Dan Holme was a speaker
at the European SharePoint Conference 2011. Read this blog by
Dan Holme to see what you can learn from the AvePoint's Chief SharePoint
Evangelist.
As my regular readers know, I've been traveling a lot this year.
I've now been home for two weeks, which is more than the last two
months combined. Being away from home so long, I've neglected the
infrastructure of my home office and of the tools I use on the
road.
The last time I did a "
tools I use" column, I got a tremendous amount of positive
feedback, so I thought I'd summarize some of the current and
upcoming changes in my own technology stack, for whatever insight
it may provide to readers. So we'll look inside my home office,
inside my carry-on luggage, and up to the cloud to see one
combination of infrastructure that works for a seasoned road
warrior.
WINDOWS HOME SERVER 2011
I finally installed a new system running Windows Home Server
(WHS) 2011 to centralize data storage and to serve media for me at
home and in my home office. Requirements included a small
footprint, low power utilization and noise. I decided to assign the
WHS role to a laptop I'm using less frequently now.
This minimizes the footprint and power utilization, and because
it is a pimped-up laptop, it gives me a lot more horsepower than
some of the microservers sold with WHS. I'm really happy with
WHS2011 so far, and I'm looking forward to using it for remote
access.
WINDOWS LIVE SKYDRIVE
Now that I can get to my files while on the road, using WHS 2011
Remote Access, I can take less data with me on my laptop or tablet.
I'm planning to migrate much of my productivity data to SkyDrive so
that my data is available across devices.
DATA STORAGE FOR HOME AND HOME OFFICE
As part of the upgrade to WHS2011, I migrated 5TB of storage. If
you had told me, 10 years ago, that I would have 5TB of data just
by myself, I would have laughed out loud. Well, I do…
I built a storage unit using an inexpensive (but so far
fantastic) four-bay Mediasonic Probox external enclosure attached
to the WHS2011 server with USB3.0. I opted for an external
enclosure for a variety of reasons including the ability to
(physically) lock up the data when I leave town, and the ability to
attach the drives to another computer if necessary.
Here in Hawaii, I have to be particularly concerned about
technology failure. The humidity leads to sometimes bizarre
failures, and replacing any technology takes several days.
With an external enclosure containing four drives (two mirrored
sets), I can continue to access data if any component fails. I
opted to use the Probox rather than a device that has built-in RAID
controllers because I discovered the hard way that when a
proprietary RAID controller dies, it takes a long time and costs a
lot of money to get a replacement device.
With this setup, Windows is doing the RAID, so I can port the
drives to any other computer, in any external enclosure, and access
data. With my home server, the gigabit network is the bottleneck
for data transfer, so I was not concerned about a minor hit to
performance by using Windows software-based RAID.
TEXT MESSAGE READING AND DICTATION ON WINDOWS PHONE
Siri on the iPhone is really cool. I love her intelligence
("Remind me to feed the dog when I get home" actually works thanks
to GPS) and it's fun to test her sarcastic and witty responses. But
Siri can't read.
And the killer feature for me with the Windows Phone Mango
update is certainly the Voice-to-Text and, more importantly, having
my text messages read to me while I drive. If I have one thing to
thank for extending my life just a little, it's that now I can
carry on text message conversations, hands free, both incoming and
outgoing. Wow!
And I'm having fun with Microsoft TellMe which,
while certainly "geekier" than Siri, has quirky ways for dealing
with cursing, emoticons, and other funky text.
A couple of tips I've found useful. First, you can go into
Settings > Speech and set text message reading to "Always." Now
my phone sits on my desk and reads me my texts as they arrive,
including Facebook messages. I've also added contacts for Facebook
and Twitter, so I can update my status with a simple "Text
Facebook" or "Text Twitter" command.
SANTA I WANT AN UNLOCKED HTC TITAN
I adore my Samsung Focus. The display is sexy and beautiful, and
music sounds terrific-audibly better than my iPhone.
But I want an unlocked phone for travel, and I am eying an
unlocked HTC Titan. The Titan's screen is big… OK, huge… but
thin.
But now that my old eyes are wearing out, the extra screen size
means I can read text messages without my glasses. Crazy, but truly
the reason I'm going big. I'm looking forward to being able to use
my unlocked phone for tethering, as well!
NEW VOICE AND DATA PLANS (ESPECIALLY INTERNATIONALLY)
I was horrified to discover I've spent close to $4000 on
wireless service with AT&T this year. Horrified because I'm out
of the country so much-at which point I use the phone far less to
avoid exorbitant international usage charges-and because when I am
home in Hawaii, service is so poor that I have to return any call
that actually makes it through to me back from a land line.
