February 2007 Archives

Breakpoint (Clarke)

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by Richard A. Clarke
Say you wanted to read an exciting techno-thriller, filled with interesting characters, cool gadgets, realistic scenarios, and a writer who knows how to join them all together. Sound good? Excellent. In that case, don't read this book.

I'm not sure how Richard A. Clarke got a rep as being a deep technical thinker. Maybe he is, but if so, this book certainly doesn't show it. Breakpoint centers on a shadowy conspiracy to screw the civilized world by destroying much of its information infrastructure. The book starts well enough, with an attack on the terminating points for transoceanic cables that link US internet traffic to the rest of the world. However, the continual pseudo-technical blathering ("server-motor-driven"? err, maybe you meant "servo"?) about "Sytho Routers" and "Living Software" (a spanking-new self-replicating software package that will simultaneously give us a cross between Kurzweil's Singularity and Skynet) quickly becomes intolerable.

The characters have little verve or dimensionality, the dialogue is bogus (particularly when 1337 h4xx0rs are speaking), and the whole thing left me shaking my head.

I haven't finished it yet. I keep hoping that it will get better, while simultaneously knowing that it won't. Don't bother.

Yes, it's that time of year again: time to submit session proposals for Exchange Connections! Our fall show is from 5-8 November in Las Vegas at the Mandalay Bay Hotel. This year the submission process is slightly different. If you're interested in speaking, visit http://www.deeptraining.com/devconnections/abstracts/ to submit your abstracts. Please do not mail them to me.

A few ground rules:

  • You need to submit at least 3 abstracts, but I encourage you to submit more than 3 to give us more flexibility in choosing sessions.
  • Speakers will be chosen within a few weeks of the closing date, which is currently 3/10.
  • All selected speakers will have their travel expenses (air + hotel) reimbursed and in addition will be paid a stipend of $400 per talk.

What kind of talks should you propose? Anything having to do with Exchange (including DR, security, migration, and best practices), Live Communications Server/Office Communications Server, or related topics. The more technical, the better! (If you plan to repeat sessions from a previous event, please make sure you update the title and abstract to reflect the latest in the Exchange world.)

Please, no vendor “pimp sessions”. If you work for a software or hardware vendor, feel free to propose technical sessions that aren’t focused on your product. If you work for a PR firm, please feel free to have your principals submit technical sessions.

If you have any problems with the submission process, or any questions, please feel free to ping me. Otherwise, fire up those browsers and get busy!

Update: I changed the stipend info; it's $500 if you've presented at more than 5 events, and $400 otherwise.

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Very cool news: MS has announced the feature list for Exchange 2007 service pack 1. Those of you who have blasted Exchange 2007 for not having public folder access in OWA (yeah, I'm talking to you) will be glad to know that it's back, along with public folder management in the Exchange Management Console, S/MIME in OWA, POP and IMAP configuration GUI, and a few other nifty features.

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Pervasive Allstate ads

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We try really hard to limit the amount of advertising that our kids see. We do this via several measures: limiting how much TV they watch, encouraging them to watch non-commercial programs, and using a TiVo to skip ads. However, in the last week, Matt and Tom have both surprised me.

First, on the way to school, Tom asked who our car insurance was with. "State Farm," I said. "Do they give you a new car if your old one is totaled like Allstate does?" he asked.

I explained that, no, State Farm wouldn't give us a brand-new car; they'd pay the market value (a concept he already grasps from allocating his allowance.) "You should use Allstate," he opined, "because they'll just give you a new car. That's what their commercial says, anyway."

That afternoon, Matt was eating a Nerds rope, which he likes to break into sections. He stacked up two sections of unequal length to make a bar graph, pointed at the shorter one, and firmly said "Dad, you could save money on car insurance like this if you used Allstate."

I don't know what Allstate is paying Dennis Haysbert, but apparently it's money well spent.

Today's mail brought a welcome surprise: the 2007 Despair.com catalog. (Despair offers a collection of very funny faux motivational posters like this and this, and my current favorite). I've never ordered anything from them, so I checked the address on the catalog. It was addressed to me at my home address, "Suite I".

Now, let me explain. I don't actually have any suites (well, unless you count the kids' rooms) but I often assign one-letter suite codes when doing business with a new company. Guess who the letter "I" belongs to? Yep: IBM. So, someone at IBM apparently decided to sell customer data to these folks (or, more likely, to a broker who resold them). Perhaps I should start ordering Despair products for the Notes customers I occasionally work with? Now there's an idea...

John shocks me twice

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I'm not sure which surprised me more: a new blog post from John, or that he didn't know about the Outlook date control's mad interpretative skillz.

