Podcasts about activesync

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Best podcasts about activesync

Latest podcast episodes about activesync

Le Podcast NetApp
NAbox pour KVM et Hyper-V, on reparle de OpenShift, NetApp Insight et bien d'autres chose !

Le Podcast NetApp

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2024 39:50


Ce mois-ci Yann nous parle de la disponibilité de NAbox pour de nouvelles plateformes de virtualisation ! Si votre hyperviseur est basé sur KVM ou Hyper-V, vous pouvez maintenant déployer NAbox !Worm et ARP sont maintenant inclus avec Cloud Volumes ONTAP sans coûts additionnels.VMware vCloud fondation est supporté avec NetAppTrident 24-06 supporte SnapMirror et les ONTAP Tools pour VMware supportent ActiveSync !Ne ratez pas les NetApp Insider's club et NetApp Insight Xtra !NFS supporte maintenant NFS-over-TLS et bien sûr on parle de NetApp Insight !Yann Bizeul (Linked-In)Guillaume Sowinski (Linked-In)Yves Weisser (Linked-In)

Le Podcast NetApp
Kubecon US, NetApp Insight, ASA, C-Series et ONTAP 9.14

Le Podcast NetApp

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2024 48:34


Dans cet épisode du Podcast NetApp nous allons revenir sur les annonces de KubeCon et de NetApp Insight fin 2023, mais ce n'est pas tout ! Nous allons aussi aborder le generative AI, les nouveauté de data protection avec ActiveSync, ASA et C-Series, ONTAP 9.14, ONTAP Select sur KVM et les nouveauté autours de Kubernetes avec Astra et Cloud Insights !Yann Bizeul (Linked-In)Guillaume Sowinski (Linked-In)Yves Weisser (Linked-In)

Data Center Therapy
#085 - Endpoint Device and Virtual Desktop Jamboree with Hoppy Shaw

Data Center Therapy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2023 36:21


The Matts are back, baby! Your intrepid Data Center Therapy hosts, Mr. Matt ‘He sings the bass' Yette, and Mr. Matt ‘He sings the tenor' Cozzolino have returned!  The Matts welcome IVOXY's own End-User Compute specialist Mr. Hoppy Shaw back to the DCT virtual studios.  Hoppy once again regales you, our audience, with stories of his time in Operations and the evolution of Microsoft products we've come to all know and (somewhat) love.   Among the many topics they review are: The beginnings of ActiveSync and Exchange. The evolution of relevant software suites from Microsoft, including Systems Management Server, System Center Configuration Manager and Microsoft Endpoint Configuration Manager. How things like networks, infrastructure, and security must all be considered at the same time when integrating Azure cloud-based services into an Enterprise. The difference between Windows 365 and Azure Virtual Desktops. Hoppy and the Matts also cover whether GPU-enabled virtual desktops are an option for folks thinking about Desktop-as-a-Service.  If your own organization needs help evolving its networks, infrastructure, or security practices so that you can leverage cost-effective virtual or cloud desktop infrastructure, please be sure to reach out to your IVOXY Account Manager so that we can help!  If you enjoyed the episode, please be sure to like, share and subscribe wherever you get your quality podcasts.  Thanks for listening as always and we hope to catch up with you on our next exciting episode.  Stay safe, stay secure, and stay well (endpoint) managed, DCT friends!  Ciao.

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 327: Vi fick ett mail

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2022 82:02


Uppvärmning/uppföljning BMÅ hotar ruinera Reuters? iOS 16 och batteri Känns som att Fredriks XS också drar lite mer batteri med IOS 16 Jockes 12 mini äter batteri som popcorn med IOS 16 Jockes 27” iMac nu hos ett bättre hem. Ska Christian sälja sin? Förvånansvärt höga beg-priser på Apple TV numera. Ämnen Trocamust: Joel med flera recenserar Entangentsgenvägar – som A istället för kommando-A - vad tycker vi? Tidiga ATP – vad mycket som hände i början där Mindre kända Apple watch-träningsformer Film & TV Britbox (45kr / mån första tre månaderna) och Skyshowtime (39,50 / mån fram till 3/10) nu lanserade i Sverige. Andor. Disney+. 4 / 5 BMÅ (tre första avsnitten) (J) Killing Eve. HBO Max 4/5 BMÅ (C) Länkar Avsnitt 320 Activesync Trocamust New coke Hindenburg Hindenburg Hindenburg ATP Road work Mindre kända Apple watch-träningsformer Tangentbordsgenvägar i Gmail Britbox Star trek: strange new worlds ITV Walter presents Stage manager kommer till fler Ipads Andor Killing Eve Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-327-vi-fick-ett-mail.html

