Sumir Karayi, CEO at 1E, is running the London 2013 Marathon for BAAF

Sumir runs for BAAF London Marathon 2013

The London Marathon. One of the great British sporting events, combining elite athletics, mass participation and record-breaking fundraising in one race. This year, Sumir Karayi, CEO of 1E, will be undertaking his first marathon, a gruelling 26 miles 385 yards in a test of endurance and willpower – passing through the streets of London from Blackheath to the famous finish line at The Mall on Sunday 21 April.

It’s not all hunger games though – as its many participants raise some incredible donations for various worthwhile charities. This year, Sumir will be running on behalf of the British Association of Adoption and Fostering (BAAF).

Here’s what Sumir had to say about his latest training session:

“It's Sunday and while some of you have probably been relaxing I have been running for nearly 3 hours and am definitely dead as it's the longest I have ever run. You may well say – well he is stupid! And you may be right.
BUT
It's for a great cause. I am running my first marathon on behalf of BAAF – British Adoption and Fostering http://www.baaf.org.uk/. BAAF do a tremendous job of helping children find loving homes. If you would like to sponsor me and thus help BAAF then please follow the link below. Needless to say I could have trained more and I will suffer :-)

It really is for a great cause – if you have a few pounds or dollars to spare, please donate as you’ll be helping to give many children a childhood that we’ve all been lucky to have experienced. You can donate to Sumir’s virginmoneygiving page here.

You’ll also have the knowledge that Sumir will be aching tremendously as Mo Farah, double Olympic champion, is planning to run only half of the marathon. Does that make Sumir double the man that Mo Farah is? We’ll see.

So in the spirit of giving, here’s some fun marathon facts for you to enjoy :)

  • The fastest marathon run by a marching band is at 7 hours and 55 minutes
  • The fastest marathon run on crutches is at 6 hours 24 minutes and 48 seconds
  • And the fastest marathon run whilst skipping with a rope is at 4 hours 28 minutes and 48 seconds (you can find more amazing and delightful records here)
  • The current 26 miles and 385 yards distance came about because at the 1908 London Olympics, the length of the course was increased to be closer to Windsor Castle so the Royal Family could watch.
  • The 'winner' of the marathon at the 1904 Olympics in St. Louis, Missouri, Frederick Lorz, went most of the way by car.
  • In that same 1904 Olympic marathon, Fourth place was awarded to a Cuban postman named Felix Carbajal, despite falling ill to apples he ate from an orchard en route.
  • And also in that eventful 1904 marathon, Len Taw, one of the first black African competitors in the Olympic Games, finished 9th despite being chased a mile or so off course by a large dog.
  • The idea for the London Marathon was dreamed up in a pub by Chris Brasher, the athlete and journalist.

Henry Truong | Technical Audience Executive at 1E

1E Blogs

1E Shopping 4.7 has released!


1E Shopping 4.7 is now RTM

Hello everyone,

I’m pleased to announce that 1E Shopping 4.7 is now available.

It has four new enhancements:

1e shopping feature os filtering 4.7

OS Filtering™

As organizations progress with their Windows 7 migration project they can end up with a confusing situation where they don’t know which apps are supported on their new machine.

Shopping 4.7 now allows the apps presented to the user to be filtered by what’s compatible with their machine.

This new capability makes Shopping an even more essential solution to getting off XP before April 2014

 

 

shopping enhanced app mapping feature 4.7

Enhanced App Mapping

The App Mapping feature, introduced in 2012 allows applications to be migrated as part of the Windows 7 process. The user will automatically get a replacement app based on their usage patterns and the app mapping rule configured by IT.

4.7 builds on this to give the admin a UI to configure the rules and allows different mapping rules for different departments or roles.

This feature requires the App Mapping solution which is comprised of Shopping, AppClarity and the App Mapping Solutions Accelerator.

 

 

 

shopping 2012 migration assistance 4.7 feature

2012 Migration Assistance

Many organizations are moving to SCCM 2012. For large organizations this may be a complex and lengthy process.

