Bob Muglia forced to step down at Microsoft by Steve Ballmer

Bob Muglia, president of the servers and tools business  at Microsoft, have been forced to step down after 23 years at the company. According to Computerworld and IDG News Service, Steve Ballmer wanted to accelerate the move into the cloud, and felt that Muglia was not the right person. According to DailyTech, the division run by Muglia have been successful, with $5.5 billion in profits for 2010. So obviously Steve Ballmer want to push Azure even harder, and Bob Muglia have been more cautious. Time will only tell what the right choice was. I want to point out this recent post here on my blog related to Microsoft and clouds... 

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Tis the Season for Chili

Sunday I made a batch of chili. I changed the recipe some, and it turned out really good. I use Wick Fowler´s 2-Alarm Chili Kit as a base (about $1,68 in the grocery store), together with 2 lbs of lean ground beef (10% fat) and a few extra ingredients. The batch I made was actually double the recipe, so do not get confused by the pictures. So here is how I make it: * Brown 2 lbs of beef in a skillet with just a small amount of butter. Add 1/2 the salt from the kit. Dust the meat with some paprika powder and smoked chipotle powder while it is being browned, this makes the flavor penetrate the meat better. * Drain the meat and transfer it to a big pot. When the meat is sizzling again, pour in a bottle of beer. I used Dos XX. Let it boil for at least 10 minutes (preferably 30+ minutes) under a lid. Make sure it does not cook dry. * Add the rest of the spices, except the Masa flour. Then add two cans of Rotel Original (sometimes I use one Original and one Hot or Chili Fixin´s), a can of crushed tomatoes and 2 cans of light red kidney beans. I drain and rinse the beans to get rid of the sugary syrup they come in. Add a little bit of water, perhaps 2-3 oz, stir well and bring to a boil. I also add about 2 teaspoons of crushed garlic. * Let it boil for 30-45 minutes while stirring frequently. Let it simmer for at least another hour or two. If the chili is too thin, mix the Masa flour with some hot water (1 bag to 1/3 cup water) and add to the chili to thicken it. Simmer for another 2-3 hours, stirring occasionally. You can also use a slow cooker (Crock Pot) and cook it overnight on slow heat. The longer the better, and the more the flavor goes into the meat. If you use a slow cooker, you can make it a bit more spicy. Serve with shredded cheese, sour cream and corn bread. And a beer.     And yes, I know that real Texas chili does not contain tomatoes or beans. But this is how I make it, and an earlier version of this (without the beer) won a chili cook-off at my work. Note that I was the only non-Texan who competed"..."  

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Review – Canon Pixma MG6120 printer

My big Christmas gift was a new printer, a Canon Pixma MG6120 inkjet printer. It replaced my HP Photosmart C3180, which I have had for 3-4 years and who now refuse to feed paper. I have now had time to use the Canon printer for a few days, and below are my first impressions. The printer was extremely easy to setup. Drivers installed faster than HP, and WiFi support mean that I did not even have to worry about the USB cable. To get the printer connected to my wireless network was easy, it was all done directly from the printer, using the 3" LCD display on the printer. It almost took longer to remove all protective plastic and tape from the printer. Since the printer is black (hence a magnet for fingerprints), Canon had put protective plastic sheets on all exposed (and some un-exposed!) surfaces. One of the things I like with the Canon, and which was a requirement for a new printer, was separate ink tanks. This printer actually have six (6) different tanks:   The bigger cartridge (marked 225) contains black pigment based ink, used for regular text. The other five ink cartridges (marked 226) are dye-based. In addition to the traditional cyan, magenta and yellow, there is also black and gray. Each cartridge have a small red light indicating that they are correctly positioned.   Well, what about the print quality? That is the important thing on a printer. Well, at first the printout were a disappointment. They were washed out, gray and not nearly as vibrant as the old HP printer. I tried different settings in Photoshop and the printer driver, and eventually got a better result, but still not near what the HP produced. That is, until I tested the sample of Canon inkjet paper included with the printer. What a difference! I had used inexpensive paper purchased at Fry´s Electronics, and it simply did not work well with this ink. So after purchasing some more Canon paper (both the "Plus Glossy II" and the "Pro Platinum") I found that the quality was fully on par with the HP. I would not say it was better, as the HP generated beautiful prints, but it was not worse.. I tested some Kodak photo paper, and they turned out pretty good as well.   I have not been scanning much, just one test this far. It looks good, though, The optical resolution is 4800x4800 compared with 1200x2400 on the HP. The scan driver is not as intuitive as the one that comes with the HP. The highest setting it accepts (when scanning from within Photoshop) is 1200 DPI, and it is listed under "output". It seems like you at the time you scan you pretty much need to know what you want to do later with the scan. You select "screen display" or "printer" as target. Could be a dumbed down version of selecting RGB or CMYK"..." But I prefer to change the settings myself.  …