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 320: Grisens hemlighet

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2022 69:10


Uppvärmning/uppföljning Premiär för Jockes podd-iMac. Jocke försöker spela in, Christian och Fredrik diskuterar billig öl Har Jocke fått sin bil ännu? Sommaren är tillbaka? Ämnen Basic Apple Guys läsare har röstat fram tidernas bästa Mac-os-standardskrivbordsbild. Vinner rätt låt? Vilka är panelens favoriter? Fredrik har skaffat Macbook air M2, har tidiga intryck av bland annat flyttassistenten En blå Homepod mini DMZ Retro #6 kommer att komma. Mer information kommer i sinom tid via alla rimliga kanaler Film & TV The Meg. Å dra åt helvete. 1/5 BMÅ (J) Sandman. Fredrik har sett. 4,5/5 (F) Poddtips: Emanuels Karlstens och Anne-Marie Eklunds Löwinders sommarprat. Länkar Jockes podd-Imac Piezo Du har ingen surf Flat tire Restaurang Tjuren Activesync Omröstning om tidernas bästa Macos-standardskrivbordsbild 512 pixels har alla Mac OS-skrivbord uppskalade till moderna upplösningar Macbook air M2 Apples flyttassistent Displaylink Basic Apple guys omdesign av appen Kontakter The Meg Megalodon Marianergraven The sandman - TV-serien The sandman - den tecknade serien Being Flynn She-hulk Podd-tips: Emanuels Karlstens och Anne-Marie Eklunds Löwinders sommarprat ICANN Nyckeln till internet Internet hall of fame DNSSEC Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-320-grisens-hemlighet.html

The History of Computing
Research In Motion and the Blackberry

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2022 25:45


Lars Magnus Ericsson was working for the Swedish government that made telegraph equipment in the 1870s when he started a little telegraph repair shop in 1976. That was the same year the telephone was invented. After fixing other people's telegraphs and then telephones he started a company making his own telephone equipment. He started making his own equipment and by the 1890s was shipping gear to the UK. As the roaring 20s came, they sold stock to buy other companies and expanded quickly. Early mobile devices used radios to connect mobile phones to wired phone networks and following projects like ALOHANET in the 1970s they expanded to digitize communications, allowing for sending early forms of text messages, the way people might have sent those telegraphs when old Lars was still alive and kicking. At the time, the Swedish state-owned Televerket Radio was dabbling in this space and partnered with Ericsson to take first those messages then as email became a thing, email, to people wirelessly using the 400 to 450 MHz range in Europe and 900 MHz in the US. That standard went to the OSI and became a 1G wireless packet switching network we call Mobitex. Mike Lazaridis was born in Istanbul and moved to Canada in 1966 when he was five, attending the University of Waterloo in 1979. He dropped out of school to take a contract with General Motors to build a networked computer display in 1984. He took out a loan from his parents, got a grant from the Canadian government, and recruited another electrical engineering student, Doug Fregin from the University of Windsor, who designed the first circuit boards. to join him starting a company they called Research in Motion. Mike Barnstijn joined them and they were off to do research.  After a few years doing research projects, they managed to build up a dozen employees and a million in revenues. They became the first Mobitex provider in America and by 1991 shipped the first Mobitex device. They brought in James Balsillie as co-CEO, to handle corporate finance and business development in 1992, a partnership between co-CEOs that would prove fruitful for 20 years.  Some of those work-for-hire projects they'd done involved reading bar codes so they started with point-of-sale, enabling mobile payments and by 1993 shipped RIMGate, a gateway for Mobitex. Then a Mobitex point-of-sale terminal and finally with the establishment of the PCMCIA standard, a  PCMCIP Mobitex modem they called Freedom. Two-way paging had already become a thing and they were ready to venture out of PoS systems. So  in 1995, they took a $5 million investment to develop the RIM 900 OEM radio modem. They also developed a pager they called the Inter@ctive Pager 900 that was capable of  two-way messaging the next year. Then they went public on the Toronto Stock Exchange in 1997. The next year, they sold a licensing deal to IBM for the 900 for $10M dollars. That IBM mark of approval is always a sign that a company is ready to play in an enterprise market. And enterprises increasingly wanted to keep executives just a quick two-way page away. But everyone knew there was a technology convergence on the way. They worked with Ericsson to further the technology and over the next few years competed with SkyTel in the interactive pager market. Enter The Blackberry They knew there was something new coming. Just as the founders know something is coming in Quantum Computing and run a fund for that now. They hired a marketing firm called Lexicon Branding to come up with a name and after they saw the keys on the now-iconic keyboard, the marketing firm suggested BlackBerry. They'd done the research and development and they thought they had a product that was special. So they released the first BlackBerry 850 in Munich in 1999. But those were still using radio networks and more specifically the DataTAC network. The age of mobility was imminent, although we didn't call it that yet. Handspring and Palm each went public in 2000.  In 2000, Research In Motion brought its first cellular phone product in the BlackBerry 957, with push email and internet capability. But then came the dot com bubble. Some thought the Internet might have been a fad and in fact might disappear. But instead the world was actually ready for that mobile convergence. Part of that was developing a great operating system for the time when they released the BlackBerry OS the year before. And in 2000 the BlackBerry was named Product of the Year by InfoWorld.  The new devices took the market by storm and shattered the previous personal information manager market, with shares of that Palm company dropping by over 90% and Palm OS being setup as it's own corporation within a couple of years. People were increasingly glued to their email. While the BlackBerry could do web browsing and faxing over the internet, it was really the integrated email access, phone, and text messaging platform that companies like General Magic had been working on as far back as the early 1990s. The Rise of the BlackBerry The BlackBerry was finally the breakthrough mobile product everyone had been expecting and waiting for. Enterprise-level security, integration with business email like Microsoft's Exchange Server, a QWERTY keyboard that most had grown accustomed to, the option to use a stylus, and a simple menu made the product an instant smash success. And by instant we mean after five years of research and development and a massive financial investment. The Palm owned the PDA market. But the VII cost $599 and the BlackBerry cost $399 at the time (which was far less than the $675 Inter@ctive Pager had cost in the 1990s). The Palm also let us know when we had new messages using the emerging concept of push notifications. 2000 had seen the second version of the BlackBerry OS and their AOL Mobile Communicator had helped them spread the message that the wealthy could have access to their data any time. But by 2001 other carriers were signing on to support devices and BlackBerry was selling bigger and bigger contracts. 5,000 devices, 50,000 devices, 100,000 devices. And a company called Kasten Chase stepped in to develop a secure wireless interface to the Defense Messaging System in the US, which opened up another potential two million people in the defense industry They expanded the service to cover more and more geographies in 2001 and revenues doubled, jumping to 164,000 subscribers by the end of the year. That's when they added wireless downloads so could access all those MIME attachments in email and display them. Finally, reading PDFs on a phone with the help of GoAmerica Communications! And somehow they won a patent for the idea that a single email address could be used on both a mobile device and a desktop. I guess the patent office didn't understand why IMAP  was invented by Mark Crispin at Stanford in the 80s, or why Exchange allowed multiple devices access to the same mailbox. They kept inking contracts with other companies. AT&T added the BlackBerry in 2002 in the era of GSM. The 5810 was the first truly convergent BlackBerry that offered email and a phone in one device with seamless SMS communications. It shipped in the US and the 5820 in Europe and Cingular Wireless jumped on board in the US and Deutsche Telekom in Germany, as well as Vivendi in France, Telecom Italia in Italy, etc. The devices had inched back up to around $500 with service fees ranging from $40 to $100 plus pretty limited data plans. The Tree came out that year but while it was cool and provided a familiar interface to the legions of Palm users, it was clunky and had less options for securing communications. The NSA signed on and by the end of the year they were a truly global operation, raking in revenues of nearly $300 million.  