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13 Posts tagged with the management tag
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If you are using Out Of Band (OOB) Management in Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM) 2007 SP1 (or greater) to manage your Intel vPro clients, you may have noticed that computer objects are created in your Active Directory domain during provisioning of the Intel vPro firmware. These computer objects are created by the amtproxymgr component of an OOB Service Point, and allow Intel vPro to communicate directory with Active Directory, regardless of the operating system state.

 

Since these vPro computer objects appear very similar to standard computer objects that are created when joining a Windows OS to an AD domain, it may be hard to distinguish which ones are vPro accounts, and which ones aren't. This situation can be worsened if you somehow have Windows computer accounts mixed into the same OU that contains your AMT objects.

 

As you'll see below, it's very easy to locate these computers using some simple PowerShell code:

 

$vprosearcher = [adsisearcher]"(&(objectclass=computer)(serviceprincipalname=*:16993*)(samaccounttype=805306368))"
$vproaccounts = $vprosearcher.FindAll()

 

These two lines of code simply create a System.DirectoryServices.DirectorySearcher instance, with some LDAP search criteria to identify the accounts, and then assigns the results of this search to a PowerShell variable called $vproaccounts. The default search root is the top-level of your Active Directory domain, and the default search scope is already set to SubTree, so you don't have to specifically configure these settings on the DirectorySearcher. Once you're at this point, you can simply enumerate the accounts, or pipe the results into a PowerShell ForEach loop, and perform some operation against them (for example, givem them a Description attribute value).

 

Because this code sample uses the "adsisearcher" type accelerator (aka. type shortcut), it will only work with PowerShell v2.0 (included as part of the Windows Management Framework), unless you modify PowerShell v1.0 to include it. There's almost no reason not to be using PowerShell 2.0, now that it has been officially released, however.

 

I recommend using the free Quest PowerGUI tool to develop and debug PowerShell scripts.

 

Cheers,

Trevor Sullivan

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A hobby of many IT professionals is playing video games ... so we asked the question: "What Video Game Would Intel vPro Technology Be?" while at Symantec ManageFusion 2009 from March 10th to 12th. Check out the responses below from IT executives and managers, Intel partners and industry analysts.

To learn more about Intel's presence at Symantec ManageFusion 2009, go to: http://www.intel.com/go/managefusion/

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While at Symantec ManageFusion 2009, we had a chance to talk to IT executives and managers from Las Vegas Sands Corporation, Blue Cross Blue Shield and McCormick Spice Company and Lee Bender, senior technical manager from Symantec. In this video, they talk about benefits of Symantec Altiris Client Management Suite v6.5 (and above) with Intel vPro Technology, including power management, remote diagnosis and repair, and fast call for help.

To learn more about Intel's presence at Symantec ManageFusion 2009, go to: http://www.intel.com/go/managefusion/

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In the opening keynote at the recent Symantec ManageFusion 2009, Intel Vice-President Gregory Bryant talked about joint efforts between Symantec and Intel around product offerings that help with centralizing management of applications and licensees, while still enabling end-users to have a responsive experience with rich-client desktop PCs and notebook PCs. The below demonstration by Symantec's Brian Duckering illustrates how Intel and Symantec are bringing these benefits to customers with Symantec Workspace Streaming and Intel vPro technology.

To learn more about Intel's presence at ManageFusion 2009, please go to http://www.intel.com/go/managefusion/

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At the recent Symantec ManageFusion 2009, Symantec announced the general availability of Symantec Altiris Client Management Suite Version 7.

One of the new features in Symantec Altiris Client Management Suite Version 7 is support for Intel Centrino 2 with vPro technology's "Fast Call for Help."  The video below by Symantec's Senior Technical Manager Lee Bender is a demonstration of how an end-user would connect back to the Altiris Client Management Suite for remote diagnosis and repair of his notebook even though he connect boot into Windows and is outside of the corporate firewall.

To learn more about Intel's presence at ManageFusion 2009, please go to http://www.intel.com/go/managefusion/

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On May 10th, Intel Vice-President Gregory Bryant was part of the opening ManageFusion keynote led by Symantec's Steve Morton.

Gregory talked about how customers are realizing value today with Intel vPro technology and getting a return on investment that pays for itself in less than one year.  He also talked about new Intel vPro technology product developments with Altiris Client Management Suite Version 7 and Symantec Workspace Streaming. View the highlights below or click here to see the full keynote.

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One topic of curiousity at MMS 08 was around the new benefits of Intel Centrino 2 with vPro technology. In the video below, D.C. Tardy, System Architect at EDS, and Kiron Lahiri, Lead Systems Engineer for Client Systems at Sisters of Mercy Health System, talk about the benefits that they are looking forward to with the upcoming Intel Centrino 2 with vPro technology.

