Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

What’s happening.

Friday, July 24th, 2009

This is to update those who are wondering about why there has been no follow up. A few quick observations:

1) If you are not on Twitter, do it now. The rest of the story can wait. Just get in and get your place at the table.

2) About Blogging: one thing is that it does create a sense of obligation. You put it out, some read it and then you have a social network that wants to know what happened next. Have at least 3 articles in draft that may or may not see the light of LCD.

3) Watch out for misleading domain renewal or search placement invoices as these seem to be on the rise again. Make sure you understand what you accept or sign-up for.

OK, so that sorts it.

Cheers

The truth is out there.

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

In ancient Vedic knowledge, one of the greatest goals to be sought is to be a master of dialectics.

In essence, this means to know what is ‘truth’. Recent experience has further enhanced my respect for this wisdom and I urge all who read this to try and work for truth in your life and dealings with others.

What really happens behind the scenes.

Friday, July 11th, 2008

We sometimes get comment that it is hard to contact us by telephone. That’s true. The telephone is not the best means of contacting busy technicians who are glued to their computer screens. However, when you (or we) place ‘the call’, the ‘need’ is to speak to someone. That need often outweighs the value of the matter being followed up. That is, the emotional weight of the situation shifts to the need to talk to someone. If that emotional need is not satisfied, we feel rejected or anxious or just plain annoyed. I know because it happens to me as well. Or at least it used to.

So what is going on when you can’t talk to someone in support right away? Possibly they are solving a Mission Critical task, have three phone lines in use, and twelve active web connections open. Or perhaps they are working on installing a software upgrade or new server. So, you get Voice mail and the anxiety builds.

Would it help if all calls could get through? Yes and No. The emotional weight would be lifted, but the cost would be extended delays in solution. This is because the emotional weight tends to be dumped during a support call.

It becomes a question of balance, judgement and trust.

Balance. Only someone who has oversight of all system status will have the balance to prioritise faults. When you or I experience a problem with something we want to use, the emotional response is narrowly focused.

Judgement. The SYSop is the best placed person to judge the critical nature of an issue for 2 reasons. First, they know the likely cause, cure and duration of an event from years of experience. Secondly, they are uniquely placed to provide a balanced view of the situation in context of the entire site.

Trust. Unless you are new to a business, you should be able to determine from past experience if you can trust in their performance. Most likely, the problem you are experiencing is sudden and unexpected. Step back from it and you can unload some of the anxiety you feel by recognising that normal service will return. Armed with this information, you can assist the process of recovery by doing some work on the matter before calling support. Did you just change something? Are your friends/workmates experiencing the problem also?

We are all human and our emotions matter, your’s and mine. However, a unique feature of emotions is that we choose to have them. Really, we do.

Consider why you feel the distress in a situation and you will realise that is has nothing to do with the facts. Facts are just that, observations of events. They have no emotional weight. The deadline/sale/upgrade that is at risk is also unweighted emotionally, it will happen or not regardless of how we feel about it. We can choose not to be disturbed and calmly deal with the situation. This will keep our minds clear and help resolve the challenge; or importantly find an alternative if the situation is one of those rare extended events.

The reason I am writing this is because I recently had my emotions tuned to something very trivial. We were asked for a fix to a situation a customer was in as a result of some changes they had made. The work was done professionally and promptly. What happened next? Absolutely nothing. Weeks later, the work remained unused. Their emotional need had been solved and passed onto us. If I had thought more about it at the time, I would have realised that the issue was not a priority. The customer at the time was anxious to resolve their problem, mainly because they were dealing with something not well understood. That converted to anxiety, a call to support and diversion of efforts from work in hand.

Was availability of ready support on the ‘phone a good thing? You be the judge.

Click on the link below for another take on this topic.

The System is down.

Wordpress hacking attempt?

Friday, June 13th, 2008

An interesting attempt to exploit some (as yet unknown) vulnerability in Wordpress showed up today. So far, it does not seem to have been successful.  Took a look at the Wordpress Forum and can see something there that might be the subject of interest but not in this manner. Does our visitor watch the forum for clues to exploit? Maybe. 

It appears to be an attempt to exploit Comments submission and retrieve the Admin password. It does produce some interesting results from the engine.

They are wasting their time for no useful advantage. If they succeed it will just point out a failure in someone-else’s product design, not a great achievement, and better done in a controlled environment if it is to have a useful purpose.

If the individual(s) want to post on my site, well why not just ask for the right to publish content? I would probably agree. If the idea is to advertise some generic product that can be found everywhere on the internet, then why go to so much effort when there are much easier ways?

I suppose a dialogue on this is unlikely to occur. Perhaps our visitor might want to post what they are trying to achieve and what brought you to bother?

SP3 Windows XP Service Pack 3

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

I am amazed at the immediate performance improvement after installing SP3. Usually, I am reluctant to move so quickly to a major upgrade. This time, it looked like Microsoft had few problems and so I took the plunge. The benefits are immediate with noticeable speed up of the environment across the board. It’s almost as if I had put in a new processor or extra RAM.

It’s been a while but I can say ” Thank YOU Microsoft”. This is the real thing.

PS. I have returned to  say. Wow.  The performance boost is just so apparent that I can hardly believe it. Just the thing to lift spirits after a tough day.

Have some fun.

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

I have been working on 3 new Technical posts. One is a piece about remote systems management, another about outside joins in MSAccess and the last one about irritating uninvited advertising in your Blog and that  notice that you need to update to a new version of WordPress. Talk about heavy. Why not have some fun?

I thought I would start by saying, I like this.

But, do you notice how ….

Things go wrong.

Tuesday, December 4th, 2007

The Internet is vast and its operation and the software used to access and develop applications on the Internet is not within our control. Adverse events or circumstances will arise. Experience shows that regardless of all efforts expended, something will occur that will exceed the capacity of the situation. Usually this will be in the form of a known but unpredictable threat such as a server failure, virus or Ecommerce fraud.

Very few ICT companies are prepared to inform their clients about risk and provide a understanding of their role in the process. The outcome of not being informed is a false assumption that the services being provided will always be flawless. The real difficulty is that unlike other commercial risks, Insurance cover is hard/impossible to get or too expensive for a small enterprise. That means that in most cases the business is self-insuring or carrying the risk itself.

Two examples of unexpected risk come to mind. A few years ago a major hardware/software vendor released a Web Host Appliance Server for use by ISPs and small business. It was very popular. The software had a security vulnerability and one day thousands of these appliance servers were hacked and disabled. The only way to fix the problem was to reload the servers from scratch meaning many domains were offline for 24 hours or more as technical staff struggled with a truly catastrophic failure.

The present day scare ( 3/12/07) over WPAD vulnerability for Microsoft Internet Explorer, shows that evan a bug that was first identified and repaired back in 1999, can unexpectedly re-emerge.
(Microsoft Security Bulletin (MS99-054)
Patch Available for “WPAD Spoofing” Vulnerability http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/ms99-054.mspx).
It is amazing to find code that had been eliminated re-enter the development cycle, but here apparently is a clear example of it.

The fact is: adverse events will occur that are outside of the reasonable control of both customer and ISP.