Shopping makes one aspect of this much simpler – Shopping can provide a single portal to cater to users on the new SCCM 2012 infrastructure in parallel with the legacy 2007 as each business unit is migrated during the transition process.

 

 

Extended Platform Support

Shopping 4.7 adds support for Windows 8 clients, Internet Explorer 10, Windows Server 2012 and System Center 2012 (including SP1)

 

 

 

 

 

 

I'd like to thank the amazing team we have here at 1E and all the hard work they've put into making some of the amazing additions in this release.

 

Dave Harding | Product Manager, 1E

1E Blogs

1E Nomad 2012 v5 has been released! Get it now.

nomad 2012 v5 released

Hello everyone,

I’m very excited to announce that version 5 of Nomad 2012 has released to market today.

The three highlights of the release are:

Nomad 2012 version 5 Fan out

FanOut

Nomad’s new many-to-many method of distribution allows distributions to happen in a fully connected or “spider web” manner across the local network.

This is great for massive distributions such as Windows 7 images to happen extremely quickly even on the largest sites without any server infrastructure.

 

 

Nomad 2012 v 5 ssd

Single Site Download

Nomad 2012 is more efficient than ever before. Large and complex locations are mapped to ensure content is only ever downloaded once.

This exciting new capability is powered by the 1E ActiveEfficiency™ platform and puts further technical distance between Nomad and competition.

 

 

Nomad 2012 v5 report

Reporting

The reporting pack helps gain insight to where Nomad saved you bandwidth and speeds up deployments on a global or per deployment basis.
Operational reports are also available such as Content Pre-caching to give visibility of what’s on what client – very useful for Win 7 deployments

The reporting pack is available from 1E support.

 

 

If you need a little more reason to get excited check this video on version 5 of Nomad 2012 out and share with all your contacts: 

Nomad 2012 v5 introducing nomad 2012 v5 teaser trailer

http://youtu.be/x0H0BsJ8h2Q

This fantastic new release was the culmination of a lot of work from our amazing team.

This release of Nomad uniquely sets it apart from the rest of the industry by touting features such as Reverse QoS™, FanOut, Single Site Download, Multicast and others that make sure we handle your content distribution with resilience and speed without affecting your network links.

Richard Threlkeld | Product Manager at 1E

www.1e.com/blogs

Introducing Nomad 2012 version 5 video release

We've recently blogged about the new version 5 of Nomad 2012 and its imminent release and there has been a lot of interest already with customers contacting us and speaking to each other. The new features such as Single Site Download and FanOut really do speak to the modern day ConfigMgr Administrator whom are looking to control bandwidth at local and branch office locations, reduce infrastructure, increase resiliency and supercharge their Win7 migration projects.

Our customers have been asking if they can see this in action a bit more too. We plan on having more blog posts explaining these new features in the coming weeks as well as more webinars detailing the technical functionality. In the meantime we’ve created this video and hope you enjoy it and share with all your coworkers and friends. I hope it makes you as excited as I am!

You can find more videos on our official 1E YouTube channel and if you can't access YouTube, we've also got a version up on Vimeo.

Even with these new version 5 features, Nomad 2012 still does not require any extra consoles as we’ve built a cool API for Single Site Download when grouping subnets. It still does not have any network hardware pre-requisites or any server/client side overhead such as kernel drivers or Java. These new features just give you more whilst still being the same old Nomad that you know and trust in your network infrastructure.

Henry Truong, Technical Audience Executive at 1E

nomad 2012 v5 single site download

1E Nomad 2012 Version 5.0 is nearly here

1E is extremely proud and excited to announce that in a couple of weeks Nomad 2012 version 5.0 will be released. We have put in a lot of hard work and feel that in version 5.0 we differentiate ourselves even further from the market.

There are several changes in Nomad 2012 v5 however the two headlining features are FanOut mode and Single Site Download. These features directly address some challenges that our customers posed to us last summer:

  • The need to shape network traffic among multiple subnets without separate Administrative consoles
  • The ability to have multicast like functionality without implementing multicast
  • The need for reliability AND speed in deployments

These challenges are key for many organizations. Nomad 2012 has always been primarily about reliability and resiliency of content transfer but with IT organizations being under more pressure to deliver in tight time frames than ever before. Speed has become paramount, especially with the looming deadline to migrate off of Windows XP and to Windows 7. More organizations than ever before need the new features in Nomad 2012 to deliver solutions to their organization and revolutionize their System Center infrastructure.

