Author's posts
Jul 05 2016
Introducing the Top vBlog 2016 virtual coin
Once again this year I commissioned a graphic designer to create a counterpart to the physical coin that the Top 50 vBlogs will receive courtesy of VMTurbo. The graphic can be used by any blogger that made the Top 50 and wants to display that accomplishment on their website. Last year I wasn’t that happy with the design, I leverage Fiverr which is a huge community of freelance designers and the one I picked last year wasn’t very creative. I was trying to replicate the look of the physical coin in a design that has a metallic look to it and the designer last year didn’t seem to be able to pull that off. This year I spent more time hunting down a better designer and the one I picked got the design spot on the first try.
So below are the finished virtual coins:
You can download the hi-res images here and re-size them to whatever works for your blog:
Jul 01 2016
Top vBlog 2016 Full Results
So the voting has ended, the results have been tabulated and here they are. There were 83 new blogs on the ballot this year, 12 new blogs made the Top 50 and and 7 new blogs made it into the Top 25. One blog fell out of the top 10 this year and the competition for the #1 spot was fierce. This year there was over 1600 votes compared to around 2200 last year. You can read more stats about this years voting here. Voters were asked to pick their top 12 favorite blogs and them rank them from 1 to 12. The votes are weighted so a #1 vote is worth 12 points, a #2 vote is worth 11 points all the way down to a #12 vote being worth 1 point. The total points for each blog were added up to determine the results.
If you missed the live results show be sure and watch the replay of the special Google Hangout results show that we recorded with John Troyer and Eric Wright from Turbonomic as we count up the Top 25 results with lots of color commentary. The vLaunchpad and Planet vSphere-land will be updated soon to reflect the new voting results. Thank you everyone who voted and congratulations to the bloggers that made the Top 25. With so many bloggers out there its a tough scene but I seriously encourage you all to keep at it, the longer you stick with it, the more people notice and will reward you with their vote. You guys are all winners, I know how hard it can be to find the time to blog but do know that your efforts are appreciated and your unselfish dedication makes a difference to a great many of people.
This year any blogger that made the Top 50 will get a special 2″ commemorative coin courtesy of Turbonomic, I’ll have a form where you can enter your shipping details up in a few days, those of you that will be at the Indy VMUG or VMworld let me know and I will deliver it to you there. Bloggers who make the Top 10 will get a gold coin, 11-25 a silver coin and 26-50 a copper coin. I’ll also be coming up with a new graphic that you can display on your website if you made the Top 50.
Next year I’m looking to change this process dramatically and make the public voting be a part of an overall bigger method of determining the top bloggers, more on that later. I will also be starting a new vBlogger Spotlight series soon that is geared towards highlighting some of the lesser known bloggers outside of the top 25, if you are interested in being one of those bloggers let me know.