 


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Sometimes within Intel Marketing, we're told that our description of Intel Centrino with vPro technology or Intel Core 2 with vPro technology is a bit lengthy. Therefore, while at MMS 08, we asked Intel customers as well as technical experts from Intel and Microsoft to give us their best, most concise acronym that best describes Intel vPro Technology. Listen to their responses below.

 

 



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To see more videos from MMS 08, go to http://www.intel.com/go/mms/

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While at ManageFusion, we had Symantec Director of Strategic Alliances Kevin Unbedacht discuss how Intel vPro Technology enhances the Symantec Altiris Client Management Suite. The videos below include demonstrations around power management with secure power-on, remote diagnosis and repair of troubled PCs, isolation and repair of infected PCs, and discovery of PC assets.

 

  • Hardware-assisted Power Management with Secure Power-On

 



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  • Hardware-assisted Diagnosis and Repair of PCs Remotely (by getting into PC's BIOS settings):

 



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  • Hardware-assisted Diagnosis and Repair of PCs Remotely (by remote booting PC to fix-it image on the network):

 



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  • Hardware-assisted Isolation and Recovery of Infected PCs:

 



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  • Hardware-assisted Discovery of PC Assets

 



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Click here to learn more about the combination of Symantec products with Intel vPro technology: http://www.earlyroi.com/

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With the launch of Intel Centrino with vPro technology - several medium to large customers (with 1000 or more PCs in the infrastructure) have asked for Intel's help with building the financial business case for the new technology. Given this need, Intel asked WiPro to survey senior IT managers from 41 companies about current notebook PC management costs that could potentially be reduced by taking advantage of the new technology. WiPro specifically focused on PC maintenance costs that IT usually budgets for on an annual basis (these are "hard dollar costs", such as help desk calls, help desk visits (especially for hardware and software malfunctions - such as OS blue screens and hard drive failures), auditing, security incidents, software patch deployment costs, major application (such as Office) deployment costs into the infrastructure, etc.).

 

WiPro's findings are as follows:

 

  • Estimated hard dollar savings of up to ~$140 / PC / year with Intel Centrino with vPro technology vs. the mobile PC in the installed PC base today

  • Reduces the need for hardware-related desk-side visits by as much as 58% and for software-related desk-side visits by as much as 57%

  • Up to 51% faster patch saturation per incident and reduces number of inventory failures by 62%

  • Enterprises can take advantage of most of the Intel Centrino with vPro technology features (including remote diagnosis and repair) in the mobile PC form factor for about 16 hours a day (the other 8 hours, on average, the mobile PC is asleep or off-line, and an IT manager cannot use the Intel vPro technology features)

 

For those interested in the report, please read about it here: http://www.intel.com/business/business-pc/roi/centrinoprowhitepaper.pdf

 

In order to help customers model the "hard dollar" savings in your environment, Intel has created the Intel Centrino with vPro technology and Intel Core2 with vPro technology ROI Estimator that is based on the data from the above study, as well as another study that focused on desktops with Intel Core2 with vPro technology that was published last year. This ROI Estimator is located here: http://www.intel.com/business/business-pc/roi/demo.htm

 

To learn more about the ROI Estimator and the desktop and mobile PC studies, please listen to Josh, me and WiPro talk about them in this PodTech videocast: http://www.podtech.net/home/4679/roi-intel-vpro-technology-in-the-enterprise

 

Cheers -

 

Justin Van Buren

 

Intel Business Marketing Manager

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This week I was reflecting on my IT journey in the last few years and how I successfully adopted new technology. I thought that sharing this type of information may be helpful to those out there that are either about to start or in the middle of their integration of Intel® vPro™ Technology. First things first, here’s an illustration of the different camps within an IT shop (architecture, engineering, operations, finance, security) and then of course there is the leadership (mgmt) that provides air cover for such new adoptions / also a key stakeholder in the success.

 

 

 

For each of these camps there is a different perspective and frames of reference, therefore let me dive into each one.

 

ARCHITECTURE: for the architect community, the requirement is to understand their 3-5 year roadmap and how a new client technology fits in - does it violate any major design rules, does it embrace the technology strategy?. Specifically the focus is around conceptual and reference architecture with focus on high level themes i.e. Compliance, Provisioning, Remediation, Automation, Virtualization. The vantage point here is looking at the big picture and being able to define it in relationship to the rest of the architecture. This includes the BDAT model as well (business, data, applications and technology), focus is around the business process changes, data architecture changes with respect to where data is being stored, retained, transmitted, etc.. Applications are all about the application architecture requirements and potentially any changes to the high level picture.

