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November 2005 - Posts

MSCOM WebCast Week…Q & A (Part 5) Troubleshooting & Debugging Web Hosting Environments

The webcast series ended with a tag team presentation by Jeff Stucky, Jim Dobbin, Khalil Nassar and Jeffery Johnson; all members of Jeff Stucky’s MSCOM Ops Debug team.   This web cast was kicked of by Jeff Stucky who re-introduced the MSCOM enterprise
posted by MSCOM | 2 Comments

MSCOM WebCast Week…Q & A (Part 4) Monitor and Manage an Enterprise Platform with Microsoft.com Operations

The webcast series started with High Availability Architecture, Configuration Management of Web Farms and Change and Release Management of Web Farms. We told you about our architecture how we script and manage configurations, and how we partner with various
posted by MSCOM | 0 Comments

MSCOM WebCast Week…Q & A (Part 3) Change and Release Management Strategies with Microsoft.com Operations

Part 3 of the MSCOM’s WebCast Week dealt with Change and Release Management Strategies with Microsoft.com Operations. Wayne King went into an Introduction of MSCOM that included the enterprise scale and high availability architecture that MSCOM OPS is
posted by MSCOM | 0 Comments

MSCOM WebCast Week…Q & A (Part 2) Configuration and Management of Web Farms

OK, here is Part 2 of the Q & A from MSCOM’s WebCast Week. These are from Tuesday’s session on Configuration and Management of Web Farms. The topics that Jeff Toews covered in this web cast included Configuration Management where he descried how we
posted by MSCOM | 1 Comments

MSCOM WebCast Week…Q & A (Part 1) High Availability Architecture with Microsoft.com Operations

First of all thanks so much to everyone that was able to tune into the Webcasts series that we finished up on Friday. We had a blast doing these and we hope that you got some good information out of them. We certainly got some good questions from you.I
posted by MSCOM | 0 Comments

Performance – Its like an Onion

No, not because it stinks; not because it brings tears to your eyes; but because performance has layers.  This is the first of a series of articles dealing with the layers of the performance onion.  Hopefully they will be valuable to System
posted by MSCOM | 0 Comments