My blog posts and tweets are my own, and do not necessarily represent the views of my current employer (ESG), my previous employers or any other party.
I do not do paid endorsements, so if I am appear to be a fan of something, it is based on my personal experience with it.
If I am not talking about your stuff, it is either because I haven't worked with it enough or because my mom taught me "if you can't say something nice ... "
With twenty years of backup experience, you might presume that my own personal backups might be flawless and in triplicate. And for my professional workstation, it actually is. But admittedly, for the rest of my data, such as those invaluable family photos, personal data and other stuff – it admittedly isn’t as well or frequently [...]
First, let me say that I have been a fan of the Nook since it came out. I owned an original, have two Nook Colors, and bought a Nook Tablet on its first week. In total, my family has 5 devices, along with umpteen book and apps.
One of the coolest parts of evangelizing a product on behalf of Microsoft is discovering other folks in the IT community that are passionate about the same technologies that I am.
Last week, at MMS 2010, I had the opportunity to meet a System Center Influencer named Mike Resseler.
I’ve been with MS for 4.5 years now, having come from some smaller data protection companies like Double-Take and Cheyenne (now part of CA). In those organizations, I always took pride in the personal level of commitment that each one of us had with our customers.
Here is an email that I received from a DPM early adopter which was just too cool not to share. This customer has a distributed-infrastructure, is mid-market sized, and is using DPM 2007 beta 2 to protect Exchange 2007 SP1 beta (partipating in two Microsoft early adopter TAP/RDP programs – in production).