2.1 downloads
Version 2.1 of WordPress has been downloaded an average of 19,483 times a day since it was released. The increased traffic on the site as a result has put a strain of the single server it runs on, we’re adding more soon.
Solid State Laptops?
I’m in the market for a new laptop as my TX 690P (which I love) is getting old and beat-up from travel. Unless Apple comes out with something amazing this month, I have my eyes set on one of the new ultraportables with solid state flash drives, which means the laptop can be completely silent and fanless. However information on these gems seems sparse online, especially in English, and especially if you want to buy one. Anyone know how to pick one of these up in the US? Anyone have one yet?
Gallery: 2-4-2007
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Adium 1.0
I just upgraded to the new Adium after it reminded me that my version was 42 weeks old.
StorageTek Availability Suite
Etech Conference
For the first time in several years I don’t have a scheduling conflict with the Etech conference this year. I’ve always wanted to go, and it will be nice to enjoy a conference without any obligations of speaking.
Technorati Product Releases
2007 Resolutions
- Not be so late with things like resolutions.
- Make my writing shorter. Because… nevermind.
- Read 2 offline books a month.
- File taxes on time.
- Do 3 major releases of WordPress.
- Get Wii tennis score to 4000.
- Eat more regular meals.
- Release 3 new Open Source projects.
- Normalize sleep schedule.
- Throw out clothes I don’t wear, junk I don’t need.
- Keep inbox in the single or double digits.
- Stop trying to do everything myself.
- Take it to thirteen.
Flip Ads
Condé Nast is launching a Myspace for teen girls and giving their users complete control of the ads. (And has already sold over $2mm worth.)
Chevy Nova
The story about the Chevy Nova not selling well in Mexico because its name meant “no go” is completely false.
New Servers
Barry is blogging some of our experiences with bringing online another DC. The search for another solid infrastructure partner has been very educational and made me appreciate how good LayeredTech actually is.
Digital Media Summit
I’m in Utah for the Polaris Digital Media Summit. Lot’s of interesting conversations with lots of interesting folks, unfortunately most of it is off the record. However the blog above is posting a bit about each session, assuming Mike will keep up with it. Deer Valley is beautiful, it makes me wish I wasn’t scared of snow.
Saying No?
Via Boris I came across a post on Susan Mernit’s blog called the No Patrol. It is supposed to be a defense of saying “no” to things in the product development cycle, but as I read each bullet point it struck me as actually a brilliant summary of why big companies often fail to create anything truly interesting, or put another way, why a product like Yahoo Personals is so impersonal. No one would advocate bloat or cruft in software, but sometimes a little silliness, a little frivolity, a little “novelty outweighs the business impact” is what separates a Youtube from a Google Video. Don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater.
Gallery: 1-27-2007
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Sun Followup
In the past few days since I wrote the post on my experience with Sun there has been a lot of interesting discussion spawned, and as much about Jonathan Schwartz’s response as my post. Mr Schwartz rightly got a ton of kudos in the blogosphere for his honest and personable response. Two others shared their experience trying to get boxes from Sun: Alex Muse applied for a different program and was rejected, but it sounds like he got pretty prompt responses on everything; Stephen O’Grady had no problem getting in Startup Essentials, but had a fairly bad experience with their store and suggests that they outsource that functionality to Ebay or Amazon. (I’m fairly surprised I didn’t hear from anyone else in the SE program.) François Schiettecatte shared a story from his experience at Sun while at Feedster, and why they made the decision they did for their systems.
The entry also drew in some interesting comments some of which seemed to conflate the issue I was talking about, namely the disconnect between the promises and follow-up in the Startup Essentials program, and questions of Sun’s financials, direction, technology, and more. To clarify, I have no opinion on the business side of Sun beyond what I’ve dealt with directly, and on the technical side they seem to be kicking butt lately and tackling truly hard problems. Their evangelism of such is the whole reason why I gave my info to the SE program in the first place. (Plus the overwhelmingly positive in-person interaction I’ve had with folks that work at Sun and at Startup Camp.) Their marketing is great — it created the desire — just the fulfillment was frustrating.
At one point in the Scoble interview Jonathan Schwartz says something to the effect of their startup program targets folks with more time than money, where their enterprise customers usually value time over money. I think this might represent a fundamental misunderstanding. While I think this argument could be made for the motivation of some segment of Open Source communities, the situation in startups is even worse — time and money are both scarce.
Where does that leave Automattic now? We just brought 20 new HP/Debian boxes online. David Comay followed up his comment with an email requesting to get together, and since he’s a kernel hacker and not a sales guy I’m very open to that. Likewise with Jeff Barr from Amazon, though their web services are so beautifully self-service I wonder what we’ll chat about. Another chance for Sun? Time will tell. For us it’s a pragmatic issue, not a religious one. If nothing else, I’m hopeful that the discussions spawned will help put Sun’s nascent startup efforts back on track.
Gallery: 1-26-2007
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Star Wars 2.0
Wii Tennis
We’ve been taking breaks at night here in La Paz by playing a bit of Wii Tennis, which is one of the best multiplayer games ever. Barry decided to organize a double-elimination tournament where everyone had to link to the winner. That ended up being me and so they’ve requested this post so they can properly pingback their entries to this one.
Gallery: 1-24-2007
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