It makes no sense to me to spend close to $250 per week that I'm
actually home for a phone that I can't use. To make matters worse,
my experience (like that of many other folks) is that AT&T
coverage in cities like San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, Las
Vegas and in the mountain towns of Colorado (where my brother
lives) is unforgivably bad…
So I'm going to invest in an unlocked phone and use SIMs for
each country to which I travel, including the USA, so that I can
find the best combination of service and rates. It's not
inconceivable that I'll drop my domestic cellular plan altogether…
it's that bad… and just use WiFi and my 4G ClearSpot.
We'll see, but something has to change. The value proposition
for multi-thousand dollar bad service just isn't there.
MORE SKYPE
I expect to centralize all of my calling through Skype. It makes
particularly good sense for inbound calls.
I have a really cool phone number as my Skype In number, and I
can forward it to whatever phone number, on whatever SIM, in
whatever nation I'm working. And when Microsoft fully integrates
Skype into its stack, I expect there will be an even bigger
payoff.
DEDICATED SERVERS GOODBYE, OFFICE 365 AND CLOUD HELLO
I just retired two dedicated SharePoint servers I had hosted at
GoDaddy. The workloads carried by those servers will be absorbed by
Office365 and cloud services at companies like FPWeb and
Rackspace,I hope!
I'll also be consolidating my dispersed content and blog entries
onto WordPress. Yes, I am not using SharePoint for my public blog…
It's a great product for many scenarios, but it just doesn't meet
all of my requirements.
VIRTUAL MACHINES IN THE CLOUD
My shoulder will sigh with relief when I get to take a trip next
month without my HP EliteBook-the 16GB, 256GB SSD, quad-core i7
powerhorse I use for virtual machines (VMs) at events and
customers. The computer has been flawless, but it's heavy.
So it's time to move VMs to the Cloud. I'm going to start with
CloudShare-I have high hopes for it-and I'll connect to my VMs from
events, rather than bring the heavy host with me. If this doesn't
work, I'll be looking for a lighter weight laptop with 16GB and an
i7 processor.
WINDOWS SLATE HELLO, MACBOOK AIR GOODBYE
Finally, I hope to make more use of the Windows Slate. I was
lucky enough to get a Samsung Series 7 slate at the BUILD Windows
event in September.
Now the devices can be purchased online and in the sexy
Microsoft Stores in select cities. Wait… who ever thought that you
could say "sexy" and "Microsoft" in the same sentence with a
straight face? But it's true! The stores are!
The device is tremendous and I can definitely see it replacing
my laptop and perhaps even my iPad for much of my use. I'll keep my
iPad for airplane trips (reading, movies, and TV) and for specific
apps.
Hopefully when Windows 8 arrives, and app developers jump on the
Windows 8 marketplace to reach a billion potential customers
(orders of magnitude greater than what Apple can reach today), I
will be able to once again proudly step away from iOS devices… but
not yet.
There are two problems with my Samsung Slate. One is Windows 8,
which is a pre-beta developer preview build and (no surprise) has a
few glitches that should be ironed out over time but that make it a
less-than-perfect productivity machine.
I might roll back to Windows 7, but I'm going to give it a good
shot. The other was the fact that-inexplicably-they designed the
slate with zero option for connecting to a VGA projector. Since I
give a lot of presentations, this was a show stopper.
There are USB-to-VGA options but none with drivers that work
under Windows 8; and there are only two USB ports on the slate
anyway, so I don't want to lose any. I eventually discovered that
Samsung makes a Micro HDMI to VGA adapter (found on Amazon, model
AA-AH1NAMB) that works perfectly.
Now that I can give presentations from the Slate, I hope to
transition away from my MacBook Air.
I have adored the Air for its size and weight, but the keyboard
is simply not author friendly (Mac keyboards lack some really
important keys for those of us who work with words), and the
Thunderbolt port has proven to be a bad way to increase cost of
peripherals ($500 for a 2TB external disk? Really?) and a really
flaky and unreliable way to connect to VGA projectors from
bootcamp'ed Windows.
Lucky for me, the Samsung Slate is as sexy as the MacBook Air,
in a different way, so I won't lose any of that "oooh-look at that
device" cache of the Air.
So that's an updated look into my technology stack. We focused a
lot on hardware and infrastructure here.
My software stack remains very close to
what I described in August but I'm moving back to
Microsoft OneNote from Evernote (
as I described in last week's column).
I'm actually quite bullish on the Microsoft stack in 2012. I had
to use a lot of other non-Microsoft technologies and devices in
2010 and 2011, but I think 2012 is the year I'll swing back towards
a more "purist" Microsoft stack, because it will meet my needs for
both work and play.
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