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Thanks for the (Webcast) memories… on daylight saving time and time zones

DST Webcast presenters Sophia, Beth, Will and RichThis morning we reprised our daylight saving time webcasts with a Webcast on (wait for it) “Preparing for Daylight Saving Time.” 

We presented an overview of information on Microsoft products and resources available to help businesses and individuals prepare for the coming changes this fall in North America and around the world to daylight saving time and time zone changes.  The Webcast will be available for online viewing in the next couple of days.

I would like to thank the many attendees we had today and to everyone from Microsoft on their participation in the LiveMeeting today.  Thanks to my co-presenters, Rich, Will, Elizabeth and Sophia (as pictured here – I was behind the camera phone), and shout out to Steve, Joel, Ronna, Jim, Sue, Shannon, Tim, Alon, Keith and the many people who assisted on our tech chat.

We have a technical web chat coming up on September 24th – watch the Webcast page for more details.

For more details, please visit http://www.microsoft.com/dst2007.

 

Tags: Microsoft, Daylight Saving Time, Daylight Savings Time, DST, 638,405; 915,153; 1,750,000+

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Upcoming Webcast for daylight saving time changes in 2007

From my friend, Beth, over on the Exchange Team blog… I will join the webcast as well…



I wanted to let you know that there is going to be a DST related Webcast this coming Friday. Event details:


Available on Friday, September 14th at 9am PT:


Preparing for Daylight Saving Time: This Webcast will provide an overview of information on Microsoft products and resources available to help businesses prepare for change to Daylight Saving Time.


https://www.livemeeting.com/cc/lmevents/join?id=msft091407sa&role=attend&pw=AGT732


To see future Webcasts related to this subject please keep checking our “Webcasts for daylight saving time changes in 2007” page which you can find here.


Elizabeth Scott


























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Microsoft Gives Customers Something to Fall Back On… (bad DST pun)

New on MScom… Microsoft Gives Customers Something to Fall Back On… a Q&A with Rich Kaplan as he “discusses the second part of the Daylight Saving Time extension to come in North America, lessons learned from March’s “spring forward,” and the effects these changes have on customers around the world.”



PressPass: What’s the “call to action” for customers this fall? What should they do to make sure they’re ready?


Kaplan: Go to the Daylight Saving Time 2007 Web site and make sure you’re up to date on all the latest information. If you’re a consumer or small business, you may not need to worry about that as much, but if you’re an enterprise company that has worldwide operations, it’s certainly important to go there and make sure you understand the impact of these changes worldwide.


For the majority of our customers — consumers, small- and mid-sized businesses — we always tell them to have automatic updates turned on. With Windows XP and Windows Vista, you really get increased product quality, not just the latest updates to align the operating system with a Congressional mandate like Daylight Saving Time, but the latest security fixes and other general updates too. So that’s always a good thing to do.


In this environment, if you got the updates in the spring for Exchange, Windows and Outlook, and you have your automatic updates turned on, there’s a good chance you may have nothing to do in anticipation of the changes this fall. However, if you do business in other parts of the world, you need to make sure to get the corrections for those other time zone changes. Not just the United States and Canadian time zone changes, but rest of the world time zone changes as well.


For larger, enterprise customers, in general the “fall back” should be much easier. We had them running a tool at the beginning of the year, The Outlook Time Zone Data Update Tool, to update people’s calendars. The majority of companies have run those tools and won’t have to do that a second time. If you’re not worried about the countries specified on the Web site listing the products affected by Daylight Saving Time, and you already took the updates for springing forward, then you’re in good shape.


The last thing I would say here is that, for customers who need to know exactly what they need to do to prepare for Daylight Saving Time — if they haven’t already — we are hosting a Web seminar on this topic at the end of this week on Friday, Sept. 14. So make sure and sign up for that. 


Of interest…

















Daylight Saving Time 2007 Help and Support Center


Microsoft Products Affected by Daylight Saving Time


Microsoft Outlook Time Zone Data Update Tool


September 14 Web Seminar


Tags: Microsoft, Daylight Saving Time, Daylight Savings Time, DST. 632,522; 951,689; 1,750,000+

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Update on DST changes in Venezuela… this September?

Remember the post at the end of August on the new DST rules in Venezuela?

