I’m a Shill

And I think these guys are hiring.  Just sayin’.

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This startup didn’t exactly ditch Amazon Web Services

 

No matter what the headline says.  What they did say, without saying it, is that you really need to understand your workloads before just slapping them in a public cloud.  Keep that in mind.  Know thy workloads.

Sounds like I need to write the 10 commandments of moving your applications to a public cloud.

http://www.geekwire.com/2014/heres-startup-dumped-amazon-web-services/

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why we won’t be painting over this – BAGBY  BEER CO.

http://www.bagbybeer.com/2/post/2014/01/why-we-wont-be-painting-over-this.html

Fuck Cancer.  Long Live Kenny.

That is all.

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The Console Living Room

The Internet Archive now has a “Console Living Room” where you can play classic console games in a browser?   I’ll see you in June.

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Book Review: Phoenix Project

The Kinzua Kid is a Blue Collar IT guy, through and through; always has been, always will be.  That’s why I generally eschew management philosophy books and complicated process models that fail to account for the way people actually, well, work.  I find the literature harder to ignore these days because you’re automatically on the outs when you aren’t quote-battling in a conversation.  It drives me crazy, so I finally broke down and read The Phoenix Project by Gene Kim, Kevin Behr and George Spafford. Continue reading

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Junk Mail Is Fun

Somehow I’m on Techgtarget’s spam list and this is what graced the inbox this morning:

Gartner research suggests that any data center site that is more than 7 years old is obsolete.  Whether true or false, constructing a new data center is sometimes the only solution for outdated or overcrowded data centers.However, many newdata center builds and expansions end up failing -resulting in a massive waste of time and money for the organization.

Expand your knowledge with this white paper that presents the top 9 mistakes to avoid when expanding or constructing a data center facility. Though many data center builds result in failure,it’s not inevitable.Keep reading to learn an effective way to achieve success with a focusedtotal(sp) costof(sp) ownership (TCO) approach.

This is why I don’t read either of these publications (TT or Gartner): they read like Fox News, The Daily Mail or the National Enquirer.  Apologies to the National Enquirer.

What Gartner research?  What could possibly be outdated in just 7 years?  How is it that many multi-million and potentially multi-billion dollar construction projects “fail” and we don’t hear about that until a ridiculous spam letter, but one dude has mold problems in a $400K Pulte home and there’s a blog dedicated to spreading the word?  How much money do these fictional organizations lose?  I may never know the answers to these questions because you have to register to read, but I’m pretty sure a focusedtotal costof ownership approach will have about zero impact on the success of a construction project.

Hiring a competent general contractor?  Now we’re talking…

Update: Found the article.  It’s a 3 year old paper from APC/Schneider Electric that is yet another reason why we can’t have nice things in this industry (no citations, unsupported claims, horrific writing, generally bullshit all around).  Read it for a laugh, #6 in particular and then tell me if I should or should not use a modular design.  I’m so confused.

 

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“Tell Me about Yourself” Is not the dumbest question, but it is the dullest

I warned you I might do this.

In the long list of career advice articles, this one is not the worst topic but it does miss a great opportunity to treat the subject properly.  While interviewers do frequently break the ice with the standard “tell me about yourself” opening gambit there are better ways to tackle this grade-1 move.  I generally dislike the whole “how to prepare for common interview questions” theme anyway, because common interview questions are bad to begin with.  Why reinforce bad hiring techniques when you can fix them yourself on the fly and improve your prospects?  Continue reading

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I am the Kinzua Kid

I am the Kinzua Kid.  We’ll tackle why that is in a moment but first I must apologize.  I haven’t been terribly productive of late, having been “offline” for about a month as I wrestled with some important decisions.  It’s all good stuff, really and I hope you can join me (and Ted, of course) for some fun times ahead.

First off, I left EMC at the beginning of November and took the month off to go hunting, enjoy Disneyland and manage the kid carpool.  I did quite literally the least amount of anything I have ever done in my life for a solid month.  That got old (seriously…do you know how dull doing nothing is?) so I accepted an offer to join the fine folks over at Datalink to help grow their Advanced Services business (read: consulting).  I am really excited to work with these aces.  Day two with the company had me moderating a panel at the Raleigh CIO Forum on Business vs. IT Transformation with 3 great CIOs.  I get paid to do this shit?  Seriously?  I love my work; sometimes I’m actually pretty good at it, too.

