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Sandia’s Vista Deployment. What we’ve learned and where we are today. Sandia is a multiprogram laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, a Lockheed Martin Company, for the United States Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.
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Sandia’s Vista Deployment • What we’ve learned • and • where we are today Sandia is a multiprogram laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, a Lockheed Martin Company,for the United States Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.
IT Staff Migration • Remained on schedule • Majority of IT staff converted to Vista by October 08 • Helped us identify many potential issues customers would see (incorporated into training) • Presented a number of challenges, including ensuring we had working versions of the tools they required for they day to day tasks • Various issues needed to be addressed with remote assistance.
Training • Feedback from IT staff and early pilot users integrated into training • Initial training was self paced, introducing and explaining the various changes with Vista and Office 2007 • Training videos introduced later
Deployment Tools • Tools available on schedule • Have refined the tools and images • Worked around various driver issues • Additional software installs to allow for more complete builds
Application Compatibility • Some application compatibility issues did show up, though not as many as expected. Unfortunately there were some corporate application issues that forced the change of our schedule • VPN • Entrust • Credant • IE7 • Oracle
FDCC/Administrative Rights • Administrative rights removal was the most contentious issue with end users • Challenges with this change causeddelays and ultimately was excluded as part of deployment plans due to lack of production solutions for certain capabilities that were lost. • Ability to install software • Lack of scalable and manageable solution for users that required admin right • FDCC implementation introduced various challenges, and required that some variances be requested. • Mobility center • Trusted sites in IE7 • Unix/Samba server connectivity
Communication • Communication with some developers was successful • End user communication was successful and allowed for feedback, but not done with as much notice as we’d planned • Had to be done more than once due to schedule changes. • FAQ site created and updated with new user questions
Where We Are Now • Vista now the default operating system for all new systems and rebuilds if hardware supported • Not required, so users can still have XP if there are software or hardware compatibility issues • No planned deployment to existing users. • Only installed on machines if OEM supports system with Vista. Drivers must be available.
Windows 7 Working from Gartner recommendations
Windows 7 • Current work on application compatibility and hardware support should make migration to Windows 7 easier • Our current plans allow us to be on a mainstream supported OS while we wait for Windows 7 to be released and stable. • Vista SP2 gives us some of the kernel changes from Windows 7
Questions ? Roman Selever rselev@sandia.gov 505-844-4787