Archive for the “Groove” Category

This is a shameless plug for myself to invite you to come to a session I will be doing with Microsoft’s Mark Ryan at Microsoft IT-Forum 2007 in Barcelona. Look for OFF201 Groove 2007: Real World Infrastructure Challanges.  The time slot is November the 14th form 15.45 till 17:00.

There will also be a Chalk-Talk  “OFF06-IS Groove 2007: Security and Communications Groove” so look out for that to and the 15th of November at 09:00 

We are working on something special about Groove on the Sunday before IT-Forum starts but I that is still a bit hush hush. So look out for more information on that here on Buit.org.

During IT-Forum Erik Luppes, Stefan Stranger and myself will blog new stuff from IT-Forum here. My job will be talking about the party’s, drinks and diners off-course. The serious stuff will come from my friends.

Hope to see you there and please give us good ratings ;-)

See ya

Jeroen Jansen

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Good news,

Just got the word the from my Canadian friends that the Groove Exam is live in Beta.
The exam will test the Client, Management Server, Relay Server and Databridge Server.
Monday 27 of august at 10 AM in the morning I will take the test. I got a feeling I will pass. Maybe because I had some doing developing this Exam as an Subject Matter Expert for Groove. I’m really excited to see if the input we gave is in the exam.

I’m not sure how long the exam will run in Beta and when it will be for the general public. I do not know how you could register for that. But they sent me a promo code and I registered with that. That worked for me.

I will let you know on Monday how I did. I won’t see the result just yet. It will take about 6 weeks to process the exam.

UPDATE:

Today I took the beta exam, I hope I passed LOL. It was fun to see how things you come up with during developing the exam get back into the final exam. I thought all questions where compelling and some questions are even mind breakers. But the exam is fair in my opinion and you will pass if you prepare for it and take a training, especially if I’m the trainer……

Now I have to wait 8 weeks for the result. I will keep you posted. 

See ya

Jeroen Jansen
TS Groove 2007 to be!!!!

Comments 2 Comments »

Ok I must admit i might be a bit of a geek/nerd/freak (choose one). But now that i have a leave of work and going on a holiday my wife told me that i must leave my laptop(s) for a rest the next 1,5 weeks. They should have a holiday too she stated and yes it’s true laptop(s) need a holiday too. To much keystrokes makes them cranky. But let’s not go that way or else i start talking about traveling agency’s for laptops

What my problem is that is still need to manage our Groove Server environment at the office. So i thought let’s use the Nintendo WII. It has a web browser inside so that should work. But what do you think after the logon screen it just give me a blank screen and I get this error message:

  

So now i have a big problem here. I might just email Abbott L. at Microsoft to ask him to patch this problem and make the pages accessible for WII users because I don’t think I’m the only one with this problem. I know for sure that a colleague of mine want’s to do the same thing. Think about it managing you Groove environment by moving your arms, what better way to lose those love handles than managing Groove on your WII. It is an Opera Browser what’s inside my WII, so Abbott would you please help me. Or maybe Microsoft could give me an IE version for the WII.
I think that would be a great solution (all i favor press the left shift key 5 times).

So now what do i do, well nothing else to do then flying to Mallorca, hanging out at the beach, drinking cocktails and beer(in what order i don’t mind). And all that because I cannot manage my Groove Environment on my WII. Aint life a B…..

Have to go now, kids are in the car and the sun is waiting and i know for sure that Abbott’s Groove team will fix this for me when i get back because they will face the same problems soon !!!!!

For what its worth see you guys in a 1,5 weeks. (feels like forever)

Jeroen 

Comments 5 Comments »

If you are like me and you like to use a smaller, dedicated partition for Windows and the remaining space as a separate data partition, you’ll have a problem with the way Microsoft Office Groove 2007 stores it files. In the previous version (Groove 3.1), you could specify the data directory for Groove’s user and system files during installation. I always changed the location to a different location, because I didn’t want all my workspaces to be stored somewhere under C:\Program Files, so I would set it to something like D:\GrooveData. If I needed to reinstall my laptop later (something that happened a lot during the Vista beta timeframe), I could just format C: and still have my workspaces.

However in Microsoft Office Groove 2007, the location of the files has changed to the local (non-roaming) part of your user profile. Now I already don’t like large profiles, so adding another few gigabytes of Groove 2007 data doesn’t sound appealing to me… So since day 1 of installing Groove 2007 I have been looking for a good way to relocate back to something like D:\GrooveData. Here’s how you can do it:

Important note: you will need Windows Vista for this, because full support for symbolic links exists only in Windows Vista.

The Groove 2007 files are located at this location in your user profile in Vista: C:\Users\<username>\Appdata\Local\Microsoft\Office\Groove
You will need to redirect this folder to another location using a symbolic link. Windows Vista supports creating symbolic links from the commandline, using the mklink command. First however, you will need to move your Groove files to the new location; follow this procedure to do that:

  1. Shutdown Groove! I can’t stress this point enough: don’t try the move the files while Groove is still running because it will corrupt the files and you will lose access to your workspaces. It happened to me and it’s quite frustrating. Exit the Groove application and open Task Manager. GROOVE.EXE should not be in the list; if it still is then kill it by clicking ‘End Process’. If you see GrooveMonitor.exe in the list, end that process as well.
  2. Create a new folder on the disk you want the files to move to. I created a folder called GrooveData on my D: drive
  3. Open Windows Explorer and navigate to C:\Users\<username>\Appdata\Local\Microsoft\Office\Groove
  4. Select the ‘System’ and ‘User’ folder and move them to the directory on the other disk that you created in step 2.
  5. After the files have moved, delete the C:\Users\<username>\Appdata\Local\Microsoft\Office\Groove folder.

Now, open a commandprompt and enter the command:

Mklink /D C:\Users\<username>\Appdata\Local\Microsoft\Office\Groove D:\GrooveData

Replace <username> with your own username and replace D:\GrooveData with the location you use in step 2. Now in Windows Explorer, you should see a Groove folder again under C:\Users\<username>\Appdata\Local\Microsoft\Office. This time however, the folder has a shortcut icon on it, to show it is a redirected folder. The resulting folder should look like the screenshot. You should also see the Groove files again that you moved to the location from step 2.

There’s one caveat: Windows will not apply the parent NTFS permissions to the files and folders that are behind the symbolic link; those files and folders will inherit the permissions from their own parent, which is D:\ in my case. So make sure you explicitly give yourself (or the local ‘Users’ group) full control on D:\GrooveData folder, otherwise Windows User Account Control might prevent you from modifying the contents and Groove 2007 will have a problem with the files.

Now you can start up Groove 2007 again, and it will happily use the files from the redirected location!

Comments 35 Comments »

                                                      

One of the things that keeps coming back in talks with Groove customers is the ability to scan the Groove Encrypted files before the are being opened inside the workspace.

Last week in learned that Microsoft OneCare has this ability to do this. It has it own MSVAPI running that can scan inside the Groove User and Systems directory. If you need this functionality that’s another question because if you have an on access virus scanner it will pick up a the virus file when it’s being opened. But ok, if you want to do virus scanning before it will be in your workspace then it can be done with OneCare.

I also heard some rumors that there a thoughts to use a ForeFront solution for Groove. So I think this will mean that the Relay server may have a ForeFront application running on it.

We just have to wait and see.

 

See Ya

Jeroen Jansen

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