• New UEB

    16
    3 Votes
    16 Posts
    5k Views
    KatieUnitrendsK

    There will be a special new free version available,which includes HTML5 - you can sign up for it here> http://go.unitrends.com/Freedom2015.

    We will not be releaseing the HTML5 GUI in the appliances until later this year since we want to make sure that all the kinks are worked out first.

    Please let me know what questions you may have.

  • Experience with Hyper-V and RemoteFX VDI?

    8
    1 Votes
    8 Posts
    2k Views
    MattSpellerM

    You're fighting a battle on two fronts

    vm's are notoriously crap at rendering/gaming/using a video card live desktop over network has never worked nicely due to bandwidth/compression issues

    Is there a way to change the way you're doing it right now? Play the video locally on a PC?

    For a while I was looking into a way of doing similar (playing games on junk laptop but have it rendered by the pc). This was ages back now. I seem to recall a company did something similar recently... NVidia or something with phones? I dunno. Something to google around for anyway.

  • Communication needs when you travel

    24
    0 Votes
    24 Posts
    7k Views
    MattSpellerM

    @g.jacobse @thecreativeone91 18650's are Lithium ion, which are plenty freaking dangerous! Batteries and caps are the only things that really scare the poop outta me in electronics.

    For the charging/discharging/maintenance/safety stuff you can get cheap LI pack minders on ebay with a full LCD screen and all the goodies. Then you roll your own enclosure (mine will be sheet steel, a project box or wood). I will also integrate a speaker and amp in mine so when I go camping I've got tunes + battery charger for phone.

  • HTML help

    36
    1 Votes
    36 Posts
    8k Views
    thanksajdotcomT

    @tonyshowoff said:

    @thecreativeone91 said:

    did you try mine? you need http:// for it to be complaint.

    Finally, can't believe it took 13 posts before someone noticed it! I thought I was going to get to answer it, damn you creativeone!

    But yes, AJ, that has to be it, considering if protocol is not included, it's automatically considered a subdirectory on the foreign host.

    Yeah, I would have noticed it given time. Most threads like this are a process of elimination. That's just what I saw first.

  • The world's greatest Azure demo

    1
    2 Votes
    1 Posts
    510 Views
    No one has replied
  • Graffitti DNS

    9
    2 Votes
    9 Posts
    2k Views
    tonyshowoffT

    My brother lives in Istanbul, what a crappy country.

  • Datacenters: Colocation vs. Cloud

    84
    0 Votes
    84 Posts
    28k Views
    scottalanmillerS

    And, in this case, who offers a truly UK cloud IaaS product? All of the key players are American.

  • Windows Update for Business (wub wub wub wub) Who employed Claptrap?

    14
    2 Votes
    14 Posts
    2k Views
    scottalanmillerS

    @thecreativeone91 said:

    @scottalanmiller said:

    And I assume you can control the peer to peer nature as well. So that not all peers can push updates.

    As of now, no. You can only choose when they get updates.

    I expect that to change very quickly.

  • How to remove Mac Junk files

    13
    1 Votes
    13 Posts
    4k Views
    thanksajdotcomT

    @scottalanmiller said:

    @thecreativeone91 said:

    @scottalanmiller its to clean up the mac junk files on a windows computer. If you copy any folders from a mac to PC or even a zip folder you will have them in it (they are hidden though, but take up space and mess with some programs).

    Gotcha, now I see what you are doing here 🙂

    Yeah, same. See, it wasn't just me for once.

  • VSAN Proof of Concept

    7
    2 Votes
    7 Posts
    2k Views
    scottalanmillerS

    @NetworkNerd said:

    @scottalanmiller said:

    @NetworkNerd said:

    Again, we would only do this if business needs require it. But my question is more centered around how people get the gear to fully test out VSAN and do a proof of concept before they deploy it?

    Bigger companies that care about testing maintain labs with lots of hardware to test this stuff. That's the price paid for all kinds of necessary testing.

    And I am certain their internal IT is much larger than our 4-person team.

    With a small team you are stuck leveraging: reviews, logic, anecdotal evidence, vendor reputation and guesswork. Just the nature of being small. Leverage what the big boys do, applying logic as to when what they do matters only at their scale rather than at yours. The way that SMBs compete is by not doing all of the expensive lab work and trusting the work of others. The way that enterprises compete is by doing their own research better than someone else does it and getting a technical advantage.

    One is about blazing new ground, the other is about running agile and low cost.

  • Microsoft Software Asset Management Review SAM

    51
    1 Votes
    51 Posts
    13k Views
    Deleted74295D

    Oh no sir, you need the white glove license management service for...1 million dollars.

