Archive for March, 2008

Fixing Problem$ The Old Fa$hion Way

Monday, March 24th, 2008

Tech 1: This one guy was trying to open a 50MB PPT presentation and wanted to know why PPT kept closing on him

Tech 2: Hm. Did it have a bunch of movies and crap in it? Probably it did.

Tech 1: The pics were really high [resolution]

Tech 2: And he used PP to resize them?

Tech 1: I believe so.

Tech 1: and he wanted a RAM upgrade. I was like are you serious? That will not fix the problem.

Tech 2: THAT IS HILARIOUS!

Tech 2: “What do I need to spend to make this problem go away?”

The Trees

Saturday, March 22nd, 2008

Individual trees. If you walk through the forest then trees are everywhere, and if you walk in a straight line in the forest you eventually will hit a tree dead on and not be able to go any further. If you don’t look around and continue to hit the same tree repeatedly and then die of starvation in the forest then you are stupid. Stop hitting the same tree, please. Step back. Look around. Understand that there are many trees that can get in your way, and yet all you need to do to travel through the forest is to simply walk around each tree.

Protected: Know The Tools Of Your Trade

Saturday, March 22nd, 2008

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Where is my stuff?

Sunday, March 9th, 2008

Wired’s Bruce Schneier talks about the consquences of the internet being your hard drive.

Mainly he is discussing the idea of relying on third party services for keeping the information you want to keep accessible and the downsides and dangers of relying on other people for what you think is important.

I recently heard someone who had stored many pictures on Flickr without any additional backup had their account hacked into and all of the pictures deleted. This was a paid account, mind you, not a free one. They requested assistance and received, well, nothing. “Sorry, that’s not our problem.” i.e. Flickr has no back up at all. If you get hacked and your stuff deleted you don’t have recourse. Such are the vagaries of cheap and unlimited storage. To Flickr, as well as Google I am sure, the only things backed up are critical systems and the date on those systems. You may be part of the great experiment, but you aren’t critical until there are millions of you and it’s happening all at one time. In this case, it is the opposite of the old saying. One person is a statistic, a million people is a tragedy.