1. sharepoint update

    Date: 08/26/08     Keywords: no keywords

    I finally got form based authentication up today and was able to play with it a little this afternoon.

    What a royal pain...  and we're not even doing all that much.  I shudder to think what kind of tech mojo it takes to keep this site working.

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/79028.html

  2. ASP shared hosting?

    Date: 08/20/08     Keywords: database, asp, sql, web, hosting

    I have two dead beat ASP sites I need to get off a under used dedicated rack and onto some sort of shared hosting service.... my biggest problem is that I despise GoDaddy and they're about the only name I know of in the ASP shared hosting world. Anyone else out there have any experience with shared ASP hosting services and who to avoid or who to check into.

    Also this is legacy,lets gut VBA and make it a web script, ASP with minimal MSSQL backend data ( 2 databases, 1:1 per site )

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/78636.html

  3. Sharepoint Authentication

    Date: 08/18/08     Keywords: no keywords

    I've been pounding my head on the wall with this.  I inherited an intranet and am expanding it to an extranet by adding sub-sites.  Trying to get it to authenticate to the domain, but it insists on the \ format instead of a simple .   Also want the intranet to just authenticate without popping a login - particularly when opening documents.  If I configure the intranet to work the way I want it, the extranet sites quit authenticating the way I want them to, and vice versa.

    Anybody built something like this?  I'm thinking of making the subsites form-based authentication. 

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/78495.html

  4. Potentially inappropriate

    Date: 07/29/08     Keywords: web, yahoo, microsoft

    My post is mainly behind a cut because this is really a question for an IT Professional because I am not an IT Professional. Or at least I think it is a question for an IT Professional. Anyway, I apologize if this is the wrong place to post this.

    My question involves Microsoft SharePoint 2007. The other important factor is that my question should be answered considering WSS and not MOSS. I appreciate anyone taking the time to answer this question.

    I feel like I have exhausted the Microsoft TechNet SharePoint TechCenter and I'm looking for websites or books to help me understand SharePoint better. Ideally I would like an explanation and a step-by-step creation and configuration process for each of the creatable list, library, discussion board, survey, page or site. Example: document library, form library, announcements, project tasks, issue tracking, custom list, site and workspace.

    While that is a more generalized request, my immediate goal is to solve this request: utilzing SharePoint 2007 I have been asked to create something like Yahoo!Answers where people can ask technical questions and the folks who answer them can be awarded points for correct answers and in this way earn a certain amount of prestige (and perhaps prizes). I was thinking of using Records Management or Issue Tracking but truthfully without being able to plug in data or pull data from a certain place, this is becoming difficult and frustrating.

    Your help is greatly appreciated!

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/78263.html

  5. It's a day late....but I figure it's worth it

    Date: 07/26/08     Keywords: software, html, database, virus

    HAPPY SYSADMIN DAY!  (www.sysadminday.com)

    Advice to employees on the proper use of the System Administrator's valuable time

    (In following examples, we will substitute the name "Ted" as the System Administrator)