The Buying Torndado They added web-based application in 2003, as well as network printing. They moved to a Java-based interface and added the 6500 series, adding a walkie-talkie function. But that 6200 series at around $200 turned out to be huge. This is when they went into that thing a lot of companies do - they started suing companies like Good and Handspring for infringing on patents they probably never should have been awarded. They eventually lost the cases and paid out tens of millions of dollars in damages. More importantly they took their eyes off innovating, a common mistake in the history of computing companies. Yet there were innovations. They released Blackberry Enterprise Server in 2004 then bolted on connectors to Exchange, Lotus Domino, and allowed for interfacing with XML-based APIs in popular enterprise toolchains of the day. They also later added support for GroupWise. That was one of the last solutions that worked with symmetric key cryptography I can remember using and initially required the devices be cradled to get the necessary keys to secure communications, which then worked over Triple-DES, common at the time. One thing we never liked was that messages did end up living at Research in Motion, even if encrypted at the time. This is one aspect that future types of push communications would resolve. And Microsoft Exchange's ActiveSync.  By 2005 there were CVEs filed for BlackBerry Enterprise Server, racking up 17 in the six years that product shipped up to 5.0 in 2010 before becoming BES 10 and much later Blackberry Enterprise Mobility Management, a cross-platform mobile device management solution. Those BES 4 and 5 support contracts, or T-Support, could cost hundreds of dollars per incident. Microsoft had Windows Mobile clients out that integrated pretty seamlessly with Exchange. But people loved their Blackberries. Other device manufacturers experimented with different modes of interactivity. Microsoft made APIs for pens and keyboards that flipped open. BlackBerry added a trackball in 2006, that was always kind of clunky. Nokia, Ericsson, Motorola, and others were experimenting with new ways to navigate devices, but people were used to menus and even styluses. And they seemed to prefer a look and feel that seemed like what they used for the menuing control systems on HVAC controls, video games, and even the iPod.  The Eye Of The Storm A new paradigm was on the way. Apple's iPhone was released in 2007 and Google's Android OS in 2008. By then the BlackBerry Pearl was shipping and it was clear which devices were better. No one saw the two biggest threats coming. Apple was a consumer company. They were slow to add ActiveSync policies, which many thought would be the corporate answer to mobile management as group policies in Active Directory had become for desktops. Apple  and Google were slow to take the market, as BlackBerry continued to dominate the smartphone industry well into 2010, especially once then-president Barack Obama strong-armed the NSA into allowing him to use a special version of the BlackBerry 8830 World Edition for official communiques. Other world leaders followed suit, as did the leaders of global companies that had previously been luddites when it came to constantly being online. Even Eric Schmidt, then chairman of google loved his Crackberry in 2013, 5 years after the arrival of Android. Looking back, we can see a steady rise in iPhone sales up to the iPhone 4, released in 2010. Many still said they loved the keyboard on their BlackBerries. Organizations had built BES into their networks and had policies dating back to NIST STIGs. Research in Motion owned the enterprise and held over half the US market and a fifth of the global market. That peaked in 2011. BlackBerry put mobility on the map. But companies like AirWatch, founded in 2003 and  MobileIron, founded in 2007, had risen to take a cross-platform approach to the device management aspect of mobile devices. We call them Unified Endpoint Protection products today and companies could suddenly support BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, and iPhones from a single console. Over 50 million Blackberries were being sold a year and the stock was soaring at over $230 a share.  Today, they hold no market share and their stock performance shows it. Even though they've pivoted to more of a device management company, given their decades of experience working with some of the biggest and most secure companies and governments in the world. The Fall Of The BlackBerry The iPhone was beautiful. It had amazing graphics and a full touch screen. It was the very symbol of innovation. The rising tide of the App Store also made it a developers playground (no pun intended). It was more expensive than the Blackberry, but while they didn't cater to the enterprise, they wedged their way in there with first executives and then anyone. Initially because of ActiveSync, which had come along in 1996 mostly to support Windows Mobile, but by Exchange Server 2003 SP 2 could do almost anything Outlook could do - provided software developers like Apple could make the clients work. So by 2011, Exchange clients could automatically locate a server based on an email address (or more to the point based on DNS records for the domain) and work just as webmail, which was open in almost every IIS implementation that worked with Exchange. And Office365 was released in 2011, paving the way to move from on-prem Exchange to what we now call “the cloud.” And Google Mail had been around for 7 years by then and people were putting it on the BlackBerry as well, blending home and office accounts on the same devices at times. In fact, Google licensed Exchange ActiveSync, or EAS in 2009 so support for Gmail was showing up on a variety of devices. BlackBerry had everything companies wanted. But people slowly moved to that new iPhone. Or Androids when decent models of phones started shipping with the OS on them. BlackBerry stuck by that keyboard, even though it was clear that people wanted full touchscreens. The BlackBerry Bold came out in 2009. BlackBerry had not just doubled down with the keyboard instead of full touchscreen, but they tripled down on it. They had released the Storm in 2008 and then the Storm in 2009 but they just had a different kind of customer. Albeit one that was slowly starting to retire. This is the hard thing about being in the buying tornado. We're so busy transacting that we can't think ahead to staying in the eye that we don't see how the world is changing outside of it.  As we saw with companies like Amdahl and Control Data, when we only focus on big customers and ignore the mass market we leave room for entrants in our industries who have more mass appeal. Since the rise of the independent software market following the IBM anti-trust cases, app developers have been a bellwether of successful platforms. And the iPhone revenue split was appealing to say the least.  Sales fell off fast. By 2012, the BlackBerry represented less than 6 percent of smartphones sold and by the start of 2013 that number dropped in half, falling to less than 1 percent in 2014. That's when the White House tested replacements for the Blackberry. There was a small bump in sales when they finally released a product that had competitive specs to the iPhone, but it was shortly lived. The Crackberry craze was officially over.  BlackBerry shot into the mainstream and brought the smartphone with them. They made the devices secure and work seamlessly in corporate environments and for those who could pay money to run BES or BIS. They proved the market and then got stuck in the Innovator's Dilemna. They became all about features that big customers wanted and needed. And so they missed the personal part of personal computing. Apple, as they did with the PC and then graphical user interfaces saw a successful technology and made people salivate over it. They saw how Windows had built a better sandbox for developers and built the best app delivery mechanism the world has seen to date. Google followed suit and managed to take a much larger piece of the market with more competitive pricing.  There is so much we didn't discuss, like the short-lived Playbook tablet from BlackBerry. Or the Priv. Because for the most part, they a device management solution today. The founders are long gone, investing in the next wave of technology: Quantum Computing. The new face of BlackBerry is chasing device management, following adjacencies into security and dabbling in IoT for healthcare and finance. Big ticket types of buys that include red teaming to automotive management to XDR. Maybe their future is in the convergence of post-quantum security, or maybe we'll see their $5.5B market cap get tasty enough for one of those billionaires who really, really, really wants their chicklet keyboard back. Who knows but part of the fun of this is it's a living history.    

