Apple, please take note

Apple    Posted by Darren 11 comments »

I don’t really want to have a pop at Apple. I loved my trusty 4th generation iPod, I love the 5th generation iPod I was bequeathed when the wife got her iPod touch (generously provided by me for Christmas, and that’s a fine piece of kit too), and I sometimes look enviously at the offspring’s new iPod nano which for something so compact is an amazing item. Unlike Ports I like iTunes, and if I had a Mac I bet I’d love that as well. So what’s my beef?

Issue number 1 - the wife’s laptop has the most unreliable WiFi adapter I’ve ever encountered, and I have said several hundred times “if you don’t agree with the idea of spending a few hundred quid on a new one don’t keep moaning about that one”. The suggestion to buy the iPod touch software update, the one containing an e-mail client, was met with a little bit of scepticism - but in the end she agreed. She could pick up e-mail anywhere in the house. Great. The e-mail client supports POP3, so I thought it would be a doddle to set up. Hmmm…

The actual process should have been easy - type in the server names, user name and password, and press ‘Done’. However, I encountered more than a few error messages about it not supporting secure connections. After a while I worked out that if I ignored these and retried the setup I could get past the errors, and then in the final piece of the setup tell it not to require a secure connection, it actually worked. Fine, but I’ve been in the computer industry a good few years and I know about this type of stuff. For the average layman this process would have been baffling and probably wouldn’t have ended in success. Did Apple perform any usability testing?

appleicons.jpgIssue number 2 - unlike the wife, I don’t have a problem with the fact that I’m prompted to install a new version of iTunes almost every time I launch it. But I’ll tell you what I do have a problem with - I like a clean desktop, uncluttered by icons, so it really annoys me that after every iTunes update I have to clean up icons from the start menu, the desktop and the bottom launch bar. Yeah, okay, many other application installs don’t give you that option, but I really don’t need QuickTime shortcuts. If I use QuickTime, it’s always through clicking on a QuickTime movie file. Apple, please add an install option for not adding icons all over the place.

Thinking beyond e-mail

Connections, Lotus, Quickr, Sametime    Posted by Darren 2 comments »

Over the past couple of years there have been a number of what I call ‘eureka moments’… that moment when the usually-invisible light bulb above your head switches on and you either “get it” or something resonates. One such moment was a couple of years ago when I saw Charlie Hill (now an IBM Distinguished Engineer and the Chief Technology Officer of Lotus software) talking about and demonstrating ‘Activities’, which have since become part of IBM Lotus Connections.

Activities are a simple premise. People work on business activities (duh, yeah) and these business activities are comprised of lots of different pieces of information and content which often derive from and live in different places - for example e-mails, calendar appointments, documents, tasks, web pages, instant messaging chat transcripts, and so on. So an activity is a ‘place’ for bringing the team together and sharing the content. You may ask why that can’t be done in a TeamRoom, Quickr place or some other collaborative solution. Well, it can. The point here is that an activity is something which is quick and easy to set up, to add members to, and is suitable for the smallest of tasks right up to something which is more involved and longer in duration. You might set up an activity just to review a document or plan one meeting. You might set up an activity to plan an entire event (as we have done with Lotusphere Comes To You). If however your project is going to last for a year you might be better off with a Quickr place.

logo.jpgA more recent eureka moment came when the feature set of Lotus Sametime Advanced was announced. Some of the features (i.e. the broadcast suite) were already familiar to IBM folk since they had been available internally as the IBM Community Tools. The big new feature as far as I was concerned was chat rooms. For me to explain this fully, you need some background, and that background concerns e-mail.

Ask anyone what their major issues are where e-mail is concerned and they’ll generally say two things… the first is the sheer volume they receive, and the second is the number of file attachments. Dig a bit deeper and you’ll actually discover a more fundamental set of problems… people are hooked on e-mail, they spend a lot of time watching their inbox, and they are very reactive to what comes in. To quote the Butler Group, the overloaded inbox creates a “false sense of panic”. People forget their business priorities and focus on making sure they keep their inbox in check, even if they’re dealing with trivial, less pressing items to do so. Where companies impose size quotas people have the added worry about their total mail box size going over the limit, so they spend time ensuring the size is kept in check rather than focusing on their job.

Some people on the other hand just give up. I’ve seen people with over 2,000 unread e-mails in their inbox. In a way this could be quite liberating - you’ve lost control, so why not just delete them all… a bit like being £5 million in debt, what does it matter if you blow £10,000 this weekend?

