Christoph Wilfert, General Manager, US Midmarket Business, Microsoft
Staying safe and secure
Dear Subscriber,
Nobody likes feeling insecure, but increasing reliance on computer systems can be unsettling to those who feel they no longer have control over all their responsibilities. This month's issue of Momentum should provide some reassurance.

From Web security, to messaging, to desktops, we've brought advice aplenty on how to bolster your defenses. Plus, find out about new security features in SQL Server 2008 that ease the defense burden.

Best Regards,
Christoph Wilfert
General Manager, US Midmarket Business
Microsoft
Featured articles
Web 2.0 brings new security challenges
Web 2.0 brings new security challenges
As companies rush to embrace the interactive and rich applications of Web 2.0, many of them are neglecting security. Here's how to make sure you're protected.
3 steps to assess and protect your most sensitive data
3 steps to assess and protect your most sensitive data
Few companies can afford to protect all data equally. A risk assessment exercise helps you identify your most sensitive information and keep it safe.
Technology at work
Easier security is central to database upgrade
Easier security is central to database upgrade
Database administrators can institute more effective practices using the new features in SQL Server 2008.
How Microsoft Forefront secures messaging and collaboration servers
How Microsoft Forefront secures messaging and collaboration servers
Use these server security tools to protect the hub servers that manage communication capabilities across your company.
8 best practices for proactive security
8 best practices for proactive security
Prepare for security risks and threats before they cause problems.
Test your defenses with the Microsoft Security Assessment Tool
Test your defenses with the Microsoft Security Assessment Tool
Most companies face security vulnerabilities that don't appear on the radar screen. The Microsoft Security Assessment Tool can help you find them.
Tough times increase supply chain fraud risks
Tough times increase supply chain fraud risks
Manufacturers can better protect goods by instituting more effective practices.
PCI data protection mandates expanding
PCI data protection mandates expanding
The PCI Security Standards Council hopes that bringing industry standards under a single umbrella will help plug merchant data security gaps.
SQL Server is a big event at ServiceU
SQL Server is a big event at ServiceU
A SaaS provider's event management business has grown nationwide and internationally, building on iterations of Microsoft's enterprise data platform.
Spotlight
Visualizing a better lifeVisualizing a better life

By Vicki Powers

Gary Strawn worked his days and nights as a successful computer game programmer in California. One day he wrote, "I quit," on a Post-It note and handed it to his boss. He was burned out and tired of sitting at a computer all day. To everyone's surprise, he moved his family to Hawaii to start his own business—as a Kona coffee farmer.

Not that this life is easier, it's just different. His days now revolve around the coffee process: plant, prune, pick, dry, store, mill, roast, package, and ship. Although his two daughters weren't thrilled to leave behind their friends in Los Angeles, not many suburban kids get to have pet goats, chickens, and rabbits.

With coffee season lasting from August to March, there isn't much off-season. Strawn's company, Kona Earth, hires a crew for most of the picking and some of the pruning, but he and his family do most everything else. Each day is different from the next. It might involve spreading thousands of pounds of fertilizer on the fields at five different intervals throughout the year. Or maintenance chores like fixing the electric fence, the tractor, or the leaky tool shed. Other chores involve picking avocados or macadamia nuts—or caring for 500 baby coffee trees that need to be weeded, fertilized, watered, and protected from the goats. Strawn's wife also home-schools their daughters, ages 9 and 13, during the day.

Although Strawn uses his computer far less than he used to, he still relies on Microsoft products to help him run his business, including an Excel spreadsheet created by a college professor at University of Hawaii that shows the cost of fertilizer, irrigation, weed control, labor, equipment maintenance, taxes, and lots of other expenses new farmers tend to overlook. Strawn also used Visual Studio to design his coffee business Web site, www.KonaEarth.com, just like in his computer programmer days.

"I'm convinced that I will always use Visual Studio, even if I never compile code again," Strawn says. "I enjoy drinking coffee, but I enjoy selling it even more. Without my Web site I couldn't sell my coffee."

Strawn admits farming isn't easy. There's an endless stream of difficult work and not always much money, but on the plus side he gets to be his own boss, so overall he's quite happy with his decision.

"Seeing a game I made on the shelves was thrilling, but hearing people rave about coffee I grew is even more thrilling,' Strawn says.

Vicki Powers is a regular contributor to Momentum ,the Midsize Business Center newsletter.
Subscribe!Subscribe!
Insights and practical technology success stories
Tips and techniques to get more out of your technology
Select from IT Manager or Business Leader versions
Discover upcoming events, free webcasts, and more
Windows Vista Application Compatibility Engagement
ArchivesArchives
Previous Issues of Momentum:

We're virtually there
August, 2008

Taking control of costs
July, 2008

Dynamic work style
June, 2008

Virtual benefits
May, 2008

Pressing issues
April, 2008

How secure can you be?
March, 2008