December 24

    Dell Mini9: First Impressions

    My Christmas present to myself arrived today – my ultra small laptop from Dell.  My goals for this new machine are two-fold:

    1)  Remove all of my personal software and email from my main work laptop (Dell Latitude D620)

    2)  Use this for new laptop for Geocaching and in-vehicle navigation.  (All my GPS toys, basically.)

    My first impression, even before opening the box was “Wow, this thing is tiny!”  The Purolator tag showed the entire contents weighed just four lbs.  The box it shipped in was so small I swore only half the package had arrived – I swear I’ve seen hard drives get shipped in bigger boxes.

    Dell seems to have fallen into the Apple trap – what is with the shiny surface on this thing?  I can’t even remove it from its wrapping without getting it messed up with finger prints.  Note to vendors – these things are tools, not fashion accessories.  I don’t need designer colors and I don’t need shiny surfaces.  Leave that to the Mac people.

    I plugged it in and fired it up right away.  I had to go through the initial Windows XP screens for accepting the EULA and things, nothing major.  I wish there had been a 2GB of RAM option – had there been I likely would fire up Vista on it.  Say what you want about Vista, it has been the victim of word of mouth more than actual bad experiences.  I have run Vista since it was first released to volume-license customers more than two years ago and, while there were compatibility problems in those early months with third-party drivers and software, it has been a rock-solid OS for me.  I much prefer it to XP – XP might be the best OS Microsoft ever released, but it is getting long in the tooth and shows its age.  Anyway, I’ll run XP on it for now and see how it goes.

    The system detected my wireless network right away.  I had no issue typing in my ultra-secure WPA2 key on the tiny keyboard, although I find the touchpad to be a bit small – I seem to need to lift my finger in order to scroll the mouse pointer from one side of the screen to the other.  I’ll eventually see if I can fix this by adjusting the sensitivity in the Control Panel.  I may also just resort to using a USB mouse when working at a table or desk. 

    An initial check of the 16GB C: drive showed 3.79GB in use.  Pretty good.  I noticed that the contents of C: have been compressed.  I’m not a big fan of compression, but I’ll leave it intact for now.  Wow, there are a lot of things running in my system tray.  C’mon, with only 1GB of RAM to play with, I need to tighten this up a bit more.

    Software which I removed right away:

    - Adobe Reader 8.1  (FoxIt has been eating Reader’s lunch for a long time now – I’m amazed anyone uses Reader anymore.)

    - Dell Support Center  (Sorry Dell, I’m my own support depot.  If it ain’t hardware related you ain’t ever gonna know about it.)

    - Google Desktop / Google Toolbar (They don’t offer me anything I can’t get elsewhere already.)

    - McAfee Security Center (Well, it’s better than Norton, but it still burns more resources than it is worth.)

    - Microsoft Works (Haven’t used it in years.  (OpenOffice will work fine for me if I decide I need Office-type functionality later.)

    - Microsoft Office PowerPoint Viewer 2007

    - Microsoft .NET Framework 1.1 (I’ll install then again if something needs the older version, but for now I’ll just leave 2.0 and 3.0 on here.  I tried to get rid of 2.0 but it says some installed app needs it so it won’t let me remove it.)

    Software which well get removed if I don’t need it:

    - Dell Webcam Central, Live! Cam Avatar Creator, Dell Video Chat, Dell Box.net Launcher

    So, what is the net result of all these removals?  A 16% reduction in used space – the system now is using just 3.17GB of space.  Might not sound like a lot, but when you are only playing with 16GB total every bit helps.  If nothing else the system should run a bit leaner without all that bloatware kicking around.

    Next steps?  Well, I’m going install Virtual CloneDrive so I can start mounting some ISO images and getting my software on there…

    August 14

    Microsoft Tech Support Sucks

    I have a domain controller which is refusing to apply the patch Microsoft released as part of Security Bulletin MS08-040.  Every other server has applied it successfully except this one.  So, I managed to find a helpful link on the Microsoft webpage for submitting my issue.  (Security issues seem to be the only place MS doesn't try and charge for support, so that was one good thing anyway!)
     
    Anyway, I nicely type in my experience along with the error message from Event Viewer and click Submit.
     
    "An unknown application error occurred. Please try again in a few minutes."
     
