Seems like I'm doing a lot of revisting these days. Perhaps I'm just not
making myself clear.
I have basically five types of systems in my organization;
mission critical, 24x7, ancillary, QA, and Development. Below are
some detail explanations of each type of system:
Mission Critical
A mission critical application is a piece of software that must
be running in order for the business to continue to operate.
Without the software, the business would cease to exist. An
example of this is eBay's auction system or the software that
executes orders for Ameritrade.
24x7
A 24x7 system is important to the business, but not essential for
the business to run. If a 24x7 system goes down, customers get
upset but business continues to operate. An example of this type
of system would be Ameritrade's …
Indeed we are looking to extend the number of MySQL Support
Engineers, in this region. Aye, plural. More than one person. And
one would be focusing for MySQL Cluster.
Particularly if you're based in Australia or New Zealand and
might be interested in this kind of gig, please drop me a line
urgently! But if you're located elsewhere in the APAC region
(Malaysia, Fiji, whereever!), that's cool too - as log as you're
fluent in English and such.
Thanks.
I bought a new personal laptop a few weeks back, and I’ve been using it enough to final post a short review. I’ve run linux on several different laptops over the years, and it’s always been kind of tough. Even supergeeks endure a lot of teasing at conferences about getting wireless networking configured.
This time, I went with System 76, who offer laptops with Ubuntu preinstalled. Definitely the right choice! I chose a Gazelle, which is not quite as sleek as my previous MacBook. It is blazing fast. I was amazed at how quickly I was able to be productive with Ubuntu preinstalled and working perfectly: NetworkManager means my wireless connection works even better than on the MacBook, suspend to RAM and hibernate to disk worked flawlessly, and it compiles MySQL in about 13 minutes flat.
…
[Read more]
Not having a watercooler, around which we can stand and gossip,
is a serious drawback to working at home. MySQL's 300ish
employees are spread out over 20-something countries. Most of the
people with whom I work closely are not within a few hours of my
timezone.
Our primary communication medium is IRC, a kind of continuous chat system, like an
agora where people group themselves together on topics, rather
than like the person-to-person chat that most people know of.
Outside of that, we occasionally use our telephones, which
connect to the Internet directly, bypassing long-distance
carriers and bills. And, of course, there's (now-ubiquitous)
email. If you consider the loss of nuance in hurried textual
communication and the ever-present risk of culture-shear, one
would think we would have far more misunderstandings than we
do.
Not having the …
Alfresco Software Inc. today announced results for the first open source JSR-170 benchmark. The results were based on a 10 million document repository and validated by 3rd party open source Enterprise Content Management (ECM) experts Optaros to assure compliance with pre-determined benchmark rules.
I wrote a while ago about a program I wrote to export GnuCash data into a MySQL database, including a couple of queries against the resulting schema. I’ve made some improvements since then to allow a simple overlay of my wife’s categories onto the GnuCash hierarchy. This article explains the improved schema, and includes some more useful tools and queries. The improved schema The heart of the schema that holds the GnuCash data remains the same, but I’ve added a table to overlay our categorization system onto it.
I was talking to Elliot this morning a bit about Linux
Distributions and it made me think a bit more about where we are
at today.
Let me share my thoughts on this topic.
First, I'm really unhappy with the state of Linux distributions
today. Its a tower of babel for the most part. Its a hope that
the LSB will solve some of this, but today shipping on Linux is a
real mess. Upgrading is a mess, especially for applications
developed to rely on a stable platform.
Let us talk about the first distribution by sharing a
story.
Last year I walk into a customer's shop and they asked me why
MySQL is crashing. The problem?
"apt-get upgrade"
It was a mismatch of libraries on their Debian systems. Debian is
a great distribution to play with, but unless you have an expert
(and you probably do not!) I find that its not the most stable
distribution to use. I do not see this …
We have released an update to Beta 5, which contains several bug fixes. This release is solidmysql-5.0.27-beta5-0040 (note 0040 instead of 0036 from the original Beta 5). You can get it from the usual place (http://dev.soliddb.com/download/). We also have new mirrors set up through sourceforge, which should improve the download speeds for people, especially for those who are in Europe or Asia. You can access the mirrors from the same download page. ¶
From Paul Kedrosky:
Does this mean you should move to the Bay Area? Maybe. Plenty of open source companies have successfully grown outside the Valley (actually, the most successful ones - Red Hat, JBoss, MySQL), but it's certainly the case that there's more venture money in the Bay Area than anywhere else.
Of course, the primary VC complaint is having to get on a plane for board meetings, so maybe it's enough to do what Zend, MySQL, etc. have done: move management to the Bay Area. They may well be the only ones who can afford it. :-)
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…
Nearly at the same time as the release of yesterday's XAMPP, the
developers of ProFTPD released a new version of ProFTPD (1.3.0a).
The new release fixes a security vulnerability which allows an
attacker to install and run malicious code: More about the security vulnerability.
As usual, in case of security-relevant upgrades, we decided to
release an suitable XAMPP upgrade as soon as possible. But to cut
a long story short, here it is:
Download XAMPP for Linux 1.5.5a