krva.blogspot.com
Cool stuff to know: FCoE vs FC (vs iSCSI)
http://krva.blogspot.com/2010/04/fcoe-vs-fc-vs-iscsi.html
Cool stuff to know. Just a collection of interesting stuff I encountered during my job. Thursday, April 22, 2010. FCoE vs FC (vs iSCSI). A client from the company I work for is starting with a FCoE (Fibre Channel over Ethernet) project for their entire datacenter. As part of this project, the seperate fibre channel and ethernet switches will be replaced by Cisco Nexus 5000 series and the servers will be equiped with network adapter that simulate Eth and FC in one. A quick high-level overview:. Here, a bi...
krva.blogspot.com
Cool stuff to know: March 2010
http://krva.blogspot.com/2010_03_01_archive.html
Cool stuff to know. Just a collection of interesting stuff I encountered during my job. Tuesday, March 02, 2010. I have recently started as an architect at a large international company with as clear objective to improve quality of the current designs being made. As a next step, this checklist can be converted to a business analist's question list. More on that in my next post. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Cool stuff to know. Subscribe to KrVa feeds. Hello, I work as a Technology Lead ...
krva.blogspot.com
Cool stuff to know: January 2009
http://krva.blogspot.com/2009_01_01_archive.html
Cool stuff to know. Just a collection of interesting stuff I encountered during my job. Tuesday, January 27, 2009. Replicate Exchange to a DRS (Disaster Recovery Site): Best Practices. In my last post I’ve gone over some of the considerations you need to keep in mind when choosing a replication setup for Exchange 2007. 1 Mandatory Data to replicate. Changes to commit to the database. Info on the entries in the log files. 2 Best Practices for asynchronous replication (replication mechanisms). Expensive, b...
krva.blogspot.com
Cool stuff to know: Let's PingPing!
http://krva.blogspot.com/2010/04/lets-pingping.html
Cool stuff to know. Just a collection of interesting stuff I encountered during my job. Thursday, April 22, 2010. Ever heard of PingPing yet? Here in Belgium the mobile service providers are developing a framework for paying small amounts with your cell phone. Unfortunately, the major cell phone manufacturers (BlackBerry, HTC, Apple, Nokia, .) aren't agreeing on a standard yet, so for now things will have to be done via a NFS tag (stricker) than you can paste on the back of your cell. How does it work?
krva.blogspot.com
Cool stuff to know: Certificate procedure for Push Mail with Exchange 2003 SP2 and ISA 2006
http://krva.blogspot.com/2009/11/exchange-2003-sp2-and-isa-2006.html
Cool stuff to know. Just a collection of interesting stuff I encountered during my job. Thursday, November 19, 2009. Certificate procedure for Push Mail with Exchange 2003 SP2 and ISA 2006. Last week, a colleague and I have configured an Exchange 2003 SP2 for push mail. Since it was a joint effort, I want to thank Bram Poelaert for his help and expertise. All information in these posts are therefore the result of our teamwork. To create and install a certificate yourself, these steps have to be completed:.
krva.blogspot.com
Cool stuff to know: Certificate procedure – Step 2: Creating a certificate
http://krva.blogspot.com/2009/11/certificate-procedure-step-2-creating.html
Cool stuff to know. Just a collection of interesting stuff I encountered during my job. Friday, November 20, 2009. Certificate procedure – Step 2: Creating a certificate. Now that our request is created and since we’ll be creating the certificate ourselves, let’s just get it over with … :). 1 Copy the text file to your CA, go to the CA website: http:/ localhost/certsrv and select Request a Certificate. 2 Select Advanced Certificate Request. 2 Certificate procedure - Step 1: Creating a certificate request.
krva.blogspot.com
Cool stuff to know: November 2009
http://krva.blogspot.com/2009_11_01_archive.html
Cool stuff to know. Just a collection of interesting stuff I encountered during my job. Friday, November 20, 2009. Certificate procedure – Step 2: Creating a certificate. Now that our request is created and since we’ll be creating the certificate ourselves, let’s just get it over with … :). 1 Copy the text file to your CA, go to the CA website: http:/ localhost/certsrv and select Request a Certificate. 2 Select Advanced Certificate Request. 2 Certificate procedure - Step 1: Creating a certificate request.
krva.blogspot.com
Cool stuff to know: Certificate procedure - Step 1: Creating a certificate request
http://krva.blogspot.com/2009/11/certificate-procedure-step1-creating.html
Cool stuff to know. Just a collection of interesting stuff I encountered during my job. Friday, November 20, 2009. Certificate procedure - Step 1: Creating a certificate request. In my previous post (see link below), I talked about the various steps you need to perform to create a certificate to secure your data transmission, both self-signed and officially signed. As promised, the following posts provide a step-by-step overview of the complete procedure. Thanks to Bram Poelaert for his input! This is th...
krva.blogspot.com
Cool stuff to know: December 2008
http://krva.blogspot.com/2008_12_01_archive.html
Cool stuff to know. Just a collection of interesting stuff I encountered during my job. Wednesday, December 17, 2008. 8220;The execution of scripts is disabled on this system” … How to run your own PowerShell scripts. So you’re picking up PowerShell scripting, are you? As a first test, you create a little, never fail “. 8221; script and launch it from within a PowerShell, but instead of seeing “Hello World” you see this:. Help about signing" for more details. C: scripts test.ps1. And that’s it! Your scri...