Tuesday, September 8, 2009

SCCM 2007 R3

A couple of month’s ago our migration from SMS 2003 to SCCM 2007 was shelved until the new year. Given the current economic conditions it was decided that we needed to scale back and focus on a couple of ongoing core projects. Everything happens for a reason. Today the System Center Team announced their plans to release R3 for SCCM 2007
http://blogs.technet.com/systemcenter/archive/2009/09/08/announcing-system-center-configuration-manager-2007-r3.aspx
Microsoft is tentativly targeting the end of Q1 2010 for release. Here are a few high level features that R3 will include:
  • Power Management, R3 will allow system administrators to monitor power consumption, report current power settings and deploy a power management scheme for their organization
  • Many deployment capabilities for Windows 7 will be enabled
  • Enhanced performance over earlier releases
Looks like we'll be running R3 right out of the gate...

Thursday, September 3, 2009

First Impressions of Windows 7

Much of my time is spent dealing with client technologies which will impact the end user experience. So for many months now I’ve been playing on and off with Microsoft’s new edition to the Windows family – Windows 7. I’ll be honest I didn’t spend much time with the Beta or RC releases, in fact it mostly consisted of loading them into a VM and never really doing a deep dive. However I have been doing a fair amount of reading and following the Windows 7 team blog so I’ve kept up to date. Well about a month ago I got my hands on the RTM version and the first thing I did was replace my Vista admin workstation at work with a Windows 7 load. (Note Virtual PC users if your physical machine supports hardware virtualization enable it because it will make a world of difference with the performance of your Windows 7 VM) All I can say is I love it. Vista and I never clicked but it’s been love at first sight with Windows 7. One of features that I find the most convenient is Jump Lists. A Jump List keeps track of the documents, URLs, media files, Explorer locations, etc that you frequently visit and displays shortcuts to them in organized lists located on your taskbar. You can take Jump Lists even further and create custom ones display things such as commonly used programs. I found a great little utility (Jumplist – Launcher (http://en.www.ali.dj/jumplist-launcher) for creating custom Jump Lists and within minutes I had all of my admin tools displayed in a Jump List – very handy.