Digsby…sigh…

Ack! IM outages are lame – but when they are so much more and incorporate other pieces, it becomes a bigger problem. Digsby is down :( so that means it’s off to my trusty backup multiple IM client on the Blackberry – Web Messenger.

As far as what happened to Digsby? Just can’t connect and the last cogent information from their blog says the following:

We are having server-side issues that brought down the service.  We are working on the problem now and will be back up shortly.  If you want to be notified when we come back online, send an email to bugs@digsby.com.

After a year of almost perfect uptime, this is the second outage in the last week.  This is completely unacceptable and we will make sure this does not become a regular occurrence!

Wish there was more information – but to be honest, I would rather they focus on fixing the problem and get the service up. Here’s to hoping that zombies were not involved. Or if they were, there is some great footage.

UPDATE: Back online! Also had the chance to start playing around with their embeddable widget – VERY cool.

Panasonic Laptops – where’s the love?

Image of Panasonic CF-Y4

Right here. I use a Panasonic CF-Y4 (the new ones are the Y7 and up). You never hear about these laptops – but though “old” I have not grown tired of the design.

Of course, there are some downsides:

I got my Y4 laptop from Dynamism in 2005 – great service and was able to get the laptop configured to my specs. I will be checking them out for my next laptop upgrade.

Panasonic CF-L1XR

Alas, Panasonic has been making some kick butt laptops for a while – previously I used a CF-L1XR and loved it. Bought in 2000 and retired in 2005 so it served me well. It had a P-III 600, 1″ thick, 4.3 lbs, CD-RW, with dual batteries (would get 6 hours out of it easy). I still use it for playing with Ubuntu.

DLNA and your OS

So if you want to use a uPnP client – you have to get creative. Music is easy – but the video piece requires some finagling. Finding uPnP servers is easy – finding software clients is the tough part.

If you are on Windows XP - you can use XBMC – but it’s a little demanding on older hardware – also kinda tough to “minimize” – it pretty much takes over. I haven’t been able to find a free DLNA client for XP (on2share has mixed reviews and costs money). I am going to try the VLC plugin next. I know Vista has it built into WMP – but my laptop can’t hang…

If you are on Ubuntu – RhythmBox is good for music and Totem works great. There are some independent projects for a uPnP client which work decently. This plugin has worked for me so far with Totem. Can’t wait til it gets folded into production code.

I have been messing around with Windows 7 and it has worked pretty well with my setup. Was able to stream music/photos/movies from my DLNA server on the network. Pretty nice having it built into WMP – might be worth the upgrade and it performed decently on my “older” laptop.

Post further ideas if you have em!

DLNA – it’s getting there

So took the plunge and decided to digitize our entire DVD collection. I wish I could say that it was a quest to forge ahead in the technical world – but alas, it was just a space issue. We have a bunch of DVDs and they take up space in the tiny place we have. Now they are in plastic bins in the basement, and we don’t miss them at all.

So if you want to take the plunge – here is the easiest way.

1) Backup the DVD into a single file (DVD43 and Handbrake are the easiest – Windows only though)

2) Put the file somewhere on the network that makes sense (I had an old server setup for a while, but then grabbed a NAS and haven’t looked back).

3) Hook up a DLNA compatible player hooked up to your monitor/tv (I snagged an 80GB PS3 – was able to retire my PS2 and get a decent blu-ray player).

4) Browse your media collections (the NAS works with Video, Photos and Music) and enjoy. Worked like a charm with minimal setup. I think this is how it’s supposed to work – awesome.

Integrating in the cloud…really?

So the notion of data warehouses is/has been a standardized approach to being able to parse it and do some analytics.  Have had some recent experiences that are beginning to show promise in getting the analytics functionality without having to dedicate hardware and management.

Companies like LucidEra and Pervasive are giving businesses a chance to outsource typical BI (Business Intelligence) gathering duties. I have had the chance to use both and am very impressed with the direction these companies are going. By allowing connections to leverage APIs in the cloud – administration seems like it would be easier. The other upside? Access to reporting is through a web interface or an existing application – so no new systems and easier access controls. Worth seeing how companies like LogiXML pop up in various ways as the logic engine under the hood of integration startups.

Great writeup on managed hosting options…

I have to give some kudos – my colleague Sean Tario put a lot of effort and research into a post on managed web hosting. There is so much misinformation and deceptive marketing out there – it’s tough to know what your options truly are.

Sean – thanks for putting this together – it’s a great resource and breaks down what managed hosting means for the typical entrepreneur.

http://seantario.com/2009/01/server-hosting-options-a-rough-guide/

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