As we release to market in the coming weeks you’ll see new videos, webinars, documentation, whitepapers and information outlining these new features and how to follow best practice for implementation. We hope you’re as excited as we are about this new release.

This is just more exciting news for the product that was just recently nominated for Networking Computer Awards 2013's Infrastructure product of the year and for that, we're incredibly proud of Nomad, our team and, as ever, our amazing customers.

 

Richard Threlkeld, Technical Product Manager at 1E

nomad 2012 fast distribution fanout

Nomad 2012 nominated for Network Computing Awards 2013′s Infrastructure Product of the Year

 

Nomad 2012 has been nominated for the Network Computing Awards 2013 as Infrastructure Product of the Year.

Now in their seventh year, the Network Computing Awards were set up to recognise the solutions and the companies that have been most impressive in helping organisations function better through getting the most out of their networks.

If your organization uses Nomad and you love it as much as we love improving it to make your infrastructure even more efficient, vote for it using this link:

http://www.networkcomputing.co.uk/ncawards/index.php?page=vote2013

It’s the first category and you don’t have to vote for anyone else in any other category if you don’t want to. It’s quick and free so get voting!

Nomad 2012 NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE PRODUCT OF THE YEAR 2013

 

Henry Truong, Technical Audience Executive at 1E
 

Maximizing Data Center ROI at Data Center Dynamics- Toronto

The operation of the data center represents the bulk of most Enterprise IT budgets.  Most firms will attest that the composition of the annual IT budget is 80% for “keeping the lights on,” and only 20% for “projects” or “innovation.”  Of that 80% of the budget invested in maintaining the data center estate, some portion of that expense is returning comparatively little value to the business.  The challenge that IT managers have is how to identify that portion of the investment that is not returning value, and decisively converting that to productive investment.

At Data Center Dynamics Converged, in Toronto, Ontario this week, 1E outlined the ways in which IT assets can fail to deliver value to the business, why traditional methods of identifying IT waste fall short, and how this problem can be solved with innovative approaches.

Analyzing where ROI is falling short in the Data Center

It has been estimated that over one million new servers are introduced into enterprise data centers each year, in North America alone.  Some of these are for modernization, some are for new applications.  Have we removed one million servers last year?  Have we removed half of a million? 

The fact of the matter is that the pace of the business and inadequacy of traditional governance methods combine to result in under-used or unused IT assets accumulating in the data center.  Data center operators often consider it a luxury just to have the necessary time to install new servers coming into the environment.  Rarely is sufficient time spent to identify and reclaim assets that are made obsolete by new additions or changes of the Business.  Even when we try hard to recover underperforming capacity, the methods at hand are woefully inadequate to do so with the necessary certainty and pace needed in contemporary data center operations.

The cost ramifications of these underperforming assets are what damages our IT Return on Investment.  On servers that are underused, misused, or no longer used, software licenses and maintenance contracts represent an ongoing expense that is difficult for most operators to isolate.  The energy costs of servers that are not returning value to the business, and the energy costs to maintain environmental set points for them can be exorbitant.

Energy costs, operations costs, licensing costs, maintenance costs, facility costs are invested repeatedly in IT assets that are failing to return the value for which the Business invested in them in the first place.

Server Utilization Measurements:  The Lights are on but Nobody’s Home

Most enterprises today use server utilization measurements as their method to determine whether a server is useful or not.  If the server is showing utilization, the assumption is that it’s purposeful.  This is unfortunate because “utilization” does not equate to value.

With utilization measurements, we can see that the server is alive, and maybe even that it’s doing something, but we cannot tell if that something is useful.  The server may be executing a stuck process or simple background administrative tasks, but not returning value to the Business.

