20-07-10

There’s an expression – “crossing the Rubicon”. I’d often thought it pretentious and didn’t really know what it meant until I went looking. As it turns out, the expression effectively means “passing the point of no return”. This sums up my thoughts quite succinctly at the moment with regards to Apple. They’re going through interesting times right now – the percieved failure of the iPhone 4 has perhaps for the first time in years, shown the company up in a negative light (and in the interests of full disclosure, let me say right now that I have three iPods of varying ages and run Windows 7 on my work laptop, Ubuntu 10.04 on my personal laptop and VMware ESXi on my test equipment – pretty much as platform agnostic as you can get. Oh, and a BlackBerry work phone and a Symbian personal phone).

As such, it’s been interesting to see Apple’s reaction. Earlier in the decade, they re-invented themselves from being a cutting edge design company almost out of ideas to a massive corporation who’ve arguably redefined the music business with the iPod and iTunes and changed the mobile phone landscape with the iPhone (dubbed by The Register as the “Jesus phone”). It’s interesting however that in terms of the “lifecycle” of a company, they’ve gone from being the plucky underdog to the cocky behemoth, and maybe this is where their problems are just starting.

Cast your mind back to August 1995. This is when Windows 95 was released to much fanfare and Rolling Stones themed advertising, at this point it could be argued that computing became fashionable, less geeky and, well, a bit rock and roll. By and large, people queued up from ridiculous times to get their hands on a copy of Windows 95, and subsequent versions of Office etc. became must have items, whether you needed them or not.

However, as time went on, many discovered that Windows 95 and a few years later, Windows 98, were maybe not quite as you’d imagined them. Or indeed how they’d been sold to you in many a high street electronics chain. It started to become de rigeur to have a pop at Microsoft, criticise them for having buggy software or complain at how it was a full time job to keep reloading Anti Virus software from floppies in the days when a consumerised Internet was still in it’s infancy. Hell, Windows Update didn’t exist in those days of Windows 95! From being a bit rock and roll, Microsoft became everyone’s punch bag. No-one can really be sure when the tipping point came along (perhaps even as late as the release of Windows Vista), but once it did, it became almost impossible to claw the good will of the people back.

And so we return from the cautionary tale of Microsoft to look at Apple. It was telling recently that a friend of mine who bought pretty much everything Apple has decided for the first time to go down the Android route. He’s a bit sick of being dictated to by Apple as to what he can and can’t use on his device that he owns. He doesn’t like having to tether himself to iTunes, which in itself is not software loved by the masses but tolerated for what it provides. He doesn’t like the fact that Apple have something of an arbitrary position on what it will and won’t allow into it’s App Store, where the Android Market is somewhat less regulated (although it should be argued that this is currently to it’s detriment).

It’s telling too that developers are looking further ahead and thinking that Android may represent a more sustainable and transparent platform to code on, though it’s worth bearing in mind that this project is run by Google, who themselves checked in their “do no evil” mantra at the door some time ago. Consumers have also been pretty pissed off that Steve Jobs told an irate iPhone 4 customer to “hold it differently” when his new device kept dropping phone calls arbitrarily. If this is what Apple have become, have they too crossed the Rubicon?

17-4-10

First post of 2010 – that’s shocking. Well, maybe shocking but not surprising. Busy month coming up with work, three overseas trips though only two are work related, one is most definitely rest! That is of course providing that this dust cloud thingy buggers off like it should, and then I can take to the skies. Abu Dhabi – looking forward to it in one part, apprehensive in another.

Enjoyed the first ever televised leaders debate the other night. I agree with the consensus that Nick Clegg came out top, and this is borne out by the fact that the Daily Mail has gone after him big style today, after deciding they were going to support the Tories this time around. I know I’m not voting Labour, but Cameron frankly has not done enough to win my vote. I like Clegg’s attitude, I find it refreshing, but he also has the luxury of making unrealistic promises he’ll  never have to make good on! According to the Mail, they’re big pro-Europeans, but as I remarked to the wife, you always get some policies you don’t like with any party you vote for. Right now, I’m still undecided and maybe one of the door steppers will win me over with their bullshit rhetoric. Or then again, maybe they won’t.

