thoughts on xbox one news

i was actually kind of excited about the xbox one debut and watched parts of the “unveiling”. yes, the name is weird, but i get what is meant by it. i was impressed by the home entertainment integration, but while seeing lots of things that were pretty cool…i didn’t really see anything breathtaking. since the xbox 360 platform is eight years old now i kind of expected some leaps and bounds. instead i felt like i was looking at the xbox 360 generation 3. that’s obviously an exaggeration when you look at the hardware differences, but what i really mean is feature-wise.

but…there’s still a lot of details to come no doubt. still lots of rumors and speculation surrounding the xbox one.
so far, i view the following negatively:
all games have to be installed on the hard drive. even with 500GB i could see people with lots of games (over 20), apps, etc running out of space and having to uninstall games. i think a terabyte drive would have been more appropriate, but perhaps it would have add too much extra cost to the unit right now. maybe in later versions…

required internet connection/checking in. i absolutely hate this concept. even though my current xbox is always connected and it wouldn’t affect me much, i still hate it. i should be able to bring my game console to antarctica or a cabin in the middle of the woods if i so desired. the mandatory installation of games to the hdd is probably less about performance and more about this checking in requirement.

used/borrowed/rented game unknowns. there’s been some outrageous rumors concerning used games. the latest explanation is that games are uniquely identified and when a game is used on a different console, the original console loses access to it. that doesn’t sound terrible to me. i think i could live with that. i wonder what happens if i rented a game and installed it on the hdd, then returned the game to the store. and lets say it’s an unpopular game that doesn’t get rented by anyone for an entire year. would i still keep access to that game for the whole year? unless there’s some stupid requirement you have to install it the hdd AND have the disc to get it to run.

no backwards compatibility. this is just plain sucks. i wonder if the xbox one can effectively emulate a xbox 360 (even with its vastly superior hardware specs).

i’m definitely on the fence on whether or not i’d ever get a xbox one. of course, i’d never get any system at launch. probably not until 2 years after launch realistically. my decision will ultimately depend on how draconian microsoft will be with their need for control over the platform and of course on what games are released on the platform. i imagine the graphic capabilities on the xbox one and the PS4 are going to be insane…

update 9/24/16:
microsoft won me over this console generation by reversing a lot of their dumb decisions made during the xbox one launch. most notably, i was interested in the xbox 360 backwards compatibility.  as of the time i’m writing this there are 253 xbox 360 games that run on the xbox one. i really think that if the xbox one had debuted with this feature they would have dominated console sales this generation. there’s no tricks or deceit to the feature, they’re really allowing you to continue playing last gen games that you invested in on the xbox one. that’s really a nice move on their part. the norm before was to just keep buying re-releases each generation. basically, a money pit.

 

Posted in: Games by resinblade Comments Off on thoughts on xbox one news

troubleshooting corrupted/hidden outlook rules

i’m currently investigating some weirdness with a particular user’s email account. at first i was certain it was a local outlook client/mail profile issue, but now i believe it may actually be related to the mailbox.

i found out about a utility called MFCMAPI today that can be used to examine a mailbox for hidden or corrupted outlook rules (which i believe is this case here).

MFCMAPI download: http://mfcmapi.codeplex.com

quick info on usage:
Session->Logon
choose correct mail profile
double-click the Mailbox – … entry
expand Root and IPM_SUBTREE (for outlook clients that are in cached mode)
right-click on Inbox->Other tables->Rules table

the above is just an example. you can quickly get to the same location by using QuickStart->Inbox Rules. hidden rules will evidently show up in the “associated contents table”.

information regarding MFCMAPI use:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/924297
http://www.msexchangegeek.com/2009/04/30/using-mfcmapi-to-delete-delegate-rules-from-mailbox/

update 5/28/2013:
i am 98% sure this blog describes the solution i have been looking for:
<blog post no longer available>
i will test it out soon…

update 5/29/2013:
the steps in the blog i mentioned previously worked perfectly. first, i need to better describe what the actual issue was in my case. meeting requests sent to a single user would automatically send to a distribution group. the user had no visible rules that reflected this. the aforementioned dist. group used to be a mailbox that this user had delegate access to. that mailbox was deleted so the dist. group could be created.

there were still residual delegate entries on the user’s mailbox regarding the deleted mailbox. therefore, this was not a local outlook/mail profile issue. i used the MFCMAPI utility to remove the offending entries.

