Does anyone still use Solaris?

Apache Foundation does, but then, they got a free box. I recently got a tour of Stanford’s data center, and was interested to see that they are moving off of Sun platforms for a variety of reasons: cost, lack of timely support from their Sun reps, Linux is almost as good, and did I mention cost?

I went to Stanford grad engineering school back in the dawn of the personal computing era in year [mumble]. Back then if I could have gotten into Forsythe Hall I would have seen a lot of DEC and IBM gear. Now there is a single IBM mainframe, and DEC is long a memory. Ironically, the robotic tape library that supports it dwarfs the mainframe itself, and the clusters of Intel boxes occupy most of the floor.

Even though the Stanford data center is in an air-conditioned, raised floor type of place, the technicians have to be careful where they place the gear because the PC platforms can output plenty of heat. I was interested to see that there are “hot” and “cold” rows of gear in alternating rows around the floor: depending on the server, you might not be able to densely pack them on racks because they will cook.

Blogging and the mainstream media: one comment

Those of you that don’t live in LA probably don’t realize how sucky our local print media coverage is. We have numerous newspapers, but none really offer what is going on outside of The Industry, that small segment of the population that we all aspire to be, or at least aspire to have multi-million dollar paychecks and homes perched precariously over major fault lines, but with fabulous ocean views.

Anyway, Mack Reed publishes the LAVoice, a fledgling effort that has some quite good journalism and is always entertaining. Here is a post of his about how blogs are not The Next Big Thing:


Blogs are the CB radio of the '00s. Those who know how to use 'em, and need to, will do so, and they'll be as commonly accepted as part of the mediastream as hey-looka-this irritainment e-mails are now.

Come to think of it, most of what is published in the mainstream press is irritainment. A great high concept!

Trusting Slate’s server logs

More on opening the kimono, this time from Slate magazine. Want to understand how Slate thinks it has 8 million uniques a month, while the two Web rating services show about half that? An interesting analysis and explanation to be sure from Paul Boutin.


[T]he more I realize people in other media are in denial. Internet publishing is the most finely measurable medium ever invented; broadcast, movie, and print companies have no way of monitoring individual transactions from their end. Yet, while the Web guys admit they could be off by half, Nielsen claims its television ratings have a margin of error of 4 percent. If I were in the cast of Arrested Development, I'd demand a recount.

Why marketing matters

I spent some time with Marcia Kadanoff of Firewhite this week and loved the fact that she was not only a very smart gal but also moonlights as her home CIO. When I came by she was telling her hubby what was wrong with their home network, while whipping out the Web browser to add access for my laptop. I have to admit, I got a little hot.

And check out this post on why marketing matters even more. These days when companies are being created right and left with little regard for how to capture and retain customers, it is time to go into the Wayback machine and remember those first marketing principles.

Trust too: Yahoo Interfaces

Last week Yahoo posted this blog.. They say:

“[It is] the companion blog for two libraries we’re proudly releasing today. The new Yahoo! Design Pattern Library offers our thinking on common interface design issues for traditional and rich Internet applications. The new Yahoo! User Interface Library is a collection of industrial-grade JavaScript utilities and widgets that enable you to efficiently get the most out of today’s powerful browsers. In both cases, these are the exact same things that power Yahoo! today.”

Kudos to them. They need to be more open than Google, more forthcoming on their APIs than Microsoft, and to start working more closely with Web developers. It is a good step.

trust.salesforce.com

An interesting URL, that of http://trust.salesforce.com/. What is it all about? Salesforce.com is showing you their internal server logs, what is up and what is down. I bet it won’t take long until someone creates a Google map mashup of the historical stats. (Right now you just get a summary page for each day’s performance, along with links to days that something went wrong with more explanation.)

Kudos to them for doing this, and showing their inner workings. I wish more Web sites were equally forthcoming.

Trusted Dating

Okay, there is a lot going in the next week, with the RSA conference, Valentine’s Day and the release of Firewall, the movie. I couldn’t resist the temptation to draw your attention to the confluence of these events. I was pretty excited back when Beauty and the Geek hit the airwaves, but that’s nothing compared to having Harrison Ford playing a computer security expert. This movie has got to be the hottest thing to happen to computer security since Robert Morris unleashed his worm back in 1988, and he certainly wasn’t as cute as Ford.