11-11-09

So for those folks who don’t know already. my relatively brief stint at Salford Software is officially over. I’m not blogging so much because I feel the need to share it with people (I’m already very surprised at how fast word gets out these days), but more because as a student of human behaviour, I’m intrigued to see how quickly, without my help, urban rumour, myth and downright inaccuracies take hold.

It’s understandable to some extent that when someone leaves their job without any prior warning, it’s assumed that he or she did something that became a sackable offence. Therefore, when I spoke to some current and past customers after I’d left who had been friends for years, they automatically assumed I’d been fired and there was some back story to it. Unfortunately for those looking for some tittle tattle, the real story is nothing of the sort.

An opportunity came up with a competitor which I decided to take (for various reasons I won’t divulge now), but I did leave the company on very good terms, it was extremely amicable and no animals got hurt 😉

As it stands for me, well, I’m sort of on gardening leave but not. My employment ended there and then, so I now have a few weeks before my new post is due to start. Being as it’s Wednesday now, already I’m going mad and looking at ways of filling the time. I plan to have a go at the VCP4 exam next week as currently you get a free resit if you fail. I’m going to have to pay for it myself of course, so that means there’s a bit of added pressure anyway.

Aside from that, I’m performing house bound duties such as spring cleaning old crap we don’t need anymore, and I’m surprised as to how tiring that sort of thing is! I’ve also started running again, and I have to say, now I’m off the beta blockers, I’m finding it a lot easier. You can track my exercise (if you must) at the following page. Ignore the first entry, the GPS went stark raving bonkers!

 

11-Aug-09

Several weeks ago I made the decision to trash my Dell Inspiron 1525 laptop, which was previously running openSUSE 11.1 , to be replaced instead by Ubuntu 9.04 (I’m not going to give it it’s quirky Drunken Antelope type name, that’s stupid, and a plague on Open Source). So for a dyed in the wool Novell guy, why do this? I’ve been hawking SUSE and it’s variants for years, but the time came for something a bit different.

Don’t get me wrong, the SUSE Enterprise line (SLES and SLED) are very good and perfectly decent Linux distrubutions, but the openSUSE desktop to me always seems slightly unfinished, plus they seem a bit careless with their patch updates (my suspend and resume was working fine out of the box, but after online updates – poof! Also, the wireless networking needed a shove after resuming a session, I never had to do this after I’d first installed). I decided to choose Ubuntu because :-

  • It’s popular – arguably the Number 1 desktop Linux distro. This means I can get a good level of support in the forums
  • It’s got a decent gloss to it – easy to use, defaults to GNOME desktop, packages easy to install, much less fiddly than openSUSE
  • They’ll send me a free DVD if I ask for one, usually within a couple of weeks too. And some free stickers. People love free stuff, y’see
  • It supports all my hardware out of the box (I know this is more a kernel thing, than a distro thing, before I get flamed)
  • The Ubuntu community does not tie itself in perpetual knots over which desktop to default to in the GNOME vs KDE war. If you want KDE, you get Kubuntu. Seemples!

The latter point is interesting as the open wound within Novell/SUSE that is GNOME vs KDE was recently re-opened by someone in the KDE team who thought that KDE should be the default desktop. Herein lies the shotgun wedding between Ximian and SUSE at the heart of Novell. Formerly, GNOME die-hards, latterly KDE stalwarts. It’s caused no end of bickering, even though the list moderators have attempted to gloss over this. I said at a previous BrainShare session that I don’t have time for this sort of thing, nor to many others. It does not become the company that this shit still goes on years after the fact.

07-May-09

Warning – here lurketh earthy language, move on if easily offended.

I had an epiphany a couple of weeks ago. I decided that cancer is a total twat. It’s a bully of the worst kind. It does not discriminate between black or white, rich or poor, funny or boring or smelly or well scrubbed. It just casually stops picking it’s nose every once in a while, looks around and just picks on someone totally at random. They could be a bit of a twat, they could be a God fearing volunteer who does great work with homeless people. The point is it doesn’t care.

A couple of weeks ago, my Mum was diagnosed with a brain tumour. We don’t know at this stage if it’s cancerous, but the fine (and I really mean that) people at Hope Hospital at Salford did some great work, got a lot of it out and sent her back home, where she’s doing miraculously well. Before this, I’d always thought of cancer as something that just affected other people. You hear about it in conversation and you find yourself doing that tilty head thing and furrowing your brow whilst saying “ahh…what a shame”.