  • Everything Microsoft announced at Ignite 2015

    1
    6 Votes
    1 Posts
    917 Views
    No one has replied
  • Zoom in on DOS Apps in Windows 10

    22
    1 Votes
    22 Posts
    5k Views
    gjacobseG

    @scottalanmiller said:

    @g.jacobse If you have never played anything like the classic Sierra and LucasArts games, I HIGHLY recommend that you download this one (free) and check out the remake of the classic that started it all. King's Quest 1 was 1984 and started the adventure gaming revolution. Well worth checking out this excellent remake with new graphics, updated story fixes and voice acting. Look at screenshots of the original to understand just how updated it is. But it remains a faithful remake, if you played the original this would take you right back.

    I'll look at that one. The other game I played for a while was TradeWars,.. dates back to when I ran a BBS,.. It's actually been ported over and is being run online. some updated graphics as well.

  • VMWare Fling of the Day - VirtualESXTop

    5
    4 Votes
    5 Posts
    2k Views
    DenisKelleyD

    @NetworkNerd said:

    @DenisKelley said:

    VeeamOne Free is also a really nice utility to look at what's going on in your VMWare environment. Plus, it's pretty friendly.

    http://www.veeam.com/virtual-server-management-one-free.html

    Are you running it on the same server as your Veeam B & R install or on a different server?

    Same server. It's on a VM that also runs Spiceworks, WSUS, and PDQDeploy. Lot's of good graphs. I'm using the "paid" version, but the free looks like it has many of the same features.
    Capture.JPG

  • How to deal with Internet Trolls!?

    30
    1 Votes
    30 Posts
    6k Views
    ?

    @Hubtech said:

    and AJ, SAM, and SAM II have derailed lol. and i have trolled? does that mean i've brought it back on topic?

    Dang you troll. #)(I$)#@$@I$#)I#@)I$)#@$ YOU!

  • Replacement for CloudatCost

    Locked
    55
    0 Votes
    55 Posts
    17k Views
    Minion QueenM

    Due to the possible issues with legalities of this thread I am locking it down.

  • How to Deal with a Manager on a Power Trip

    30
    -3 Votes
    30 Posts
    6k Views
    ?

    @tonyshowoff said:

    How long until someone posts a Cartman meme?

    lh.jpg

  • Happy Cinco de Mayo!

    2
    10 Votes
    2 Posts
    803 Views
    GregoryHallG

    Woot!

  • Redis Failover, No Good Slave

    25
    0 Votes
    25 Posts
    17k Views
    scottalanmillerS

    One of the biggest issues is the lack of logging. Things fail, no explanation why. Just "go figure it out". The documentation is abysmal and it appears that no one is using it. Do a search and you can only find their own useless, internal docs.

  • How do you feel when a recommendation you give winds up bad?

    7
    2 Votes
    7 Posts
    2k Views
    scottalanmillerS

    @Breffni-Potter said:

    What do you do when that recommendation was a disaster? Do you reach out and say "Well, that was a bad call, sorry I recommended that to you"

    That one is very tough. But, I think, one of the most important jobs of IT professionals is to have used and evaluated a wide array of products (not for helpdesk people, but at a certain level and job type) and understand much of their technical strengths, quality differences, support value and the integrity of the companies that stand behind them (or the communities that do, as the case may be.) Our job is to determine what is the best chance of success for someone, what is cost effective, what is likely to work out the best. Companies change, products change, some things cannot be foreseen.

    Sometimes it is on us for actually making bad recommendations. That's a given. I see completely insane and reckless recommendations given regularly. Recommendations that I think should fall into a "fire them and consider pressing charges" category - like overspending by six figures without any technical or business reason for the spend, just because the recommender thinks that a product sounds cool, they like the brand or, often, they are getting some cool toy in exchange for selling the company down the river. This really happens, and industry wide it happens very often, this is true in any industry: the average person giving recommendations is not well prepared or capable to be doing so.

    But assuming we are competent and honestly attempting to give good recommendations, hopefully good customers or businesses understand that we are not just being asked for a very complex recommendation in the moment (knowing all relevant products or approaches on the market) but also gauging both those products' futures as well as the business' future. Being asked to predict the future comes with risk, always. Even the best possible recommender, with the best possible intentions, with the most unlimited research budget and time can't get things right every time because that's not how predictions work.

    When we make an honest mistake and recommend something completely wrong, yes, I think it is good if we own up to that and/or somehow fix the situation. But should we apologize for the times when we did the research, tried hard, used the available information and simply could not predict the future? Probably not, it sets an expectation that we are responsible for things we cannot be responsible for.

    In many cases, one of the worst things about being in IT is that other people push impossible demands upon us as if it is acceptable. In what other job is nearly every single person in the field expected to be a fortuneteller, even without them claiming to be, and often held accountable for having failed to predict the future accurately?