Monday, June 04, 2007

More Blogs

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Moving blog to www.kmmm.net

I am moving to a hosting site that will allow me to use my own domain name and give me more flexibility over my blog. You will be able to follow my discussions at www.kmmm.net.

Kevin

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Weekly Listening Choices

By now, most folks know that I am into Podcasts. I am constantly referencing news and events that I heard listing to my Podcasts. I picked up Computerworld and Network World this week and realized that they were at least a week or two behind in the news that they were covering.

Listening to Podcasts, helps me to stay current with all the Business and Technology news, and it outlines industry directions which help with vision and strategy.

Here is my list of Daily and Weekly Podcasts. On a weekly basis I probably listen to another 20 feeds that are not identified below, however the feeds below are the most notable. Here are My Podcasts ….


Daily Feeds:
KenRadio World Tech Roundup - Ken Rutkowski
CNET News.com daily tech news podcast - CNET News
CIO Daily News Show- idg news service
Wall Street Journal Tech News Briefing - podcast@wsj.com
MSNBC Business News Headlines – MSNBC

Weekly Feeds:
.NET Rocks! AAC – Carl Franklin
Best Damn Tech Show, Period.
In the Trenches - Kevin Devin and George Starcher
Inside Silicon Valley: San Jose Mercury News
InfoWorld Virtualization Report Podcast
InfoWorld Emerging Enterprise Podcast
IT Conversations part of the Conversations Network
Manager Tools - Michael Auzenne and Mark Horstman
Middle Management Lobotomy Podcast - Kevin Williams
Mike Tech Show – Mike Smith

Saturday, July 22, 2006

Building Influence

To be a successful manager of business or technical processes today, you need a lot of different skills. You need to understand the business needs and goals and understand your teams needs and goals. At times it appears that this is easier for the business folks as they are closer to the business needs and often see the technology as a tool to meet their needs, however technical groups need to pay attention to the business needs and plans because in most cases, the technical groups would not be in place without the business need.

There are many aspects involved in managing, however I want to focus on one key area today, Influence. In my mind, everyone is capable of Influence. I feel that I have influence over my direct staff, other staffs, my boss, his peers, my boss’s boss, and often, others in the organizations.

How did I gain this influence, was I given this influence when I became a Manager? I don’t think so. When rank becomes the primary means toward influence, then you have lost the battle to influence. At times, you need to be in business compliance and have to fall back on rack, however in my opinion there is a clear line between managing or directing thru rank and managing though influence.

You build influence by building and maintaining strong relationships, by communicating effectively and by being fair and consistent across all groups in the organization. This starts with your direct team. You need to lead by example by working hard and always communicate what you are doing. This can be hard at times. You often make choices for organizational benefit over personal preference that others many not fully understand, however as long as you are fair and consistent, others will respect your decisions even if they do not agree with them. As your team comes together and starts to beleive in you, other groups will also be influenced by this.

Working hard, communicating well, being fair and consistent are keys to Influence. In my opinion, being a manager is not a requirement. Everyone can be influencer.

If you are looking to move into the managerial ranks, then please consider the topics outlined above. For help with these and other Managerial Topics and Discussions, follow the links below for more information:

Manager Tools is a great reference for all managers: www.manager-tools.com

Scottberkin.com has a number of essays that are applicable to all, however there is a real technical influence in his writing which makes it appealing to technical folks: www.scottberkun.com

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Sunday, July 09, 2006

Continuation of my Top 10 System and Network Administrator Tasks

Top 12 System and Network Administrator Tasks

Last week, on the In the Trenches podcast, Kevin and George reviewed of my list of System and Network Administrator Tasks. I really appreciated the review and all comments. George and Kevin spoke of a couple of Tasks or Requirements that could be added to the list and I have to agree with them. The two other items were ….

1) Know your users or your customers

2) Know your line of business.

I certainly agree with these and I am going to change my list to a Top 12 System and Network Administrator Tasks. Thanks for the input and thanks for the link.