procedure:
open MFCMAPI and Logon as mentioned above
under MDB->Open other mailboxes (you have to have full access to this mailbox)
double-click Freebusy Data
select LocalFreeBusy entry
find the entry with the tag “0x684A101E” and double-click
delete the obsolete delegate entry
exit
then open the rules table (procedure mentioned above)
and delete the entry with “Schedule+EMS Interface” mentioned in it.

again, a lot more details are in the blog i mentioned before: <blog post no longer available>
my thanks to the author, the info was very helpful

Posted in: IT by resinblade Comments Off on troubleshooting corrupted/hidden outlook rules

getting a windows core dump from an unresponsive VM

two articles:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/927069
http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1009187

apply the changes in the microsoft article first
then run the commands mentioned in the vmware article when the VM becomes unresponsive:
vm-support -x
/usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmdumper <world id> nmi
(the above commands are for pre vsphere 5.x hosts)

Posted in: IT by resinblade Comments Off on getting a windows core dump from an unresponsive VM

SSL certs: broken certificate chain

if windows is reporting “windows does not have enough information to verify this certificate”, it’s most likely indicating a broken certificate chain. viewing the certification path tab and examining the Trusted Root Certification Authorities store can verify this.

in the case that i was looking at, it looked like the root chain was missing Baltimore CyberTrust Root, Microsoft Internet Authority, & MSIT Machine Auth CA2. this site provides a download for those root certs:
https://corp.sts.microsoft.com/Onboard/CertRenewal.html

additional information here:
http://www.kozeniauskas.com/itblog/2011/06/27/windows-does-not-have-enough-information-to-verify-this-certificate/

Posted in: IT by resinblade Comments Off on SSL certs: broken certificate chain

dragon warrior 1 (nes)

dragon warrior 1 (or dragon quest 1) is a game that is very dear to me. it’s not only the first JRPG game i’ve ever played it’s the first RPG i’ve ever played period. the game came out in 1989 in the US and i feel like i got it for christmas that same year. my memory is always hazy on exact dates, but that seems about right. i can recall nearing the end of the game and getting stumped by something. i ended up calling a kid on the phone from school (4th or 5th grade time period) and was able to finish the game with his help. there was a video done by the AVGN about how back in the olden days before the world wide web you had to rely on nintendo power to provide hints on how to finish the games. that’s definitely true, back then it was nintendo power, strategy guides, and word of mouth from friends. i guess you could have called one of those hint hotlines too but i never knew anyone that did that.

anyways, the original dragon warrior means more to me than even final fantasy 1. i see FF1 as a natural evolution of dragon warrior, while from my perspective dragon warrior 1 is the grandfather of the genre (as far as JRPGS released in the US are concerned). dragon warrior is a beautifully simplistic. there’s multi-part quests that are subtlety explained to you and not all in your face explaining what needs to be done step-by-step like games are now. i’d rate the game as having a medium difficulty. the game is merciful with deaths since you only lose half of your gold and keep all of your experience. i like how you have to face enemies that have you outclassed to progress in the game. if you only fight enemies that are less powerful than you or about on the same level, it will take forever to gain gold and levels. i also like the system of learning new spells simply be leveling. the music is great even though there’s not much variety. i’m not much of a fan of the caves in the game, but thankfully there aren’t too many of these. even back when i was a kid i used maps from the strategy guide to navigate them.

the strategy guide…was more like a booklet ~15 pages or so that came included with an issue of nintendo power. i absolutely loved this thing. the illustrations were incredible. i probably looked through this guide and read the descriptions of monsters and items multiple times. the dragon warrior strategy guide fascinated me probably even more than the full fledged final fantasy 1 strategy guide (which was also awesome).

as i mentioned above, i did finish this game when i was a child. as a kid i don’t think i ever played it again after finishing it. however, i’ve probably replayed it as an adult (most likely without finishing) at least 4 different times since then.

i’m playing it again now in hopes to finishing it once more. so far, i’ve defeated the green dragon and retrieved the staff of rain. most wisdom says to wait until level 12 to fight the green dragon. i became impatient and did it at level 11. i died the first two times, but on the third try the sleep spell kept the dragon asleep for the entire battle…which made things pretty easy. the sleep spell definitely comes in handy when fighting more powerful enemies. the stopspell is useful as well for enemy spellcasters. i’m not sure how far i’m into the game yet, i’d guess a third of the way through? i remember there only being 20 levels of experience so there can’t be too much more. correction: there are 30 levels of experience, i don’t think i ever knew that…

update 5/19/2013:
i’m nearing the final stretch of the game. i attempted the ruthless trek to cantlin at level 13 and failed miserably. i was able to do it at level 14 with lots of running and the use of fairy water. previously, where i mentioned that i liked how the game forces you to face enemies that outclass you…this segment of the game makes me change my mind. at this point in the game you are severely outmatched. even at level 15 w/ the silver shield i have a fairly difficult time gaining exp and gold outside of cantlin. old tricks like using the sleep spell aren’t nearly as effective anymore. the starwyvern is particularly troublesome. this is probably the first part of the game where i felt that the act of progressing was tedious. part of the problem is having to retreat to heal constantly and relying on the nearly useless heal spell (at this point). luckily, i will get the healmore spell in a few more levels.