An Innovative Solution

Instead of treating the server as a black box, what if we could see every process running on every server in the entire estate, and in real time categorize each process as either “useful” or “non-useful?”  What we would then have, is a clear view of where value is being returned, across the whole server estate.  We would have a complete accounting of our servers, and the degree to which they are doing useful data processing activity and returning value to the Business.  We would automatically be identifying waste, in real time.

The 1E Server Work Assessment

This is exactly what the Server Work Assessment , offered by 1E, does.  The Server Work Assessment is a packaged service offering, using 1E’s unique technology to see inside the server estate and identify exactly where value is being returned to the Business.  This allows the data center operator to decommission servers with confidence, and to more accurately manage resources and control virtual sprawl.

 

Sunshine after the storm: How 1E is helping those in need after Superstorm Sandy

The 1E New York office has not been the same recently, not since “Superstorm Sandy” came to visit.

Over the past few days, the immediate needs of the city in the wake of Sandy have become much clearer. New Jersey still has 780,000 power outages and New York has 540,000 homes without power. Today, 65 schools remained closed and will most likely continue to be for the rest of the week. As New York attempts to get back to normal, a second storm is now threatening our area this week. Temperatures will drop over the next three days, bringing wind chills down to 33 degrees Fahrenheit to areas that were severely affected by Sandy.

You just have to look around to see the extent of the damage and with people left without power, transport and even homes, something had to be done.

That’s why it is so amazing to see so many people helping each other out. From something as simple as offering to charge cell phones for free right up to large donations and volunteering from major celebrities. When people are in need, the natural instinct to help one another is a strong one. To spread joy and cheer to those in need, this is a behaviour that 1E proudly calls “1E Sunshine”. So with everyone doing their part to help one another, what can 1E do to spread sunshine to those who need it?

After making several phone calls to local shelters and talking to people on the ground, it had been decided that the greatest impact helping those in need would be by delivering items like food, batteries and coats directly so we asked our amazing employees here at 1E to drop off donations in our office over the course of the week for express distribution to local shelters.

For our small office even on our first day of reopening we've had a better response in donations than we had originally anticipated. It's great to see everyone wanting to help out those in need.

1E employees donating to help out those in need

Here at 1E, we also like to keep our employees happy and well fed with regular grocery deliveries to the office. In order to further the efforts of helping those in need, the NY office has agreed to take the funds that were allocated to groceries and donate them to the hurricane relief efforts. We’ll be doing this the entire month of November and possibly extend into December depending on how the efforts go. Just another example of the wonderful employees we have here at 1E who want to spread sunshine. It’s heart-warming to know that everyone wants to do their bit here at 1E – forfeiting a little office luxury in order to better the lives of others.

Some of our other super 1E individuals have even generously offered their time (and vehicles!) to assist with transporting donations to local shelters in Hoboken and the Rockaways. We want to thank Brian Gebert and Lauren Bermudez in particular for their efforts and contribution. We also like to thank all the other volunteers and contributors who did not want to be named and helped in their own way.

Apurva Desai, North America Technical Lead at 1E, was one of these individuals that decided to spread some sunshine to those who were less fortunate in Hoboken, New Jersey. His quote shows the range of emotion that individuals were feeling in the aftermath of Sandy and is quite revealing.

“Experience started Saturday morning, as I went to City hall to offer help. The scene was a bit chaotic with a lot of volunteers and not enough leadership or direction. Eventually, we were broken up into teams of 8, and after a good hour of mulling around, sent out to distribute food, water and batteries to local residents. We were given a 4 block area in the north east part of town still without power. We basically had to go door to door to check on people, give them the military ration packs which the national guard had brought to town, and as many bottles of water they wanted. Along with that, we provided them a 1 page paper that city hall had written up which detailed where shelters were, emergency phone numbers, and info on where hot food was being distributed across town. So off we went in 2 cars filled with food water batteries and information. We went door to door for about 2 hours, and were met with a wide variety of emotions. Many were happy that others were thinking of them in these dire times, many were angry about power not being on and were taking it out on us via some unfocused anger, and many were indifferent, passing on what we were bringing to them, as they had already ventured out and gotten whatever they needed. By Saturday a decent part of town was already up and running in terms of businesses and restaurants. Many restaurants and food trucks were also giving out food for free, so those military rations were not exactly a very appetizing option for most. Some of the hard hit areas were a different story I’m sure.”

