You
might not remember, but to finish out 2014 I submitted three
specific technologies that
will be important to the IT career in 2015. With 2015 almost half
over, a thousand new product announcements and alignments, and a
couple big Microsoft conferences under our belts, I thought it would
be good to see how those I submitted are holding up. Has anything
changed or replaced my submissions, or only served to solidify my
suggestions?
PowerShell
There's
a seemingly never ending supply of content, both online and offline
in articles and code, for PowerShell. PowerShell can do massive,
complex tasks in a few lines of code. But, there are also those that
developed thousands of lines of code, spending weeks or months to
complete. PowerShell fits any scenario.
But,
is PowerShell gasping for air? Not on your life. New announcements
around things like Nano Server, Office
365 integrations,
SharePoint, Azure, and System Center show that PowerShell is only
becoming even more important and more deeply integrated with all the
products you are required to manage. In many cases, like with Nano
Server (the
headless server option for the forthcoming Windows Server 2016),
Microsoft opts to infuse PowerShell management first and deliver a
GUI second.
Bottom
Line: This
prognostication holds true.
Microsoft Intune
Microsoft
Intune, of course, is Microsoft's Cloud-based management tool for PCs
and devices for all the major platforms (OSX, iOS, Android, Windows,
Windows Phone). Each month the software company releases updates to
the service that extend its capabilities and improve its management
abilities. Microsoft is vested in being a leader in this space. It
already owns the market for on-premises management with System Center
Configuration Manager (ConfigMgr), and when ConfigMgr 2016 releases
this year, there will be even bigger integrations with Intune. Top
that off with a Windows 10 release which will have instant
connections to Intune built in and Intune is not going away anytime
soon. In fact, the more you know about Microsoft Intune, the better
prepared you'll be as a technologist looking to extend a career in
IT.
Now,
look back over the past few months of announcements and realize that
there's also a strong push to infuse Intune features into Office 365
for document protection and application management and you have a
combination that you can't ignore.
Hybrid Cloud
Hybrid
Cloud is the catchall term for integrating your on-premises
datacenter with a hosted datacenter, but only where it makes sense.
Hybrid Cloud gives customers choices, whereas a Public Cloud is an
all-or-nothing scenario. You use as little or as much as you need,
and pay as you go. And, you get to decide what happens with your
company's data. It's all completely under your control and a great
way to test the waters to see if value exists.
There's
a lot of noise about Hybrid Cloud, with many vendors are now rushing
to join the band through acquisitions and revamped services. Noisy
technologies generally mean you can ignore them, writing them off as
marketing fluff.
But,
what's the truth?
When
I wrote my original article in December, the onramp for the Hybrid
Cloud was more difficult. But, if you've been following along,
vendors like Amazon and Microsoft have worked to make it extremely
easy. Google seems to have been left in the dust by the Big
Two, but is still in the game somewhat.
Take
Microsoft as the example. SQL Server 2016 will release with deep
threads directly into Azure services. Data will be "always
encrypted," databases will be able to be "stretched"
automatically between on-premises and Azure, it will provide
real-time operational analytics for both on-premises and Azure
storage, and on-premises and Azure will be managed through a single
console (single pane of glass). Additionally, Microsoft will provide…
- Azure SQL Data Warehouse. Supports petabytes of data storage which can scale as necessary to save money on storage costs and produce valuable data analytics for insight towards business decisions.
- Azure SQL Data elastic database pools. Allows developers and ISVs to manage the performance, scale and cost across a larger number of databases as a single pool of capacity.
Bottom
Line: My
cognitive skills know no bounds.
Get on Board
So,
my reasoning was sound. If you invest time in learning PowerShell,
Microsoft Intune, and Hybrid Cloud this year, you'll be strategically
aligned for a long life in IT. Learning on your own can be tough, and
there are many ways to accumulate good information.
If
you attended Microsoft Ignite this year you may have left with a head
full of knowledge about Microsoft's future product line, but not much
else. Getting deep learning and technical knowledge was tough due to
over-booked session rooms, a massive 23,000 in attendance leaving
little opportunity for networking, and staged community events with
the masses strewn across downtown Chicago. Ignite was a great event
for planning. Microsoft successfully delivered its future and the
future we'll need to heed. But, now it's time to dig deeper, learn
about these upcoming technologies, but at the same time resolve the
burning issues that exist today.
IT/Dev
Connections 2015 is just around the corner. It's not a massive event
like Ignite, but tailored to give you the ability to get the most
value from a week's worth of in-depth training. It's a conference,
for sure, but engineered to feel more like a User Group meeting where
you have all the time in the world to ask questions, get answers, and
solve your most difficult problems. If you take a look at the session
catalog you'll
clearly see that we have you covered with expert advice from your
peers. PowerShell, Microsoft Intune, Hybrid Cloud, and more – we
have you covered. These aren't high-level overviews or roadmap
announcements, but each session is a deep-dive learning event. And,
you can stick around after each session to ask questions directly to
the speakers instead of feeling like the event is being run by
stopwatch and you have to rush to get a seat in the next session.
It's a stress-free learning opportunity. You are in control.
Recently,
I wrote up a brief on what IT/Dev Connections is intended to provide.
InIT/Dev
Connections 2015: The Right-sized, Highly Engaged, Deeply Personal,
IT Technology Conference,
you'll read how we've taken the best pieces of events like this and
created something extremely worthwhile. A couple years back we took
attendee feedback and completely revamped the event and we've
improved it each year since then. This year we've even added a new
component called Executive Insights. Executive Insights is a 2-day
track (in the middle of the IT/Dev Connections week) designed
specifically for executives to understand the technologies you are
learning about. Our intent with this is to help build a strong
relationship bridge between IT and decision makers to help ensure a
frictionless environment. The integration of the two events is a
first. So, if you like your boss, bring him/her along to enjoy Vegas
and learn something to boot. If you don't like your boss, bring them
anyway. We'll teach them how to be kinder technology citizens.
We
hope you'll join us.
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