Monday Recap

I woke up with a headache. Alive kicked it, so I was happy in the afternoon. Most of the day was taken up with shepherding along other peoples projects. I did get to deal with a few items on my ever growing list of items I am working on. The thing about the Getting Things Done system I am trying is that the list always gets bigger, and each task gets more specific. The purchase of Daylite has been very helpful in keeping things organized.

Some things I did get to work on today was some network port blocking projects I have had in the works. I also got some time to update some test virtual machines for some other tests. I also pitched to my boss a new upgrade to our network. I think he liked it, so we will take it to the next level. Not much more I can go into on this site.

I got to get home at a normal hour today. I ended up cooking dinner instead of ordering out like I have been doing the past 2 weeks. I also got to touch base with Amanda over IM for a while. She is back from her honeymoon so she was able to chat.

One Of Those AIM People

Are you one of those people who leave themselves logged into AIM (if you don’t know what AIM is just stop reading this now)? I used barely use AIM. I have a cycle. Sometimes I won’t turn it on for days, and I get people asking me if I am logged in every. Then there is the other side where you log in once (lets say at work) and never log off. I have lots of friends who do both. I am sort of in the middle. I use iChat (that is how I get onto AIM) on my Powerbook. When I turn on the powerbook I launch AIM. Never auto-start it but almost always I start the program when I start doing anything. I then leave it logged in as long as my computer is on. That means that friday night I turn on my computer at home and usually leave it on all weekend. However that does not mean I am sitting there waiting to take anyone’s IM’s at any moment. So if it says I am idle for 16 hours, or if it says I am unavailable or away I am most likely maybe away or unavailable. Why then do people feel like they have to IM anyway?

AD Day

Worked on clearing out my backlog of open tasks to work on. I got through allot of my small misc. tasks in my list. That was good. I also got started on the first 3 new servers for our Active Directory project. We had to start over due to some complications. after some research we figured out we probably didn’t have to start over, but we wanted to play it save so we just swapped the drives from those machines with new ones Jayson had built. Working through some other issues with the setup, but we built a test environment to hopefully prevent issues like the ones we just had.

Busy day, but productive.

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Virtual PC For The Mac

I have tried Virtual PC for the Mac before. I think it was version 5.x or 6.x. I don’t remember. It is hard to imagine that I have been using a Mac long enough to have lived through 3 revisions of software but you never know.

I was on MSDN today to download Beta 1 of Windows Vista for a developer (all 2.4gig or so of it that will take 2+ hours on a 4+ megabit link) when I saw MSDN had Virtual PC for the Mac 7.01 online. I decided to try it again. I am still a skeptic, but I figured I would look at it and see if it was of value. Right now I am installing Windows XP into a new Virtual PC 7.02 install. The concept of XP on a Mac is nice, but the slow speed may not be worth it. I may just have to wait for x86 Macs.

Man this install is taking forever…

Replacing Outlook Update

I have not been 100% successful at getting rid of my Microsoft PIM. I am still using Entourage for Calendar and Tasks. Thankfully I am not using outlook for anything anymore. The apple PIM (address, iCal, etc) do not sync categories with my Treo, and all other (non MSFT) alternatives have one draw back or another. So instead of buying another package that will work but still be lacking in one or two key areas I decided to stick with Entourage (i already bought it) and live with its drawbacks for now. I sync address book contacts from entourage and address book via a sync conduit. That lets me keep my Treo updated, and have Mail, Bluephone Elite, and iCal have the latest contact information also.

So far this setup has been working out for the most part. I am also doing 99% of my day to day “office” work on my Mac now. I still use my Thinpad and desktop computers for specific tasks, but my Powerbook is now truly my main computer, and I wouldn’t have it any other way (right now).

Addicted To Outlook No More

If Microsoft Outlook was a drug, for me I think it would be crack. When it came out in 96/97 (i can’t remember exactly when) I was addicted after about a day or two. It was by far better than anything else out there at the time. I went to great lengths to use it. When I was at BM in 1997 we used CC Mail. I went extraordinary measures to get outlook to work while still using the CC Mail system. Our mail admin (a friend of mine at the time) almost had kittens when she realized I was using a MAPI conduit getting CC Mail into Outlook. I had to promise never to tell anyone else that it was possible.

When I couldn’t use an exchange server somewhere (i don’t remember what job) I ended up building my own so I could have outlook with all my contacts and stuff both at home and at work.

Back in the day (meaning 2000 or so for this conversation) it was great. I would use it daily. it would be my central program no matter where I was or what I was doing. Email being a lifeline when I traveled and a necessity in every other job I have had.

Over the past 3 years (wow it has been exactly 3 years this month) I have gone from a curious interest in Mac’s to using one as virtually my primary machine at work, and almost exclusively at home. One problem I had was no outlook. First I used OS 9 classic outlook. it was a poor replacement for the real thing. My addiction stuck and I always went back to my PC for good old comfy outlook. The problem was around the time I started getting really into Mac’s I found that Outlook was not the great program it used to be. I was still stuck on it, but it would crash, perform slowly, etc. From XP to 2003 was a great improvement in looks, but everything else was horrible. yet I was addicted to using 2003. It sucked, and I knew it yet I still used it.

Late last year I bought Office 2004 for the mac. Entourage then became my poor alternative for Outlook. When I was on my Mac I would use it, but I still always went back to Outlook. My Treo (or any other Palm or Pocket PC I had) would sync with outlook. Whatever computer had my primary outlook PST file on it became my “main PC”.