    Weird.  Maybe it was a glitch.  I'll try again...
     
    "An unknown application error occurred. Please try again in a few minutes."
     
    OK, OK.  I should know better than to try and use a Microsoft website with Firefox.  I copy and paste the URL into Internet Explorer.  I copy and paste my error message into the form and submit it for a third time.
     
    "An unknown application error occurred. Please try again in a few minutes."
     
    OK, this is just plain stupid.  It has already been a few minutes and nothing has changed.  Frustrated I give up and wait a few days.  I find the Notepad file where I copied my error message, and submit the form again.
     
    "An unknown application error occurred. Please try again in a few minutes."
     
    Could it be that the world's largest software maker doesn't know their webpae for submitting incidents doesn't work?  Or, is this an outdated form and no one thought to remove it from the web or put in an automatic redirector?  Could it be no one reported this issue to MS because they would have to pay for a tech support call?  Or, is it MS doesn't care that its form is broken because then it keeps them from having to deal with users?
     
    C'mon guys, get it together!  Let's treat the clients like they are valuable assets and not a drain on the company's bottom line.  I have a domain controller which is presumably vulnerable to an attack and I can't fix it because MS won't let me submit the case?  **sigh**  No wonder Joe Q. User has such a negative impression of this company.  Heck, I've been accused of being a MS fanboy (if such a thing exists!) and I find this frustrating beyong belief.
     
    In the meantime, if anyone can help solve this problem, here is the Event Log entry in question:
     
    Installation Failure: Windows failed to install the following update with error 0x80070643: Security Update for Windows Server 2003 (KB948110).
    For more information, see Help and Support Center at http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.
    0000: 57 69 6e 33 32 48 52 65   Win32HRe
    0008: 73 75 6c 74 3d 30 78 38   sult=0x8
    0010: 30 30 37 30 36 34 33 20   0070643
    0018: 55 70 64 61 74 65 49 44   UpdateID
    0020: 3d 7b 35 43 43 42 46 34   ={5CCBF4
    0028: 42 42 2d 43 39 30 37 2d   BB-C907-
    0030: 34 32 38 36 2d 39 31 45   4286-91E
    0038: 32 2d 45 34 34 37 30 46   2-E4470F
    0040: 33 30 33 32 46 39 7d 20   3032F9}
    0048: 52 65 76 69 73 69 6f 6e   Revision
    0050: 4e 75 6d 62 65 72 3d 31   Number=1
    0058: 30 34 20 00               04 .   
    July 31

    Who Bookmarks Webpages?

    Harry McCracken's recent blog post got me thinking that maybe I am normal because I don't normally bookmark websites.

    http://technologizer.com/2008/07/31/you-mean-im-not-the-only-person-who-doesnt-bookmark/

    Quite frankly, once Google emerged as a dominant search engine (circa '98 or so?) I gave up on bookmarking web pages.  I can remember working desktop support and whenever I had to reload someone's computer they would freak out and remind me "Back up my bookmarks!!!"  I would wonder "Why?"  -- after all, is remembering www.oprah.com really that hard? 

    My problem is not trying to remember sites that I visit frequently, it is trying to remember how to navigate to a page that I might only visit once or twice before the information on it becomes so outdated it is irrelevant.  THOSE are the sites I need bookmarks for.  And, much as Harry mentions in his article, once I add a bookmark to my browser I rarely remember to go back and delete it when it is no longer needed.  My bookmark list was a tangled jumble of webpages that either had moved, didn't exist or I would never visit again.

    When I made the move to Windows Vista in late 2006 I didn't bother to back up my old bookmarks from XP -- clean slate, start fresh let the old clutter go and start anew.  Now my bookmark list is a lean, clean list of websites -- mostly bookmarked because of the annoying Web 2.0 practice of spelling common words in an incorrect manner.  After all, a couple mouse clicks is easier than trying to remember "Is it flickr or flcker?"

    Thanks to the magic of the FoxMarks extension for Firefox, that bookmark list follows me from desktop to laptop, home to work and back again.  Now if I could find a really good free tool for keeping those Firefox bookmarks in sync with IE I'd been even happier.  Because, yes, there are still some websites that make me use IE for full functionality...ah, the joys of being a Microsoft drone -- I mean Windows Server Admin.

