Some of my current favorite iPhone apps

Here are some of my current favorite iPhone apps:

  • Bump. Exchange contact information with someone else simply by bumping your two iPhones together. Free
  • Camera Genius. Zoom, repeat timer, burst mode, timestamp, “big button” to ease taking your own picture. $2
  • FastFinga. Scribble notes with your finger, save the result or email it to yourself. Great for people with sore thumbs or other keyboard-related RSD. $1
  • iTranslate. Translate a word between any of several dozen foreign languages. Free
  • Louvre. Overview of the most famous museum in the world. Free
  • Pocket Universe. Hold the iPhone up to any part of the sky and PocketUniverse will show you what you’re looking at, including sun, moon and planets. $3
  • Stanza. Nice e-book reader, can download fee-based and free content. Free
  • Terra. Similacrum of the earth from any given vantage point. Show direction of Sun, distance between two points. Move date backwards & forwards. $5

Page 56, sentence 5

Time was when an Internet meme would last for weeks or months. Nowadays, on Facebook they come and go within hours. At 14:43 today my friend Terry posted this on Facebook:

Grab the book nearest you. Right now. Turn to page 56. Find the fifth sentence. Post that sentence as your status, and post these instructions in a comment to this status. Don’t dig for your favorite book, the coolest, the most intellectual. Use the closest book.

Four more of my Facebook friends followed suit within a few hours, but by tomorrow — Monday at the latest — it will all be over. As soon as an item scrolls off the bottom of the Facebook news feed, it’s almost as if it never existed. You can dig around for it, but I suspect hardly anybody does. If you want your meme to last, don’t use Facebook!

Cloudy Weather – Is My World Changing?

I’m a systems administrator. When asked what that means, I’ll say different things to different people. Sometimes I say “I keep the computers working,” other times I reply “I spend a lot of my time down in the data center.” I had the pleasure of designing my company’s new data center when we moved to San Ramon in 2006. And while a data center is a noisy, cold, windowless room, at least it was my noisy, cold, windowless room – and it was a damn sight better than the old noisy, cold, windowless room.

But will cloud computing change my world? If companies gradually abandon their local data centers and move everything to the cloud, there isn’t going to be any noisy, cold, windowless room. What then happens to their sysadmins, who were that glue between users, applications and hardware? Well, it comes down to whether you think the Cloud is the Borg, or just a bunch of marketing hype.

In one corner are bloggers like Mark Mayo, who predict Cloud Domination and suggest how sysadmins can prepare. Arguing for the defense, m0j0 believes the Cloud is hype overload.

I’m currently attending the Usenix Technical Conference in San Diego, and have been asking many of my colleagues what they think. Most are in the “hype” camp: interesting technology, but they are not going to take over the world. Stay tuned.

Clouds

This past Thursday I attended Fujitsu’s third annual Cloud Computing Symposium in Sunnyvale. It was an excellent program, with a succession of interesting panel discussions.

With cloud computing, you exchange applications and data on your own machine for applications and data somewhere out on the Internet. Gmail, for example, is a cloud-based application: all the data is up on the Net, and you can access it from anywhere.

The Cloud is hot. The Cloud is the new black. The Cloud is where you should invest. The Cloud will spark the next bull market in technology. Well, maybe. There’s certainly a lot of momentum and media attention – not to mention money – behind the Cloud.

And at first glance, you’d be crazy not to use the cloud. Your data is available from any Internet connection, be it in San Francisco or Timbuktu. No more worrying about upgrading applications, replacing a crashed disk, or backing up your data – all those niggling things that you’re not very good at. No more having to lug around a traditional laptop with a large disk. Heck, you can get to the cloud from your iPhone.

The economic advantages are even greater for businesses. Running a data center is a huge capital expense – construction, power, HVAC, all the servers, network hardware & cabling – as much as 40-70% of non-personnel expenditures. For a startup company these expenses can be overwhelming, and it’s all up front, before any revenue comes in the door. But if you use the Cloud, you simply rent your computers & applications (using operating expenses instead of capital expenses) and you’re ready to go almost immediately.

Viewed from a security standpoint, however, you’d be crazy to use the cloud. You are trusting that your vendor will keep your data private, both from themselves and from third parties. You are trusting that they make backups of your data. You are trusting that they have the wherewithal to maintain high uptimes. On Wednesday 10 June a lightning strike damaged an Amazon data center and many customers were offline for six hours. Vendors aren’t necessarily liable for these outages: many cloud vendors do not offer guarantees, or ask you to pay extra for “geographic redundancy.”

When a potential customer is leery of the cloud because of security concerns, a vendor will typically reply “are the data any more secure at your own site? The largest threat to any organization is from insiders.” I’m willing to acknowledge that, but moving to the cloud can’t be just that simple, or everyone would already be doing it. It’s a complex process.

There are legal ramifications of the cloud as well: whereas data in your possession can only be obtained by a search warrant, data in the cloud need only be subpoenaed – and sometimes the Cloud Powers that Be simply hand over data to the government upon request. And if the cloud is physically located outside the country, all bets are off. How do you know whether someone on the cloud is looking at your data? What if your trade secrets are leaked? Encryption is certainly part of the ultimate solution, perhaps in a way where data are only visible unencrypted at the customer’s site. This is an area of much research.

Despite the hype, cloud computing is still a small percentage of the industry, about 2% of the U.S. infrastructure according to one estimate. But in two or three years, that number will undoubtedly be much higher.

Welcome to the Cloud.

Making a Difference 2.0

Though some think the term is meaningless, “Web 2.0” has come to mean the new generation of collaborative & social networking sites, such as Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. Sometime this past Sunday, Facebook signed up its 200 millionth user. That’s a lot by any measure — Web 2.0 is big business. The Web 2.0 conference in San Francisco is already in its sixth year. I was there yesterday along with about 1000 other geeks, bloggers and tweeters.

So far I’ve found Facebook most useful for keeping in touch with distant friends & relatives, but in my experience that’s not what people use it for. Facebook’s home page asks “What’s on your mind?” and most people spend time answering that question: “I’m enjoying wine and cheese out in the garden” or “I’m off to the hardware store” or “Whiskers just ate his catnip mouse”. It’s nice, but it’s… well, trivial. Facebook’s mission is “to give people the power to share and make the world more open and connected” — but I didn’t see anyone trying to leverage Facebook to push the envelope and make a difference.

Until yesterday. One of yesterday’s keynote addresses was from Amanda Koster, founder of the advocacy group SalaamGarage.  From the web site: “SalaamGarage leads media advocacy workshops around the world that connect participants with international Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs).  Participants (hobbyist-advanced media makers) commit to creating and sharing unique, independent media projects that raise awareness and cause positive change.  The rest of the adventure is spent touring around the region, experiencing and exploring the culture and environment with an entirely new context.” After your adventure, you return home and use the Web 2.0 sites to share your experiences and raise awareness for your project, as a vehicle for change and making a difference. Upcoming destinations include Guatemala, India and Vietnam.

There was lots of technology on display at the conference too, but SalaamGarage made more of an impression on me than anything else. Finally, a way to take social networking sites and use them not just for keeping in touch, but for making the world a better place.