Daily Check-In with Ned1313
Quantum ActiveSync is S3 On-Prem

Daily Check-In with Ned1313

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2020 12:26


I was a delegate for Tech Field Day 22 going December 9th through the 11th of 2020. Quantum presented on the first day, December 9th, about their ActiveScale product that provides object-based storage at scale for customers that need an on-premises solution. It's clear that the solution is well engineered and designed for high-durability and availability, as long as you don't mind a little delay in getting your data. Here are my thoughts on what they presented and how it might fit into your organization. You can check out the event details here: https://techfieldday.com/appearance/quantum-presents-at-tech-field-day-22/ And here's my Twitter thread during the live event: https://twitter.com/Ned1313/status/1336730126843830272 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/nedinthecloud Website: https://nedinthecloud.com Pluralsight: https://app.pluralsight.com/profile/author/edward-bellavance GitHub: https://github.com/ned1313

Kodsnack
Kodsnack 387 - Det är som internet förr i tiden, med Johan Thelin

Kodsnack

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2020 50:14


Fredrik snackar med Johan Thelin om fediversumet, och del två av Foss-north 2020. Vi diskuterar Mastodon - den lugna och distribuerade versionen av Twitter där du verkligen äger din egen data och kan driva din egen server om du så vill, Peertube - det Googlefria och lika distribuerade svaret på Youtube, och Nextcloud - Dropboxersättningen som blivit väldigt mycket mer med stöd för allt från fotouppladdning till e-post och kalendrar (nåja). Sist men inte minns är det snart dags för en mysig heldag med Foss-north igen! Den här gången behöver du inte ens kliva ur morgonrocken och kan dricka varm choklad i soffan till förmiddagsföreläsningarna! Ett stort tack till Cloudnet som sponsrar vår VPS! Har du kommentarer, frågor eller tips? Vi är @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @antikristoffer, och @bjoreman på Twitter, har en sida på Facebook och epostas på info@kodsnack.se om du vill skriva längre. Vi läser allt som skickas. Gillar du Kodsnack får du hemskt gärna recensera oss i iTunes! Du kan också stödja podden genom att ge oss en kaffe (eller två!) på Ko-fi. Länkar Johan Thelin Fediverse Mastodon mastodon.technology toot.cafe joinmastodon.org var det, inte getmastodon @e8johan@mastodon.technology @bjoreman@toot.cafe Toot! Tusky Dag Ågren Unarchiver Tweetdeck Activitypub Peertube Conftube Jocke I make FOSS på Twitter Carol Chen fidonet.io mastodon.fidonet.io Foss-north Pixelfed Flickr Jeena Indieweb Pingback Pump.io Duckduckgo Fripost Caldav Thunderbird Lightning Davx5 ics eml Roundcube DKIM Nextcloud Nextcloud Pi Foss-north-podden Borås djurpark Markdown Collaboras onlineversion av Openoffice Nextclouds konferens Nextcloud 20 med dashboard Activesync-addon för Nextcloud Nextcloud talk Activitypub conference peertube.fidonet.io Jeenas serie om varför han kör Peertube och hur man kör det TLS Vincent Rivière om reverse engineering och öppet ROM-chip av Ataris OS GCC till 68k GEM TOS Foss-north 2020, del 2 Akademy Big blue button Slido ITS Lars Brinkhoff i Kodsnack Ansible Bunnie Huang Precursor Novena - öppen källkods-laptopen Bunnie var inblandad i Kodsnacks Youtube-kanal Titlar Vi pratade ju fediverse imorse Tyst variant av Twitter Man får ju lägga sin tid på vad man vill Dags för ett andra konto I ett försök att avgoogla Folks e-post som transportprotokoll Den dagen SD-kortet ger sig Min server har hans server på vitlistan Ingen kurering och inga smarta algoritmer Det är som internet förr i tiden Det var en jätterolig fransos där Does god approve? En riktig nörd på det positiva sättet Det skadar inte att fråga Min fru accepterar, men hon kommer aldrig att förstå

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 228: En katt som heter Sauron

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2020 72:26


Vilken vecka va? Kanelbullens dag - i backspegeln Den Björemanska djurparken har utökats Premiär av Dune flyttad till 1/10 2021. Vafan Fredrik ska LÖDA Rackmonterat vin! Jockes bil genom besiktningen med rent papper DMZ Retro-produktionen fortgår oförändrat. Tre artiklar skrivs samtidigt Vi minns Eddie Van Halen med hans “Eruption” Kan datorer sluta vara så jävla dåliga? Mer gnäll om Android och deras “touch points” Länkar Vilken vecka va? Samma bild på Ernst Kirchsteiger varje dag Winzip KM:s Goda bok Marsvin tämjdes för som mat Katten Larson Dune Tenet Rymdresan Christer Fugelsang Christer Fåhraeus Jonas Birgersson Christer Sturmark LasseMajas detektivbyrå Splitkb.com Kyria - tangentbordet Fredrik ska bygga Vinhylla för rackmontering The C-64 C-64 mini Eddie van Halen Eruption, live Bruce Swedien Atom Intel AMT Nextclouds plugin för Outlook Carddav Caldav Activesync Två nördar - en podcast. Fredrik Björeman, Joacim Melin diskuterar allt som gör livet värt att leva. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-228-en-katt-som-heter-sauron.html.

