greg hughes - dot net
Note that the contents of this site represent my own thoughts and opinions, not those of anyone else - like my employer - or even my dog for that matter. Besides, the dog would post things that make sense. I don't.
 Wednesday, October 22, 2008
The fall conference season is upon us, and I'll be off to Barcelona on the first of November for a week at the Microsoft TechEd Europe/Middle East/Asia conference. I'll be joining my friend and colleague, Richard Campbell, there for the week. If by chance you'll also be there, be sure to let me know ahead of time! Then, the following week Richard and I will both be traveling to Las Vegas for the Connections conference, where we'll be doing a live RunAs Radio recording session. Should be fun, and we have a great guest slated. More on that later. If you'll be at either conference, please let me know via a comment or an email!
 Thursday, October 16, 2008
My friend Richard Campbell and I spent the morning recording a couple episodes of RunAs Radio for publication in the near future. One of our guests (whom we shall reveal when the show is published) provided some amazingly great information about using Performance Monitor, or "perfmon" for short. He's a perfmon Ninja, really. I'm excited about that show because I think when it comes up I think people will be able to learn something quite useful, as it includes some desktop video (perfmon is, after all, a very visual tool) and other resources. I think you'll like it. Needless to say, both of us have been playing with perfmon for the past hour. Richard just IM'ed me with a funny situation, though: 
Not really sure how that works. :) So, be sure to check out RunAs Radio for the Performance Monitor show, which will be published sometime in the next couple weeks. We've also had a number of other great guests sit down with us over the past while, talking about some very useful topics suited for IT professionals. So check it out!
 Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Want to watch tonight's final presidential debate live on the 'net? Everyone should watch, and please don't skip your opportunity to vote in the election. It's just too important. Hulu.com is again streaming this debate, and you can watch it right here. Who needs a TV, anyhow?
 Monday, October 13, 2008
Dumping the warm-fuzzy naming convention and avoiding the year-based names of the past, Microsoft announced today that the next version of Windows, which will replace Vista, will be called simply "Windows 7." Good idea. It's the seventh version of Windows. It makes sense. Returning to a solid, basic, fundamental naming convention helps, I think, in helping to focus purpose on ensuring the fundamental requirements are met, that a solid, simple (from a usability standpoint at least) product is released. Etherial names like "Vista" sound cool, but subconsciously they also evoke an image and set an expectation of something magical, something not quite real. That's not what's needed, especially this next time around. So keeping the name simple is the first sign of staying focused on the core product. I like that. As Mike Nash explains, this is the first time a code name for an early product in development has been retained for the final product. Well, given the substantial departure from the conventional Microsoft code names, I'd say it's okay this time. :) More information is available on the Windows Vista team blog, where the announcement was made.
Space Aliens for McCain or Obama? Could be... Someone's trying to get the vote word out, that's for sure.
Updates: The corn field in the video is at Baggenstos Farms, and you can go walk through it. Also, I'm geeking out a bit on the fact that I filed the video as a CNN iReport that was featured all day today on the homepage of CNN.com and was viewed by 220,000 people in one day (wow). A portion of it was also aired on TV tonight on Anderson Cooper 360. That was fun. I had a flying lesson Monday morning and on the way back to our home airport, my instructor and I saw an unusual crop formation in a corn field from about 1000 feet above the ground. You'd never see it otherwise. You think someone out there is trying to send us a message? I captured it for you to see with my new Kodak Zi6 pocket HD video camera. You can get the higher-quality version of the video here. Oh, and by the way: Don't forget to vote!

Analyst and research company Gartner revised its IT industry projection figures and - as reported this morning by ZDNet and released by Gartner themselves - presented them during a symposium keynote at the company's big annual IT conference, which opened this morning. In a nutshell, Gartner analyst Peter Sondergard says they still expect growth, and that even in the very worst case, IT spending next year will fall about 2.5 percent. From ZDNET: - Gartner had expected budgets to grow 3.3 percent in 2009.
- Now the most likely case is IT budget growth of 2.3 percent to 0 percent.
- The worst case is that IT budgets will be down 2.5 percent.