Special thanks to Turbonomic for sponsoring this year and making the giveaways possible.
Here are the overall voting results…
And here are the Category voting results…
Favorite Storage Blog | Votes |
---|---|
Cormac Hogan | 299 |
CloudXC (Josh Odgers) | 118 |
Virtual Geek (Chad Sakac) | 107 |
Punching Clouds (Rawlinson) | 84 |
3PAR Dude (Richard Arnold) | 72 |
My Virtual Cloud (Andre Leibovici) | 68 |
Cody Hosterman | 54 |
Around the Storage Block (Calvin Zito) | 47 |
The Storage Architect (Chris Evans) | 46 |
Pure Storage Guy | 45 |
StorageIO | 38 |
VM Storage Guy (Stefan Renner) | 35 |
Why Is the Internet Broken (Justin Parisi) | 34 |
Stephen Foskett, Pack Rat | 33 |
Paul Meehan | 26 |
vTricks (Patrick Schulz) | 26 |
Ruptured Monkey (Nigel Poulton) | 22 |
Vipin V.K. | 22 |
Penguinpunk.net | 21 |
GeekFluent (Dave Henry) | 20 |
Great White Technologies (Dave Morera) | 17 |
This is Hyper-Awesome (G. Chapman) | 16 |
Pragmatic IO (Brett Sinclair) | 15 |
Hus Blog | 6 |
Favorite Scripting Blog | Votes |
Virtually Ghetto (William Lam) | 395 |
Virtu-al (Alan Renouf) | 176 |
Wahl Network (Chris Wahl) | 158 |
vCO Team | 81 |
Jonathan Medds Blog | 53 |
That Could Be A Problem (Kyle Ruddy) | 53 |
DBigCloud (Daniel Romero Sanchez) | 52 |
Double Cloud (Steve Jin) | 49 |
My Cloud Revolution (Markus Kraus) | 43 |
Orchestration.io (Chris Green) | 42 |
Steven Kang | 42 |
Michael Ryom | 39 |
vLenzker (Fabian Lenz) | 36 |
Favorite Podcast | Votes |
vBrownBag (Cody Bunch) | 245 |
Geek Whispers (Troyer/Brender/Lewis) | 120 |
Datanauts Podcast (Ethan Banks & Chris Wahl) | 106 |
Nutanix .Next Community Podcast (Angelo Luciani) | 101 |
VMware Communities Roundtable (Various) | 71 |
In Tech We Trust Podcast (Farley/Poulton/Vanover/Chapman/Malhoit) | 62 |
StorageIO | 60 |
Veeam Community Podcast (R. Vanover) | 60 |
Virtually Speaking (J. Nicholson/P. Fletcher) | 58 |
Virtualization Security (Edward Haletky) | 49 |
GC On Demand (Eric Wright/VMTurbo) | 46 |
vChat (Siebert/Seagrave/Davis) | 43 |
vSoup (Dearden/Mohn) | 37 |
The CloudCast (A. Delp & B. Gracely) | 35 |
Tech On Tap (NetApp/Justin Parisi) | 31 |
Favorite New Blog | Votes |
Matt That IT Guy (Matt Crape) | 119 |
Rays Virtual Exchange (Ray Hassan) | 111 |
VM Storage Guy (Stefan Renner) | 111 |
vTimD (Tim Davis) | 103 |
VirtualXpress (Prashant Rangi) | 77 |
vMBaggum (Marco van Baggum) | 76 |
vLenzker (Fabian Lenz) | 75 |
Rob Beekmans | 72 |
Lets Virtualize (Kanishk Sethi) | 63 |
Learning to Virtualize (Gorka Izquierdo) | 56 |
VMware Guruz (Sateesh Thupakula) | 56 |
Homelaber Brasil (Valdecir Carvalho) | 50 |
vAddicted (Raffaello Poltronieri) | 47 |
vDelboys View (Dale Carter) | 47 |
Inspired By Digital Tech (S. Kaushik) | 36 |
vRevealed (Amit Rathod) | 31 |
Favorite Independent Blogger | Votes |
ESX Virtualization (Vladan Seget) | 115 |
VCDX133 (Rene Van Den Bedem) | 96 |
NTPro.nl (Eric Sloof) | 82 |
The IT Hollow (Eric Shanks) | 67 |
CloudFix (Various) | 44 |
vNinja (Christian Mohn) | 44 |
Virtualization is Life! (Anthony Spiteri) | 43 |
3PAR Dude (Richard Arnold) | 40 |
Come Lo Feci (Pietro Aiolfi) | 38 |
StorageIO | 37 |
VM Blog (David Marshall) | 28 |
NoLabNoParty (Paolo Valsecchi) | 25 |
ITQ Blog | 24 |
WoodITWork (Julian Wood) | 22 |
mwpreston dot net (Mike Preston) | 21 |
Mike Tabor | 20 |
Viktorious.nl (Viktor van den Berg) | 20 |