    July 15

    Living in the Country

    Cool, we're sitting on the deck checking out our Internet connection (Davinci Broadband rocks!) and we just saw one of the new feline additions to our household catch a mouse, exactly what he is "paid" to do.  Way to go Stitch!

    July 09

    Ghost Town Convention 2008

    Well, half of my worldly goods are now at the acreage in Priddis and the other half (well, likely more than half) are in Redwood.  We've moved many of the "important" items such as the plasma TV and the XBox 360 while the movers will handle the remaining household stuff on July 19.  All of that is a moot point as we're heading out of town for a few days anyway.

    Friday will mark the start of the Second Annual Ghost Town Convention, this year being held in Ardath, SK.  We will spend two solid days of exploring the ghost towns of the area, shooting hundreds upon hundreds of digital pictures and preserving as much of the history as we can.  There are a number of ghost towns in the area but I haven't been to any of them before so I can't comment on them yet.

    We'll have a gathering with the in-laws in Saskatoon on Sunday, take the trailer to Priddis on Monday, and then on Tuesday the Bell guy will be showing up to hook up the satellite dish at the new place.  Two days of work and the movers will be there on the Friday.

    June 13

    Wasn't That A Party?

    The penultimate day of Tech Ed was topped off by the Attendee Party at Universal Studios.  Holy crap, that was a blast!  The park was closed except for Tech Ed people and we had free reign over the place.  Everywhere you went there was people offering you free food and drinks -- basically whatever you wanted.

    We managed to visit Shrek 4D, have a beer and a hotdog, go on The Simpsons Ride, have a pretzel, stand on a soundstage which recreated the drive-in scene from Twister, have another beer while sitting on the steps of a New York brownstone watching the Blues Brothers, and then rode The Simpsons Ride a second time.  (Guess what my favorite part was?)

    As for the techie part of the day, I managed to learn the details of Kerberos, learned how to deploy Server Core using the command line and a bunch of other stuff.  Still didn't get to the vendor booths and many people were saying there were running out of swag, so those at home counting on getting cool stuff might be S.O.L.

    Before the party we had dinner at Uno's Chicago Bar and Grill.  Great hamburger and ambience.  (Put me in the mood to see the Blues Brothers)

    Last day tomorrow!

    June 11

    Day Two of TechEd Done

    Two of the sessions today were very well done -- the hacker session (as I expected) and the Vista SP1 session (which I didn't expect at all).  The Vista session was presented by Mark Minasi who is a very famous (at least amongst Microsoft people) writer.  It turns out he is a very good presenter as well.  He had a sense of humor and kept everyone involved in the topic right through to the end.  And, as much as I have felt along in being a fan of Windows Vista, I guess when guys like Mark Minasi and Paul Thurott like it I can't be all wrong.

    I still have not been through the vendor booths yet to gather swag.  That's OK because Shirley has had two days to shop while I have been attending sessions so there won't be much room.  Oh well, Dell doesn't need a fanboy in their booth drooling over the lastest R900 anyway.

    These sessions have provided very good content.  I already feel I have material to keep our bi-weekly Windows Team sessions full of content for months.

    I'll add some pictures of the conference floor.  They are poor quality because since they are inside and a flash won't help I shot them with a high ISO.  They give you some idea as to the size of the convention center, specifically the meal area which is HUGE.  (I'll also show a shot from the convention center entrance and from our hotel room.)

    IMG_3272

    IMG_3275

    IMG_3273

    IMG_3277

    IMG_3278

    June 10

    Microsoft TechEd: One Day Down, Three To Go!

    Whew, survived Day One!  I am amazed at both the size of the conference and how well organized everything is.  From the time I stepped out of the hotel until the time I returned I felt like I was never more than 20m from someone who was able to direct me where I wanted to go or answer questions.  There have been no moments of confusion at all.

    I am also shocked at the food.  Breakfast consisted of the standard fruits, bagels and cereals along with sausage patties, applewood smoked bacon, scrambled eggs, french toast and all the fixings.  Everywhere you turn there are water coolers, snack tables and, my personal fave, coolers and coolers of Pepsi and assorted soft drinks -- just open the door and help yourself.  This place is great!

