Archive for July, 2007

Looking for UW folks interested in Amazon EC2 and S3 services

I put this out on the UW Techsupport mailing list a little while ago, and thought I’d post it here too.

We’ve been having some conversations with folks at Amazon recently about their S3 storage and EC2 compute virtualization services, trying to do some thinking about how these services might be useful at the UW and what (if any) role there is for a central organization to play that might help folks who want to make use of these services here.

We’ve gotten to the point where what we need is some use cases or other scenarios of what uses people might want to make of these services.

If you or people that you work with are making use of S3 and/or EC2, investigating them, thinking about them, idly musing about them, etc, will you drop me a line off list? I’ll gladly summarize back.

Thanks!

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Looking for UW folks interested in Amazon EC2 and S3 services

I put this out on the UW Techsupport mailing list a little while ago, and thought I’d post it here too.

We’ve been having some conversations with folks at Amazon recently about their S3 storage and EC2 compute virtualization services, trying to do some thinking about how these services might be useful at the UW and what (if any) role there is for a central organization to play that might help folks who want to make use of these services here.

We’ve gotten to the point where what we need is some use cases or other scenarios of what uses people might want to make of these services.

If you or people that you work with are making use of S3 and/or EC2, investigating them, thinking about them, idly musing about them, etc, will you drop me a line off list? I’ll gladly summarize back.

Thanks!

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Mozilla, Thunderbird, and the future of email

There’s been a lot of discussion (much of it of the hand-wringing variety) of Mitchell Baker’s Email Call To Action blog post where she talks about Mozilla splitting off the development of the Thunderbird email client software to a new organization. In today’s follow-on post titled Thunderbird — Why Change Things? she clarifies that the desire to split T-bird off arises from the phenomenal success of Firefox making it impossible for Mozilla to concentrate efforts on both products.

That seems fair enough to me. Thunderbird is a very competent mail client, and we depend on it here at the UW as an attractive alternative to the mail programs that come bundled with Windows and Macs, not to mention separate mail programs like Outlook and Entourage. It does strike me that the same could be said of Firefox, as an alternative to IE and Safari – but it can certainly be said that Firefox continues to drive innovation in the browser space, where Thunderbird has not achieved the same status for email.

My real interest, however, was in the part of the Call To Action where Mitchell talked about taking on a broader mail initaitive:


We would also like to find contributors committed to creating and implementing a new vision of mail. We would like to have a roadmap that brings wild innovation, increasing richness and fundamental improvements to mail. And equally importantly, we would like to find people with relevant expertise who would join with Mozilla to make something happen.

It seems to me that with email crippled by the deluge of spam, the rise of social networking as ways for people to connect, the start of the mass adoption of really smart handheld connected devices, and the use of synchronous communications in addition to asynchronous, that there’s room for some radical rethinking of the tools we use to communicate, and I hope we can work with the Mozilla folks to imagine that future.

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Hierarchies – what are they good for?

Anne Truitt Zelenka’s recent post titled Hierarchies Plus: What Enterprise 2.0 Can Do for the Typical Big Business struck a resonant chord in me:

…big businesses have always needed their hierarchies subverted or at the very least complemented with additional relationships to get certain kinds of work done. Hierarchies make control feasible, and consequently allow for efficient and effective work in situations that are similar to situations that the enterprise has confronted in the past. But in times of uncertainty and change, big businesses need their employees to use ad hoc relationships across formal organizational lines and even outside of the organization’s boundaries.

she goes on to suggest that applications that support the formation and deepening of ad hoc relationships across the boundaries of organizations and allow problem-solving using those informal relationships could help organizations succeed. Sounds right to me.

Bloglines now optimized for iPhone use

A couple of weeks ago I noted that Bloglines didn’t work well with the iPhone – they’ve not got a version that does at i.bloglines.com.

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Bloglines now optimized for iPhone use

A couple of weeks ago I noted that Bloglines didn’t work well with the iPhone – they’ve not got a version that does at i.bloglines.com.

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Greg Barnes blogging OSCON

My colleague Greg Barnes is attending O’Reilly’s Open Source Conference this week in Portland, and is blogging the event over at our UW eTech blog. And while you’re there, you can read Fang Lin’s recent report from An Event Apart.

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Who’s using RSS?

A question came up in a meeting I was at yesterday – to what extent are people actually subscribing to (and presumably reading) RSS (or Atom) feeds?

After casting around a bit all I could find on the web was this post from Feedburner’s blog talking about the use of aggregators (hot news: Google, Yahoo!, and Bloglines are the tops).

The aggregators certainly make it easy to subscribe to feeds, but I wonder if that’s the same thing as saying people are actually using feeds. When Rael Dornfest asked the crowd at O’Reilly’s Emerging Tech Conference in 2006 how many people thought their feed reader was more important than their email client, a significant number of people raised their hands – but that’s a pretty geekily self-selected crowd.

If you’ve got any data on how much you and the people around you are or aren’t using feeds, and how they’re being used, drop a comment to this post or send me an email.

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Update on the file sharing provision in the Higher Ed bill

Mark Luker from Educause reports that the Reid ammendment to the Higher Education Reauthorization Bill was dropped after a groundswell of criticism. Whew. There apparently is some substitute language from Sen. Kennedy being included in the “Manager’s Package” on the bill that asks colleges and universities to inform their students on the following points:

(P) policies and sanctions related to copyright infringement, including –

(i) information which explicitly informs students that unauthorized distribution of copyrighted material, including unauthorized peer to peer file sharing, may subject them to civil and criminal penalties;

(ii) a summary of the penalties for violation of copyright laws under the US Code;

(iii) a description of the institution’s policies with respect to unauthorized peer to peer file sharing including disciplinary actions which are taken against students who engage in unauthorized distribution of copyrighted materials using the institution’s information technology system; and

(iv) a description of steps that the institution takes to prevent and detect unauthorized distribution of copyrighted material on its information technology system.

That’s all stuff we’re either doing already or working on, so no problems there. This is an important battle won, but it’s not the end of the story by any means.

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Update on the file sharing provision in the Higher Ed bill

Mark Luker from Educause reports that the Reid ammendment to the Higher Education Reauthorization Bill was dropped after a groundswell of criticism. Whew. There apparently is some substitute language from Sen. Kennedy being included in the “Manager’s Package” on the bill that asks colleges and universities to inform their students on the following points:

(P) policies and sanctions related to copyright infringement, including –

(i) information which explicitly informs students that unauthorized distribution of copyrighted material, including unauthorized peer to peer file sharing, may subject them to civil and criminal penalties;

(ii) a summary of the penalties for violation of copyright laws under the US Code;

(iii) a description of the institution’s policies with respect to unauthorized peer to peer file sharing including disciplinary actions which are taken against students who engage in unauthorized distribution of copyrighted materials using the institution’s information technology system; and

(iv) a description of steps that the institution takes to prevent and detect unauthorized distribution of copyrighted material on its information technology system.

That’s all stuff we’re either doing already or working on, so no problems there. This is an important battle won, but it’s not the end of the story by any means.

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