This time last year, I did the Great Manchester Run for the first time and got myself sponsored for Cancer Research UK. Ironic really, in hindsight. I only picked them at random because they’re a well know and deserving charity amongst many other fine causes. I’m too late now this year to do the same again, but should I do another 10K (and feel free to take me into a corner and have words if I tell you I am), I intend to get sponsorship to help those fine people at CRC and let’s beat this twat with all we’ve got. Things have come a long way in just a few years, but we aren’t there yet. Like all bullies, it won’t stop until we’ve ground it’s fucked up face into the dirt with feeling.

If you are a cancer sufferer, I wish you well from the bottom of my heart.

29-Jan-09

First post of 2009! The new job is going well, certainly learning a lot of new things, especially where Novell’s ZENworks Configuration Management is concerned. I thought now might be a good moment to impart some of the things I’ve picked up over the last four months as I think I probably get 90% of the ZCM traffic that comes through Technical Support here.

Firstly, if you’re a ZEN7 shop and you’re wondering, should I upgrade? The answer takes many different facets, and each situation is totally different. I think you have to analyse your business drivers first and then wrap the technology around that as it fits best.

My first question would be – what’s the motivator to upgrade? If you are a ZEN7 shop with Windows XP with no plans to move from XP any time in the near future, my advice would be to stay as you are. Why? Well as Windows 7 has been brought forward considerably by the relative failure of Windows Vista, in many cases there is no pressing need to support Windows Vista workstations in the enterprise. If you take a look at Novell’s Support Lifecycle page for ZENworks, you will see that ZEN7 is supported until the end of August 2010 and then stays in Extended Support until the end of August 2012. What do these support phases mean? The short answer is that regular support is just that – service requests against the product by Novell, bug fixes, security releases, new TIDs, service packs etc.

Extended Support is what is available for customers on the higher level support plans, generally where you have PSEs or ASEs on your account. If you have Premium Support, you can continue to raise SRs and get defect fixes until the end of the Extended Support phase. So if you’re in this category, you needn’t worry too much about moving to ZCM until perhaps early 2011, which is a good two years off.

On the other hand, ZCM has not had the best of starts. From it’s release up until Christmas last year, there seemed to be a major release of bug fixes every month. It’s quite a departure from what you’re used to with “traditional” ZENworks, and I would strongly recommend attending any courses you can get on the product before you even throw it up in the lab for testing. There are many major differences from “traditional” ZENworks, including :-

– ZCM content repository for applications and content

– ZCM holds all configuration information in a backend SQL database (Sybase by default, NO MySQL support as yet)

– ZCM can operate in a “pure” Microsoft AD environment (as some customers already do)

– Much of the ZEN nomenclature changes – we now talk of “bundles”, “content servers”, “deployment stages” and “baselines”

I hope to write further postings as we go along to help current “traditional” ZEN customers decide when and if ZCM is suitable, but for now, this is a good start!

02-Dec-08

Well bugger me, a post on Linux (amongst other things). If you’re in the world of Linux, and more specifically in the world of Novell’s Linux product offerings, you may wish to know where in the development cycle SLED11 is, as Novell to my knowledge have made no real announcements (other than the usual “coming soon” crap). In case you don’t know, SLED (and for that matter SLES) are the harder Kray twins of what comes from the openSUSE movement. At the moment, this group is days away from releasing the latest iteration of openSUSE, version 11.1.

Historically, NLD (as was) and SLED have been inextricably linked to the progress of the “free” variety of SUSE Linux, and this is still the case. NLD was based on SUSE Linux 9.1 and SLED based on 10.1. So you can see here already a picture is forming – if we extrapolate this further, we can deduce that SLED11 will be based on openSUSE 11.1. There are a couple of things to mention here, firstly that is assumption is correct – Although openSUSE is days away from release, the same codebase for SLED11 is currently at Beta 5 as I write. I’m not on the official beta test program, but as I work for a Novell partner, I do have access to the code itself. My guess would be that sometime mid-January or early February, you will see a public beta, with the big fanfare reserved for Novell’s annual festival of geek, BrainShare.