Hope This Helps - A Tech Podcast
HTH0009 - We Went to BurgerTown Today

Hope This Helps - A Tech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2020 70:56


PowerShell 7 is out, we love Out-GridView, Microsoft DNS had a gaping security hole, Exchange Online PowerShell, Microsoft Graph, and a whole lot more. Extended show notes available at https://hthpc.com/ Boot-Up (Intro…random topics) 00:16 • Raccoons and wildlife • Various podcast housekeeping items • Facebook, Twitter, Bathroom Magazines • Ways to remove blue light from your life • PowerShell 7 is officially out: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/scripting/whats-new/what-s-new-in-powershell-70?view=powershell-7 • Out-GridView is the best • You can now update your user info, change your password, and more in the authenticator app https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/azure-active-directory-identity/update-to-the-microsoft-authenticator-app-now-rolling-out/ba-p/1169863 • The Coronation ceremony: Microsoft Teams Giving Away Paid Features for Six Months Due to Coronavirus https://www.thurrott.com/microsoft/231376/microsoft-teams-giving-away-paid-features-for-six-months-due-to-coronavirus • Wash your hands, work from home, be sensible about COVID-19 please! PPE! • Free Microsoft domains (patched now): https://www.darkreading.com/vulnerabilities---threats/researchers-find-670+-microsoft-subdomains-vulnerable-to-takeover/d/d-id/1337246?_mc=rss_x_drr_edt_aud_dr_x_x-rss-simple • Writing documentation: Mostly screenshots or purely text? • VSCode ISE Experience: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/powershell/visual-studio-code-for-powershell-7/ • Copying and pasting code from ISE/the internet is dangerous due to quotes/character encoding Exchange Online PowerShell Module V2 (EXOPMv2) 28:20 • FOLLOW-UP FROM LAST WEEK: Connect-ExchangeOnline DOES support prefixing, there is a command switch. It was just not documented on the official page: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/module/exchange/powershell-v2-module/connect-exchangeonline?view=exchange-ps • However, note that the new get-EXO commands are NOT prefixed, regardless. • Doesn't work in PowerShell 6 or 7, only 5.1 and below: https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/exchange-team-blog/faster-and-more-reliable-exchange-online-management-using/ba-p/1198604 • https://www.petri.com/exchange-online-powershell-goes-restful Help needs Help 38:10 • https://old.reddit.com/r/PowerShell/comments/fcjkip/multiple_years_of_microsofts_broken_powershell/ • Correct syntax: "powershell Update-Help -Verbose -Force -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue" Graph: Where do I draw the line? 39:40 • Graph PowerShell SDK Preview: https://github.com/microsoftgraph/msgraph-sdk-powershell/tree/dev/samples Variety Hour 42:20 • Unsecured LDAP calls • The Basic Authpocalypse: MFA/Modern Auth/End of Basic Auth = no more Office 2010 or ActiveSync for you • ActiveSync on Palm OS, it was a thing once: https://kb.iu.edu/d/atjx • Microsoft Endpoint Manager and SCCM: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q9Bc2_eJozM • If you have Intune licensing, you have SCCM licensing: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/intune/fundamentals/licenses An update on Steve's Pentium 4 Linux adventures 49:26 • Swapped to Peppermint OS for one system with the dual monitor bug • Raspberry Pi NAS project starting soon More Variety Hour 56:18 • Yu-Gi-Oh • Anime • 90s Nickelodeon • Rumble Pak • Forwarding topic being deferred to HTH0010 Ask the Stiffs: Question of the Week 01:03:12 • Do you have any funny "war stories" from jobs' past? Outro - "Plus Delta" 01:07:10 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 174: Underdelen av Jabba the Hutt

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2019 55:40


Det stora e-postserver- och postpaketavsnittet! Rutger Hauer är död Ars technicas war stories-videor. Blade runner - en resa i kompressionens tecken Fredriks eventuella hostingproblem - dags att skaffa en mycket liten VPS? Semestern är här, Fredrik tycker redan det kan bli svalare Jockes pool-liner har kommit. Tre veckor för sent men lagom till värmen? Lite hat mot DHL En mycket udda postupplevelse En Legonära upplevelse Uppföljning om NASAs mobila plattform och deras crawler-transporter. Kan det bli mer Dune 2 än crawler-transporter? Framtiden för Fredriks pensionerade Mac mini Ska vi ersätta Dropbox? fredwasfed - veckans Instagramtips Länkar Rutger Hauer Jockes text om Rutger Hauer Liftaren Blind fury Sin city Split second Laydyhawke Ars technicas war stories Avsnittet om Blade runner-spelet Dune II Freshrss Tiny tiny RSS Pingdom Oderland One.com Kerio connect Activesync Dovecot Postfix Crawler-transporter Österbotten Nykarleby Allt om trädgård Artikeln om Sandra Neumans grymma trädgård Nextcloud Talk show med Daniel Jalkut fredwasfed Instagrammaterial om Apple park Två nördar - en podcast. Fredrik Björeman och Joacim Melin diskuterar allt som gör livet värt att leva. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-174-underdelen-av-jabba-the-hutt.html.

