Archive for May, 2007
I wan to buy a server but Dell won’t let me
Tuesday, May 29th, 2007

Dell the online is currently looping on this page for all queries regarding their servers. I didn’t bother to check anywhere else.
Fantastic.
Quick where can I short Dell shares?
(Update : Still down this morning!)
I just rang Dell and of course their sales line is oblivious to the problem. They then connected me to the technical help desk where an automated attendant wanted a service tag before proceeding.
This is a business that is predicated on Web Sales? Oy Vay!
PutPlace and The NextWeb
Monday, May 28th, 2007I’m at the NextWeb Conference on Friday. Drop me a line if you fancy meeting up for a pint on Thursday or Friday.
What I want from Dell
Monday, May 28th, 2007The Reason Mary Lou didn’t get it
Monday, May 28th, 2007Karlin gets the good juice on why Mary Lou didn’t get in. Though Cyprian’s election does expose one of those nasty anomalies of PR.
We are in private beta
Monday, May 21st, 2007Well we did it. This morning I sent out the first batch of private beta invitations for PutPlace. We expect to roll out invitations each Monday for the next few weeks and hopefully we should have sent out an invitation to everybody who registered to date within the next month or so.Big shout out to John, Darren and Gearoid for their trojan efforts in getting the beta to this point over the last month or so. Also thanks to our valiant first run testers, Matt, Ivan and Sean.
This first version does backup (Windows only, Mac to follow shortly) as we reckon getting your stuff safe is a priority for most people. We have most of the heavy lifting done to allow publishing to places like Flickr and YouTube as we expect that to emerge in the next month or so.
Please register for the beta if you haven’t done so already…
Joe Drumgoole
CEO
The next OnDemand Service - User Account Management
Wednesday, May 16th, 2007PutPlace.com is launching real soon now and of course like everybody else on the planet we rolled our own user account management (UAM) system (you know, registration, login, logout, forgot password, change username etc. etc.). Needless to say we used a Framework (in our case Django) but why do I need to reinvent this wheel?
We get our storage from Amazon (and soon our Grid). Our O/S is a flavour of Linux, our Database is Postgres, we use surveymonkey for surveys and mailchimp (what is it with the simian metaphor?) for mail campaigns, why can’t I pay somebody on a per user basis to manage my user accounts?
What would this service look like? Well pretty much like a credit card payment interface looks like on the web today but with the following features.
- a bunch of REST endpoints for all the standard UAM functions
- Register
- Login
- Logout
- Enable User
- Disable User
- Set Session Timeout
- etc.
- Support for session management
- Standard reporting (who, when, from where, how long)
- Support for OpenID
- Java, Python, Ruby and .NET APIs (Rails and Django integration for extra points)
- Global deployment with appropriate SLAs
- Deployment pages with a proper branding kit so people can get up and running quickly
- Ability to extract all my users in .csv format or via an API
I would pay for this service in chunks of hundreds to 1000s of users with all the usual discounting policy for prepayment or purchasing in bulk and the first 50 users are free.
One more pain point on the road to release removed.
I don’t want a free one with strings attached (e.g. LiveID) and I don’t want some non-profit consortium (e.g. the Liberty Alliance). I want to pay for it and own my data.
Basically a Web 2.0 oriented OnDemand business.
Microsoft goes where we always knew they would…
Monday, May 14th, 2007I see Microsoft has taken the gloves off in the Open Source/Closed Source battle. Surprise, Surprise they found the infringing patents in the three areas where Microsoft makes most of its revenue, operating systems, Office and the Windows user interface.
But he does break down the total number allegedly violated - 235 - into categories. He says that the Linux kernel - the deepest layer of the free operating system, which interacts most directly with the computer hardware - violates 42 Microsoft patents. The Linux graphical user interfaces - essentially, the way design elements like menus and toolbars are set up - run afoul of another 65, he claims. The Open Office suite of programs, which is analogous to Microsoft Office, infringes 45 more. E-mail programs infringe 15, while other assorted FOSS programs allegedly transgress 68.
Watching this from the sidelines is gonna be a hoot.
Addendum: Of course the real reason for this may to head off the new version of the GPL at the pass.
Eurovision - Take your licks like a man
Sunday, May 13th, 2007We got crushed, 5 points in total. John Waters, hang your head in shame
Serbia won.
Microsoft’s partner site crashes IE 7
Wednesday, May 9th, 2007
Microsoft’s partner site crashes IE 7
Originally uploaded by Joe Drumgoole.
I’ve crashed IE 7 three times in a row now. Does anybody know what telephone syntax the Microsoft partner program will accept?