With the new job comes some changes to the blog, most of which I think you’ll enjoy.  I’ll be pushing out more timely content related to IT, Cloud Services, Service Management, and especially articles concerning how those things intersect with consumerism, since that’s kind of the point of Cloud and Service Management.  But that’s not all I’m going to write about…

  • I’m a skeptic and a critical thinker.  If I feel like calling out some pseudoscientific bullshit I might just have to.  A lot.  There are a lot of snake oil salesmen and high priests of fraud out there so expect this to be a recurring theme.
  • I’m an amateur astronomer, really amateur but I hope to become even just a shadow of guys like Jack Kramer and continue to add back to the community.  So you’ll see more of my astrographs if I ever get any good at taking them.  Yes, those are mine.  I’ll take your insults in the comments.  “Do you even polar align?!” is a good start.
  • I’m an amateur magician.  My brother in law is a professional but I just perform mentalism, coin and card tricks for fun and mainly during the holiday season as a walk-around entertainer.  I am, however, featured on YouTube performing a miracle or two.  I might, therefore, have to cover that end of the world.  Guys like Randi, Penn & Teller and Banachek are my rock stars…
  • …But only because Pink Floyd and Dire Straits aren’t touring any longer.  So I’d really appreciate any help getting David Gilmour and Mark Knopfler on stage in my back yard together.  That’s really the only reason we have this blog, anyway, to be ready for anything Pink Floyd or Dire Straits tour related.
  • I have a secret talent heretofore unmentioned: I am an aficionado of flash games, having played and mastered hundreds (and probably thousands) of them.  Puzzles, defense, strategy, action, shooters, scrollers, tossers, launchers…I’m a sad man when I have 10 minutes to kill and access to sites like Kongregate or ArmorGames.  You might see a review or two.  There are some talented developers working in that space.
  • I’m a patron of the arts because the arts was a patron of me, hence coming coverage of the Oceanside Theatre Company.  These people pull together amazing shows with no money and only sweat equity to push forward.  You might also see material from forensics competitions everywhere, because if you’ve never been given 3 minutes to develop a 5 minute speech or gone 1-2-4 you simply shouldn’t be speaking in front of people without adult supervision.
  • I’m also a patron of my wife.  She’s an event planner and you people who organize meetings or conferences need event planners and meeting managers in spades.  I’m looking at you Gartner forums, EMC World and the ACC JPW Open.  Hey, it’s neat that you’re in bed with one hotel forever because they give you massive kick backs but fuck you very much for screwing the attendees over.  All of you.
  • Which leads me to the fact that I was a competitive Cribbage player (mediocre, but I can hold my own).  I’m getting back to playing again after 12 years away.  Dad’s pretty pumped up over that one since he’s already there and is a ridiculously good player.  I’ll see you at the 2014 Grand National!
  • And last but not least, I believe in treating people like decent human beings.  This is a concept utterly lost on HR departments and my good friend Nick Corcodilos has been speaking that truth for a long damned time.  Once again, I have a transition story that drives the point home affirmatively.  Nick’s right.  There is no talent shortage.

Lucky for all of you, that transition story is likely to be my next article because it touches on so many service management, HR, career, law and political topics from above.  I’m looking forward to writing it.

I say that and I smile.  I called Ted right after I resigned to discuss the future of our blogging experiment and I was concerned my departure (he’s still with EMC) would cause some friction for both of us.  I even went as far as to replicate the blog on the domain I always wanted, KinzuaKid.net, you know…just in case.  That turned out to be unnecessary because Ted’s not actually a douchebag and he helpfully reminded me that we hosted our own blog specifically because situations like this do happen, so I destroyed the database and KinzuaKid.net now permanently redirects to practicalpolymath.com.

Strap yourself in and enjoy.  Oh, right…I almost forgot:
My dad is the Kinzua Kowboy (his old handle/callsign from the 1970s) and I am just the Kinzua Kid.  This is Kinzua (Kin-zoo).  The polymath?  That’s still Ted; he’s the smart one.  I’m just here to piss you off.

Speaking of which.  Ask me the TB:FTE question again; I dare you.

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The Rack and Pinion Fix, Revisited

It’s been way too long since my last post (I’ll get to the reasons for that later this week) but some time ago, reader Jeremy Stanley wrote for more information about this post.  The long title aside, he had some questions about the material needed and construction steps.  He managed to skip a step with good results:

The repair was quick and effective. I rolled the Teflon, stuffed it in the hole, marked the cut point, snipped it with scissors, and then stuck it back in the tube, test-fitting the drawtube inside it. It fit well. In fact, it didn’t want to come out easily, so I just left it in and used the telescope without gluing the Teflon (other than possibly some residual adhesive left over from the nylon strips that I peeled off).

In any case, the focuser slop was almost entirely eliminated, making it possible to collimate (and easier to refocus).

I’d love to describe just how well this worked for him but I’ll just let Jeremy’s pictures speak for themselves.  Links below to the originals.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jpstanley/9542685888/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jpstanley/9497143835/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jpstanley/9499944072/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jpstanley/9499941994/

Nice work, Jeremy.  I clearly need to start over in this hobby because those are some stunning shots.  Same gear, same fix, much better output.  I think I need to stick to writing and fixing broken gear instead of astrophotography.

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Subverting Big Data

I had 1,500 word article all written two weeks ago about how long and far LinkedIn has fallen, even going as far as to title the thing “Why I am Leaving LinkedIn.”  Then Nick spouted off with his usual nay-saying self in his own article: Join My LinkedIn Big Data Gang-Bang, stealing my thunder.  Well, really he says it better than I, so it’s not so much he’s stealing my thunder as I’m his echo in the canyon.  Nick may have turned me around.  I don’t think I’m leaving LinkedIn after all.  I’m going to subvert it. Continue reading

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