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 147: Många sköna gigabyte

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2018 69:19


Ur veckans skakande, rafflande och spännande avsnitt från Sveriges mest revolutionerande podcast: Bodyguard - spoilerfritt. Nästa vecka blir det eventuellt djupare diskussion Diverse annan trevlig TV Fredrik har varit på Øredev igen, och blivit sugen på mer VR Jocke har jobbat hårt DMZ Retro #3: vi är i mål! Och du kan fortfarande förbeställa En punktering kommer sällan ensam Fredrik filosoferar kring sin relation till Tetris effect Uppgraderad Amiga 2000 för BBS:en Fredrik kikar på senaste Scamanderfilmen “Programminnet är slut” och andra spännande Macproblem Remakes av spel, vilka är bra? Favoritremake av ett spel Jocke fascineras av skräp på sin hårddisk - en skakande städrapport Länkar Öppningsmusiken - Less than av Nine inch nails, live Bodyguard House of cards, sista säsongen Manhunt: Unabomber Sharp objects The rain Øredev Moon Ribas och hennes keynote Az Balabanian Podden Research VR Oculus quest Magic leap-headsetet Gubbdata Pontus Berg Fairlight ABC 80 Tetris effect Ecstacy of order - Tetrisdokumentären Little big planet-spelen Quinn AmiTCP Roadshow Miami Binkd Frontdoor Amibinkd Crashmail Little endian och big endian Crashmail II ixemul Inumbo Activesync Scamanderfilmen - Fantastic beasts del två Railroads Pirates! Wings remastered Tetris effect Holedown Protracker Två nördar - en podcast. Fredrik Björeman och Joacim Melin diskuterar allt som gör livet värt att leva. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-147-manga-skona-gigabyte.html.

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 137: Hej Frippe, har du några nya warez?

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2018 55:45


Ur veckans avsnitt: Känslan av att “allt är på plats”. Virtualisering som lirar. Bra tangentbord, bra brandväggar. bra nät. Alles in Ordnung. Sedan blev det lite sådär … … men tangentbordssagan får ett lyckligt slut Hejdå Exchange Server Fredrik speltipsar Mojave närmar sig, hur ligger det till på Fredriks dator? En härlig söktjänst för Liftaren-böckerna Jobs dotter Lisa Brennan-Jobs publicerar självbiografi - smaskiga och inte så trevliga detaljer om Apple-grundaren Jocke har byggt en “Synology” Länkar Ulla-Bella sekreterare Lelle Printer Jag rullar Logitech K750 The seal Fredriks K811 Kerio connect ActiveSync Donut county Another world Skyforce anniversary 1942 Wings AGA Trolls AGA Syndicate One must fall Moslo Synergy Söktjänst för Liftarens guide till galaxen-böckerna Lisa Brennan-Jobs självbiografi Xpenology Två nördar - en podcast. Fredrik Björeman och Joacim Melin diskuterar allt som gör livet värt att leva. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-137-hej-frippe-har-du-nagra-nya-warez.html.

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 122: De tusen gäspningarnas avsnitt

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2018 62:16


Ur veckans avsnitt: Inbetalning till Skatteverket ska göras till bankgironummer 5050–1055, ange OCR-nummer … Spam-SMS och pysslet att gå ur kyrkan Herrejävlar-TV: Homeland, säsong sju, The Handmaid’s Tale, säsong två av Westworld Markovsnack Google släpper ett nytt chatprogram. Igen. Sju månader sedan Apple släppte telefoner med trådlös laddning men var är deras egna laddare? Apple går som tåget i Indien Vad körde man på sin 486:a när man körde Openstep i mitten på 90-talet? Litestep och Afterstep Objective-C på klassisk Amiga! Elementary OS Nintendo Switch hackad, på väldigt låg nivå Kan man bygga en ARM-baserad dator själv? Länkar PSVRlife - VR-spelpodden Fredrik hittade Svenska kyrkans tillgångar - cirka 45 miljarder The handmaid’s tale Margaret Atwood Emmy Markovsnack Martin, alias Grapefrukt Google ska släppa ny chatt igen Google Talk Google plus Hangouts Google meet Google voice Project fi Google messenger Allo Duo gsma.com Open handset alliance Air power Death from above Iphone X säljer bra trots allt Apple går som tåget i Indien Openstep Omniweb Beos och dess filsystem Litestep - skärmdump av Fredriks uppsättning! Afterstep Objective-C rullar på klassiska Amigor Ximian Elementary OS Logitech wingman - joysticks Bebits Nintendo Switch har hackats Kerio connect Active sync Kemp Clavister Cloudflare Cloudflare-VDns blogginlägg Qualcomm Centriq Asus Tinker board Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-122-de-tusen-gaspningarnas-avsnitt.html.

