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Your DST Questions: Will update KB 933360 be released for WSUS deployment as an Update Rollup?

(cross posted from http://blogs.technet.com/dst2007/archive/2007/08/18/kb-933360-on-wsus-081707.aspx)


Q: Will update KB 933360 be released for WSUS deployment and will it be classified as an Update Rollup?


A: Yes, Microsoft Windows operating systems KB 933360 is now available (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/933360/),August 2007 cumulative time zone update for Microsoft Windows operating systems.” KB 933360 will be issued as an “Update Rollup” and available via WSUS.  (This Knowledge Base article replaces KB article 931836.)


To see such updates in WSUS, go to “Update Classifications” and select “change,” then check “Update Rollups” and sync.


The KB will be released to WSUS on August 28th, 2007.


As we have done in the past, we will ask the WSUS team to post a blog a few days before release to remind WSUS admins that Update Roll-ups are not displayed by default and they must take the steps outline below if they are not downloading Update Roll-ups.


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KB article 933360 posted: August 2007 cumulative time zone and DST updates for Windows

Relatest to changes in Daylight Saving Time (or as some still refer to it: Daylight Savings Time), a quick note to let you know…


In case you missed my previous post on the latest Daylight Saving Time and Time Zone update, the August 2007 cumulative time zone update for Microsoft Windows operating systems is posted (see KB 933360):


















Article ID : 933360
Last Review : August 7, 2007
Revision : 3.0

Important This update supersedes and replaces update KB931836, released in January 2007. This update also includes additional time zone changes that were signed in to law after update KB931836 was created. Customers who have already deployed update KB931836 should evaluate whether any of the five specific time zone changes that are addressed in the update described by this Microsoft Knowledge Base (KB) article merit deploying this update immediately. If systems are not directly affected, you can schedule deployment at the next available opportunity. We recommend that all customers standardize on the most current Windows cumulative time zone update to guarantee the consistency of the time zone database on all systems.

Important Before you apply the update that is described by this article, be aware of potential issues that may affect Microsoft Office Outlook.

For more information about these issues, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
931667 (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/931667/) How to address the daylight saving time changes in 2007 by using the Time Zone Data Update Tool for Microsoft Office Outlook

Important If you are running Microsoft Exchange Server in an Information Technology (IT) environment, you must take additional measures to guarantee the correct operation of Exchange Server.

For more informationabout the Exchange daylight saving time (DST) update, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
926666 (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/926666/) Update for daylight saving time changes in 2007 for Exchange 2003 Service Pack 2




The update that this article describes changes the time zone data to account for daylight saving time changes in several countries, as outlined. This update also includes other DST-related changes, time zone-related changes, and settings-related changes. Some of these changes will occur in 2007. Some of these changes have occurred since the products that are listed in the “Applies To” section were originally released. The update that this article describes is a cumulative update rollup that includes all the changes that were previously released in Microsoft Knowledge Base (KB) articles 928388 and 929120. This update also describes some additional changes since the last cumulative update in Microsoft Knowledge Base article 928388 and 931836.

Just to clarify, I received a mail today noting that a couple of people weren’t clear on the time zones added to this update, and whether or not time zones added in past KBs (931836) were included in the update.

 

Yes, this includes the TZ releases for countries, territories and provinces previously impacted and updated (such as Newfoundland):  it’s a cumulative update that also includes the updates from prior OS updates, including KB 931836, I believe. This from KB 933360

  


Updates from the previous cumulative Windows time zone update


The following changes have been made since the previous Windows cumulative time zone update, described in KB931836:




















Caucasus Standard Time
Changes display name to Caucasus Standard Time as cities in the previous display name have separate time zones, and removes DST settings.



Armenian Standard Time
Creates a new time zone for Armenia to better align with different DST changes in the Caucasus Region.



New Zealand Standard Time
Adjusts DST start and end dates according to changes signed in to law after the prior cumulative time zone update was created (February 2007).