The other thing to mention about this is that as we have observed that previous enterprise versions of desktop linux have been based on “free” SUSE Linux versions 9.1 and 10.1 and SLED11 will be based on 11.1, it seems fair (and accurate) to assume that SLED12 will be based on openSUSE 12.1. OK so far, but then again, so what? Well this also means that we can be pretty accurate on the future roadmap of when this product can be expected.

openSUSE follows an interesting development cycle, much the same as other distros such as Ubuntu and Fedora. Essentially, then development cycle and release dates are set well in advance and the code basically always ships on time as up until late beta stages, the development carries on in a state of flux until which point the distro vendir locks down the versions and functionality and makes sure polish is applied and no showstopping bugs are in there. What you then get is a guaranteed new version of the distro every six months.

Clearly this is not to everyone’s liking, hence the enterprise versions. In this case, we had SLED10 in July 2006, we will most likely see SLED11 in March 2009. 2 1/2 years is around the optimum time between releases, in my opinion. Compare this with the devlopment hell that was Windows Vista. Late, buggy, bloated and promised features (WinFS) stripped out before the end and shunted to future releases. What have Microsoft learned from this? Well, they already brought forward the release of Windows 7 to “sometime” 2009 (probably Christmas). They’ve also said it’s just called Windows 7. Not Vista, Keith or Dave. Just 7. They’ve removed some bloat (mainly because they need to compete in the netbook space without XP). In all, they’ve looked at the Linux development lifecycle and decided it might work for them.

So what’s new in SLED11? As much as I’ve seen (which isn’t a great deal), take openSUSE 11.1, add Novell branded graphics and some Novell centric apps such as GroupWise (version 7, 8 won’t be in there I don’t think) and GroupWise IM and that’s pretty much it. Maybe they will put some extra work into the networking stack so that it can be incorporated into an AD or eDirectory environment, but that’s all. The main time lag behind 11.1 will be the test and beta phases, which are much more limited in the “free” product.

I’ve also never liked the idea that the openSUSE product is somewhat or in any way deficient or inferior to the SLED product. Some commentators like to say that the openSUSE releases are “only for gurus” or for “brave people only”. What rot. If you’re competent using graphical user interfaces, you can use it just fine. Also, there’s no implication in there that the software is ropey, it all just works.

That’s the Linux stuff out of the way, now to the Manchester Congestion Charge Referendum. JUST SAY NO! The government state that we can have £1.3bn funding for public transport improvements, but this can only be found if we vote yes. Hmm..On the other hand, the same government can find countless billions to bail out banks that nearly went bust owing to “wanker bankers who played poker with other people’s money” (credit to David Mitchell). Sorry, I’m not voting for another hideous tax when we pay enough tax as it is. Make the money go further or bugger off and give us a government that realises you need to run the country’s transport system at a loss because that way the country can reap the benefit of a first class system designed to get a person from A to B as quickly as possible as cheaply as possible and not this decades old thinking that it must generate some kind of profit in order to be sustainable.

19-Nov-08

Interesting last few days that gave me a real flush of nostalgia. Firstly someone I used to go to school with got in touch for the first time in over 10 years. I’m usually quite critical of Facebook (even though I am on it), but in this case, I would never have re-connected with this person after such a long time. It’s really cool to see the reaction when you tell them you’ve been married for 10 years, have two boys, one of which is nearly ten!

On the other hand, you have the surprise of finding out this person has a daughter and lives near to where you were born and spent the first 20 years of your life. Amazing! It’s really given me a warm feeling to know this person is doing very well and also that they have fond memories of our time together at school!

The other blast from the past was last night at the Manchester Academy. I went to see Extreme, the first time they’ve been in Manchester since 1995.  They seemed genuinely moved by the reaction they got from the crowd, which is always a good thing to see. I didn’t really know any of the new stuff they played, but they put on a great show in a small venue, so a good night – with the exception of ringing ears when I came out!

For pics of the gig, visit the usual place.

06-Nov-08

Another horrendously long time since my last blog post. I did of course leave MMU for pastures new, and it’s the best move I’ve ever made. I felt drained in my old post, stressed, devalued etc. but my new post has given me a massive shot of new life. I’m now VMWare VCP certified, I’ve submitted my BrainShare ’09 paper and things are going well.

Writing this in deepest Luton as I’m with a customer and Novell tomorrow as we try to sort out a long standing issue. Hopefully all goes to plan and I’m not leaving for home when it’s gone dark!