The Record
Seattle Before the iPhone #7 - John Chaffee

The Record

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2014 67:20


This episode was recorded 16 May 2013 live and in person at Omni's lovely offices overlooking Lake Union in Seattle. (Check out the OmniFocus 2 public beta!) You can download the m4a file or subscribe in iTunes. (Or subscribe to the podcast feed.) John Chaffee is a co-founder of BusyMac which makes the awesome BusyCal. John talks about being a Mac developer in the '90s, what it was like at Now Software, and how he got tired of mobile and came back to the Mac. This episode is sponsored by Squarespace. Easily create beautiful websites via drag-and-drop. Get help any time from their 24/7 technical support. Create responsive websites — ready for phones and tablets — without any extra effort: Squarespace's designers have already handled it for you. Get 10% off by going to http://squarespace.com/therecord. And, if you want to get under the hood, check out their APIs at developers.squarespace.com. This episode is also sponsored by Microsoft Azure Mobile Services. Mobile Services is a great way to provide backend services — syncing and other things — for your iPhone, iPad, and Mac apps. If you've been to the website already, you've seen the tutorials where you input code into a browser window. And that's an easy way to get started. But don't be fooled: Mobile Services is deep. You can write in JavaScript in your favorite text editor and deploy via Git. Good stuff. Things we mention, in order of appearance (roughly): BusyMac BusyCal Now Software Extensis Farallon SplashData PhoneNet connectors AppleTalk Berkeley Mac Users Group (BMUG) Berkeley, CA QA A/UX Desktop publishing Mac iici SCSI Santa Barbara Mac Store Pagemaker Mac 512 VIP Technologies Atari ST Apple IIgs Lotus 1-2-3 Taxes Mac SE/30 Portland Bay Area San Jose System 7 1991 Now Utilities Dave Riggle Claris MacWrite Filemaker Pro Bento 1990 Macworld Expo Floppy disks iCal Now Up-to-Date Macworld Expo Boston Compuserve Windows Altura Mac2Win Qualcomm Osborne Effect Dotcom Bubble Aldus Fetch Quark MacMall OnOne Software 1999 Adobe InDesign OpenDoc Mac OS X Carbon AppKit NetNewsWire Office Space Getty Images PhotoDisx 2001 Palm PDA Handspring Visor PalmGear Handango SplashPhoto SplashMoney SplashID SplashShopper SplashWallet Windows Mobile Symbian Android SplashBlog Instagram 2006 SixApart Movable Type 2007 Mac App Store BusyCal, LLC Google WWDC RSS Safari/RSS Google (Partly) Shuts Down CalDAV MobileMe SyncServices iCloud Sandboxing JCPenney's Apple Pulls out of Macworld Twitter AirPlay Apple TV Type A Personality Domain Name System BusySync HotSync iCloud Core Data Syncing iCloud Key/Value Storage ActiveSync ExchangeWebService Blackberry

The UC Architects Podcast
Episode 15: What Day Is It?

The UC Architects Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2013 66:03


Hosts: Pat Richard, Michel de Rooij, Serkan Varoglu, Johan Veldhuis, John Cook, and Michael van Horenbeeck. UC news, Office 365 recipient limit, Remote Connectivity Analyzer, Lync Phone Edition updates, Exchange 2013 gotcha's, ActiveSync and Gmail, Fast user switching and Lync voice calls, MCM process, and more. Download or subscribe to this show at TheUCArchitects.com.For additional show notes, visit the summary page for this episode. Running time: 01:06:03

AfterDawn Suomen Podcast
AfterDawn Podcast - Osa 17: Vuosi 2012 pakettiin sekä Tizen, Ubuntu ja ActiveSync

AfterDawn Suomen Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2013 42:51


Mobile Nations
Mobile Nations 20: CES 2013 preview

Mobile Nations

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2013 89:45


Kevin, Phil, Daniel, and Rene talk about CES 2013, what they expect to see, and whether it's still relevant, then fight about ActiveSync, RIM vs. Microsoft, and what they want to see from Apple, Google, and everyone going forward!

WMfrance Podcasts
La minute de mobilité - 1 x 02 - Smartphone

WMfrance Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2009 2:59


Pour le deuxième épisode de notre podcast on décrypte le mot smartphone ! Car même si la traduction de l'anglais littéral signifie "Téléphone intelligent" on se rends compte qu'il a en réalité plusieurs types de smartphones. On expliques aussi les nombreuses possibilités de ces machines. For our second podcast we choose to explain the smartphone word. There is different types of smartphones and you'll discover the each type of. We'll show to you what we can do we these littles machines !

WMfrance Podcasts
La minute de mobilité - 1 x 01 - Synchronisation

WMfrance Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2009 2:37


Premier épisode de la minute de mobilité sur le mot synchronisation. Une méthode souvent mal comprise par le public néophyte qui pourtant facilite beaucoup les choses. First episode of the mobility minute podacst. Its the presentation of the synchronisation which is misunderstood by the neophyts users but this methode make the the things easier !

CPScast
CPScast 25 – Zu viel Gesynce

CPScast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2009


Eine halbe Stunde selbstgespräch zum Thema Google-Sync und was daran nicht funktioniert. Denn eigentlich wäre es ja toll, seine Daten kostenlos auf seinen Computern und Geräten aktuell zu halten. In der Praxis bringt dieser “Beta-Dienst” allerdings eine Hand voll an Problemen mit sich, die aus einer tollen Idee eine Sache werden lassen, die funktioniert, aber nicht [...]