It makes us proud that we have such incredible employees here at 1E who spread sunshine to others. If you’re in New York or New Jersey, we hope you stay safe and that some sunshine is spread your way.

Nomad 2012 recognition in Windows IT Pro and upcoming Nomad webinars

Nomad 2012 has been released for about 2 months now and it's gaining even more recognition in the world of IT – we're proud to announce that we've now been placed in the latest issue of Windows IT Pro. If you have a membership with them, check it out.

We're also hosting some technical webinars for Nomad 2012 focusing on the technical delivery of an OS Deployment project. It will cover:

  • Native Configuration Manager OSD features 
  • Supercharging your Win7 and Win8 migrations using the Nomad 2012 
  • Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (MDT)
This is a two part technical webinar that will show a detailed demonstration and technical breakdown of the OSD process within Config Mngr 2012.
 
Webinar date: 1st and 8th of November, 2012
  • Session 1: Thursday November 1, 2012 at PST 9am, EST 12noon, GMT 16:00, CET 17:00
  • Session 2: Thursday November 8, 2012 at PST 8am, EST 11am, GMT 16:00, CET 17:00

You can register for your place on the webinars here.

 

Separating Server Value from Waste at Data Center Dynamics- Chicago

If one agrees that data is the Business’ most valuable asset, then the data center is the metaphorical treasure chest of the Business.  The data center represents a major focal point of capital and expense for the Business, as the container and life support system for its IT assets.  While data centers are conceived with a certain return on investment in mind, managing the delivery of this value is difficult once the data center is commissioned.

At Data Center Dynamics Converged, in Chicago IL this week, 1E outlined the ways in which IT assets can fail to deliver value to the business, why traditional methods of identifying IT waste fall short, and how this problem can be corrected with innovative techniques.

Waste Happens

As the months and years go by, applications come and go, the Business ebbs and flows, and the residuum of the path of the Business is underused or no longer used IT assets.  Unfortunately, these resources carry costs that are not contributing positively to the mission of the Business.

Hardware waste, in the form of unused or underused servers is prevalent but often undetected in the data center.  Surveys suggest that even in well run shops, up to 15% of server assets are returning no value to the Business. 

On servers that are underused, misused, or no longer used, software licenses and maintenance contracts represent an expense that is unnecessary, but difficult to isolate.

Then of course there’s energy wasted with unused IT equipment.  We waste energy to power systems that are doing little or nothing for us, and we waste energy on cooling those same boxes… on cooling the data processing activity that is only spinning wheels.

Technical operations staff, monitoring tools, and processes are invested in support of servers.  This expense is wasted when invested in servers that are under used or comatose.  Many a late-night bridge call are commenced to respond to an alert triggered by an event on a server that is not even serving a purposeful function for the Business.

As painful as it may seem, we are aware that money is leaking down the drain every month and every year because of this aspect of data center operations.

Server Utilization Measurements:  The Lights are on but Nobody’s Home

Most enterprises today use server utilization measurements as their method to determine whether a server is useful or not.  If the server is showing utilization, the assumption is that it’s purposeful. 

With utilization measurements, we can see that the server is alive, and maybe even that it’s doing something, but we cannot tell if that something is useful.  The server may be executing a stuck process or simple background administrative tasks, but not returning value to the Business.

A Better Way

What if we could see every process running on every server in the entire estate?  What if we were able to categorize each process as either “useful” or “non-useful?”  What if we could do this for every server, whether physical or virtual?

What we would then have, is a clear view of where value is being returned, across the whole server estate.  We would have a complete accounting of our servers, and the degree to which they are doing useful data processing activity and returning value to the Business.

The 1E Useful Work Assessment

This is exactly what the Useful Work Assessment does.  The Useful Work Assessment is a packaged service offering, using 1E’s unique capability to see inside the server estate and identify exactly where value is being returned to the Business.  This allows the data center operator to decommission servers with confidence, and to more accurately manage resources and control virtual sprawl.