update 5/20/2013:
i bought the flame sword, but didn’t notice too much of a difference. i believe all my prior frustration was due to my own fault. a much better location to gain experience in is the desert region around haukness. the enemies are much easier to defeat and you don’t really need a nearby inn to heal if you have healing armor. the only minor annoyance in the area is the demon knight. at level 16 i did a hit and run for erdrick’s armor in haukness. i’m at level 17 now and will probably head for erdrick’s token soon.

update 5/24/2013:
starwyvern become easier to deal with at level 19 and they’re no problem at all at level 20 w/ erdrick’s sword. i did another hit and run, this time to charlock castle to retrieve erdrick’s sword. the strongest enemy to run from me thus far has been the wraith. i think the only enemies that can cause me problems now are the blue and red dragons, the armored knight, and the stoneman. i’ll probably finish the game tomorrow.

update 5/25/2013:
i finished the game earlier today at level 23. blue dragons weren’t much of a problem actually. red dragons were difficult if i didn’t get a successful stopspell cast since the red dragons can cast sleep. i didn’t run into any armored knights. i was actually thankful when i ran into wizards because i could handle them without any problems. the dragon lord’s 2nd form was pretty tough to beat, but it was manageable by casting healmore often. this will be at least my 2nd time finishing this game and it still lives up to the fond memories i have of it.

Posted in: Games by resinblade Comments Off on dragon warrior 1 (nes)

equallogic FS7600: service pack update

download the latest service pack and unzip it
FTP to the NAS management IP address port 44421
use grpadmin credentials as the login

upload the unzipped service pack to the “servicepack” directory
after the upload completes then SSH to the management IP using grpadmin credentials again
then run service-pack start [filename]

the guide also suggests rebalancing connections amongst the controllers from Group Management after the service-pack applies.

update 5/11/2014:
ran into 2 problems trying to apply newer 2.x service packs within the last couple of months. issue #1 was that the /var volume was full of logs on the NAS unit. with support’s assistance we were able to get to a linux shell and manually delete the logs. the process was something like this (from my recollection) – SSH into the NAS and go to the submenu Administrators->Passwd and reset the password for an account named “fse”. logout and log back into the NAS with the fse account and more options will be available to you. then go to the submenu System->Maintenance->Shell to get to a full linux shell. i was informed that this full shell access will most likely disappear in the 3.x versions of the firmware

issue #2, the application of service packs was still failing after dealing with issue #1. this one took a long time to troubleshoot. eventually it was determined that an IPv6 setting was missing switch-side. the NAS controllers evidently use IPv6 addresses internally and try to ping each other by an IPv6 address as a test. if the test fails the service pack is unable to proceed.

update 8/29/2016:
when upgrading from 3.x the process is slightly different. SSH in and enter the CLI mode and run system -> software-updates -> type upgrade [filename.sh]. also system -> software-updates -> list can be used to list installed updates and available updates.

Posted in: IT by resinblade Comments Off on equallogic FS7600: service pack update

exchange 2007: grant send on behalf permission

open target mailbox and choose properties
then mail flow settings->delivery options

and add specified user(s) to “send on behalf, grant this permission to:”

source:
http://www.shudnow.net/2007/08/12/send-on-behalf-and-send-as/

update 8/28/13:
it is possible send from a distribution group address. run the following command from the exchange management shell:
Set-DistributionGroup “<dist group>” -GrantSendOnBehalfTo “<user>”
of course the From: field must be visible on the outlook client to send from a different address. for OWA, in exchange 2007 you can’t set the From: field option…this appears to be fixed in exchange 2010+.
source:
http://xyfon.com/tech-tips/send-email-distribution-group/

Posted in: IT by resinblade Comments Off on exchange 2007: grant send on behalf permission

exchange 2007: recipient limits

quick ways to check recipient limits
global setting:
Get-TransportConfig | fl

mailbox setting:
Get-Mailbox -Identity <mailbox> | fl
or
Get-Mailbox -Identity <mailbox> | fl RecipientLimits

source:
http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/exchangesvradmin/thread/13799663-163c-4928-a4a9-02fa2a19b99e

additional info:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb310760(v=exchg.80).aspx

