Blog Business Cards Yay or Nay?

A little while ago I met Michael Poore (blog vSpecialist.co.uk) at a London VMUG and was impressed that he had produced some vSpecialist business cards.

I wasn’t 100% sure whether having work and personal business cards was a good idea, however in certain circumstances your work business cards aren’t appropriate e.g. fellow bloggers.

With this in mind, I thought I would give it a whirl and engaged a colleague of mine Adam kirby (twitter @adamkirby_mk).  Adam has  excellent design skills and I think he has done an awesome job of the VMFocus.com business cards.

Business Card Front

Business Card Back

So what do you think are blog business cards worthwhile? Cast your vote!

Attention All New vExperts

So you have become a vExpert for the first time and you are basking in your awesomeness, but what happens now?

Well the answer to that is I’m not 100% sure, I think are meant to receive an email from John Troyer @jtroyer team at VMware at some point, but in the meantime, you can do a few things to get your name on the ‘list’.

I was catching up on my twitter feed late last night and I saw a couple of tweets by Larry Gonzalez @virtualizecr in relation to the vExpert program.  You may or may not be aware that their is a vExpert Directory.

To add yourself to the vExpert Directory, first of all login to VMTN and make sure that your handle has the vE symbol beside it

VMTN

Then go back to the vExpert Directory and click on Create new vExpert Entry

VMTN 2

Fill out your details and if you want a vExpert Appreciation Gift, give the box a tick!

Once again, thanks to Larry Gonzalez @virtualizecr for this information.

But wait we have more, a number of awesome companies are giving away free gifts or exclusive access to vExperts, these are the ones I currently know about:

Strange SRM Use Case

Today we had rather a strange request, which was resolved by ‘thinking outside of the box’ using Site Recovery Manager.

Scenario

Client required an exact copy of an 8TB VM to be available in an alternate location over 50km away.  I’m not exactly sure why, but we had been explicitly told that the VM could not be logged into, so this ruled out using any items inside the VM such as robocopy.  Another constraint was that the original VM had to stay in it’s same location and it needed to be accessed by the in house IT team in the alternate location!

The engineer working on the ticket, originally used Veeam to restore the VM from backup which was fine, but we couldn’t alter the original backup files, therefore a restore to an alternate device at the same location seemed the next logical step.  The only downside was we only had the spare capacity to bring the VM up on the NAS it was backed up to, which meant two things:

  1. It was thrashing the disks as it was reading the backup files, and then writing the restore, plus it then had to deal with the normal Veeam backup duties.
  2. The VMDK’s still needed to be copied from the NAS onto removable media, taken to the alternate location and copied onto the target device and then booted up as a new VM.

With the above in mind, the engineer gave me a call and asked if we could do something with SRM!

Solution

We know the VM could not be accessed and that trying to restore from backup wouldn’t meet the clients time requirements, so we discussed using SRM.

The VM in question was protected by SRM and is replicated on a 15 minute basis.  So the plan was to

  1. Run a Test Failover creating a Read/Write snapshot of the Read Only copy in the target location in an isolated environment.
  2. Shutdown the Read/Write copy and copy the VMDK’s to another datastore.
  3. Create a new VM and attached VMDK’s

The first step worked like a dream, however we received an error when trying to copy the VMDK’s to another datastore ‘the specified key, name, or identifies already exists’.  We thought about removing the VM from inventory and re-adding it back again, but didn’t know the risks in terms of SRM cleanup.  We knew we could force a cleanup, but knowing the sensitive case of the request we couldn’t afford any unknown errors.

Instead we decided to ‘clone the VM’, once completed we disabled the NIC, changed the server name and IP address.

It worked, everyone was happy in the ‘ranch’ and we used SRM for a different purpose than intended.  Understanding how something work’s makes the difference to putting forward solution to resolve a time sensitive problem.

vExpert 2013 Applications Open

John Troyer, Social Media Evangelist for VMware (twitter handle @jtroyer)   has announced that the vExpert 2013 applications are open.

To become a vExpert you have three paths to choose from.

Evangelist Path

The Evangelist Path includes book authors, bloggers, tool builders, public speakers, VMTN contributors, and other IT professionals who share their knowledge and passion with others with the leverage of a personal public platform to reach many people. Employees of VMware can also apply via the Evangelist path. A VMware employee reference is recommended if your activities weren’t all in public or were in a language other than English.

Customer Path

The Customer Path is for leaders from VMware customer organizations. They have been internal champions in their organizations, or worked with VMware to build success stories, act as customer references, given public interviews, spoken at conferences, or were VMUG leaders. A VMware employee reference is recommended if your activities weren’t all in public.

VMware Partner Network Parh

The VPN Path is for employees of our partner companies who lead with passion and by example, who are committed to continuous learning through accreditations and certifications and to making their technical knowledge and expertise available to many. This can take shape of event participation, video, IP generation, as well as public speaking engagements. A VMware employee reference is required for VPN Path candidates.

To apply to become a vExpert, click me

Got To Be In It To Win It

Virtualised

Being new to the blogging world, I didn’t realize that there was such a thing as ‘Top VMware & Virtualization Blogs’ until I saw a raft of tweets about registering for it towards the end of 2012.

I for one, enjoy healthy competition and decided to get involved by registering vmfocus.com  I would like to thank Eric Sierbert for putting together the poll together as it must take a lot of personal time to put the structure together and collate all the data.

So why did I decide to blog? Well, for two reasons, the first being I love using VMware product range and I’m constantly ‘banging’ on about it on a daily basis with colleagues and clients.  The second and perhaps the most important to me, is documenting issues I face and also to help as a study aid.

I was surprised to see a few folks getting upset on Twitter about the reason why people blog.  For me, if someone takes the time out of there day to put something down on the big ‘www’ which can help me achieve a task, understand a product or troubleshoot an issue that’s got to be  a good thing, regardless of there motivation.

So if you have a spare five minutes head over to vsphere-land.com to cast your vote.