shahine.com/omar/

homepage | Send mail to the author(s) contact

yet another Microsoft blogger

# Saturday, March 24, 2007

PDF Preview Handler for Outlook 2007

Yes, everyone out there has seen Tim Heuer's Foxit PDF Preview Handler. This allows you to preview PDF files in Outlook 2007 or the Vista Preview Pane.

Well I didn't install it cause I stopped using Foxit now that I can install Adobe Acrobat Reader 8 without much of the prior annoyances.

Anyway, Ryan Gregg, has released a PDF Preview Handler that uses Adobe Acrobat's ActiveX Control. I've been using it for a few weeks (Ryan works on the Outlook team and had an internal version for a while) and it's fantastic.

Thanks a bunch Ryan for releasing it.

Posted Saturday, March 24, 2007    Permalink    Comments [4]  View blog reactions

 

# Tuesday, March 20, 2007

BitLocker

I have been meaning to blog about BitLocker since I set it up on my new ThinkPad T60. Why did I use BitLocker? In case my laptop is stolen then my hard drive will just look like a bunch of unintelligible 1s and 0s. I would not use BitLocker on a desktop machine, but for a Laptop, especially one with confidential Microsoft info it's a no brainier.

BUT WHERE WAS THE BIG FAT EASY BUTTON?

Setting up BitLocker was a PITA for me. I followed the step by step instructions to enable BitLocker but each time I installed Vista I was told my drive configuration was not suitable. Finally I gave up, created a big fat partition and installed Vista. I then got the new Windows Vista Ultimate Extras BitLocker enhancement and it did all the dirty work for me. Why oh why didn't I know about this first? It would be nice if the Technet article mentioned this easy tool.

Anyhoo, I write this today because Lifhacker has an article comparing BitLocker to Apple's FileVault. Now I dig and respect Lifehacker but Gina totally missed the most important aspect of BitLocker. YOU DON'T NEED A USB Key to use BitLocker. My Laptop came with a Trusted Platform Module (TPM Chip). Most PCees come with one these days. They are usually disabled in the BIOS so you must turn them on (not sure why they are disabled as they are pretty benign when not being used). In fact I would never have considered BitLocker if I had to use a USB key (BitLocker does allow to you use a PIN and or USB Key in addition to the TPM Chip).

Anyway, with a TPM chip the "key" is essentially a chip on the motherboard. However, if the system detects and significant change it will force you to manually enter the key and disable/re-enable BitLocker. This ensures that if some one lifts your laptop and takes out your hard drive it won't be readable. This mode of operation is called Transparent Operation Mode:

Transparent operation mode: This mode leverages the capabilities of the TPM 1.2 hardware to provide for a transparent user experience – the user logs onto Windows Vista as normal. The key used for the disk encryption is sealed (encrypted) by the TPM chip and will only be released to the OS loader code if the early boot files appear to be unmodified. The pre-OS components of BitLocker achieve this by implementing a Static Root of Trust Measurement – a methodology specified by the Trusted Computing Group.

I had to experience this fist hand the other day when some kind of change caused my BIOS to think that my machine changed enough to require me to enter my key (I suspect it was one of the early boot files being modified by an OS update). Now you can insert a USB KeyChain with your key (which didn't work for me, not sure why, need to muck with the bios to find out) or enter it in manually from a print out or in my case the key that was backed up to the Windows MarketPlace Digital Locker (another Vista Ultimate Extra).

So, while it's nice that Gina gave BitLocker the win over FileVault, she neglects the two coolest features:

  • Support for the TPM and hardware key
  • Support for backup of your key to the Digital Locker on Windows Market Place

BTW, if you do use BitLocker with a TPM I highly recommend that you have a copy of your key somewhere you can get to if all you have is your laptop. In my case I store the key on my Samsung Blackjack using eWallet. I would be pissed if I were on a plane, tried to boot my laptop and I was locked out.

Posted Wednesday, March 21, 2007    Permalink    Comments [1]  View blog reactions

 

# Sunday, March 18, 2007

New Amazon Feature: Subscribe and Save

This is genius. My metrosexual self needs hair stuff, and I happen to love Bumble and Bumble Sumo Tech. Only problem is I always forget to re-order it and run out. It's not easy to find and I don't know or frequent the women's beauty shops to know where to find it.

Anyway, I just noticed Amazon now has a new feature called Subscribe and Save.

What Is Subscribe & Save?

When you order through Subscribe & Save, you'll automatically receive a new shipment of the item in intervals you select at a discount on our everyday price. Plus, all subscription orders ship free. We'll charge your credit card for each order only when the item is shipped, and you may cancel at any time.
To start a subscription for this product, choose a quantity and delivery schedule, then click "Subscribe now!" You'll be asked to provide a shipping address, credit card, and billing address. Once the order is placed, your first shipment will be processed and your subscription activated.

I LOVE YOU AMAZON! :-).

Posted Sunday, March 18, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions

 

Jott

Jott is a great service for GTD type folks. When you are out and about, you call a phone number and leave a message. Within seconds you will get an email with a transcription of your message.

For example, I called  the Jott number (after the registration process) and left a message "Call mom about her flight tomorrow". A few seconds later this appeared:

Very cool indeed.

[via Scoble]

Posted Sunday, March 18, 2007    Permalink    Comments [1]  View blog reactions

 

# Friday, March 16, 2007

Works on my machine

Brilliant... Ordered my t-shirt.

Posted Friday, March 16, 2007    Permalink    Comments [0]  View blog reactions

 

The Wow

Ok, I happen to like "The Wow" ads that Microsoft is running for Vista. However, in the last week I have seen/heard at least two people say something like "Where is the Wow in this product" and "The wow effect".

