Windows Vista Hardware...

MAP v1.0 beta videos

Baldwin Ng, Senior Program manager for the Microsoft Assessment & Planning Solutions Accelerator is interviewed by David Tesar of TechNet Edge in this two-part video.

Part one:


Solution Accelerators Beta release PM interview - Part 1

Part two:


Solution Accelerators Beta release PM interview - Part 2

Windows Vista Hardware Assessment 2.0 released

WVHA v2.0 was released earlier today.

Baldwin Ng, a Supremo (PM) on the Windows Vista Hardware Assessment team has details about this version here.

In my post here, I touched on the availability of Windows Vista Hardware Assessment, a free tool from Microsoft that allows IT managers an incredibly detailed inventory of corporate (Windows) client computing assets, both hardware, and installed software.

Prior to the release of Windows Vista™, we at Logikworx had come up with a hardware baseline for delivering the Windows Vista AeroGlass’ experience to client desktops. After validating that baseline, we then proceeded to inventory all (yes, all!) our clients’ companies’ computers, no small task, as it was spread over several hundred clients.

Well, you don’t have to do the same.

WVHA eliminates the manual labor associated with having to physically visit each computer, since hardware configuration might have changed from the date of delivery and/or initial install.

I have been testing the release (GOLD) version of Windows Vista Hardware Assessment for the past few days.

Read on at SmallBizVista.com

Windows Vista Hardware Assessment

As you test Windows Vista™ with a view to developing an able a migration plan from Windows XP, Windows Vista Hardware Assessment is a tool you should, without a doubt, use to take a census of the hardware in your inventory.

This tool, with a public release of Version 1.0, and a public beta of Version 2.0 available, is an agent-less hardware assessor that very quickly scans your systems and delivers an incredibly detailed report of the state of your hardware, its ability to run Windows Vista™, and, surprise, surprise, the ability of the same hardware to run Microsoft Office.

At Logikworx, leading up to the release of Windows Vista™, we developed a forms-based template for the hardware survey of our clients systems, managed or unmanaged.

Since we had established a baseline for hardware capabilities that would enable the full Windows Vista™ experience, we wanted to find out what each client company required in order to deliver it to them.

If only the Windows Vista Hardware Assessment had been available at that time.

I had only given the Windows Vista Hardware Assessment a cursory look in Version 1.0 as all I wanted to see if the results from an official Microsoft assessment tool validated our baselines for delivering the full Windows Vista™ experience to our clients.

However, the release of the beta of Version 2.0 so soon after the release of version 1.0 prompted me to try out the new version, starting with our own systems. The results have left me impressed, especially with the phenomenal range of data returned to the administrator.

Read on at my blog on NetworkWorld.com