    Lunch offered two types of chicken as the main course.  Normally I expect chicken at an event like this to be dry because the general tendency towards safety means everything gets overcooked, but this was surprisingly moist.

    The keynote speech was presented by Microsoft's Bob Muglia, whose title is Senior Vice President of Server and Tools Business.  It was your standard marketing rah-rah presentation with a number of demos of MS products, but nothing particularly exciting.  Lots of focus on Microsoft's Hyper-V technology which looks interesting but will need to be priced VERY competitive if they want to get people to move away from VMWare.  (On a side note, the African drumming opening was very engaging and well done!)

    The sessions were quite varied today.  "The Power of Windows Server 2008" sort of had a "bad infomerical" feel to it at one point. 

    "So, let's say I wanted to go back and change this configuration setting.  I guess I'll have to click Cancel here, go back and make the change and then run through all this work again, right?"

    "Not with Server 2008!  Now changing that setting is as easy as..."

    There are some technologies which I think we can really use right away when we start rolling out Server 2008 such as Server Core.  Other things such as Read-Only Domain Controllers initially appealed to me but I now think will have limited impact in our environment.

    By far the two best sessions of the day were "The Past, Present, and the Future of Security in IT" and the round table discussion for I.T. Pros working in higher education.  The Security session was presented by Rafal Lukawiecki of Project Botticelli Ltd.  His bio states the following:

    "Rafal is a highly rated, frequent and popular speaker at Microsoft events having presented at prestigious Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer conferences mainly in Europe, Middle East, and Africa. His uniquely energetic speaking style should keep you engaged no matter how complex the subject."

    This is no word of a lie.  Rafal is by far the most engaging and easy to listen to speaker I have ever heard at a tech conference.

    The "Windows in Higher Education" session was introduced as "group therapy for Microsoft people at higher education institutions" and it proved to be true.  It was a relief to hear that our group is no more screwed up than other places!  In fact, we're perfectly normal.  Sure, some places may be further ahead than us but others are just reaching places where we were several years ago.  We're not alone!

    Well, that's Day One.  I haven't even hit the vendor trade show for the free swag yet or taken in any of the product demo booths.  There is so much to see and to cover there is no way to cover it all in four days.

    My schedule for Day Two is:

    -- Deploying Active Directory Domain Services in Windows Server 2008

    -- A Hacker's Diary:  How I Can Hack Your Vulnerable Services and How You Can't Stop Me

    -- Do These Ten Things Now or Get Own3d!

    -- Windows Vista, Take Two:  Understanding Windows Vista SP1 from A to Z

    -- Changes to Backup and Recovery of Active Directory Domain Services in Windows Server 2008

    -- Licensing Your Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008 Systems:  Everything You Know is Wrong

    I expect that other than the two security focused sessions tomorrow will be a fairly "dry" day.  I still won't be done until 18:00 so I haven't had any time to see anything else in Orlando.  Thursday night is the attendee party at Universal Studios and Friday night Shirley and I are going to see SeaWorld but then we fly out Saturday morning -- and, no Johan, we will not be back in time for the company picnic that day.  :-)

    OK, I better go to bed.  I was up at 06:00 this morning but at least I can sleep in until 07:00 tomorrow.  The time change is messing me up even though it is only a two hour difference from home.  My laptop says it is 22:36 but my body thinks it is only 20:36 -- of course in the morning it thinks I am waking up at 04:00 so that doesn't help!

    June 09

    TechEd 2008: Orlando, Florida

    I should be in bed.  It is fast approaching 22:30 here in Florida and I have been up since 03:00 MDT, which makes it a total of...well, I'm too tired to actually calculate out the hours.  We started the day with a 45 minute drive to Calgary International (YYC to you airline buffs), dropped the Jeep off at the Park 'n Jet and then did our check-in at the airline counter.  We then cleared US Customs and airline security, all with no hassles other than the standard "Please remove your laptop from the bag.  Please take off your shoes.  Please step through the scanner."
     
    A quick connection in Houston and then it was off to Orlando for TechEd 2008, which is basically a massive Microsoft love-in, er, I mean conference.
     