Virtual Patel (Manish Patel) | 20 |
VMware TV (Cahit YOLACAN) | 19 |
doOdzZZs Notes (Abdullah Abdullah) | 18 |
My VMworld (Noham Medyouni) | 18 |
Running-System (Andreas Lesslhumer) | 18 |
vLenzker (Fabian Lenz) | 18 |
VMware Front Experience (A. Peetz) | 18 |
DBigCloud (Daniel Romero Sanchez) | 17 |
Myles Gray | 17 |
Settlersoman (Mariusz Kaczorek) | 17 |
Matt That IT Guy (Matt Crape) | 16 |
Rob Beekmans | 16 |
VMware & Veeam Blog (Karel Novak) | 16 |
GeekFluent (Dave Henry) | 15 |
Pragmatic IO (Brett Sinclair) | 15 |
Tims IT Blog (Tim Smith) | 15 |
The vCenterNerd (Nigel Hickey) | 14 |
Marius Sandbu IT blog | 13 |
Great White Technologies (Dave Morera) | 12 |
Lets Virtualize (Kanishk Sethi) | 12 |
ITPath (Paolo Torresani) | 11 |
vAddicted (Raffaello Poltronieri) | 11 |
Michael Ryom | 10 |
The Virtual Horizon (Sean Massey) | 10 |
vBlog.io (Cedric Quillevere) | 10 |
Vipin V.K. | 10 |
Federico Cocinalli | 8 |
ukotic.net (Mark Ukotic) | 8 |
vCloudnine (Patrick Terlisten) | 8 |
Virtualization Blog (Shabbir Ahmed) | 8 |
Homelaber Brasil (Valdecir Carvalho) | 7 |
Virtually An Admin (Jonathan Stewart) | 7 |
VMFocus (Craig Kilborn) | 7 |
RNelson0 (Rob Nelson) | 6 |
Port115 (Carel Maritz) | 5 |
vMBaggum (Marco van Baggum) | 5 |
Inspired By Digital Tech (S. Kaushik) | 3 |
Learning to Virtualize (Gorka Izquierdo) | 1 |
Virtualisatieadvies (Eelco de Boer) | 1 |
Favorite VDI Blog | Votes |
Brian Madden | 316 |
The Virtual Horizon (Sean Massey) | 171 |
My Virtual Vision (Kees Baggerman) | 156 |
Virtualize Tips (Brian Suhr) | 156 |
vHojan (Johan van Amersfoort) | 87 |
Rob Beekmans | 84 |
Marius Sandbu IT blog | 81 |
Come Lo Feci (Pietro Aiolfi) | 72 |
vDelboys View (Dale Carter) | 45 |
Favorite News/Information Website | Votes |
The Register (Various) | 249 |
vSphere-land (Eric Siebert) | 209 |
CRN (Various) | 106 |
Petri IT Knowledgebase (Various) | 96 |
VM Blog (David Marshall) | 78 |
Virtualization.Info (Various) | 60 |
InfoWorld (Various) | 57 |
Tech Target | 53 |
Virtualization Admin (Various) | 52 |
Cloud Cow (Various) | 51 |
Virtualization Software (Davis/Lowe) | 46 |
Silicon Angle (Various) | 45 |
Virtualization Review (Various) | 38 |
Network World (Various) | 32 |
The Virtualization Practice (Various) | 32 |
Jun 30 2016
Announcing Top vBlog 2016 Category winners!
Below are the winners of the individual voting categories for Top vBlog 2016, see my previous post for the Top 25 announcement. Full results coming soon!
Jun 30 2016
Announcing the Top vBlog 2016 results
Congrats to all! I will be publishing the category winners later today and the full results very soon. If you haven’t watched the results show you can watch it here.
Jun 27 2016
Watch the Top vBlog 2016 Results Show Live!
Join myself along with special guests Eric Wright from Turbonomic and John Troyer from TechReckoning as we countdown the top 25 bloggers based on the results from my annual VMware/virtualization blog survey. This event will be broadcast live via Google Hangouts at 10:30am PST on Thursday June 30th right here on vSphere-land.com so bookmark this page, get the popcorn ready and come back when it starts. If you want to tweet about this event please use the hashtag #TopvBlog2016. Alternatively you can view it direct on YouTube at this link. And in case you missed it here’s some statistics on this year’s voting to get you ready for the results.