Even more interesting, ask someone what the solution to the overblown mail box problem is. If they say “archiving” that’s the wrong answer. That’s a solution to a symptom, not a cure for the disease. One of my favourite slides at the moment is entitled “What? How can I be over my mail quota again?” - and contains a screenshot, a real screenshot, of my inbox with over 40 mb of file attachments received in one day. How can this happen in IBM? There’s some interesting facts about these e-mails. The attention indicators (Notes 7 and 8 feature) tell me that none of these e-mails were sent to me only or even a list of less than five people including me. None of the e-mails came from the Lotus UK team. We have a very strong practise of sharing information via Quickr or Activities. But clearly there some people with bad habits. It’s not that we don’t have the technology… I actually think we have too much. As well as Quickr and Activities there are various other ways to share documents including some un-productised research projects. This goes to prove what we’ve always known, that collaboration is cultural - you can put the technology in place, but people have to realise the pain and then see the value. Either that or you stand behind them with a large piece of wood with a nail sticking out the end of it.

So, having solutions like Quickr (with it’s Connectors for Notes and now Outlook) and Activities can help to cut down the volume of file attachments. But what about the number of e-mails? Think about this… every e-mail you send has the potential to spawn several more over the next few days and maybe weeks. Reply-with-history seems to be a default (minus file attachments of course), so you get the same e-mail again (and again, and again) with a extra dollop of text each time.

chatrooms.pngThis returns us very nicely to the subject of Sametime Advanced chat rooms. I’m not suggesting for one minute that chat rooms will replace e-mail, but I suggest that they can replace e-mails for selected business activities. Along with all of the other items that you gather, you can associate a chat room (or rooms) with a business activity and define that as the place to communicate. Everyone can see the transcript, no-one has to ask for the history (not even late joiners). No-one has to repeat anything as the transcript exists as one continuous persistent dialogue, even if you step out of the dialogue for several days or perhaps weeks. The chat can be real-time, or can be asynchronous as you can catch up on the discussion later. And through a rather neat capability which plugs into the Sametime client you can be alerted to activity going on inside the chat room so that you join in.

E-mail is here for the duration, but you need to be ready for the day it gets side-lined and overtaken by more effective methods of communication and collaboration. To quote an old marketing campaign, I use Lotus solutions and I AM ready for that day.

It’s going to be a record-breaker

Lotus    Posted by Darren No comments »

Lotusphere Comes To You 2008Lotusphere Comes To You (UK edition) is just a week away and it looks like we’re going to exceed our registration target by some measure. We were expecting around 400 registrations but with registrations still coming in thick and fast the current total (minus the IBM folks who have registered) stands at 480. That’s just Wembley… the figures for Manchester are way up on last year as well. So in total we could see well over 700 people, perhaps 800, for the two events combined.

If you haven’t registered yet it’s not too late. And as I said in the LCTY blog, it doesn’t matter if you’re an Exchange customer… so many solutions in the Lotus portfolio integrate with Outlook and Office so you’ll see things you can use in your environment. Over a third of the new Lotus Sametime customers in 2007 use Exchange - there has to be a reason why they selected Sametime over Microsoft’s comparative offerings. Come and find out why.

Widget dashboards

Lotus, Notes    Posted by Darren No comments »

Last month on dadams.co.uk we discussed IBM Lotus Notes 8.0.1’s widget and live text capabilities. Yesterday I sat down with my frolleague Chris Freestone to discuss what we are going to cover in our Lotusphere Comes To You session ‘Why mash-ups matter’. We’re going to talk about Notes 8.0.1 widgets, composite applications, and the forthcoming IBM Lotus Mashups product, so we reviewed what we had in terms of widgets and spent a while experimenting. Chris knows a thing or two about application development (see here) so he showed me some widget and live text options I hadn’t looked at yet.

One thing I hadn’t really explored was dashboards. A dashboard comes about from taking the results from a number of widget-based actions and displaying them in one Notes screen. We ran out of time, but Chris inspired me to come up with something…

postcodelivetext.gifOne widget we already had was ‘live postcodes to Google Maps’. This was constructed in two parts… a recogniser for UK postcodes and a wired action. The postcode in a Notes e-mail or appointment (or any document) becomes live, and clicking on the postcode plots the location on a Google Map. Very cool, and fairly easy. I started thinking about other web sites which used postcodes in a query fashion, but I wanted something we could show to business users. Finding the nearest branch of Argos could be useful, but not in this situation. So I decided on finding the nearest NCP car park and looking at the local weather. These were configured as actions and associated with the postcode recogniser.

I kept the Google Map action as the default, but right-clicking on the live postcode brings up the option to place the three items into a dashboard (see the slides embedded here, but view it on the SlideShare web site for a closer look).

SlideShare | View | Upload your own

This afternoon I went to visit John and Robert at IBM Premier Partner LAN 2 LAN for Lotusphere Comes To You planning (they’re co-presenting the session on ‘Putting collaboration into context’). I told John about the Notes 8.0.1 widgets, and within seconds we’d dragged and dropped a set of widgets off my USB stick onto his Notes widget panel. I’m sure John won’t find me telling you he was overawed at the simplicity of adding the widgets and the way they immediately worked… he found an e-mail with a postcode and tried out the dashboard. Then he tried the Google Translate widget (select the text in an e-mail, select the languages, and the translation is carried out before your eyes) - useful because Robert is Swedish (although is English is perfect). After a few “oh wows” John gathered up his laptop and bounded off to show other colleagues in the office with an excited look on his face. Another widget convert, and rightly so.