Here is Kevin and George’s Link for In the Trenches:

http://www.kevindevin.com

Here is the link to their Podcast:

In the Trenches Podcast.mp3

Sunday, July 02, 2006

Internet Explorer 7 Beta 3

I installed Internet Explorer 7 Beta 3 today. It would not install as an upgrade, instead it required that I uninstall Internet Explorer 7 Beta 2 and then do a full install of Internet Explorer 7 Beta 3.

All of my settings remained including my default search setting of Google, so I just uninstalled Beta 2 and reinstalled Beta 3.

Looks good, give it a try.

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Thursday, June 29, 2006

Server Consolidation Project

We are working on a Server Consolidation Project at work and I thought that this would be a good place to share our strategies, challenges and accomplishments. I will touch base on how we see Server Consolidation and outline a couple of our strategies.

Overview
Server Consolidation is an approach to effectively use computer resources in order to reduce the Total Cost of Ownership and reduce the total number of servers required to support our applications. Two technologies are frequently associated with Server Consolidation, Server Virtualization and the adoption of Blade Server Technology.

We are looking to gain experience with both the Blade Hardware, and VMware software environments, and then incorporate them into our support mix. Both technologies show great promise to deliver better system utilization from our Intel based servers, however we need to gain some real world experiences with this technology to best determine which applications work best on blade and which applications are better suited to the VM virtual environment.

Virtualization
Server Virtualization is the masking of server resources (physical servers, processors, memory, and disk capacity) from the users by transforming these resources into virtual resources which can be pooled and moved around to better meet the computing needs of an organization.

There are a number of Virtualization Products available for the Intel market: VMware, and Microsoft Virtual Server. We have invested time demoing VMware and Microsoft Virtual Server, and have selected VMware and the VMware ESX server as our Virtualization Product.

VMware ESX Server is virtual infrastructure software for partitioning, consolidating and managing servers in mission-critical environments. ESX is suited for enterprise data centers and helps to minimize the total cost of ownership of computing infrastructure by increasing resource utilization, and improving the system provisioning and system management process.

The ESX product appeared more stable and mature, and has been identified as the “best virtualization software for consolidating windows servers that handle mission critical workloads” by the Gartner Group. The Gartner Group predicts that by 2008, 90% of all virtual-machine deployments will be on Hypervisor’s or virtual products that directly interface with the Hardware, like the VMware ESX server, as opposed to the Microsoft Virtual Server product that is installed as an application on top of a Microsoft Operating System (MS Server 2003).

Blade Technology
Blade Technology is a redundant server chassis with thin modular servers known as Blades. Each Blade is a computer server incorporated into a modular server card with individual CPU, memory and disk resources. Most of the major vendors offer a Blade Configuration, and we have chosen the IBM BladeCenter product.

Our initial testing strategy will be to :

• Merging low cpu and low memory usage applications onto virtual servers
• Move high cpu and high memory usage applications onto blade servers

Industry Notes
The value proposition for server consolidation (blade and virtualization) is increased utilization, saving on power, space, server maintenance and easing the complexities associated with deploying many servers.

There are a few concerns associated with server consolidation. Companies implementing Blade technologies need to consider the power and cooling impacts on the data center, especially with over populated racks. Also, there are few hardware standards associated with blades today, which means that we could run into a compatibility issue in the future should Blade Infrastructure Technology change as it matures.

Also, Gartner points out that “the Blade format and Virtualization do not necessarily go hand and hand” for server consolidation. Consolidating and virtualizing on Blade servers (with 2 CPU’s), can leave companies with management of a large number of physical servers. Instead, Gartner identifies servers with large amounts of memory and 4 or 8 CPU’s as the ideal platforms for Virtualization. You will still have a large number of Virtual servers to manage, however they will all be located on one physical server.

At the same time, as we speak with others using Virtualization today, we have identified a trend where most large scale Production installations are on larger 4 CPU and 8 CPU servers each with 16, 32, or 64 gig of RAM. The trend makes us take a cautious look at adopting Virtualization within our Blade Consfiguration.