I have a bad feeling that this silly phrase will be repeated for a long time to come. I find it annoying.

"The Wow" is clever marketing. It should not be used to describe or promote your feature product IMHO. I'm pretty sure people building Vista weren't thinking about "The Wow" when they were writing specs and code. Maybe I'm wrong though.

Posted Friday, March 16, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions

 

# Wednesday, March 14, 2007

DST problems

Even at Microsoft it seems some people didn't get the memo. I witnessed a meeting today where a nameless person who relied on their Samsung Blackjack missed the meeting.

Windows Mobile needs software auto-update.

Posted Thursday, March 15, 2007    Permalink    Comments [4]  View blog reactions

 

Inline Autocomplete

Funny how you think you know about ever hidden feature and shortcut. Well Sean tells us about Inline Autocomplete and what it does. I for one had no idea and am glad I found out :-).

Posted Thursday, March 15, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions

 

# Monday, March 12, 2007

Intuit doesn't want your feedback

I had the exact same experience as Dennis when I reported a bug in Turbotax.

Basically Turbotax 2003 screwed up my mortgage interest deduction on amortized points. When I sold my condo last year I was eligible to take that mortgage interest deduction for the point that I paid.

However, it never reported that I paid any points in the year that I got the loan, and didn't amortize anything. As a result the calculations were incorrect (only off by a few dollars) but if I corrected it I would not be able to e-file.

Anyway, the emails they sent me were exactly the same. You cannot respond to them.

Posted Tuesday, March 13, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions

 

# Sunday, March 11, 2007

Package Tracking Gadget

This has become one of my favorite Vista SideBar Gadgets.

Posted Sunday, March 11, 2007    Permalink    Comments [0]  View blog reactions

 

# Friday, March 09, 2007

I laughed so hard I cried

This is just too funny. Vista Speech Recognition is pretty amazing, but I've felt like this on a few occasions.

Posted Friday, March 09, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions

 

# Thursday, March 08, 2007

Lenovo

I LOVE Lenovo. Maybe it's the fact that I LOVE my ThinkPad T60, or the fact that Lenovo folks have great blogs... or maybe even that all their little applications share the same start menu shortcut and grouping and icons. I can't think of any other PC OEM that has employees that blog about their hardware. I find it especially cool. You can tell from their posts that they love their product and they are proud of what they do and who they work for. That makes me feel better about my ThinkPad. They are also honest about things like Crapware.

Having just read their anniversary post on the Lenovo 3000 series I'm inclined to get the J115 for my parents. I'm also inclined to tell my sister to ditch getting the Sony Vaio and get a 3000 series laptop.

You know since giving up on a Mac Laptop years ago, I've owned two Sony's, one Compaq, two Toshiba's, a Dell and a Fujitsu. Lenovo is far and away the better laptop. My Dell had it's motherboard replaced 5 times.

I'm so happy the ThinkPads are available at Microsoft now (sanctioned by our IT department).

Oh, the best idea I've heard in a while is mentioned on the Happy Birthday Lenovo 3000 series. Replace the stupid S-Video port on laptops with an HDMI port. That would at least keep me from going crazy that all PC laptops still have VGA and not DVI on board. If you replace s-video with HDMI then you get the best of both worlds: VGA for legacy compatibility and projectors, and HDMI for digital video out.

I hope some one takes that idea and runs with it.

Posted Friday, March 09, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions

 

Nikon RAW codec update posted

Head over to the PIX blog to find out more.

Hopefully this first big photo codec release for Vista was a lesson to all and this sort of thing is not repeated. Modifying a RAW file and not having that file work was a bit scary (even scarier is that it appears that I was the first person inside Microsoft to find and report this bug).

It worries me that Nikon's QA isn't all that. No one there dogfooded this product or uses Adobe software?

Anyway, I'm glad it's fixed and the Microsoft and Nikon folks worked together to address the problem quickly.

Posted Friday, March 09, 2007    Permalink    Comments [1]  View blog reactions

 

Intel and AMD on Vista

I admit, I'm an Intel man. I love their motherboards, core 2 duo, and so on. However, after reading this I'm a bit perplexed. What the hell is Intel doing waiting for SP1? I mean common.

I may just have to consider AMD next time around.

I'd also like to point out that the nVidia drivers for Vista are crap and featureless. I can't even change resolutions or add custom resolutions using their control panel. Meanwhile ATI (now part of AMD) has awesome Vista drivers.

When I read the AMD memo it just made me proud of the work that folks at Microsoft have done to get Vista out.

I'm writing this post on all the vista features that I love as I find them, but it's taking forever because I keep finding new things. Like did you know that robocopy is built into Vista? Kick ass!

Posted Friday, March 09, 2007    Permalink    Comments [1]  View blog reactions

 

# Wednesday, March 07, 2007

I've been there

Reeves has a rather humorous post all geeks can relate to.

You decide to update some piece of software or hardware that is working perfectly fine as it is. You do it because you want that new feature, bug fix, firmware update or whatever. You do it in a hurry, like 5 min before you need to walk out the door... and then you go Noooooooo!!!!! Because something went horribly wrong. Or you do it the night before you need to get up at 5 am for a flight somewhere... you know what I mean. You screw the thing up so bad you don't get any sleep and you hate yourself vowing never to do anything like that again.

I do disagree with Reeves' first point "If it ain't broke, don't fix it.". Um, that's not how we are built... :-).

Posted Thursday, March 08, 2007    Permalink    Comments [3]  View blog reactions