Forrester Research also recently cut it's projections for 2009 IT spending, but still ended up with figures in positive growth territory. So, if the analysts are to be believed, the business sector feeding products and services to IT should still see some growth. The question is, where will that growth happen? My guess would be that one good place to be doing business is anywhere products or services are commoditized and can be outsourced, as well as in key technology areas like security and high availability. Having successfully managed an IT organization at a "dot-com" company through a few years of painful economic times early in this decade, I can say from experience that at the time we had to cut overall IT spending dramatically to allow the company to survive. We went quickly from buying lots of new computers and software and building out data centers to buying practically nothing new for two full years. We renegotiated stacks of contracts with vendors and major software suppliers, consolidated services, convinced vendors to charge us less, and in the end prioritized every single project and said "no" a lot. As a result, we cut our multi-million dollar budget almost in half and - in combination with other business changes - put ourselves in a position where we were just able to weather the storm financially. It was painful and a bit scary at times, and we had to deal with the side effects of substantial change. We had to get very creative in leveraging what we already had and nothing more, but in the end we all learned a difficult yet necessary lesson: You don't have to spend, spend spend to survive, or even to thrive in some cases. In fact, what we needed to do was just the opposite of the "spend" approach. We would still spend where it made the most sense - but our decision-making process changed dramatically. You have to shift where the money goes to maximize your dollar's impact in the specific environment, adapt to the rapid changes in the marketplace, and work with your business partners and vendors to make it through to the other side. Smart vendors and good partners know that doing whatever it takes to survive a storm together means a better relationship when we all come out of the clouds. Gartner has a list of ten things they say IT organizations need to consider when faced with tough economic times. They are not easy or happy things. But I think they're spot-on. I've had to do all of these things when times were toughest. - Reduce headcount or freeze hiring
- Renegotiate with technology and service providers
- Curtail data center expansion, virtualize assets and lease them back
- Consolidate systems
- Outsource commodity
- Offshore outsource
- Investment shutdown
- Prioritize projects
- Mothball businesses and projects
- Change leadership and restructure IT teams
What's your IT plan? Are your budgets shrinking, or staying about the same? How would you prepare for tight times ahead?
 Friday, October 10, 2008
Over and over it's obvious that the vast majority of people I speak with have no real idea what the current financial situation is all about, how it happened and how it works.
It's not often I'll ask people to take the time to listen to an audio show, no matter what. But in this case, I think it's important enough. With all the media discussion about the gloom and doom of the current economic mess, there's been little or no meaningful education about what caused it and where we are now. Panic reporting doesn't prepare anyone. History and analysis does.
So: Listen to two audio episodes of a show called This American Life, which are linked below, and you'll be a much more aware citizen. You'll find yourself much better prepared to think about where we're at and where we're going. Understanding how we got here is critical to understanding where we're going, and why.
I hope this is helpful to at least one person. I know I found the reporting and explanations cogent, thoughtful, understandable, non-partisan and non-political, and - as a result - quite valuable.
Let me know what you think.
 Tuesday, October 07, 2008
The Chumby is a cool little Internet-enabled device that sits pretty much wherever you want and does all sorts of cool things. You can check it out here. Today it became even better that before, in a way that I especially appreciate, so I jumped on eBay to see if any were available there (you can buy them online new, too).
So what's this new cool thing that makes it even better in my eyes? Pandora - the Internet "radio station" app that I already use on my computer as well as my iPhone, is now available for Chumby.
I'm looking forward to waking up to my Pandora stations, viewing the latest weather for flying, playing new podcasts when they become available, displaying some of my favorite pictures. I'm sure there are a ton of cool things I'll be able to use it for that I can't possibly think of yet. I'll have to take a look at the Chumby Widgets guide while I wait for it to arrive. A bit about the Chumby:
Chumby was designed from the beginning to take all your favorite parts of the internet, whether they’re video clips, or internet radio stations, or anime cartoons, or sports scores or the weather, or anything else, and, using your existing wi-fi connection, simply deliver them to you at a glance. Automatically, one after the next. You just leave it on — don’t worry, your carbon footprint isn’t getting much deeper, chumby draws far less power than a light bulb. No need to go to your study and boot up your computer and launch a browser, no need to fish your smartphone out of your purse and launch the browser application (…and wait) to get your favorite bits of online goodness.
