madai thiranthu

25 Oct 2006

I can’t stop listening to this [YouTube] Tamil Malaysian rap video, “Madai Thiranthu,” which my friend Darshan sent me. The music is stupifyingly spectacular. The big guy in the video is Yogi B, one of the most popular MCs on the Malaysian hip hop scene, according to Darshan.

And here’s the original, which is also spectacular.

Ethan! Oracle and Sun news

More rumors about Oracle releasing a Linux distribution, this time from a Jefferies analyst:

“We have heard that Ubuntu is currently working to certify its recently introduced server OS to all Oracle’s major products, including databases and middleware,” she wrote.

“The relationship between Oracle and Ubuntu seems to have come together rather quickly, and is perhaps the fallout from an attempt by Red Hat and Oracle to work more closely together.”

Egbert said she thinks Oracle could introduce a dedicated hardware appliance running Ubuntu and its own software, which would see the company returning Larry Ellison’s “Raw Iron” idea, or a software appliance, much like Ingres Corp’s Icebreaker project.

According to Egbert, the most likely opportunity to announce this project will be the October 22-26 OpenWorld customer event, and its October 26 investor day.

In separate news, Sun announces a data center in a shipping container, which is cool. Here‘s Jonathan Schwartz on the issues around it. (Note “The Searchers” DVD in the photo; I can’t think of a better way to establish credibility than to accidentally put that in the background. Nice going.) And the Schwartz links to a good post by Greg Matter on data centers of the future.

Dell consumer experience: beware support!

My father-in-law, a retired orthodontist, needed a new computer to replace his old Dell laptop. He’d been very happy with his old machine, which last seven years with nothing more than an occasional hard drive upgrade, so we spec’d out a new Dell laptop at the website. We looked at a couple of alternatives both on-line and at stores, but the Dell prices were ‘good enough,’ so we went with them. He wasn’t especially price sensitive, but didn’t want to get ripped off and Dell did not seem like a rip-off, which was good.

He’s no computer expert, but he has a few things that he’s accustomed to doing and he is an expert at those, so he wanted his new machine to look like his old one. I spent some time, the dutiful son-in-law, downloading Firefox instead of Explorer and configuring it so that he couldn’t tell the difference. Likewise with Open Office. We cancelled his AOL account but — very nice customer service, by the way, astonishingly — they let us keep his username and mail account, accessed via their website instead of through their client software. My father-in-law was happy that he was saving the $25/month but I found the whole thing completely confusing; I don’t understand AOL at all. Switching him over to the cable company’s Internet service instead of AOL-over-cable was equally easy. Getting his new wireless router to work was more of a hassle and required a few calls to the Phillipines for customer service; eventually, I gave up and swapped out his router for one I’m familiar with, the Linksys WRT-54 and that did the trick.

We did this all while on vacation, but I was fairly pleased that a day’s work had set him up for the next seven years, with better hardware and software. (I was afraid to go near his old machine, it was so infested with rootkits and viruses.)

So we leave his place and drive back to where we’re staying, 45 minutes away. We walk in the door and the phone rings. It’s David. “Ed, I’ve got a problem with the computer.” I think, ah, no problem; this is why, smart guy that I am, I told him to buy ‘configuration support’ from Dell, a week or two of unlimited phone help. Not so smart as it turns out. I suggest he call Dell. But he had already, because apparently minutes after we left his house he couldn’t find something — the tabbed browsing in Firefox? the new Gmail account worked differently than AOL?, I’m still not sure — so he faithfully called Dell. Their customer service helpfully walked him through some diagnostics and then decided that what he really needed to do was to re-install his entire system, a clean install.

Which he did.

That got rid of the problem, but he was having trouble finding the web browser and called me to ask for help. Of course, the reason that he couldn’t find it was because Dell had told him to wipe away my day’s work, all the carefully configured Explorer-like tweaks I’d done to Firefox, the copied bookmarks in the same place as he knew from his old computer, the wireless setup, the whole thing. I was so mad that I wanted to break things; I think that I threw my phone at one point.

I went back the next day and, more quickly this time, re-did his setup and added backup software to we could go back to good known images if necessary. But that one call to customer service made me swear off (and swear at) Dell for consumer-grade products forever. I still like them for servers and enterprise stuff, but no more Dells for my family.

More on Xen: Markus Rex tells ZDNet it’s ready for the enterprise

From ZDNet:

At Novell’s Sydney office on Thursday, Rex responded to claims by Linux competitor Red Hat that Xen was not stable enough to be deployed in enterprise environments. Novell has claimed to be the first vendor to include Xen in its Linux distribution, SUSE Linux Enterprise Server.

Xen, primarily developed by US-based start-up XenSource, allows users to run multiple operating systems as guest virtual machines on the same hardware.

“If you look at the Xen open source project, we have been the number two contributor during the past 10 months or so to that project. So we’ve kind of contributed most of the enterprise readiness for the Xen platform,” Rex said.

Red Hat only had to look at Novell’s launch of its new server for testimony that Xen was enterprise ready, according to Rex.

“We had all the major hardware partners that had virtualisation hardware like IBM, Intel and AMD. They all stood up and said ‘Yes, this technology’s ready, and we fully support deployments based on Xen and in combination with SUSE Linux Enterprise 10’.”

“So I guess the other vendors would not do that if it weren’t ready.”