Of course all this wouldn’t be possible without the support of our official sponsor of Top vBlog 2016:
Jun 23 2016
All VMworld 2015 session recordings now available to the general public
I was looking through the 2015 VMworld session recordings looking for a particular session on VVols and backups and discovered that I no longer had to log into my account as a VMworld attendee to view the sessions. VMware always limits the VMworld session recordings to paid attendees except for some select sessions that they release on YouTube shortly after the event. Typically at some point VMware will lift the restrictions so anyone can view the sessions right before the next year’s VMworld. Not sure when they did that this year but it looks like anyone can access last years sessions right now. So head on over to the VMworld 2015 session page and enjoy the hours and hours of great content that exists there.
Jun 23 2016
The biggest VMUG UserCon in the US is coming soon
If you were asked what the largest VMUG UserCon event in the US was and the 2nd largest in the world would you have guessed Indianapolis, IN? Probably not. I was always curious as to why that was, you would expect much bigger cities like Chicago, Atlanta, Dallas and Boston to be the biggest but the fact is Indianapolis has consistently had the highest attendance of any VMUG event in the US and the 2nd highest in the world. Indy regularly draws around 900 attendees, the next biggest cities in the US are Chicago (800), Atlanta (700), Kansas City (700) and Charlotte (700). The largest VMUG in the world is in the Netherlands with around 950 attendees.
So why is Indy so well attended? After attending several past VMUGs in Indy and talking to attendees I found out that where Indy is located pulls from several states (IL, IN, KY, OH, MI) and well populated areas including Chicago, Cincinnati and Louisville. This centralized location draws people from all over and is what drives the attendance so high at Indy. I’ve always enjoyed going to the Indy VMUG and will be back again this year. Indy is a very laid back city and the people there are very friendly, it still maintains that Midwest small town feel despite having a population of close to a million people. The airport is easy to navigate and not overly crowded, I was surprised at how early all the restaurants and shops shut down in the airport, usually around 8pm.
So if you are attending the Indy VMUG on 7/20 stop by the HPE booth and say hi, we have a cool drone that we’ll be giving away, I’ll also be doing a session on VVols at 11:00am. I expect other bloggers and community people will be there as well from the agenda I can see that Chris Wahl, Sean Massey, Gina Rosenthal, Eric Shanks, Paul Woodward will be there and I suspect you will see a few more.
Jun 22 2016
VMworld 2016 party band announced and once again I’m disappointed
Just noticed that VMware announced the band without any fanfare this year and it’s Fall Out Boy along with some indie electro band called Capital Cities.
Once again I’m disappointed in the band selection but I’ve gotten used to not expecting anything great as not getting more popular bands has seemed to be the trend the past few years. I did a post last year on this which listed all the bands across the years that have played at VMworld along with the cost to hire them along with a comparison to bands at other vendor conferences (EMC, Oracle, Cisco, etc.). Here’s the band breakdown at VMworld over the years along with the cost to hire each band:
- 2007 – Smash Mouth – $40K – $60K
- 2008 – DJ & Tainted Love (cover band) – probably not a heck of a lot
- 2009 – Foreigner – $40K – $50K
- 2010 – INXS – ? (prob under $100K)
- 2011 – Killers – $500K
- 2012 – Jon Bon Jovi & the Kings of Suburbia – $850K
- 2013 – Train and Imagine Dragons – Train – $200K-$300K, Imagine Dragons – $400K – $600K
- 2014 – The Black Keys – $975K
- 2015 – Neon Trees and Alabama Shakes – Neon Trees – $40K – $45K, Alabama Shakes – $90K – $125K
- 2016 – Fall Out Boy – $100K – $150K, Capital Cities – $40K – $60K
The cost of the bands this year is on par with last year and in case you were wondering here are some comparisons of who else they could of selected with a roughly $200K band budget.
- 38 Special – $35K – $45K
- Blues Traveler – $40K – $40K
- Cheap Trick – $45K – $70K
- Creed – $100K
- Five Finger Death Punch – $50K – $75K
- Jefferson Starship $15K – $25K
- Paramore – $125K – $175K
- Pharrell Williams – $125K – $175K
- Steve Miller Band– $100K – $200K
- Slash – $45K – $65K
Well at least I know the band early this year as I will probably leave Wed. evening and skip the party. If you’re around and not thrilled about the band choice there is always the UNParty you could go to instead, or since you’re in Vegas there is plenty of other things to do.