 

ENGINEERING: for engineering it’s all about the connection points, ports, protocol’s, access rights. What I find very compelling in this realm is that the dialogue is around AS IS and TO BE solution architecture with heavy reference to the BDAT model output. How does it specifically fit in w/ the rest of the pieces, what is the traffic pattern, what is the fault tolerance, how does it reuse the pieces of infrastructure already in place, how does each level of the support stack manage their respective pieces without breaking the separation of duties requirements, scaling out ramifications.

 

OPERATIONS: for operations it all about what is the process change, realization of the value and how does it all work. As you dig in more in this area it is about the 1-x process steps required, there is a heavier view on automation of remedial tasks, there is focus on ownership of problems, reliability of the solution, SLA’s, OLA’s (operational level agreements). The dialogue for operations is about the minutes it takes to operate a given function, the time to execute, back out, re provision, etc.. This is where the business process understanding and changes are the most critical as they are truly tested in live production scenarios

 

FINANCE: for finance, it’s a few things that I think are important to know, it’s not all about the ROI & TCO, however that is about 90% of it. The other 10% is primarily focused on how this solution would enable company objectives, goals and vision. They are also the keepers of the value (from Headcount, costs, impact, including how to verbalize) when it’s all said and done, as they play the role in delivering a projected vs. actual account of the events, therefore their keen involvement and insight is important. An Enlisted finance manager can make a world of difference.

 

SECURITY: I initially did not draw in security & then went back to add this into the picture above. Why you ask? Well, years back security was an afterthought, however Ever since the Code Red/Nimda/SQL Slammer days – they’ve had a pretty strong foothold in decisions within IT – especially in evaluating new technologies… They have to ensure that the ‘last mile’ is covered in the enterprise, 1 box can wreak havoc on the network, etc. What this means is that it’s all about CIA (Confidentiality, Availability & Integrity), therefore diving into the technology & understanding the RISK is the key part here (specifically the Risk Assessment).

 

LEADERSHIP/MANAGEMENT: the focus here is around not just being an “approver” but to also being a champion for the new technology. The goal is to have them very aware & equally as passionate as the adopter of the technology. If you can drive this passion from the top the air cover is significant in removing roadblocks that may arise.

 

So is one more important than the other? No, they are all critical for full adoption, however I will highlight that the message crafted towards the leadership team is critical.

Does a small/medium IT shops have these same challenges? I think so, they are just differing in size of the work required . for example in a small business the IT director may be participating in arch-eng-ops type of roles and rolling out the technology, where as in large enterprises these may be broken out over different people and groups.

 

So.. how do you go for the WIN?

My past has taught me that if I can understand the differing roles, what is needed to satisfy their requirements, the process is smoother (not perfect). I have also realized that sometimes even in IT you have to put on a marketing’ish type of role to help push the adoption along, whether it’s brown bag lunch meetings to show off the technology or just asking the Sr. Exec to join you in the data center for a hands on demo. In every case of new technology I’ve enlisted a team of passionate peers that see the vision and then together we tackle the key area’s as a team, while also diffusing that passion to others.

 

I’d like to share some examples of each area if there is interest in the community, specifically focused around Intel® vPro™ Technology. please comment back and then I will attach examples for each..

 

Also. What have I missed? What key questions do you think need to get answered for a “WIN”.

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Watch this video series where a admired IT administrator teams up with a brilliant developer for a remote management solution. Where IT and Dev team up to battle the EVIL in order to deploy the right solution. There is action, drama, suspense .. and lots of fun. What else were you expecting "Romance"? Give it a peek and pass it along. Also, stop by the

Super Secret Organization

.

 

Background:

 

The super secret organization (SSO) is a elite covert services company where IT services and security issues are a matter of life and death. So begins the saga of a Whiz Dev, a brilliant developer, and IT smith, a genius IT administrator. Whiz Dev and IT smith must depend on each other to defend their honor, their company and the best kept secrets. And, we have the bumbling interno who is constantly looking to enter this secret world.

 

Episode 1 "IT smith meets the bumbling interno"

 

Episode 2 "Whiz dev and IT smith"

 

Stay tuned for the episode 3 --- "The fate of SSO"

 

Video thumbnail. Click to play Click To Play Episode 1

Video thumbnail. Click to play Click To Play Episode 2

 

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This is my second video demonstration of Intel AMT Commander at IDF. This time, I show off Intel System Defence, Agent Presence and the benefits of using Serial-over-LAN to communicate with a OS agent while the network driver is turned off.

 

Ylian (Intel AMT Blog)

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