    We're staying at the Orlando Metropolitan Resort for five nights, which means this will be the closest thing we have had to a permanent home since the Victoria Day long weekend back in May.  Supper was a quick meal in the hotel's restaurant, which seemed reasonably priced ($30 for two people, including two beer and an 18% (18%!!!) automatic gratuity. 
     
    The conference starts tomorrow.  I hope to be up at 06:00 so I can catch one of the first shuttles from the hotel to the convention center so I can checked in and then check out what Microsoft provides for a breakfast.  My plan for tomorrow is to attend the following sessions:
     
    -- The keynote address
    -- Managing Windows Server 2008 with Server Manager
    -- The Past, Present and Future of Security in IT
    -- The Power of Windows Server 2008
    -- Active Directory Domain Controllers in Your Enterprise
    -- Windows in Higher Education
     
    If all goes well I'll be catching a shuttle back to the hotel tomorrow around 18:00 for some more rest. 
     
    If the convention center has wireless internet, I'll try doing some updates on Twitter.  I'm at http://twitter.com/danocan
    (For the record, I have been doing most of my updates on Facebook which is why this site has been so idle for so long.)
    December 16

    Geocaching in Carburn Park

    Long time since the last post.  I'll try and get better with adding in information about what is happening.

    Today was a trip to Carburn Park in Calgary's SE, followed by a drive in the country to the small town of Madden.  Yes, as always, the focus of the day was around Geocaching.

     

    Map image

    Wildlife was out in full force.  We came across ducks, geese, deer, black-capped chickadees and a woodpecker.

    IMG_2331

    IMG_2347

    IMG_2353

    This is also my first post using the relatively new "Windows Live Writer" software.  We'll see if having some better editing software allows me to post more frequently, or at least make the posts more visually interesting.

    September 23

    Another change of plans

    We set out on Friday with plans of hitting Sentinel Peak west of Longview.  It was going to be a bike/hike of around 20km round trip.  However, as we got closer the weather was turning colder, it was wet and muddy and Petro-Canada was doing a lot of work near where we needed to park.  So, we basically chickened out and headed further south down the Forestry Trunk Road, caching along the way as far as Coleman.
     
    We ended up turning off onto Atlas Road, which was a rough and rocky stretch.  There were some fairly good puddles to cross and having higher clearance paid off in some locations.  No more so than at a location where the road has been washed away.  We stopped at the top of the washout because it looked like the road turned into a quad trail beyond that point.  We were still 2km from the cache we were looking for at that point so we decided to walk the rest of the way.  Well, once we got to the top of the washout it was clear the road carried on and, in fact, looked better on the far side of the washout than the section we had just been on.
     
    So, I walked back, hopped in the Jeep and carefully navigated across.  The pictures don't do it justice because it was quite steep and the dip at the botton didn't leave a lot of clearance.  But, the Liberty lived up to its "Jeep" moniker and made it without problems.  That saved us backtracking 14km!
     
    Atlas Road eventually hits Highway 3 west of Coleman.  So, we did some more caches in that area, including one which let me set into BC briefly.  We scouted out some locations for future caches and some old alignments of Highway 3.  A quick bite to eat at the Subway in Coleman, a drive home along the Cowboy Trail (Highway 22) some more caches along the way and we made it home just a mere 12 hours after leaving.  Just a typical day in the life of a cacher. 
    September 18

    Failed Ascent of Mount Baldy

    Another one of those situations where I'll just copy and paste my Geocaching log from GCJHCQ:
     
    Awesome, simply awesome. Great views and a great hike to get to this one. I was hoping to finish the ascent of the mountain but I either ended up on the wrong trail or I don't have the skill/nerve to complete this one. Just about 50m or so beyond the cache I came to a location where the trail dropped down to a narrow ledge with severe drops on both sides. I figured I would either fall getting across or I would get stuck coming back so I bailed out and went down. Some other time, perhaps! Had a horrible time keeping the cache from sliding out of its hiding spot but I finally got it blocked in. Great time! 
    September 09

    Galatea Lakes

    Yesterday we had a great time taking the Galatea Lakes Trail up past Lillian Lake to Lower Galatea Lake. 
     
    Despite rain Friday night, freezing temperatures at the trailhead and fog it ended up being a great weather day.  It wasn't too hot and at the higher elevations there was just a trace of snow.  The cooler temps made it easy to conserve our water as I used only about half of the two liters I carried up with me.
     