News from my new friend Jose Antonio in our offices in SA says that it may be earlier than reported.

Originally we found in the ABN news release on the DST change that Venezuela would change its time zone on Jan. 1, 2008.

We now hear from government sources that the new DST change will begin at the start of the school year in Venezuela, which is next Monday (September 17). This will be a ½ hour change, from the -4:00 GMT to -4:30 GMT.

More as it develops, but be aware of the pending earlier change.

http://www.minci.gob.ve/noticias/1/15606/inicio_de_clases.html

http://www.minci.gob.ve/noticias_-_prensa/28/15416/cambio_de_huso.html

http://buscador.eluniversal.com/2007/08/23/pol_ava_cambio-de-huso-horar_23A944997.shtml

http://buscador.eluniversal.com/2007/09/02/pol_art_huso-horario-no-trae_448906.shtml

Tags: Microsoft, Daylight Saving Time, Daylight Savings Time, DST. 632,522; 951,689; 1,750,000+

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Geeks rescue consumer victims of “software rage”

This evening on CBS 60 Minutes, Steve Kroft updated his report from earlier this year and gives the Geek Squad their fifteen minutes of fame.  Kroft covered the challenges and increasing complexities computers, networking devices and the myriad of consumer electronics that contain computer chips… everything from personal computers to mobile phones and all-in-one remote controls, or as Steve said, “anything that needs to be programmed, requires technical support, and can crash, die, or merely freeze.”

“We are becoming slaves to our own technology – addicted to and dependent upon all sorts of beeping, flashing gadgetry that is supposed to make our lives easier.

“But it has become so complicated to set up, program and fix, that most of us don’t know how to do it, giving rise to a multi-billion dollar service industry populated by the very people who used to be shunned in the high school cafeteria: geeks, like Robert Stephens.

My favourite part was the snips of interviews and sound bytes from one of the folks I read regularly, tech columnist David Pogue.

“Part of the problem, when it comes to computers at least, is that there are so many cooks for what you are using. Microsoft made the operating system, some company in Taiwan made the equipment, you’re running software from a company in California, and now you’re installing the driver for a digital camera from a fourth company. You know, what are the odds that all of these are going to work flawlessly together for all 400 million people who have PCs? Zip,” Pogue says.

“So, what do you do?” Kroft asks.

“You get unhappy. You develop software rage,” Pogue says.

Pogue is right: how many times have you gotten to your wit’s end after trying everything outlined in the manual. Often, you’re lucky if you find a cryptic (or poorly translated) electronic read-me file or esoteric web page reference, as some companies don’t even include a real manual with their products these days. 

In an article by By Paula Rooney, the author notes that a major problem around our launch of Windows Vista was (and some will say “is still”) a lack of software drivers for third party hardware components and peripherals…

“Tons of vendors haven’t done Vista drivers and that’s left a big hole in support. I can understand when it comes to printers and scanners, but when we’re talking about hard drives, chipset controllers and video cards, things that run the PC, it’s surprising,” he said. “It’s not just peripherals but primary component manufacturers aren’t ready, and that unusual compared to the previous releases [of Windows].”

Rooney calls out that in the feedback gathered by CRN, the top three problems facing Windows Vista early adopters — and I’ll suggest, often users of any OS — are:

    1. Lack of available drivers from ISVs causing application conflicts;
    2. Lack of available drivers for existing and new peripherals and hardware components;
    3. Buggy drivers

Drivers, drivers, drivers. 

A good article is this one, “The hunt for drivers” on the Windows Help and How-to site, and the use of Windows Update to locate and install the latest updates for your software and hardware.  In Vista, Windows Update is integrated into the OS, and found that (according to the site) “more than 31,000 updated drivers were ready when Windows Vista was completed” which is almost three times what was available when Windows XP was launched.

“In many cases, you don’t even need Windows Update to install new devices. Often when you plug in a new device or install a new add-on card in your computer, Windows Vista will detect the hardware and automatically install the correct driver in less than a minute. A notification lets you know when installation begins and when it’s complete. You don’t have to do anything.”

Sometimes, that’s true, as I found when I connected my HP scanner to my Windows Vista

Tags: customer support, Windows Vista, drivers.