Posted in: IT by resinblade Comments Off on exchange 2007: recipient limits

office365 notes

adfs:
iis w/ ssl certificate
.net framework 3.5.1
windows identity foundation
adfs 2.0 rtw
adfs 2.0 rollup 3

adfs web config files in c:\inetpub\adfs\ls

auto-populate UPN: http://social.technet.microsoft.com/wiki/contents/articles/4184.ad-fs-2-0-auto-populate-the-username-field-of-the-forms-sign-in-page-when-signing-in-to-office-365.aspx

add UPN suffixes to your local domain:
active directory domains and trusts
right-click active directory domains and trusts->properties->upn suffixes->add

dirsync:
c:\program files\microsoft online directory sync\syncbus\uishell\miisclient.exe (dirsync gui)
run c:\program files\microsoft online directory sync\DirSyncConfigShell.psc1
to load the powershell console use: powershell.exe -psconsolefile DirSyncConfigShell.psc1
then Start-OnlineCoexistenceSync (forces a sync)

the dirsync TargetWebService sync needs to be ran with an onmicrosoft.com account that has global administrator rights (user management rights won’t cut it). in the dirsync gui, choose Management Agents then right-click TargetWebService->Properties->Configure Connection Information to verify.

also under Management Agents->SourceAD->Properties->Configure Directory Partitions->Containers..select OUs may be chosen for syncing.
source: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/denotation/archive/2012/11/21/installing-and-configure-dirsync-with-ou-level-filtering-for-office365.aspx

both dirsync and adfs installs will require command line options to use a full SQL server instance

important link: https://portal.microsoftonline.com

installed anywhere management is to be done:
windows azure active directory module (formerly microsoft online services module)
sign-in assistant

windows azure active directory module
*update – this must be done from an ADFS machine OR use Set-MsolAdfscontext -Computer [ADFS server FQDN]*
Connect-MsolService (enter office365 creds, as in the .onmicrosoft.com global admin login)
Get-MsolDomain
Convert-MsolDomainToFederated -DomainName [local domain to be federated] -SupportMultipleDomain (this sets up the relying trust in ADFS)
Get-MsolFederationProperty -DomainName [local domain to be federated]
Get-MsolUser -UnlicensedUsersOnly -All > output.txt
Get-MsolAccountSku

enabling ADFS debug logging:
event viewer->adfs 2.0 tracing->right-click in white-space and choose “show analytic and debug logs”->right-click Debug log on the left and choose enable log

licensing note: for our production wave 14 tenant the SKU was named differently than it was in our test environment. ended up being <domainname>:EXCHANGESTANDARD_STUDENT

there’s a way to change the UPN of a non-federated office365 user with:
Set-MsolUserPrincipalName -UserPrincipalName <currentupn> -NewUserPrincipalName <newupn>
(^i’ve never actually tried this^)
source:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2523192

sources:
http://www.messageops.com/documentation/office-365-documentation/ad-fs-with-office-365-step-by-step-guide
*excellent article* step-by-step instructions for setting up ADFS and dirsync

http://www.office365forbiz.com/setting-up-office-365-adfs-and-dirsync/
another adfs/dirsync step-by-step, important details are included

http://mikecrowley.wordpress.com/2011/11/21/office-365-dirsync-x64-installation-walkthrough/
http://social.technet.microsoft.com/wiki/contents/articles/9082.office-365-adfs-active-directory-federation-service-installation.aspx
http://www.messageops.com/documentation/office-365-documentation/active-directory-federation-services-design-planning-for-office-365
http://thelaith.azurewebsites.net/?p=1582#!prettyPhoto

Posted in: IT by resinblade Comments Off on office365 notes

esxi 5.1: CLI partitioning

it appears that the vsphere client (5.1) won’t allow you to format a disk as VMFS if the disk already has existing partitions. however, you can SSH into an ESXi host and use the partedUtil command to alter the partitioning. previously fdisk was used for this purpose, but has evidently since been deprecated.

disk information here: /vmfs/devices/disks/

in my case the disk was listed as naa.(long string)
so i first used partedUtil get “/vmfs/devices/disks/naa.(long string)” to list the partitions
then i used partedUtil delete “/vmfs/devices/disks/naa.(long string)” 1
and
partedUtil delete “/vmfs/devices/disks/naa.(long string)” 2
to delete the existing partitions

i was then able to use the vsphere client to format the disk as VMFS

more info concerning partedUtil here:
http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1036609

Posted in: IT by resinblade Comments Off on esxi 5.1: CLI partitioning