GTB Standard Time
Correct the display name for GTB Standard Time on Windows Server 2003 SP2 to include Bucharest.



Jordan Standard Time
Adjusts DST start and end times and dates according to changes signed in to law after the prior cumulative time zone update was created (February 2007).



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Your questions: Is KB 933360 a required Windows update for Daylight Saving Time and Time Zones?

Willy had a question today…



“A customer got this e-mail about DST 2007 update – http://support.microsoft.com/kb/933360/en-us, which supersedes and replaces update KB931836, released in January 2007. Is this a mandatory update?”


It depends. This is an update for those customers who need the update for the added and revised countries (new time zone rules for Jordan and New Zealand, for example), replacing update KB 931836.


Per the KB… “Customers who have already deployed update KB 931836 should evaluate whether any of the five specific time zone changes that are addressed in the update described by this KB article merit deploying this update immediately. If systems are not directly affected, you can schedule deployment at the next available opportunity. We recommend that all customers standardize on the most current Windows cumulative time zone update to guarantee the consistency of the time zone database on all systems.”

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Defining customer service isn’t always easy

Amy Conn-Gutierrez has an article in the Dallas Morning News on how companies are struggling in their definition of customer satisfaction.



“Customer service isn’t what it used to be. That’s a lament expressed by many consumers, convinced that a golden age when the customer was always right is long past.

“But that statement is also a fact of life for businesses – and retailers in particular: Customer service doesn’t mean what it used to mean.”


What does it mean to you?


“The phrase [customer service] means everything, and it means nothing,” said Pamela N. Danziger, an authority on consumer insights and author of several books on the shopping experience. “It’s whatever is important to the consumer.”

“Everybody knows it when it’s not happening. It’s like what the court says about pornography. It knows it when it sees it,” said Phil Rist, vice president at BIGresearch, a firm that surveys more than 7,000 shoppers a month for the largest retail trade organization.


To me, it’s knowing that my expectations will be met and (in terms of great service) sometimes exceeded.

Here’s one example: When I visit an on-line bookseller —Amazon, eBay or Barnes and Noble — I expect one experience where I often know what I want. It’s all about finding what I’m looking for and completing the transaction quickly, and then waiting for my product. My questions are usually answered by looking at on-line customer reviews, and sometime via a quick question to customer service (usually related to the transaction or my account).

But when I visit a store, it’s different. Sometimes I’ll be looking for real-time help in locating an item — as in a recent trip to find an abridged Jules Verne novel for my sci-fi starved 9-yr-old — or for the browsing experience with my kids as they look for a new book to read at bed time. (One of the reasons they love the library if for the social aspect, and the exposure to the sheer volume of books available, something that it difficult to appreciate or visualize via a web browser.) 

I appreciate the knowledgeable staff at our local bookstores, just as I do when I am when shopping at the hardware store: I’m buying access to the staff’s experience as much as I buy the product. I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve gone to a bookstore on a mission to get just one book, and left with a bag full of stuff,

Case in point: my recent experience in locating a part for a Samsung monitor: the gentleman working at Lowes Hardware with an incredible knowledge of the parts department found a part almost immediately that I wouldn’t have found (or even known what to look for). When I need something for the house or a tool, most times I head to the store, sometimes after researching the tool on various sites for customer feedback.

Steve Ballmer spoke at Convergence 2007 this past March, and he (like many of our execs) are passionate about improving the overall product and services experience for our customers and partners. I can tell you first-hand that there are fewer people in the highest levels of a company that go to great lengths to solve customer issues and ensure that customers are heard and get the responses they need. At one point in his talk, Steve discussed how we make technology that helps our customers better serve their customers and improve business productivity…


“I’ll tell you a story which really has a profound impact on my thinking about where we need to go with business solutions and applications. I was in Italy late last year, I was meeting with the CEO of a firm called Monte Dei Paschi Di Siena Bank. I won’t try to repeat it too many times, but it is the world’s oldest bank. It was the bank that financed Columbus’ adventure in America. They reminded me.