Lotusphere Comes To You blog

Lotus    Posted by Darren No comments »

Not content with this blog, I’m also now a contributor to the UK Lotusphere Comes To You blog. Not much to tell you other than we’re using the blog to keep the punters updated on what’s going on with the LCTY preparations… and it’ll be useful to get feedback from those visiting the site to register and view the agenda.

So much for the world-wide web

Movies, Rubbish    Posted by Darren 2 comments »

For someone who rarely visits the cinema, I am madly interested in movies and movie news. Instead of going to the cinema, I buy DVDs which I never get a chance to watch… although actually I do copy them onto the Archos and watch them on the Camberley Express into London.

I quite liked the recent ‘Hulk’ movie directed by Ang Lee and starring Eric Bana - some of it was a bit slow-going but there’s a glorious segment about two-thirds of the way through where the US armed forces chase the big green fella across the desert, and fun ensues as he throws tanks and helicopters around.

copyrights.pngAn even newer Hulk adaptation starring Edward Norton is one the cinematic highlights I probably won’t get to see this year, along with ‘Iron Man’, ‘The Dark Knight’ (the latest Batman flick) and ‘Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Zimmer Frame’. Nevertheless, I was excited (possibly the wrong word… interested, maybe) to see the news of the Hulk trailer on Comingsoon.Net. So I clicked on the link and made ready with the headphones… but in the embedded movie player I saw the message pictured here.

I can understand being asked to leave a room while someone explains US encryption export policy to some US citizens (yes, it did happen), but this is a bit stupid. What’s the point? Spoilsports.

Searching for Alice West

Ancestors, Personal    Posted by Darren 1 comment »

The family tree project is going well, but there are still a few gaps to be filled in for the mid and late-19th century. I received an incredible amount of detail from a distant cousin from my grandfather’s side of the family, including details of where my great-grandfather was born, where his father died just a year later, and where my great-great-grandfather was married. However, I decided that I didn’t just want too much information handed to me on a plate, so I will do my own research on that side of the family.

Over at my grandmother’s side of the family, the Clinch dynasty, there have been a few walls to knock down. Still the most pressing is the identity of my great-grandmother, Alice West. This was not an uncommon name in 19th century London, so some clues were required. I decided to cough up for my grandmother’s birth certificate, even though I supposed I had all the info that it would contain. However, it arrived yesterday and it revealed one crucial piece of information… a middle name, Maud. This meant that I could discount any candidate who wasn’t shown as Alice, Alice M or Alice Maud… and that narrows it down significantly.

There was one other interesting piece of info… my grandmother (also Alice) was born at the family’s home, 32 Wood Street. Yet in the 1901 census, ten years earlier, the family lived at 30 Wood Street, and my great-grandfather’s older brother lived at number 32. Stranger than truth, except it’s true (or it could have been an error on the part of the census taker).

The next obvious step in revealing more details of Alice Maud West would be to obtain her marriage certificate. This should be found by cross-referencing marriages of Henry Clinch to Alice West in a time period and in London. I’ve used this method successfully for other ancestors, but on this occasion it drew a blank. Despite an exhaustive search, one that I’ve repeated several times, with variations on names, I’ve failed to find any record of their marriage. Perhaps they didn’t get married. There’s a thought…

But then I hit on something. Normally if you search a marriage register and view an index number in a given district it will display an even number of men and women, signifying that these men married these women, although you won’t be sure who married who (in 1911 they changed the marriage register to show who married who without the need of the actual certificate). However for the 2nd quarter of 1898, in the London district of St Saviour (Southwark) there are five names… three women and two men. So, a fair guess that one of the men’s names is missing. The trouble is, the Alice West listed could have married one of the other two men, that I can’t tell from the marriage register.

I then looked at the birth register and discovered that in 1879 (the right year) an Alice Maud West was born in St Saviour. Okay, this could all be highly coincidental. There is only one way to find out, and that’s to obtain the 1898 marriage certificate for Alice West of St Saviour and see what it says. It could be £7 down the drain, but it could be one of the most important pieces of the jigsaw. If she does turn out to be my great-grandmother, I already know the names of her parents and her grandmother (courtesy of the 1881 census). Mind you, I’ve been sure of details before, only to have found they were wrong later. It’s worth a £7 gamble, so here goes…

Microsoft not so power-hungry after all

Microsoft    Posted by Darren 5 comments »

While we at IBM Lotus have yellow as our brand colour, it seems that Microsoft are aiming for green. At CeBIT last week, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer (yes, the guy who did the whooping monkey dance) claimed that Microsoft are at the forefront of environmentally-sound computing. Ballmer’s claims included the fact that Windows Vista’s idle mode consumes 33 times less power than that of Windows XP, and Windows Server 2008 consumes up to 40% less power than the 2003 version. Notice the mixing of measurements here, one being a factor and one being a percentage, making the second measurement seem more impressive than the first at a first glance… but when you think about it, it’s not.

