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    2016 Mar 1

    Small Efforts for Big Wins

    This morning, I paid a visit to the American Citizen Services department of a US Embassy, for passport-related services. Anyone who has been there knows that this is not exactly an efficient experience. You need to make a reservation online in advance The security makes TSA look like a luxury hotel: no bags, no backpacks, no phones, no earphones, no Kindles, no food, no drink. You only are allowed your documents, wallet, keys and printed material.
    2016 Feb 24

    Penny-Wise and Pound Foolish, Eh?

    There is an old (obviously) English saying, warning people not to be "penny-wise and pound foolish." As the main British currency is the pound, 1/100 of which is a penny, someone who is penny-wise and pound-foolish is someone who refuses to invest a small amount now, leading to a much greater cost later. No matter how often I come across companies being penny-wise and pound-foolish, I never cease to be surprised by it.
    2016 Feb 18

    Ask Not What Technology Can Do For You...

    At the Container Summit, I was speaking with a colleague at a booth, when a potential customer of his walked up and engaged in conversation. He asked an interesting question: How do I know if my software is ready for the cloud or for containerization? While an interesting discussion ensued about the company's technology, the most important points of the conversation were three key lessons: Just about any software or application can be containerized.
    2016 Feb 16

    Put a Stake In Your Steering Wheel

    When at the Container Summit, I heard a great (if somewhat perverse) line from Jacob Groundwater of New Relic. I liked it so much, I tweeted it out immediately: If you want people to drive slower, don't give them an airbag; put a spike in their steering wheel! While a rather morbid image, Jacob hit on a core truth: if you make dangerous activities safer, people will do more dangerous things.
    2016 Feb 11

    Lift and Shift

    Yesterday, I had the pleasure of attending Container Summit NYC, arranged by the great folks at Joyent. The first speaker, Dave Bartoletti of Forrester, gave a broad overview of cloud computing - private and public - and container adoption. One of his themes was the methods by which companies adopt new technologies, particularly cloud and containers, and the benefits they gain. New technologies enable new ways of operating. While some technologies simply make it easier or cheaper to operate in the same way as before, most enable new methods, new processes, new ideas that previously were difficult or impossible.
    2016 Feb 10

    Ad Blockers Are Good Signals

    Are ad blockers good or bad? Does it depend for whom? Advertisers and content Web site owners are up in arms over ad-blockers. A report from August 2015 suggested that the industry lost $22 BN in revenue in 2015 due to ad-blockers. Yesterday I visited a news site on my phone - I believe it was Forbes - and it refused to show me the page until I turned off the ad-blocker.
    2016 Feb 9

    Decoupling Microsoft, or Free Your App

    A few weeks ago, a colleague showed me a technology that was fascinating in and of itself, but the strategic ramifications are even greater. For those of you who are technically inclined, look at these links: https://hub.docker.com/r/microsoft/dotnet/ https://hub.docker.com/r/microsoft/aspnet/ https://github.com/aspnet/home These are, respectively, the Linux docker images for running Microsoft .Net and ASP.Net apps, and the open-source repository. This is quite cool technically. After all, apps compiled for platform A, especially tightly closed platforms like Microsoft, usually aren't meant to run on platform B!
    2016 Jan 27

    Don't Defer the Problem, Resolve It!

    I have been pondering this article for quite some time, then came across a great similar quote from Bryan Cantrill: "Don't just reboot it, goddamn it! Debug it!" Since Bryan always is a great speaker, watch it here. Time and time and time again, I come across companies and people with systems that are misbehaving. Time and time and time again, people suggest "why don't we just restart/reboot it?" What these people really are suggesting is, "
    2016 Jan 19

    You Are What You Sell

    At the risk of kicking someone when they are down, let's look at... GoPro. GoPro recently reported slower than anticipated sales, laid off 7% of their staff, and had their stock hammered (down 14.5% in a day). BusinessInsider did a straightforward if nice job showing their absolute revenue and relative year-over-year growth for the last 5 years. While total sales numbers are nice, the growth numbers aren't pretty.  
    2016 Jan 13

    Do You Need Microservices to Make Containers Worthwhile?

    Earlier this week, I had breakfast with a colleague of mine from Rancher. Rancher is a great "orchestrator" for Docker containers. I have recommended and used them in production environments. Containers - one of the hottest technologies in the last year - is a much more efficient form of virtualization than traditional "hardware" virtualization (think VMWare or Xen), while providing a superior application distribution model. The challenge is that while the native Docker tools are pretty good for managing individual servers with containers, managing more than a few containers, let alone across more than a few servers, becomes impossibly complex.
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