Summary
The Blade and Virtual tools available today are a compelling strategy in the adoption of Server Consolidation. These tools will help us to be more cost effective in our server purchases, server utilization, and server support strategies. In the long term, Server Consolidation will help us with decreased server expenditures and lower the overall cost of server maintenance. There are also a number of softer infrastructure costs that will be saved surrounding Data Center Footprint, cabling and deployment.

The adoption of these new tools provides us with more options when deploying new applications or expanding current applications, however our challenge will be to come up to speed quickly, manage the deployment effectively and mainstream these tools as soon as possible


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Thursday, June 22, 2006

System and Network Administrator's Tasks

In late 2005, Kevin Devin and George Starcher from www.kevindevin.com and "In the Trenches", recorded a podcast called "How to be a good SysAdmin". In their podcast they identified and reviewed a list of "Top 10 System Admin Truths" that came from a blog entry written by Evan Erwin over at misterorange.com.

I have been thinking about this, and came up with my own list of System/Network Admin truths. I struggled with the word truths, and instead of refering to my list as System and Network Admin truths, I see this list as a list of tasks or responsibilities that if maintained on a daily basis, will help System and Network Administrators to reduce downtime and ensure that they are better prepared to deal with issues when they occur.

Top 10 System and Network Administrator Tasks

1. Backups are a requirement and are crucial to your success
• Eventually all hardware will fail, so be prepared
• You need to create a backup strategy and backup all application data

2. Monitoring Tools
• Monitoring tools are different in all companies, however you need to invest in them and make them a requirement.
• The Gartner Group estimates that system/network managers can manage about 30 servers per admin, we all know that this number varies depending on experience and maturity of the technology. Monitoring tools help this tremendously.
• Monitor all applications, servers, and network connectivity
• Establish performance baselines to help troubleshoot performance related problems.

3. Maintain Service Contracts with all vendors
• Maintenance contracts should be required for all production environments. That includes contracts for both hardware support and software support.

4. Maintain Version Control
• Version control is essential when troubleshooting issues. Vendors often fall back on the old line “We fixed that in the latest release, please upgrade to the latest release”, so STAY CURRENT on all software products.

5. Consistent Hardware Builds and Software Installations
• Create a strategy that includes redundancy in all hardware builds
• Consistency helps with maintenance and troubleshooting.
• Document your builds and installations

6. Documentation
• Develop some standards surrounding documentation
• Organize all of your documents and store them in a central place that can be accessed by all admins.
• Document the backup process, document your monitoring process, document your vendors contact information, document your builds and installations, in the end, you will be glad that you did.

7. Communication
• Communication comes in many forms, memos, email, IM, voice mail, process and build documentation are all forms of communication.
• Be consistent with your communication, and always re-read your emails before sending.
• When there is a problem at 2:00am and you get paged, send a note to the group after resolving the issue, the little notes after problem resolutions go along way to teamwork and documentation.

8. Teamwork
• Teamwork is a subject that will not fit into four or five bullets, however it is critical to all IT operations.
• Teamwork is about coming together, sharing together, working together, and succeeding together, especially in adversity.
• Great teams and handle and work through the most difficult situations.

9. Training and Schooling
• Go back to school, work toward a degree, this will extend your career
• If you already completed a degree program or if you are not interested in an undergraduate or graduate degree, then look into Technical Certificates.
• If you are not interested in either a degree or certificate then do your best to stay current with Technology changes.

10. Stay Current with Technology
• A motivated individual looking to learn and grow, has many resources available on the Internet,
• Read the Trade Rags, visit the Tech Web sites, Read Blogs, listen to podcasts, go to conferences.


Finally, I hope that helps, please feel free to leave comments or questions.




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Friday, June 09, 2006

Podcasting and MP3 Players

I am sure that many folks who come across my blog would be interested in Podcasts, however many folks do not own a MP3 Player, which restricts listening to music and podcasts to sitting in front of your computer.

My recommendation to everyone, would be to start investigating the MP3 players. CNET.com is a great place to go and compare MP3 players on the market today. You have the Apple iPOD which is the Cadillac of MP3 Players, however you have many other great MP3 players on the market.

