A List of Amazon S3 Backup Tools

 

S3 is a cool virtual disk service provided by Amazon. Unfortunately its only accessible via an API so mere mortals don’t get a lookin. Thankfully Jeremy Zawodny has compiled a list of list of backup tools that will give you access to the service.

S3 is priced at 0.15 USD per GB per month and 0.20 USD per GB of bandwidth consumed.

Paul Graham : Why Startup's Fail

Darren drew my attention to an essay by Paul Graham entitled “The 18 Mistakes that Kill Startups“. Its a pretty good list but of course it could just as easily be entitled “The 18 mistakes that kill companies”. The only difference is that when big companies (DEC, Data General, Compaq, Symbolics, Thinking Machines, ICL) make these mistakes, death is long and lingering rather than short and sharp.

Ideas Park : Excel to Web Applications

One of the worlds most popular RAD environments is Excel. But Excel is a pain to share and god forbid you need a third party to enter data into your carefully crafted spreadsheets. Now imagine this problem compounded n times over when an organisation attempts to collate data via a shared spreadsheet. You get to play our favourite corporate games  such as,

  • Who has the master copy?
  • Where did all my changes go?
  • I updated that last week
  • We’ve changed the format this month

So we all love Excel, but we need better ways to control data entry and sharing.

So take your Excel spreadsheet and parse all the presentation material out it in order to generate a web page.  Now use an AJAX interface to hide intermediate workbooks, behinds the scenes tables etc. etc. Now ink in the data entry fields so they become highlighted. You now have a AJAX/HTML application version of your spreadsheet.

Now you load this into a runtime framework (probably encompassing the Excel DLL ‘cos who wants to rewrite all that code) and you wrap it in a proper web login environment along with profile and preference information and you store all computation and changes in a database so every version of the spreadsheet is kept when each set of values is changed by each user.

Finally you allow the designer to upload new versions of the spreadsheet and store that in a history as well. Finally you offer a sharing capability so a user can invite other users to access and use spreadsheet, safe in the knowledge that a single master and all changes are held centrally.

Now you can offer it as a hosted service, charging each user a few cents for each spreadsheet they access or charging the owner a most substantial fee on a monthly basis for hosting their application.

How hard can that be?

Delicious Networks : Slow student finally cops on

I’ve been adding people to my del.icio.us network without really know why or understanding it for the past while. So today I actually clicked on the link and finally copped on.

Its an RSS feed of all the links these people post, doh!

Anyway I’ve added it to bloglines, so thanks Conor (argolon), James (eirepreneur), Justin (jm), John (johnkeyes), Damien (mulley) and Walter (walterh).

Keep ’em coming…

SiliconRepublic.com: Cape Clear in major US education deal

 

SiliconRepublic.com reports that Cape Clear has flogged its ESB technology to Ohio state. No dollar values and that usually implies a less than 1m price tag.

When its over 1m the tag line is “multi-million dollar deal”. Still business is business, props to the Cape.

New LiveWriter Beta fixes categories problem

 

The new  Live Writer beta fixes the categories problem where a long list of categories was not visible once in exceeded the height of the screen.

Live Writer continues to impress me.