    Great hike.  Our net elevation gain was around 750m, but with all the up and down our total ascent ended up being just a shade over 1000m.  The round trip was 16km.  We spent a lot of time lunching at Lillian and taking our time on the steep sectons so our total time was seven hours -- four hours of walking time and three hours of stopped time.
     
    The ladies stopped at Lillian while the fellas pushed on to Lower Galatea Lake.  That was an additional 1km each way, but you gain an impressive 250m of elevation in that short distance, much of it on loose scree.  That portion of the trip alone took us 40 minutes to complete.  The cache at Galatea Lake was in pretty grim shape but it was an easy find.  After signing the log we took about 20 minutes to get back to Lillian, found the ladies again and then completed the walk out.
     
    This was my fourth straight weekend of trying some good hikes.  From Barrier Mountain to Moose Mountain to Grass Pass to Galatea Lakes it was been great.  I'd like to think it is getting easier but I'm not so sure.  Today my left ankle is very sore (I kind of rolled it over coming down to Lillian Lake) and my right knee gives out on me everytime I bend it with any weight on it.  We'll see if I recover enough to hike somewhere else next weekend or if I'll be limited to doing the lower more accessible caches.
     
    We forgot our trekking poles at home and we left the camera in the trailer, so we have no pictures to post this time.  Sad
     
    Guinn Pass looks really tempting at some point.
     
    September 01

    Grass Pass

    OK, that hike is deceptive.  It doesn't look that far on the map but the path is used for running cattle so it is very worn in places.  It is also much rockier than you expect.  In fact, I am more sore from doing Grass Pass yesterday than I am from either Barrier Mountain or Moose Mountain.  The views once you get to the top are nice, but certainly not as great as the ones from places like Barrier Mountain or Heart Mountain.  As well, the whole way up the view is behind you so you don't really appreciate the effort you're putting in until you are done and heading back down.
     
    According to my GPSr, the one-way distance was about 3.8km -- again deceptively short.  However, in that short distance you pull around 470m of elevation gain making the route quite steep.
     
    In the end Shirley bailed out after four caches and I only managed to get six of the nine I had on my list.  In a sense that worked out OK because there was a new cache placed up there in the Bull Creek Hills (which is where the three I missed are) that I didn't know about.  It would have been a lot worse coming down thinking I had hit all nine caches and "cleaned out the area" and then found there was one left.  At least with four still up there I have more motivation to return.
     
    August 26

    Moose Mountain (Aborted summit attempt)

    The weather beat me this time.  For you non-Geocachers, just substitute "Harry" for BearGPS and "Graham" for UK_CAN.   Open-mouthed
    I thnk my log for "A Cache Along Packer's Trail" says it all:
     
    First the back story:

    BearGPS, UK_Can and I had made plans to summit Moose Mountain today. Needless to say, this was before the forecasters began calling for showers and rain.

    We met at the trailhead parking lot at 09:00. It was foggy but the rain hadn't started so we had high hopes.

    We skipped this cache on the way up, opting to save our energy for the summit and the main trail. We made promises to "see how we feel on the way back".

    We eventually made it to "Mostly..." The rain was coming down steadily, the fog was obscuring the views and, quite frankly, I was cold and wet. (I really need to invest in waterproof clothing if I am going to keep doing these hikes in the rain.)

    We started our push for the summit. The rain was threatening to turn into snow. Suddenly BearGPS voices exactly what I was starting to think: "You know, guys, there is no shame in turning back."

    That was all the encouragement UK_Can and I needed to hear. We turned around and began working our way back. We know the cache at the summit is a micro so the reward is all in the views and there weren't any of those to be had on this day.

    We walked back and decided to hit this one. What a great trail this is! It is so nice to get onto a trail that sees less use and has such historical significance to the area. The final location was great, such a shame we couldn't enjoy the views. The cache was a quick find and then we worked our way back to the main trail.

    All I will say about that is "So, that is why you call it Buggeration Hill!" That phrase was uttered several times on the trip up, but it sounded best coming from UK_Can with his British accent.

    We reached the vehicles and had a little celebratory drink. We didn't make the summit but if you get to share six caches with two good friends that's all the reward you need.