You should also look at Music Managers and Media Players for your computer like iTunes and Media Player. There are also a number of free Music Managers available on the Internet, however ITunes and Media Player are the best in my opinion. I have a 30 Gig IPOD and use iTunes every day

If you go back in time to 1990, most folks did not know how to use email. By 1995, many folks were introduced to email, however only used it at work. By 2000, many folks an email address for both home and work. Many folks that did not know how to use a computer and email in 2000 are now online everyday, reading email, investigating purchasing decisions and purchasing products over the internet.

Podcasting, is where email was in 1995. It's just getting introduced. Most technical folks understand it and know how to use it and take advantage of it, however most non-technical folks do not know what it is. Listening to Podcasts is like listening to the radio, however you are dialed into what you what to listen to, and you can listen when it is convenient to you.

There are many Free Podcasts available on almost every subject from Arts and Entertainment to Technology. You can start listening today without an MP3 player by downloading iTunes. Once you download iTunes, go to the Music Store tab and selecting Podcasts. You do not need an MP3 player to start downloading to your PC. You can download what you are interested in and listen on your computer. You will be amazed at the content available today.

The MP3 player allows you the freedom to take it with you, to become better informed in many areas. I understand that its and additional purchase decision, however I would ask that you start looking into it now.

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Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Internet Explorer 7 Beta 2

I installed Internet Explorer 7 Beta 2 and I really like it. It certainly appears cleaned up and I have not run into a problem. I really like the TAB feature and the favorites and feeds buttons.

You can subscribe to a number of daily RSS feeds from blogs and sites, and then scan the latest news from each site quickly, by selecting the feed similar to selecting a Favorite.

Give it a try ....

Sunday, May 28, 2006

RSS Feed

Having problems adding RSS feed.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

More Podcast's

There is a lot going on at work which required my time and effort, and that kept me away from the keyboard for updates like this, however when time was scarce, I start multitasking and listening to podcasts in my car back and forth to work or while performing errands.

I did not have an opportunity to sync my ipod as frequently as would necessarily do, and started listing to a couple of podcast that subscribed to but had not listened to. I found these podcasts very helpful and very enjoyable. The first is another Business Management podcast called "Middle Management Lobotomy Podcast".

The second Podcast is more of a techie show for System Administrators called "The Best Damn Tech Show Period". They touch on many admin topics and the recent news that may imact admins. This podcast has a little bit of an edge to it, however there is a tremendous amount of great content here for system admins.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Keeping current with patches and versions

In the last two weeks we have had a number of issues that could have been elimiated by staying current with the latest MS patches and the latest Software versions. We manage hundreds of servers and use a utility to do so (not sms), however managing this process can be overwhelming. Multiple versions of MS Server (2000, 2003), multiple functions and different software installs on each, even with a standard build, however, once we start laying down applications we loose track of which version and MS patch is installed on each server.

Next take that 3 to 4 MS patches delivered a week and you can understand our management nightmare. We rely strickly on critical patches, however recently, a non-critical but recommended patch caused multiple problems when it was not applied to all of the appropriate servers.

Then you have Service Packs. We started applying Windows Server SP1 to selected servers and ran into a problem on two servers. Patch Management is becoming a Full Time Job.

Monday, May 08, 2006

More about me

I am a IT Manager at a Healthcare company in New England and would like to share idea's , experiences and helpful hints with others. Please feel free to share your thoughts and comments.

Kevin

Sunday, May 07, 2006

Kevin and I


This is my son Kevin and myself

Saturday, May 06, 2006

Molly and Rocky



Molly and Rocky today

Our doggies as puppies. This is Rocky and Molly.

New Addiction

My new addiction is Podcasts. The Podcasts of today are the Radio and Magazine's of the 80's and 90's. 20 years ago, ambitious folks had to rely on magazines and trade shows to stay current in their respective industries. Today there is a tremendous amount of content available to listen to at your leisure, which will keep you informed of current events and changes within your industry.

If you have not looked at Podcasting, then I would recommend that you start investigate this new and easy technology.

Introduction

This is my first attempt at blogging. I have been working with Technology for almost 20 years and have been listening to a lot of Tech and Management Podcasts. My favorite is KenRadio which I have been listening to since 2000 when it was streamed.