Robbie Allen
 
Web rallenhome.com

 Links

  Home
  About Me
  Books
  Essays
  Articles
  Scripting
  Public Speaking
  Contact Me

 


 Other Blogs

  Publishing Hacks

  UNC Basketball


 Archived Blogs

  MIT Musings

  Active Directory
    Cookbook


Technorati Profile

This site has moved to robbieallen.com. Update your bookmarks!

April 30, 2005

Saturday, April 30, 2005

I'm going to be speaking at the next meeting of the Boston Area Windows Server User Group at the Microsoft campus in Waltham (May 4th @ 7pm).  My presentation is called Active Directory Hacks.  I presented something similar at a Windows Connections conference and it received high marks.  I also plan on giving away few books.  Typically, I come up with some interesting trivia or obscure questions to ask the crowd.  First person to answer correctly gets a book.


April 29, 2005

Friday, April 29, 2005

Over at the O'Reilly Radar, Tim talks about how book sales track overall technology trends very closely.  I first saw a presentation on this by Tim at the last FOO Camp.  You can draw some very interesting conclusions about adoption of various technologies from their data.  O'Reilly was inspired, at least partially, from Moneyball, which is a tale of using statistics in baseball to pick players that are undervalued by traditional subjective approaches.  I recently wrote in my MIT blog about how the Boston Celtics are doing something similar.  I'm a big believer in tracking and analyzing metrics to help make business and technical decisions.  Anytime I design an IT or software system, one question I always ask: how are we going to measure success through the use of performance and customer satisfaction metrics?  This should not be an afterthought.

BTW, if you think you can get rich writing technical books, just look at how badly the overall book market has performed for the last 2 years compared to 2003 (and 2003 was a significant decline from 2000-2001).  Back in the late 90s and early 2000s (before I got started writing books), you could make quite a bit of money on books that were not considered big successes.  Now, even a top seller in a category is not a guarantee for solid returns.  But alas, I keep writing!


April 15, 2005

Friday, April 15, 2005

I received an interesting thing in the mail recently--the Russian edition of Active Directory Cookbook.  Here is a picture of the cover:


April 2, 2005

Saturday, April 02, 2005

I have a new article in the April edition of Windows IT Pro: 5 Steps to a Secured Active Directory. In it, I cover the fundamental things system administrators must do to ensure a basic level of security with Active Directory.  Often people concentrate on more advanced security issues such as defending against root kits, but ignore the basics like providing physical security or implementing secure administrator practices. If you can do the things in this article, you'll be better off than most.



  On the Web:

      Amazon Connect
      LinkedIn
      Flickr
      Technorati
      Facebook

  Notes of Note:

  Recent Posts:   Archives: