|
|
Posted by: Rick on March 31st, 2009
While reading articles via Google news, as I’m prone to do, I clicked on an article titled: Microsoft targets Linux, IBM with Windows Server for really small biz. My opinion of the article will be noted in my next article. It’s not so much the article itself, but computerworld.com that rubbed me wrong.
One [...]
Posted by: Rick on March 26th, 2009
Tomorrow, the people of the world have the opportunity to demonstrate their unity. Between 8:30-pm and 9:30pm in each time zone people around the world are planning to turn-off their lights. And, everything else that uses power. This is our opportunity to show the powers-that-be we are united in the effort to change our [...]
Posted by: Rick on March 21st, 2009
Six months, or so, ago I was brow-beaten’ to remove Linux from our community computer (that’s the one everybody else in my house uses) and reinstall Windows. With great reluctance and a warning I complied. The warning; “If it gets infected, someone else in this house is going to learn how to install Windows. I’m done with it!”
I was greeted with a note from my daughter this morning;
Daddy, Would you please fix my computer.
Continue reading Windows: A Festering Wound…
Posted by: Rick on March 19th, 2009
I think everyone can acknowledge, technology itself isn’t always guilty of making our lives complex and/or problematic. In fact, very often it’s the person using the technology that causes self-imposed grief. Towards that end, I found this incredibly funny story you’ve just gotta read…
http://www.mollynoir.com/carolineinparis/2009/03/03/technology-bites/
Okay, locked-out I can see, but locked-in? Technology not [...]
Posted by: Rick on March 19th, 2009
I work creating and maintaining websites and applications. Seems like everything on the ‘net gets cached at some point. It can be a real P.I.T.A. to keep track of where cache is created, when to clean it and when to leave it alone.
Some of the sites I care for are CMS based. Don’t get me wrong, I think CMS’s are great. They save a lot of time and keep the content separate from the design elements. Which makes life easier. Some however, have caching built-in. And the built-in caching actually works from a performance stand-point. What bites, is the necessity to periodically clean the cache. With tens of thousands of cache files, just getting the cache display page to load takes forever. Deleting the files takes time too and it’s never a single-pass operation.
Continue reading Cache here, cache there, cache everywhere…
|
Notice You'll need to have an account and be logged in to view the family category (where the pics are).
|