Sunday, October 27, 2013

VMware vCenter Operations Manager for Horizon View 1.5 Deployment Guide

This guide describes the vCenter Operations Manager for Horizon View monitoring solution and how to use it, including useful lab exercises. It includes deployment scenarios for administrators planning to expand their use of vCenter Operations Manager Enterprise to manage Horizon View desktops. This document complements related documents, such as the vCenter Operations Manager for Horizon View Administration and Installation guides. This deployment guide is not, however, a reference architecture guide or a recommendation for third- party products.

This document is designed for information technology professionals, system administrators, and help desk personnel who are responsible for deploying Horizon View virtual desktops in their companies, and who want to expand the use and capacity of their VMware vCenter Operations Manager platform.

Download: VMware vCenter Operations Manager for Horizon View 1.5 Deployment Guide

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Mark Your Calendars – VMware’s Online Forum is Back by Popular Demand

Join VMware and industry experts on October 22 from 8:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. PT, for a free online event to gain insights on how to simplify your IT infrastructure and expand your existing virtualized environment. No matter where you are in your IT journey, bring your questions about virtualization, cloud computing options, and the software-defined data center to chat live with other small and mid-market business IT pros.

Whether you're looking to troubleshoot specific issues, or just looking for more information on how to move your IT infrastructure forward, the Online Forum offers many ways to find solutions to complex IT problems without leaving your office:

Attend live breakout sessions, technical deep dives and discussions to expand your IT knowledge base.Network with VMware experts and other IT pros to hear how your peers are approaching their organizations' IT challenges.Learn about the software-defined data center, and new VMware products and offerings from VMware subject experts.Test out VMware products with no downloading required in our Hands-on Labs. Get a lab up and running in minutes with full technical capabilities, without installing anything new on your existing hardware.Chat live with VMware experts who can answer your questions while you navigate in your online lab.

You have the chance to explore many tracks within the Online Forum, including:

vSphere and vCloud SuiteVirtualization ManagementVirtualization 101Cloud ManagementEnd User ComputingBusiness Continuity/Disaster RecoveryPublic and Hybrid CloudNetworking and StorageVirtualizing ApplicationsTier 1 Applications

Register for the event here and you'll have a chance to win 1 of 3 prizes –

First Prize: Nikon D3100 Digital SLR CameraSecond Prize: iPad MiniThird Prize: Bose-Mini Bluetooth speakers

Also, make sure to earn CloudCred points for the Online VMware Forum competition for additional prize opportunities (contest task 867).

This is one of those Online Forum opportunities that is a true investment of time toward an easier, more agile, datacenter

We encourage you to attend, and invite your fellow IT pros and we'll see you in the Online Forum!

VMware's Small and Mid-Market Business Dedicated Team

Follow VMware SMB on Facebook, Twitter, Spiceworks and Google+ for more blog posts, conversation with your peers, and additional insights on IT issues facing small to midmarket businesses.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

vCAP5-DCD: FAIL– Here is what I learnt today

All I have to say is “Wow, that's not even close to what I was expecting!

First off, time is a real factor:

As I was reading other peoples blogs, they kept mentioning that they finished with only 2 minutes left I just kept thinking to myself I write fast (I do most exams in sub 30 minutes) so this won’t be a problem for me.

I clicked finish with 6 minutes left, and I watched the clock like a hawk once I only had 2 hours remaining and was less than 1/3 done (not a great feeling).

There are 3 Types of Questions:

I knew about the regular pick one / two type of questions and the design style questions but I was quite surprised when I got my first of 17 scenario type questions.  These are drag and drop style where there is a list on the left you have to match up with things on the right based on a scenario / diagram given to you, sounds simple right… wrong!

I found some of these to be harder than the design questions.

What makes these so tough was some times it a 1 to 1 match, some time its a 1 to many match and sometimes you don't have to match everything.  The harder of these seemed to be asking 6 – 8 separate questions all related to the same scenario.

Design questions take a long time:

I spent well over 20 minutes on most of the design questions, and get ready to re-do some of them more than once. 

After spending about 15 minutes on my second design question, I got an adobe error message on my screen and the design engine froze.  I clicked “no” to stopping the script then finally had to call the admin in to reboot my PC.  This ate up about 4 minutes of my time, but when the PC came back up, I had to start the question over again.

On another question, after spending a good 20 minutes on it, I noticed one line that changed the design.  I started trying to drag things to the garbage can, but some of the items “stuck” together so I had to hit start again and spent another 10 minutes re-creating the design.

Some VERY technical questions:

I didn't expect to see anything uber technical on this exam, but there were a few questions that dealt with advanced options / configuration settings.

So what now:

I have to wait 14 days to re-take this exam, so for the next 14 days I will be focusing on the Forbes & Scott’s Design Guide and the Clustering Deepdive by Duncan and Frank along with reading some of the more technical readings outlined on the exam Blueprint.

I won’t be spending anymore time with the “Official” Certification Guide, which should be called Guideline instead.  I put too much faith into this guide and I paid the price for it.  It does cover all of the topics on the exam, but doesn't have enough of the technical details to help you answer most of the exam questions.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

vCAP5-DCD Study Review

As I site here on the eve of my vCAP5-DCD exam, I am looking back over all the notes and ideas I had scribbled down at the beginning of my studies and realize that it has been quite a journey to get me to where I (hopefully) am prepared to write a design exam.

One thing I would like to note is the incredible job people in the community have done mapping topics and information to the objectives on the blue print. As I review some of these study guides and blogs I am astounded that people were able to pull such abstract concepts from the readings and place them, some what neatly, under each of the objectives.  Without the community, I’m not sure I would of been able to align all the qualities, factors, design thoughts and considerations into the knowledge that will be tested tomorrow on the exam.

My main source of study has been the following:

Big thanks to everyone mentioned above, and everyone who has ever blogged or shared their experience with the vCAP-DCD exam, if I pass I owe it all to you.

Wish me luck,