Do you have one? What do (or would) you use it for?
DirecTV had an unusual technical glitch sometime in the past 48 hours, and as a result customers with either standard or HD DVRs might experience issues with a "frozen remote" or similar behavior. DirecTV Has emailed customers to let them know (see below).
This is important because if your DVR is in the hung state they describe, you need to reset it, or your scheduled recordings will likely not be recorded. I had the issue exactly as described the night before last on my HD-DVR, and did a red button reset (RBR) at that time in order to restore it to normal functionality, which is pretty much what the email from DirecTV says to do:
IMPORTANT NOTICE ABOUT YOUR HD DVR OR DVR RECEIVER
In our effort to improve and expand our service, we experienced a temporary technical glitch. If your HD DVR or DVR receiver is not responding to your remote control or front panel commands, you can resolve this issue by pressing the red "Reset" button located inside the small door on the front right corner of your receiver. Please allow about 15 minutes for your receiver to complete the resetting process. Once completed, your picture will return automatically. Unfortunately, any show you may have scheduled to record yesterday will not be available on your DVR.
We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may cause you. Our promise is to provide you with the best television experience, and to resolve any issues that might arise as quickly as possible. If you have any further concerns, please do not hesitate in contacting us at 1-800-347-3288.
Larry Dignan posted some interesting charts, graphs and figures today over at ZDNet looking at advertising revenue for the first half of 2008, compared to previous periods. He also asks what will happen to advertising revenue in the faltering economy. Good question.
What I know best is my experience, which is undoubtedly unique since this site is not exactly huge (about 750K pageviews/month). However, over the past few years I have watched my revenue trends from contextual advertising rise and fall. In these most recent "tough" times for the overall economy, my advertising numbers (meaning impressions, click-through rates, eCPM, daily revenue, etc.) have increased somewhat dramatically.
If you think about it, this could actually make some sense. Less discretionary, from-the-hip spending by various types of consumers means the market needs to find effective ways to reach out to buyers. In many cases, where consumers are looking to save a few bucks on a purchase, they will naturally turn to the Internet for better deals. So, maybe the Internet advertising world has a real opportunity.
My weblog and the few other site I have don't rely on financial services or automotive industry related advertising, granted. I could be way off base here. Yet I can't help but wonder what the second half will look like. I have at least some confidence it will weather this storm. Time will tell.
Thoughts?
I've lately come to enjoy the relatively new video site, hulu.com, for catching up on television shows I've missed. Decent quality and easy access offered by the site are great. The other day they posted the Saturday Night Live spoof sketch poking fun at Joe Biden and Sarah Palin, and quite literally everyone I know must have gone there to view that specific clip in the past few days.
Tonight, Hulu takes it to the next level with the real candidates by introducing live streaming to their mix. The U.S. presidential debate is their initial undertaking (view here), and they will also live-stream the third debate next week. Tonight's debate airs on NBC and the last one on FOX, both of which are owners or hulu.com.
It will be interesting to see what else they decide to stream live in the future. One would think they might have to limit live streaming to non-advertising-supported content (like these debates) in order to avoid diluting their local advertisers. But I certainly wouldn't mind being able to watch certain shows live from the road, and ads focused based on geolocation or something similar would be just fine with me. Oh, and as a sidenote: We can always continue to hope against hope for a hulu iPhone app.
 Saturday, October 04, 2008
It's been a fun and challenging week learning to fly. I found a couple good podcasts, and have posted a couple new detailed entries to my new flying blog, Coordinated Flight.
The podcasts I found are The Student Pilot Podcast, by Bill Williams in Arizona, and Uncontrolled Airspace, which Bill recommended. Good stuff.
I have four flight days scheduled next week. I hope the weather cooperates!
 Thursday, October 02, 2008
Well, true to my own distracted form I realized about a month too late that this weblog turned five years old last month. I didn't get a chance to wish it "happy blogday," so I'll do so belatedly. Five years is quite a bit of time, yet it also seems as if it was all that long ago that I started this thing.