Then Mac OS 10.4 came out. That along with the missing sync and a few other utilities allowed me to start weaning off of Outlook, and by extension Windows in general. First I moved everything into Entourage, but that became a similar drug like Outlook. It was bad, and yet I found I had no choice to use it, so I was stuck on it. I found some utilities that would sync apple’s iCal and Address book to Entourage and used that for the past 3 weeks. I have had so much data corruption because of the syncing I gave up on that idea.

I stopped using Entourage for my email last week, and moved over to Apple Mail. Integration makes me move programs. the integration between mail, address book, and ichat is amazing. All that was left was the PIN functionality I used in Outlook and more recently Entourage.

So today I start what I consider my final rehab. I backed up entourage and did one last synch to iCal and Address book. I then took my Treo and did a sync to those programs instead of Entourage. I hope this is the first day of my long future of not using Microsoft PIM’s. Even if my company goes to Exchange I can still use iCal. This solution isn’t without some trade offs. Some of them I haven’t even addressed yet, but I hope it is better than what I was doing before.

I haven’t done a sync to outlook in weeks. I only use it for IMAP mail when I am on a windows box. My PST files do contain email archives and contact archives going back to 1997, but I am using other programs to export that data to other formats that are less proprietary.

For now I am happy with my “rehab” of address book and ical. We shall see if I break down and go back, but I am hopeful I don’t.

Mail Server

We have been having a problem with one of our Mail servers. It is the machine that holds a bunch of small domains we own, and our call center mail system. It wont allow us to log into terminal server. VNC keeps crashing, and LDAP doesn’t start. It serves up mail fine though. We have had this issue for a week or so. We have been trying to figure out the problem without causing more issues.

I finally broke down and configured the replacement box today. We put the new hardware up at our data center on Tuesday but had not had a chance to cut all the mail over onto it. I configured Imail, moved the mailbox’s and domains. All but our biggest domain is now cut over. Everything looks normal so far. I will cut the remaining domain over when our call center closes tonight. hopefully everything will go smooth. I should just need to update the MX record, and sync the mail. All the accounts are created, and copies of the mailbox’s are on there from a snapshot a few hours ago.

Keeping my fingers crossed!!!

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Outlook Extractor

I found a program (actually several) that allow me to extract mail from an Outlook PST file to different file formats. We had a need at work to do this, and I also had some uses for it. All the tools worked great, but I chose Outlook Extract 1.3.x. I can pull out entire messages, and attachments into txt and html files, while keeping Outlooks file structure. I can keep the attachments with the email or dump them into a folder someplace. I am now extracting mail out of bloated 2gig PST files. What is funny is that I thought lots of 1kb files would be larger on the disk than the one big PST store, but I was wrong. It looks like the individual messages take up less space on the disk!

Remote Problems

Tuesday I had to deal with problems while I was 2000+ miles and 3 time zones away. First we are having lingering issues with a mail server. No one can log into it locally but the email services are running. so for now we are in a wait and see state with it. we are making sure we have good backups of everything on the box before we mess with it more. Also Kai and I being away isn’t helping.

A reporting function of Zeacom failed again. The only solution is to reboot the system. This is what the brain trust at Zeacom support tells us. Rebooting that system is not without its own risks. Kai and I are the only ones who have rebooted it before. Brian will do it tonight, but it will be his first time. He has seen Kai do it so hopefully we have no issues.

We also had performance issues with Jabber and some other minor crap. I had to juggle this, Dan complaining of site performance issues and 4 lectures. it was a busy day. The problem with the site performance issues is we see nothing wrong on our end. Dan is just frustrated. Not sure what else we can do (from my end) right now. it is not like the local director is acting up again (thank goodness), that I can make a change and magically it is all better. that is what he is hoping for.

Why Don’t They Make This Stuff On The PC?

So if you have been reading this site recently you will have noticed that I am on a “Mac is great” kick. I am becoming one of those people. Yup. There is a reason though. Some of this software that integrates on the Mac is fantastic. either there is nothing like it on the PC, or it is just easier (allot easier). For example I found a Bluetooth product called BluePhoneElite. It takes your bluetooth phone and uses your mac to do some crazy stuff. It flashes caller id on the mac screen when the phone rings, then when you answer it the software pauses any dvd’s or itunes you may have playing. Once you are done with your call it turns everything back on. How cool (and actually useful) is that? You can also dial numbers and send SMS mail from the program, see signal and battery strength, and more. It even changes your iChat status to away when you walk out of range with the phone and changes it back when you return. Why can’t I fund useful software like that for the PC that actually works? Another reason why I use my powerbook more and more each day.

I also just got Merlin. It is a MS Project like program for the Mac. It is half the price, and writes to Project files or Project XML files. I did a test and it imported and exported a 200 line project file I did in no time. The integration into the mac iCal and Address book was also very useful. I use project on my PC, but this just seemed to work better. Maybe I am just caught up in the whole coolness factor, but I felt this product was just simpler and more powerful to use than MS Project. Another program that I don’t need windows for!

Jayson and I are spending more of our spare time recently finding replacements to our old standard Windows programs. He is happy working on his thinkpad with a dual boot of Suse 9.3 and Windows XP. He almost never uses XP anymore. He is using more open source software than I. He has to since he is using Suse, and I am on my Mac. I am going to dual boot my thinkpad when I get back from my trip.