========================================================================
CTO CONNECTION: CHAD DICKERSON                  http://www.infoworld.com
========================================================================
Wednesday, September 22, 2004

REAL-WORLD LAPTOP RECOVERY LESSONS

By Chad Dickerson

Posted September 17, 2004 3:00 PM Pacific Time

When you're 1,500 miles from home, combing the shelves of a Mexican
Costco, and hoping to find Windows XP on the shelves to help get you out
of a jam -- you know you're in trouble. And that's exactly where I found
myself recently when I accompanied our sales staff to Cabo San Lucas for
our annual sales meeting.

ADVERTISEMENT
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
The Enemy in Your In-box:
Perimeter Email Strategies that Will Work
Join experts from Network World, Meta Group and Proofpoint
for this new, on-demand webcast as they identify the top 10
concerns for email managers and action steps to address them.
http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=8DCCB0:2B910B2
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --

My official duties consisted of a presentation about our Test Center and
a presentation about an SFA project I'm leading. My unofficial role was
(surprise) technical support provider for the meeting attendees.
Although the heat, humidity, sun, and water were the main attractions,
being the IT guy I naturally thought about how those conditions might
affect the laptops. I wasn't too worried because our laptops run the
same system image and are backed up nightly. If a laptop falls apart, we
simply re-image the machine and restore the backup via the Internet. The
hotel in Mexico had Wi-Fi in every room, so I was relatively relaxed
about my ability to troubleshoot.

After arriving at the hotel, I headed to the welcome reception and
grabbed a margarita. Before the glass even touched my lips, Paul
Calento, our vice president of marketing, approached me with his Windows
XP laptop and a look on his face that suggested all was not well. I
reluctantly turned my attention away from the crystal blue water in the
distance to the harsh blue on the laptop's screen. It was a registry
corruption problem.

Paul needed a copy of a presentation he had been working on just a
couple of hours before, so our nightly backup would be no help. And,
because the system wouldn't boot, we couldn't get on the network to
restore the backup anyway. Well then, here was an actual, high-stakes
test of our remote laptop-recovery strategy. I handed the unsullied
margarita to Paul, who needed it more than I did at that point, and got
to work.

As you may have guessed, I was thwarted right away: I'd forgotten to
bring a Windows XP install disk with me to Mexico, which is how I ended
up at Costco de Cabo. With XP in hand, the fix would have been easy --
boot the Windows XP disk and repair the registry -- but Costco didn't
have a copy of XP. So I was out of luck with that approach.

Instead, I fired up my own laptop and used Skype to conference with our
IT manager, Kevin Railsback, and discuss alternative approaches. Kevin
suggested downloading Knoppix Linux and building a boot disk, mounting
the NTFS Windows XP drive, and uploading Paul's presentation to a server
somewhere. Earlier in the day, it had taken three hours just to download
the 3.5MB Skype client, so Kevin and I ran some bandwidth tests. We
realized that although my hotel had wireless, it appeared that it was
hooked into a 256Kbps line to the outside world -- not enough bandwidth
to download the 700MB Knoppix Linux distribution. I was stuck again.

Meanwhile, happily, the tequila loosened Paul's memory a bit. It seems
he had burned a copy of the presentation onto a CD after all. So the
problem turned out to be more annoying than catastrophic, but the
lessons are simple, obvious, and critical: Be sure to give all of your
users a boot CD for whatever OS they are using, provide some basic
instructions with the CD, and insist that they take both with them
wherever they go. Also, make no assumptions about throughput if your
hotel offers broadband. It's always best to assume everything will break
and the only tools you will have are the ones in your carry-on baggage.

Chad Dickerson is CTO of InfoWorld.


========================================================================
Now the InfoWorld Test Center reports to you
It's like having your own multimillion dollar IT
test facility, with lab reports in your inbox each
Monday. The weekly "Test Center Report" newsletter
delivers product and technology evaluations, trend
analysis, and advice from the legendary InfoWorld
Test Center. It will save you lots of time - and maybe
money, too. But it's free, fast, and easy to subscribe.
Sign up now at
http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=8DCCAC:2B910B2

ADVERTISE
========================================================================
For information on advertising, contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

UNSUBSCRIBE/MANAGE NEWSLETTERS
========================================================================
To subscribe, unsubscribe or change your e-mail address for any of
InfoWorld's e-mail newsletters, go to:
http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=8DCCAD:2B910B2

To subscribe to InfoWorld.com, or InfoWorld Print, or both, or to renew
or correct a problem with any InfoWorld subscription, go to
http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=8DCCAF:2B910B2

To view InfoWorld's privacy policy, visit:
http://newsletter.infoworld.com/t?ctl=8DCCAE:2B910B2

Copyright (C) 2004 InfoWorld Media Group, 501 Second St., San Francisco,
CA 94107



This message was sent to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to