The site has gradually changed in terms of how I "use" it over time. Recently I've written less frequently than at times in the past, but when I do write I tend to write more in one sitting. I'm also writing (and speaking) elsewhere occasionally and splitting my time among a variety of other life activities these days.
Some of my favorite posts are from a few years ago (although some recent posts are on that list, too). My first post was decidedly non-technical (and reading it now I'm not even sure I'd write it today (but I'd probably say something on Twitter)). Well, okay - maybe I would write it. :)
I've gone through the server stress of being "slashdotted" and all sorts of other mega traffic deluges, and have been running dasBlog the entire time, thanks to the influence of my good friend Scott. I've written about some very personal topics as well as random technology tidbits that interest me. In five years I've authored 1,762 posts and people have commented on those posts more than 2,800 times. Somehow I've attracted a fairly large readership and Internet audience over the years (frequently over 600,000 page views a month), and for that I'm grateful and a bit humbled.
At any rate, it'll be interesting to see what's happening here (and on other weblogs, for that matter) in five more years.
 Saturday, September 27, 2008
I speak English natively. My friend that I want to chat with in IM speaks German. A chat-helper service called MTBOT (Microsoft Translation Robot) allows me to type in English, yet my friend sees and reads what I wrote translated into his native German language. Likewise, when he types in German, what I see is his messages machine-translated into English.
If you use Windows Live Messenger, you too can add mtbot@hotmail.com to your buddy list. When you want to chat with someone who speaks another language, add them to a "conversation" with your TBot. You and the other person are asked to specify your native language, and after that you just start typing.  There are a number of commands you can issue to control TBot's behavior. To see a list of commands, just type "TBOT ?" in the IM window. You'll then be presented with the list of available commands:
 Cool stuff. Check out the Translator information posted over at the Live Search blog.
Currently-supported languages:
- English to/from:
- Arabic
- Chinese Simplified
- Chinese Traditional
- Dutch
- French
- German
- Italian
- Japanese
- Korean
- Portuguese
- Russian (Russian to English only)
- Spanish
- Chinese Simplified to/from Chinese Traditional
Call your Congressional rep now (202-225-3121) and ask them to support H.R. 7084, the Webcaster Settlement Act of 2008. Pandora and other similar services need your help.
I called last night and left a message for my Congressman in Oregon, David Wu. If it's your first time, calling just know it's easy: The operator will answer the phone, you ask for your congressman by name, and they transfer you to the correct office.
I left a message for Wu last night stating that I wanted him to support the resolution because it was of a timely nature and it ensured fair ad reasonable competition, and that industry lobbyist attempts to defeat it or stall it were anticompetitive in motivation.
If you use online streaming music services like Pandora or other similar ones, their very existence may depend on this resolution, so make your voice known now. It really does make a difference.
If you don't know who your Congressperson is, you can look them up quickly here. All you need is your ZIP code.
© Copyright 2009 Greg Hughes

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
 | This page was rendered at Sunday, November 08, 2009 12:30:48 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
newtelligence dasBlog 2.1.8015.804
|
"Computers used to take up entire buildings, now they just take up our entire lives."
- Unknown
"So how do you know what is the right path to choose to get the result that you desire? And the honest answer is this... You won't. And accepting that greatly eases the anxiety of your life experience."