Wow, this is kind of a big hole: Palm OS Treo Find Feature Information Disclosure Vulnerability. Basically, if you set a password on your Treo, the Find function still works even when the device is locked. (See the details here.) In defense of Palm, the exploit requires physical access, so if your phone is always with you the risk is fairly low. However, according to Symantec, Palm was notified of the exploit and has decided not to fix it. -1 for them.

Happy Valentine's Birthday

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Big day today.

First, we got about 6" of snow last night. No big deal, except that the steady wind drifted it to 12-15" in spots... like all along our front sidewalk and 2/3 of our driveway. David, Thomas, and I went over to Mom's to clear her driveway, which went fine until the ancientvenerable snowblower conked out. I then used our small blower to clear our driveway and sidewalks; that only took about an hour.

Second, today is my dear sister's birthday! Happy birthday, Julie! Enjoy your Wii!

Third, Arlene and I have a saying: "every day is Valentine's Day". While it helps to think of it that way, given that today really is Valentine's Day, I just want her to know how much I love and treasure her. Thanks, darling, for 15 great years... and counting!

Good news and bad news from my favorite local newspaper.

Good news: five Blade columnists have started blogs at the paper's web site. (Thankfully, none of them are opinion columnists.)

Bad news: you can't get RSS feeds for them. Oh sure, each page sports a little orange RSS logo, but when you click it you get this summary page. It offers some feeds, but none for the columnists. (Bonus bad news: the only comment mechanism is to e-mail the blog author.)

So, I give them a B- for their effort so far. All of the columnists had content posted before the official launch this morning, and it's all decent intro material. The grade would be higher if I could actually subscribe to their feeds. I called Kevin Cesarz, who's listed on the masthead as the online editor, to ask him about it, but he wasn't in.

Update: the feed page now lists the individual columnist feeds. Yay, Blade!

In last week's UPDATE, I mentioned the need to patch all your Exchange clients, not excluding Windows Mobile. The process for doing this by hand is pretty tedious. Thankfully, Microsoft today released an all-in-one DST update that contains a single CAB file (plus instructions) that will update your device to have correct time zone information. You need to install the CAB file after you update your Exchange mailbox's calendar; once it's installed, you'll need to change the time zone on your device manually to make Windows Mobile notice the change. Then you'll need to change it back.

Improving the Cocoa text editor

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Via this post on Kirk's blog, I found this terrific collection of customizations you can apply to the standard Cocoa text editing engine. The article is quite detailed, and it's tough sledding if you're not already an experienced Mac user. However, it features some nifty customizations, including the ability to use incremental search for Cocoa text fields. Good stuff.

Chevy Uplander

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Dear Avis Rent-a-Car:

Please accept my thanks for renting me a Chevy Uplander minivan instead of the car I actually reserved. Ordinarily I would have preferred to have a standard sedan. since I was traveling solo. However, I'm grateful for the opportunity you gave me to drive an Uplander during my recent trip to Seattle. Why? Because it helps me appreciate the engineering quality, driveability, ergonomics, and product quality of my Dodge Grand Caravan. In fact, I can say that the Uplander was inferior to every other car I've ever owned or even driven, including the 1972 VW Super Beetle.

DST and Exchange

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My UPDATE columns for this week and next cover the process of updating Exchange 2003 to handle the upcoming DST change. (I'll update this post with links to the columns when they're published.) Oddly, as I was writing this week's installment, I found myself wondering how Notes and Domino will manage the DST transition; today I saw Ed's post on the topic. Apparently no matter whose messaging system you use, it's still a messy process. Of course, Exchange 2007 doesn't have this problem; if you hurry maybe you can get your environment upgraded before the DST switchover :)

UPDATE: here's part 1 of the series.

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So I was trying to figure out how to exempt a particular IP address from connection filtering on an Exchange Edge Transport server. I needed to do this to keep Edge from deciding that the internal relay server was generating spam. It's going to be injecting spam (for some tests I'm doing), but I didn't want the sender reputation agent to decide that the server was a spammer itself.

My first thought was to add the server's IP to the IP accept list. That wouldn't work, though, because mail coming from IPs that appear on the accept list are tagged with an SCL of -1, indicating that no further filtering is necessary. I could have turned off connection filtering altogether, but I didn't want to do that either. Finally I broke down and pinged a friend who works for Microsoft, and once he understood what I wanted to do he came up with the right answer: I needed to use the set-transportConfig cmdlet's -internalSMTPServers flag.

Once I knew that, I was able to find references to the cmdlet all over the place (including one at Bharat's blog from yesterday... I guess that's a good reason to be more diligent about my blog reading!) As much as I've worked with Exchange 2007 over the last year, I still have a lot to learn.

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About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from February 2007 listed from newest to oldest.

January 2007 is the previous archive.

March 2007 is the next archive.

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