I haven’t yet seen the movie, but I can just imagine Ford battling the bad guys by bashing them over the head with a Sniffer or some big Catalyst switch, or better yet, something involving a wiring closet filled with snakes and a long whip to taunt the villains. Wait a minute, wrong movie franchise. Still, I can see the excitement building in the scene where he gains root access to his Linux server, and John Williams score swelling as the hacker is doing a SQL injection to obtain his bank’s customer records. And of course, we all can’t wait for Firewall 2.0, where Ford is fighting zero-day exploits on peer-to-peer viruses created by a bunch of Estonian high school kids during their lunch break. Really, the opportunities are so endless, it makes me want to start writing that script now.

Alright, you hopefully can tell that I am kidding. And that is the problem with computer security experts in a nutshell — how does it translate to something that a movie star can grasp and portray that has some physical manifestation? It doesn’t, really.

The problem with a lot of computer security is whom do you trust, and how do you establish a trusted relationship? I will have more to say about this in my dispatch next week, when I take my eyes off Indy and give you a look at a nifty new VPN product. But while you are waiting for that, you might remember that next Tuesday is Valentine’s Day, and that brings me to how we tie this all together.

Apropos of V-Day, there were a couple of stories in today’s LA Times about online dating, including an examination of when you are in a relationship and at what point you delete your Jdate account. Or at least no longer check to see who has replied to your posts, indicating that I guess you are no longer in the market. Talk about trust. Thankfully, I have a wonderful wife and I hope I never have to face the whole online (or even offline) dating scene again: I wasn’t a great dater in my 20s, and in my (mumble) later years most recently I wasn’t much of a dater either. But this isn’t about me.

What caught my eye this week was a site called TrueDater.com. This is a site where you can post information about various people on other online services, including the major ones such as Match.com, eharmony, Yahoo Personals and MySpace. The idea is to combine the Netflix ratings system for videos with the online dating world. If someone represents themselves as a tall thin Caucasian and when you meet f2f you see that he is a short, balding black dude, you can quickly exit stage left and rush to your nearest Starbucks and post the truth about this person’s credentials.

I haven’t tried the site, but the theory sounds terrific. Daters can send emails to each other and communicate their findings. And one of the things that you should know is the majority of people on their site are female (not that I am going to act on this information!). You can also post positive reviews in addition to the negative ones.

Finally, a mechanism for trusted dating. It is so clever, it should be a Microsoft API. Or maybe the concept for the next Harrison Ford movie.

Come Fly With Me

As a frequent flyer, I used to have these rules. Like, never take the last connecting flight out of a hub. Or don’t connect unless you are prepared to spend the night. And always keep moving when your flight is cancelled — getting closer to home is far better than standing still.

One of my rules was to never fly any airline that was ever in chapter 11. Well, that limits me to Jet Blue and Southwest, not that I mind taking them.

Anyway, enough about me. I just came across a wonderful airline blog called Enplaned that is well worth your reading. He (or she, not clear who the author is, don’t you just hate that) has some great content on the evolution of airline reservation systems, the differences between the major carriers in terms of “scope clauses” that determine the size of their planes that their own pilots must fly, the whole debacle of Independence Air (which had the most temporary of terminals in the eternal construction zone otherwise known as Dulles airport), the relationship between regional and national flag carriers, and so much more. For people who fly because they have to, this is one educational read.

And while we are flying around the blogosphere, the “Fly With Me” podcasts from a real airline pilot Joe d’Eon is a wonderful collection of audio interviews, commentary, and insights from people who serve us every day.

Small Business Summit in NYC Feb 10

Ramon Ray is offering to Web Informant readers a real deal. You are invited to attend the Small Business Summit 2006, February 10, 2006 in New York City for free. Read on for details.

The conference is for small business owners seeking growth through the marriage of best business practices and technology. It is a full day conference. You’ll learn from small business owners who have achieved exceptional growth through an effective marriage of business savvy and technology, exchange ideas, and hear from such speakers as:

Charles Hand, President, New York Metro Region, Verizon Wireless
Scott Vacaro, Regional VP, Enterprise Rent-A-Car, NYC
Lisa McCarthy, Intuit Professional Advisor and Accounting Resource LLC
Harry Brelsford, President, SMB Nation
Jeff Barr, Web services evangelist, Amazon.com
Adrian Miller, Adrian Miller Sales Training
Rex Hammock, Founder, Hammock Publishing, Smallbusiness.com
Dan Hoffman, President/CEO of M5 Networks
Robert Levin, New York Enterprise Report
Steve Rubel, VP Client Services, Cooper Katz PR; Micropersuasion blog

If you want to attend, use the code “David” when you register and you will receive a complementary pass.