Syndication [XML] and .net Alerts
For lazy, highly-technical or enlightened people, get this site's content without the use of a web browser. I use FeedDemon for this, but you can choose your own. Subscribe - click the icon for my feed... or sign up for Microsoft Alerts to receive updates through your MSN Messenger, e-mail, or mobile device. Click the orange button thingie to sign up with your Passport account: 
Contact
Drop me an email: Phone: 503-766-2258
Add me to MSN Messenger
Monthly Archive
| September, 2009 (2) |
| August, 2009 (1) |
| July, 2009 (2) |
| June, 2009 (4) |
| May, 2009 (7) |
| April, 2009 (3) |
| March, 2009 (5) |
| February, 2009 (1) |
| January, 2009 (10) |
| December, 2008 (7) |
| November, 2008 (7) |
| October, 2008 (18) |
| September, 2008 (18) |
| August, 2008 (18) |
| July, 2008 (35) |
| June, 2008 (16) |
| May, 2008 (12) |
| April, 2008 (16) |
| March, 2008 (22) |
| February, 2008 (32) |
| January, 2008 (9) |
| December, 2007 (6) |
| November, 2007 (4) |
| October, 2007 (19) |
| September, 2007 (36) |
| August, 2007 (19) |
| July, 2007 (17) |
| June, 2007 (16) |
| May, 2007 (13) |
| April, 2007 (11) |
| March, 2007 (5) |
| February, 2007 (14) |
| January, 2007 (16) |
| December, 2006 (16) |
| November, 2006 (4) |
| October, 2006 (23) |
| September, 2006 (14) |
| August, 2006 (21) |
| July, 2006 (34) |
| June, 2006 (25) |
| May, 2006 (20) |
| April, 2006 (20) |
| March, 2006 (17) |
| February, 2006 (34) |
| January, 2006 (30) |
| December, 2005 (23) |
| November, 2005 (39) |
| October, 2005 (30) |
| September, 2005 (49) |
| August, 2005 (31) |
| July, 2005 (21) |
| June, 2005 (35) |
| May, 2005 (53) |
| April, 2005 (54) |
| March, 2005 (60) |
| February, 2005 (27) |
| January, 2005 (59) |
| December, 2004 (70) |
| November, 2004 (58) |
| October, 2004 (55) |
| September, 2004 (64) |
| August, 2004 (53) |
| July, 2004 (65) |
| June, 2004 (50) |
| May, 2004 (49) |
| April, 2004 (26) |
| March, 2004 (20) |
| February, 2004 (26) |
| January, 2004 (28) |
| December, 2003 (12) |
| October, 2003 (8) |
| September, 2003 (11) |
| August, 2003 (1) |
On this page
Search and Translate this Site
Blog Posting Categories
Navigation Links
Blogroll
Scott Adams' Dilbert Blog
Scott Adams is the creator of Dilbert, and his blog is an incredibly smart, clever and often funny (sometimes very serious) look at the world. Everyone should read this blog. |
Alex Scoble
Alex is a former coworker who blogs about a variety of IT-related topics. |
Brent Strange
Brent is a cool dude and a great QA guy that I used to work with. His blog is, appropriately, focused on QA and testing technology. |
Chris Brooks
Chris was formerly my boss at work and is an avid board gamer and photographer. He always has some new info about top-notch board games you may have never heard of, so if you're into them, you should check out this blog. |
Chris Pirillo
Lockergnome by trade, Chris is always up to something new. If you are not familiar with the Lockergnome newsletters, be sure to check them out, too. |
Matthew Lapworth
Matt's a software developer and friend. He seems to enjoy extreme sports. That's fine as long as he doesn't, like, die or something. |
Milind Pandit
Milind writes about all sorts of interesting stuff. We worked toegther for eight years, and he worked at our employer longer than I, which pretty much makes him old as dirt in company time. :) |
MSFT Security Bulletins [RSS]
RSS feed for all Microsoft security bulletins provides an always-up-to-date list of updates along with complete descriptions of each. |
neopoleon.com
Rory Blyth is one of the funniest and most thought-provoking bloggers I read. And I blame him for everything. Literally. |
Scott Hanselman
Scott's computerzen blog is a popular spot for all things .NET and innovative. I used to work with him, but then he went off to Microsoft. He's one of the smartest guys I know, and arguably the best technical presenter around. |
Sign In
Who Links Here
Total Posts: 1825 This Year: 32 This Month: 0 This Week: 0 Comments: 3298
Apple (43) AudioBlogging (42) Blogging (153) Fireworks (3) Geek Out (125) GnomeDex (20) Helping Others (27) Home Servers (4) Humor (143) IT Security (214) Kineflex Artificial Disc Surgery (6) Management (8) Mobile (117) Movies (31) Mt. St. Helens (13) Office 2003 (52) OneNote (29) Personal Stories (162) Photography (26) Random Stuff (631) RSS Stuff (47) RunAs Radio (28) Safe Computing (38) SharePoint (55) Tablet PC (41) Tech (995) Things that Suck (67) Windows (5) Windows Media Technology (27)
|