    • Make sure to save all your MP3 files on your network drive. No sense in wasting valuable space on your local drive! Plus, Ted loves browsing through 100+ GB of music files while he backs up the servers.
    • Play with all the wires you can find. If you can't find enough, open something up to expose them. After you have finished, and nothing works anymore, put it all back together and call Ted. Deny that you touched anything and that it was working perfectly only five minutes ago. Ted just loves a good mystery. For added effect you can keep looking over his shoulder and ask what each wire is for.
    • Never write down error messages. Just click OK, or restart your computer. Ted likes to guess what the error message was.
    • When talking about your computer, use terms like "Thingy" and "Big Connector."
    • If you get an EXE file in an email attachment, open it immediately. Ted likes to make sure the anti-virus software is working properly.
    • When Ted says he coming right over, log out and go for coffee. It's no problem for him to remember your password.
    • When you call Ted to have your computer moved, be sure to leave it buried under a year-old pile of postcards, baby pictures, stuffed animals, dried flowers, unpaid bills, bowling trophies and Popsicle sticks. Ted doesn't have a life, and he finds it deeply moving to catch a glimpse of yours.
    • When Ted sends you an email marked as "Highly Important" or "Action Required", delete it at once. He's probably just testing some new-fangled email software.
    • When Ted's eating lunch at his desk or in the lunchroom, walk right in, grab a few of his fries, then spill your guts and expect him to respond immediately. Ted lives to serve, and he's always ready to think about fixing computers, especially yours.
    • When Ted's at the water cooler or outside taking a breath of fresh air, find him and ask him a computer question. The only reason he takes breaks at all is to ferret out all those employees who don't have email or a telephone.
    • Send urgent email ALL IN UPPERCASE. The mail server picks it up and flags it as a rush delivery.
    • When the photocopier doesn't work, call Ted. There's electronics in it, so it should be right up his alley.
    • When you're getting a NO DIAL TONE message at your home computer, call Ted. He enjoys fixing telephone problems from remote locations. Especially on weekends.
    • When something goes wrong with your home PC, dump it on Ted's chair the next morning with no name, no phone number, and no description of the problem. Ted just loves a good mystery.
    • When you have Ted on the phone walking you through changing a setting on your PC, read the newspaper. Ted doesn't actually mean for you to DO anything. He just loves to hear himself talk.
    • When your company offers training on an upcoming OS upgrade, don't bother to sign up. Ted will be there to hold your hand when the time comes.
    • When the printer won't print, re-send the job 20 times in rapid succession. That should do the trick.
    • When the printer still won't print after 20 tries, send the job to all the printers in the office. One of them is bound to work.
    • Don't use online help. Online help is for wimps.
    • Don't read the operator's manual. Manuals are for wussies.
    • If you're taking night classes in computer science, feel free to demonstrate your fledgling expertise by updating the network drivers for you and all your co-workers. Ted will be grateful for the overtime when he has to stay until 2:30am fixing all of them.
    • When Ted's fixing your computer at a quarter past one, eat your Whopper with cheese in his face. He functions better when he's slightly dizzy from hunger.
    • When Ted asks you whether you've installed any new software on your computer, LIE. It's no one else's business what you've got on your computer.
    • If the mouse cable keeps knocking down the framed picture of your dog, lift the monitor and stuff the cable under it. Those skinny Mouse cables were designed to have 55 lbs. of computer monitor crushing them.
    • If the space bar on your keyboard doesn't work, blame Ted for not upgrading it sooner. Hell, it's not your fault there's a half pound of pizza crust crumbs, nail clippings, and big sticky drops of Mountain Dew under the keys.
    • When you get the message saying "Are you sure?", click the "Yes" button as fast as you can. Hell, if you weren't sure, you wouldn't be doing it, would you?
    • Feel perfectly free to say things like "I don't know nothing about that boneheaded computer crap." It never bothers Ted to hear his area of professional expertise referred to as boneheaded crap.
    • Don't even think of breaking large print jobs down into smaller chunks. God forbid somebody else should sneak a one-page job in between your 500-page Word document.
    • When you send that 500-page document to the printer, don't bother to check if the printer has enough paper. That's Ted's job.
    • When Ted calls you 30 minutes later and tells you that the printer printed 24 pages of your 500-page document before it ran out of paper, and there are now nine other jobs in the queue behind yours, ask him why he didn't bother to add more paper.
    • When you receive a 130 MB movie file, send it to everyone as a high-priority mail attachment. Ted's provided plenty of disk space and processor capacity on the new mail server for just those kinds of important things.
    • When you bump into Ted in the grocery store on a Sunday afternoon, ask him computer questions. He works 24/7, and is always thinking about computers, even when he's at super-market buying toilet paper and doggie treats.
    • If your son is a student in computer science, have him come in on the weekends and do his projects on your office computer. Ted will be there for you when your son's illegal copy of Visual Basic 6.0 makes the Access database keel over and die.
    • When you bring Ted your own "no-name" brand PC to repair for free at the office, tell him how urgently he needs to fix it so you can get back to playing EverQuest. He'll get on it right away, because everyone knows he doesn't do anything all day except surf the Internet.
    • Don't ever thank Ted. He loves fixing everything AND getting paid for it!
     (www.sysadminday.com/time.html)

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/77794.html

  6. might have broken my own PC, need help

    Date: 07/14/08     Keywords: no keywords

    Awhile ago, I was installing a Kingston 1GB into my PC to help my Apacer 512MB in speeding things up. But when I tested my computer, it starts to randomly reboot. I took the Kingston 1GB out and it still does the same. I'm guessing I might have broken my own motherboard but at the very quick time my PC works, I can see my desktop, my settings, my files, everything, intact. Can anyone shed at least a bit of some light?

    Added Info:
    My Uncle just looked the PC over and guessed I might have overheated my processor because of how bad the dust bunnies have covered the fan. When he tests it, we usually get this error:

    CMOS Checksum Bad
    Chassis Failed
    System Halted


    My motherboard is a P5-LMX and my processor is a Core2Duo if the info is needed. Thanks!

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/77560.html

  7. A strange favor needed (IT PEOPLE LISTEN UP)

    Date: 07/08/08     Keywords: no keywords

    Cables

    Hi. This is for a Top Secret project that Sarah and I are working on. What I need from you, gentle IT readers, is your unneeded Cat 5 cable.