Now, don’t get me wrong, making computers more energy-efficient is a wonderful thing and I applaud Microsoft for putting this into their strategy. However, let’s think about this in more detail. I can see that making desktop computers and laptops more energy-efficient while in idle mode will reap benefits, since people leave their workstations on when they go for lunch, go for a meeting, go to the toilet, go for a ciggie break, or (if you work from home) go for a quick game of Wii tennis. But Softchoice refute this claim, stating that Vista’s CPU requirements are 243% greater than that of XP, and this alone will knock out any idle time savings.

So how about the servers? Well, if it’s down to idle time the big question would be “why would your servers be idle?”… or “when would your servers be idle?”. And another thought springs to mind… if you servers are idle, is your server strategy wrong?

Taking this further, my thoughts go down two paths. The first is one that I do come back to quite often, the ol’ Domino versus Exchange argument. As I often say, I’m no Exchange expert, so by all means go and ask an Exchange expert about this. My understanding is that Exchange 2007 no longer supports active / active clustering… Exchange 2003 did, but not 2007. Why Microsoft decided to take it out of the product is a mystery to me - I’ve heard it said that no-one used it anyway, but that sounds like a reason to improve it, not yank it out. Domino does support active / active clustering (most Domino customers use this model), meaning that all the servers in a cluster are working and thus they need fewer servers to achieve 24 x 7 operation than an Exchange customer would. Fewer servers is a more green approach, whether they be working their chips off or sitting idle.

The second path is a continuum of the first (are you following this?) and comes back to the ‘fewer servers’ issue. Microsoft solutions run on Windows. That’s it, end of story. IBM solutions run on Windows, but also System i, System p and System z (and Linux, and a few other platforms such as Sun Solaris). Let’s take System i for example - anyone who wants to argue that System i doesn’t scale well beyond the capabilities of Windows either doesn’t know anything about the subject or needs their head tested. We have a Domino customer running 24,000 users’ mail boxes on two clustered System i servers. If they were to move that deployment to Windows servers, I’d say they’d need somewhere between eight and twelve servers (and if, to throw the thought in, they were running Exchange that would mean even more servers because of the clustering requirements).

Okay, it’s not as simple as saying it’s two servers versus eight (or ten, or twelve) because clearly the System i server is a different beast to a Windows server, in terms of both operating system and hardware. But System i servers are no longer the size of an American-style fridge-freezer so the difference in power consumption is not what you’d think. Server consolidation from many small-scale servers to fewer large-scale servers does add up, especially when you start to consider the whole ecosystem of a data centre in terms of cooling and peripheral devices. About a year ago one of my colleagues conducted a cost of ownership study for an Exchange-using customer with around 150 servers, and calculated that they could save about £300,000 per annum in electricity consumption by switching to fewer consolidated large-scale Domino servers.

And this isn’t just about Domino… take WebSphere Application Server - the same applies, you will have the potential to run many more transactions on one System p server than on a group of Windows servers.

IBM’s colour is blue, Lotus’ is yellow… mix them together and what do you get?

Lotus Notes 8 top ten

Lotus, Notes    Posted by Darren 6 comments »

notes8logo3.jpgIn the run-up to the release of IBM Lotus Notes 8 I put together a presentation about the client’s top ten features (going up to eleven, Spinal Tap-style). I even included a picture of Nigel Tufnel. Some members of the audience got it, some… had never seen the movie.

So, something I’ve been meaning to do for a while is put together a page on that top ten (eleven). The list has changed a bit since some new features have come in with 8.0.1 (most notably widgets and live text). You can access the page here.

If anyone disagrees with my list, or has an idea for something else to be included, let me know with a comment.

I’ve landed on Planet Lotus

Lotus    Posted by Darren 7 comments »

Yancy Lent set up a web site named Planet Lotus which aggregates the feeds of various Lotus-related web sites into a single feed served up into the site’s home page - very cool. This isn’t new news to many people within the Lotus community, it’s just that my blog landed on Planet Lotus today.

The background is that we tried to add this site’s feed to Planet Lotus a few months ago but it didn’t work. This was very strange - not a WordPress problem as several WordPress-based sites worked. Yesterday Yancy had the idea of me registering dadams.co.uk on FeedBurner to pick up the RSS feed, and then Planet Lotus automatically picks up the feed from FeedBurner. And ‘hey presto’… I’m there.