John Pattison

John R. Pattison is a Principal Consultant at Info et Cetera Consulting, based out of Worcester, Massachusetts. John focuses on developing custom line-of-business systems and leveraging cutting-edge technology as an enabler for smaller companies to achieve their business objectives and effectively compete against larger businesses in their market space. John is an MCPD, MCSD, MCDBA, and MCAD, and holds a BS from Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Management Information Systems.


Posts by John Pattison

Windows 7 Beta: Adding and removing programs

I was playing with the Windows 7 beta today and made an interesting observation…  Microsoft has made it easier to find where you remove programs!

First, a bit of background…  In Windows XP and before, we used to have “Add/Remove Programs.”  Now that frustrated people, because they said “Who ever uses that to add a program?”  Of course, the IT Pros out there said “Hey, that’s where we can publish programs using Group Policy,” which was followed by a collective “Huh?” from everyone else.  …  So in Windows Vista, they renamed that to “Programs and Features.”  Now that made a lot More >

Hilarious video – Macbook Wheel

The Onion never fails to disappoint me.  To coincide with MacWorld, they have a great parody video out about the “Macbook Wheel”.

Apple Introduces Revolutionary New Laptop With No Keyboard

Why my Zune did not have a happy New Years Eve

So yesterday, on December 31, 2008, everyone with one of the original 30GB Zunes (I have two) found their precious portable media players frozen at a startup screen.  Of course, in today’s blogging world, this hit the news quickly and Microsoft found themselves swamped with support calls and demands to fix the problem (wouldn’t that be a great way to wake up?).

This morning, I saw that a user over at ZuneBoards.com has found the bug in a reverse-engineered version of the Zune 30 source code.  This is just such a classic programming “oops” that I had to post it for other More >

Some Good Windows Azure Videos

Some good videos came out today about Windows Azure.  I’m linking them here as a good single-page way to get a quick (haha… ok, several hours) understanding of what Azure is all about.

Program Manager Steve Marx gives a great 35 minute overview of what Windows Azure means for developers Steve Marx: Windows Azure for Developers

Next on the list, is a 40-minute video of Manuvir Das, Director in the Windows Azure team introducing Windows Azure.  Lots of good architecture stuff in this video. Manuvir Das: Introducing Windows Azure

Diving a bit into more of the individual Azure services, Technical Fellow John Shewchuk More >

What I’ll Be Working on for the Next Few Years

No, I’m not going to become a one-project guy.  That would just be too easy.  Rather, here’s the technology stack that I’ll be working on for the next few years — announced at the Microsoft PDC today — the Windows Azure Services Platform.

Learn more:  http://www.azure.com

Here a diagram from the PDC of Microsoft’s broad online platform vision:

Mary Jo Foley has a nice overview about the Azure Services Platform over at ZDNet

Emergency Windows Patch

I’ve spent a lot of time over the past 27 hours notifying clients about the emergency Windows patch released yesterday afternoon, and also installing that patch on servers and workstations.  So I’m just now getting a chance to post the information here, to my blog.  (Isn’t that a great diagram to the right?  No, I didn’t make that.)

 

The gist

  • This is a major vulnerability affecting the “Server” service that is part of Windows 2000/XP/2003/Vista/2008.
  • The problem is not as critical in Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008, as those operating systems have better built in protections in place.  These systems should still More >

Microsoft Image Tools

There have been a lot of image tools coming out of Microsoft recently, so I figured it would be helpful for a lot of people to present all of these options in a single place.

 

Image Composite Editor – from Microsoft Research

Let’s start with Microsoft Image Composite Editor.  This is the most recent tool that I have learned about.  It comes out of Microsoft Research’s Interactive Visual Media Group and offers some of the most complex and accurate stitching algorithms to put multiple pictures, all taken from a single point of view, into a single image.  Now what’s really neat is that More >