    Yes. I need Cat 5 cable[1. I will also take broken fiber cable. SC, ST, LC connectors... I don't care. So long as the connector is still on, it is useful to me].

    It can be broken cable [2. The cable must have the connector at least at ONE end]. If it doesn't work, that is fine as that I will not be using it to network anything. I need it as a material. I don't care what color it is. The only thing I care about is how CLEAN it is. Meaning?

    Well it can't be sticky or gross with slime, garbage, smooshed roach bits... etc. Dusty, is fine.

    I need quite a bit of it.

    If ever there was a time that you wanted to get rid of some old cat 5 cable lying around, now is the time. I'm sorry... I can't pay for shipping. =( But I assure you, donating the cable to me will be for a great cause that everyone will get to see the fruits of.

    If you are interested in donating cable to me please comment or send me an email and I will give you a mailing address to ship this cable to. I need it sooner than later. I need at least TWO large boxes of cables. More is better. Any size will do. Thanks!

    (and yes, I work in IT myself but I'm a consultant so I never get to take bits of cable away from project with me as that hey belong to the client)

    Thanks again! =D

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/77254.html

  8. CCNA: Oh so nervous!!

    Date: 06/26/08     Keywords: no keywords

    Okay. I MUST get my CCNA before July is out. I have this book and ordered this one. Can anyone give me any sort of assistance on what else or anything I can do to pass? I know they changed the exam. All I have are some Cisco 2500 routers for my home lab which I wonder will even help me anymore as that they have updated the exam and I guess assume everyone has at least a 2600 now.

    Any kind of assistance I would be forever grateful for.

    Is it easier to take the two tests instead of the one? Tips, Tips,... I need tips! Has anyone here taken the new exam? I am so nervous! I hate taking exams!!

    If I don't get it by the end of July, I'm fired!!

    (and if I don't get CWNA by end of August, I am also fired!)


    Thanks!!

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/76803.html

  9. While I'm here...

    Date: 06/12/08     Keywords: no keywords

    I really enjoy this community and its members. It seems like the group is populated by hardcore server and network jocks who, like me, are down in the trenches everyday. I wish there was more activity here, which leads me to my question. What other online forums do people like? I'm looking for something akin to this group...real techs with real skills to share.

    So, anybody out there care to point me in the direction of some other communities, BBS, forums, etc?

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/76589.html

  10. FTP weirdness

    Date: 06/12/08     Keywords: no keywords

    A few weeks back I set up an IIS FTP server for a client and it worked right out of the box. The client started using it to move heavy files to clients and it was quickly adopted by the staff. Today it stopped working. Here are the details:

    Static NAT on their Cisco 1841 with ACL’s allowing ports 20 & 21 (data & control) to the server. Clients were instructed to use active connections, as IIS is renown for failing on passive. After learning way more that I ever wanted to know about the two connection modes I discovered that in IIS 6 you can hack static ports for passive mode. I tried that (edited the metabase and set up another ACL on the router) and got the same result.

    The initial issue was that clients could authenticate but not list the contents of the root directory. After ripping out IIS, rebooting, and re-installing IIS that resolved. The problem now is that  while you get a directory listing from a “DIR” or an “LS”, when you try to transfer a file in either direction you get the first five or so  kb and then the session times out and disconnects. The FiIeZilla client I used auto-retries a few times, downloads another five kb, then the connection times out permanently. Native Windows FTP client just hangs & dies. 

    Ran a Wireshark cap from both ends (portable apps are so cool) and they looked pretty much like the server & client logs.

    I checked the DACL’s on the file system, all good.

    The connection timing out makes me that the issue is in the router/networking.  But the change in behavior after re-installing IIS points toward the box. But the same behavior from two different FTP servers (IIS & FileZilla) points to the Ether. Can somebody help me out here?

    This thing just worked until this morning. And nothing’s changed. It’s late and this is probably not my most coherent message. But if anybody has run into this sort of thing and can point me in the right direction I’ll buy ya a beer.


     

     

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/76471.html

  11. Be a Blogger

    Date: 01/16/08     Keywords: no keywords

     

    Blog for Network WorldDo you have what it takes to blog with Network World? We're looking for a few good bloggers. Contact Site Editor Jeff Caruso today!

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/72791.html

  12. Exchange Server 2007 SP1 Issues?

    Date: 01/08/08     Keywords: no keywords

    (x-posted various)

    Has anyone installed Service Pack 1 for Exchange Server 2007 yet? Did you run into any problems?

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/72404.html

  13. Migration of linked Excel files?

    Date: 12/21/07     Keywords: no keywords

    Does anyone out there have any experience with migrating linked Excel files to a new server? I have to get a client off of a badly failing  SBS 2k machine and onto an entirely new domain ASAP and there are loads of linked Excel spreadsheets in the mix. If anyone can suggest some resources to correct, or at least identify, the links I would be grateful.

