Every time Bush opens his mouth, he starts babbling about curridge.
What is curridge?
Never heard of it before.
Oh well…back to being tuned out.
Author: spierzchala
Chitika: It’s all Jeremy’s Fault
So, Jeremy turned me on to Chitika this morning, hence the new ads you see.
Turns out that their offices are less than 10 minutes from my house.
Heh.
We will see what the head-to-head comparison between Chitika and AdSense will be.
GrabPERF: Think you have Packet Loss? This is what it looks like
So, I mentioned earlier that I have packet loss on the uplink from my Web server where GrabPERF and this blog are hosted. How do I know it’s packet loss and not some other issue?
Notice the banding of measurements around 3 and 9 seconds? These values are the set TCP re-transmission timeouts for new connections for almost every operating system. When you see this pattern, check your packet loss stats from your routers/switches/network equipment.
Now…I wonder what my connectivity provider has mucked up?
CBC Wants To Purge History
Apparently, the CBC wants all of the negative blog posts by the Canadian Media Guild members locked out for the last 50 days removed from their personal blogs.
CBC: Please consult the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Most notably, Section 2:
2. Everyone has the following fundamental freedoms:
a) freedom of conscience and religion;
b) freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, including freedom of the press and other media of communication;
c) freedom of peaceful assembly; and
d) freedom of association.
Oh, and if the CBC isn’t going to hire Shelagh Rogers or Rick Mercer or ANY of the CBC Unplugged Bloggers back because of their blog posts, I will tear up my Canadian Passport and become a US citizen.
I am ashamed of my country, and especially of the CBC.
Via: Mutually Inclusive PR
Gutter Helmet: On the persistence of blog posts
When I look at my logs, I am always astounded by the items visitors come to read.
The one posting that I am most proud of is this one, where I do not sing the praises of Gutter Helmet.
b2evolution only maintains local hit logs for 30 days. In that time, there is a serious pattern appearing.
URL NUM ---- ------ Home Page 116 Why I Will Not Recommend Gutter Helmet 105 This is your host on South Park 30
I have been watching this for a while, so on Monday, I wrote a letter to some of the executives at Gibraltar Industries [here], the holding company that now owns Gutter Helmet.
Dear Gibraltar Industries:
I saw that your company has just purchased Gutter Helmet. Congratulations.
I thought you and your team would like to know that my blog post detailing my experience with a Gutter Helmet installation is near the top of Google Search for the phrase “gutter helmet”.http://www.google.com/search?q=%22gutter+helmet%22 –> it’s the link from the IceRocket blogsearch engine
I get between 5 and 10 visits a day where people are reading what my experience with the Gutter Helmet installation team was like.
Gutter Helmet is a great product. The team that installed it failed miserably in making us happy.
Good luck, and remember: the conversation you don’t hear will be the one that hurts you the most.
stephen
On Monday, there was a huge flurry of hits from Gutter Helmet IPs and others, including what looked like Gibraltar’s very high-priced law firm.
And you know what?
They didn’t bother to respond.
So, I will continue to de-evangalize Gutter Helmet, as they are stuck in a negative customer experience death-spiral. If they can’t get over the big company, “One complaining customer is nothing” attitude, they will continue experience the force of a customer scorned. And when new prospects research the Gutter Helmet product, they will continue to encounter my negative experience high on the search engines’ lists.
Gibraltar Industries: I am now defining the conversation around the Gutter Helmet product, and you have no control over that. If you don’t believe this has an impact, follow the thread and conversation around Jeff Jarvis’ experience with Dell [here].
Hey CTO, I’d like some software, with open and extensible on the side
The CTO of the blogosphere asks: What kind of software would you like developed?
Option 1: Build a product in 12 months that is simple and easy to use but only meets basic requirements. Upon completion, this company will only fix bugs and provide minimal updates every six months; training through FAQs and some simple documentation; and support through basic email, forums, but no phone contact.
The cost to you to pay for the development and ongoing support of this product is low.
Option 2: Build a product in 24 months that meets all the requirements including features that you might want to use in the future but is complex to configure and use. Upon completion, this company will fix bugs and provide enhancements or new functionality through a elaborate support agreement that includes frequent updates every three months; extensive training through onsite, manual and online and support through 24/7 phone,email and web. However, the cost to you to pay for the development and ongoing support of this product is high.
Option 3: Build a product in 18 months that is simple, basic and easy but an open architecture is developed that will allow others such as end users or other developers to make it as complex as they would like it through the development of addons and extensions. Upon completion, this company will fix bugs or enhance existing functionality only and provide moderate updates, training and support through a combination on in-house and community resources. The cost to you to pay for the development and ongoing support of this product is a little more expensive than Option 1. In addition, you will be on your own regarding support and future development of any additional functionality that is provided by third parties.
Only an idiot or a dinosaur would build software under Options 1 and 2.
The Imagination Age: The Growth of the American Minimum Wage Class
CCUCEO has a great take on the arrival of the Imagination Age.[here]
The Minimum Wage Class is the result. In some cases, people fall into this group as a place to start when they arrive.
In other places, like here in Massachusetts, it is almost carried like a badge of honour to just scrape by.
And then there are those that have moved beyond Industrial, beyond Information.
I just wish the people who paid the bills joined us out here.
GrabPERF: FOR SALE
GrabPERF is FOR SALE.
I have reached the limits of my coding, database administration and time available to keep GrabPERF growing and evolving.
What is for sale?
- The GrabPERF Domain — grabperf.org
- Measurement scripts
- Database design and current contents of the database
- Automated processing scripts and batch jobs
- Web GUI code
- Consulting time from me to install, and configure the GrabPERF system at your location, with your team
There is a lot of potential in the code. I have a lot of ideas to make it better.
There are 24 hours in a day.
Now, when I mean for sale, I mean FOR SALE. There is a lot of work in this code and infratstructure; I am not going to simply give it away. I am also going to be very careful when selecting the buyer.
Drop me a line if you or your organization would like to present a proposal to me for the purchase and transition of GrabPERF.
Thank you all for your support.