“We were doing a big project with them, and I was talking to the CEO and he said, you know, one thing that really surprised us, five or six years ago when the Internet was sort of coming  or seven years ago when the Internet was coming into fruition people were telling us we were never going to need branches anymore, everything was going to move online, there was going to be no need for people, customers will completely self-serve. And today we find we need more sophisticated technology in our branches than ever before, and our branches are as important and busy as ever before.

“And I stopped and looked at him and I said, what are you saying? I don’t get it. He said, what we found is we were able to move all of the simple transactions online, but now our employees, the people who sit in the call centers and the branches, and the customers who want to interact with us in those places, they actually have more complex requirements, they’re more complex, it’s more interesting, they’re more valuable. We sell them higher value products. They have more complicated customer service needs.”


So, in a sense, better automated systems and technology doesn’t eliminate the need for a personal relationship or a brick-and-mortar presence, it helps companies with with superior customer service focus on the hard problems while automating the simple transactions.

An for those of you who think that this is a feel-good op-ed piece, I also keep this quote from Bill Gates tacked to my bulletin board:


“Your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of learning.”


In cases where customer complaints are escalated, we try to learn about what we did and how we got into the situation (root cause analysis), and then correct the situation. 

A personal example: for several months, I worked closely on the product side of the house to help coordinate on our response to the challenges brought upon by the changes in daylight saving time. Many of our customers have a diverse set of applications, tools, services and solutions installed throughout their IT shops from a number of suppliers: this added to the complexity of the situation. And we had a number of different areas to respond to, given that different product updates were often required (on PCs, mobile devices, calendaring applications, services…). In short, this was a hard problem.

The feedback and response we received from our customers was tremendously helpful in our planning leading up to the daylight saving time “Spring Forward” (March 11, 2007, in the States), and in our planning on how to address such situations in the future. The customer input has helped improve the tools and updates we deliver, as well as some of our support and update policies.

I’ll spend more time on this in a future post, as I need to tend to a customer here at home: my six-year-old is looking for a glass of water.


Tags: Customer service, customer feedback

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Reminder: Daylight Saving Time ‘Fall Back’ later in the States… and New Zealand this year

Keep in mind that the Daylight Saving Time ‘fall back’ is later this year by one week, in the US and Canada on November 4th, rather than on the last Sunday in October. For more on this, check out the Microsoft DST 2007 Support site. Geekzone NZ notes that the government in New Zealand “announced in April that the period of daylight saving in the country was being extended to 27 weeks.”



“From this year, daylight saving will start on the last Sunday in September and end on the first Sunday in April the following year. Accordingly, the next period of daylight saving will start on Sunday 30 September 2007 (when 2:00am becomes 3:00am) and end on Sunday 6 April 2008 (when 3:00am becomes 2:00am).”


“Deputy Secretary Keith Manch says IT providers will want to test their systems with the required changes before daylight saving commences on 30 September.”


That’s a small window of opportunity to update products, systems and services, ‘though not as short of a window as Western Australia provided late last year (about a two week warning).


A personal note for those in government: IMHO, if you are considering changing the observance of DST or Summer Time in your country, figure on at least a year (perhaps even two) to ensure that not only vendors but those IT professionals impacted by the changes have enough time to make the appropriate decisions.

Microsoft New Zealand has a website up to provide information and links to updates on the upcoming changes to DST in New Zealand at http://www.microsoft.co.nz/timezone. “IT managers and users are invited to check this website regularly.”


And if you thought that Daylight Saving Time and parsing the various time zones around the world was hard, here’s an interesting note from Cathi on the time is observed in East Africa…



“In Swahili time, the day begins with sunrise so one o’clock in the morning is actually OUR 7 a.m. This difference in time system makes it very hard for the children to understand the English system, a system used throughout the world including in business.”