    Thanks and Happy Holidays!

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/71812.html

  14. Odnoklassniki jammed abroad

    Date: 12/10/07     Keywords: spam

    Foreign users are constantly experiencing problems with the access to the Odnoklassniki. Currently the social network is disabled for the citizens of at least three countries, i.e. Canada, UAE and China. According to the project management, each country has various problems with the access. Somewhere Odnoklassniki does not correspond to moral and ethical fabric, in other places Odnoklassniki are blocked as their DNS servers are suspected in spam sending.

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/71677.html

  15. Help Desk software

    Date: 11/20/07     Keywords: software, web, microsoft

    Hello,
    I work for a fairly large university, and we're in the market for some new
    help desk software. We're currently using a free(?) software package called
    SomeHelp based on Microsoft Access. We local IT grunts like it for what it
    is, but the big man upstairs does not and our users can't access it.

    Here's what we need:
    -An interface, preferably web-based, where users can submit support tickets.
    Brownie points for user-friendliness.
    -An inventory system, where we can track our assets and their maintenance
    history, and perhaps some kind of report on them (the boss wasn't specific)
    -A product where reliable and dedicated support is available if necessary
    -LDAP connectivity is a plus but not a requirement

    The product does not necessarily have to be free, though it can't be too
    costly. We were recently eyeballing Track-It, but the manager did not like
    the $8000 a year price-tag. He does not like Remedy for some reason (didn't
    ask why). I got a copy of Bugzilla running locally, but getting it to
    behave like helpdesk software is tricky; I might understand it, but our
    users definitely will not. Any suggestions? Thank you all.

    ~Elliot

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/71273.html

  16. SFC with '03 server

    Date: 11/17/07     Keywords: no keywords

    Is it normal after running SFC /scannow for it to ask for the windows cd or does it ask for that only if it encounters a problem with files? I ask because I think I've run this on XP and it didn't ask for the media before, now it's being run on server '03 but it's asking for media. SP2 has since been installed and the original install media was the original release of '03 server. Will SFC confuse the updated files from the service pack as being foreign?

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/71132.html

  17. Corporate antivirus system

    Date: 11/16/07     Keywords: virus, antivirus

    What's the best practice for the placement of a parent antivirus program (in this case, symantec corporate) in a windows server 2003 network?

    I have one machine set up to recieve the internet and then act as a firewall sending data out to the rest of the network through a separate NIC. My initial thought was to be to place the antivirus primary server program on this machine (acting as the one that gets updates and distributes patterns to other servers/clients) but I'm concerned about it being in the dmz/server that's exposed to the internet... but then again, isn't that where I would want it, as a first responder to junk coming in from the internet? Or am I just asking for trouble by putting it there?

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/70758.html

  18. Гугл ответит

    Date: 11/12/07     Keywords: google

    Кому интересно, 14 ноября состоится интервью с главой Google-Россия, расскажет что к чему нас ждет в Рунете. 
    Вопросы, как водится, приветствуются здесь.  

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/69894.html

  19. Russia: IT-specialists’ demands go up

    Date: 10/23/07     Keywords: no keywords

    Some Russian internet-recruitment companies point to the increase in salary expectations of IT-specialists, in several cases up to 50% and up. Most specialists believe there has been no unexpected surge, but the salary expectations went up because of the seasonal factor and the overall increase in prices.

    Read more

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/69583.html

  20. Roaming profiles

    Date: 10/23/07     Keywords: linux

    I just picked up a client where the recently departed Sys Admin had implemented roaming profiles. Point-to-point VPN's connect multiple sites over biz-class cable back to the main site where the server containing the profile is located. Needless to say, log on/off is painful...on the order of ten minutes at times. The profiles also frequently fail to either load or push changes back to the server in all locations, including machines that are on the same LAN as the server. It's just not stable and it's eating too much of my time.

    I don't want to fix it. I want to kill it. Dead.

    The client's concerns about dumping the roaming profiles are backup and user convenience. One set of users is very mobile and may use two desktops in addition to their laptops on any given day. When it works the roaming profile is great for keeping one consistent environment and one version of a document in a known place. When it doesn't work it eats days of documents on one bite.  Anyway...

    Anyone out there have any experience of weaning users off of roaming profiles without running into data loss or "I have eight copies of that report on five machines and two flash drives and it's all your fault"? What sort of issues did you run into with data integrity and user education/resistance?

    Next I have to wean them from their Gentoo Linux servers running Postfix & Oracle calendar to Exchange '07. (shudder)

    TIA for any thoughts.

    Source: http://community.livejournal.com/itprofessionals/69238.html

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