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Lotusphere 2011 – Wednesday Party Location Revealed

As Andy "Macian" Donaldson reported on Facebook, this years Wednesday party will take place at The Wizarding World of Harry Potter. The park is brand new, it opened last June, but already during Lotusphere 2010 I blogged about the park as a potential venue for the 2011 party. John Head just visited the park in late December, and gave a good review on Twitter. He especially recommended the butter beer, which just the other day sold it´s one millionth serving. Update:As Andy clarified, he got the info fromepisode33of This Week in Lotus.  

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Wi-Fi Overload – Sounds Familiar?

From The New York Times: The problem is that Wi-Fi was never intended for large halls and thousands of people, many of them bristling with an arsenal of laptops, iPhones and iPads. Wi-Fi is meant for homes and other small spaces with more modest Internet demands, says Ernie Mariette, founder of Mariette Systems, which installs conference Wi-Fi. "You´re asking a technology to operate beyond its capability." Conference organizers and the Wi-Fi specialists they hire often fail to provide enough bandwidth. Many depend on the infrastructure that the hotels or convention centers hosting their events already have in place. Companies that install Wi-Fi networks sometimes have only a day to set up their equipment in a hall and then test it. They must plan not only for the number of attendees, but also the size and shape of the room, along with how Wi-Fi signals reflect from walls and are absorbed by the audience.   Let's see how it works at Lotusphere in January. Perhaps there need to be some areas during the OGS with network cables to plug in to, to complement the Wi-Fi network?. 

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Microsoft Cloud Data Breach Heralds Things to Come

What might be the first major cloud data breach happened Wednesday. Microsoft announced that data contained within its Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) has been downloaded by non-authorized users. You'd better get used to this kind of thing because we'll be seeing a lot more of it in the future. All any of us can do is pray we're not a victim. [T]he whole affair will feel like a stomach punch for anybody considering cloud adoption in the coming year--especially those considering Office 365, Microsoft's major cloud offering that ties into its Office suite.  More here and here. 

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Lotusphere, here I come!

I just got everything finalized for Lotusphere 2011. I managed to find a $155 roundtrip fare on AirTran from Dallas to Orlando, and I got a room booked at Dolphin. IdoCheckin is back for the 3rd year, and as some of you in the community already may have noticed, I have been adding people on FourSquare and Google Latitude (where I am texasswede@gmail.com) during the last few days. Add me if you like. I will try to check in frequently during Lotusphere if anyone want to meet up.   So what's left to do? Well, the most important thing: planning! The first thing I did was to download Ben Langhinrichs' Lotusphere Session Database. You haven't downloaded it yet? Then go do it. I also went and ranked some of the sessions here. This year I will focus on Xpages. As I mentioned previously, we are just now finished upgrading our users from Notes 5 to Notes 7. Most of them still got the Notes 5 mail template, though. But the IT Operations Manager have mentioned that he plan to get us on 8.5.2 soon. I am hoping for sometime before next summer. So I can see a possible use for Xpages at my current workplace, especially after the issues Sean Cull wrote about have been addressed. There are a number of interesting sessions about Xpages, but I will also attend some sessions about user interface design (something I am very interested in) and of course harass the poor developers in the labs.   I am of course also excited about seeing so many of the people I consider friends, even if I know that several long-time Lotusphere visitors will not be there. I will be flying in Saturday morning, so I can attend BALD (Bloggers Annual Lotusphere Dinner) that afternoon at Big River Brewhouse. Of course you do not need to be a blogger to attend. That's the beauty of the Lotus community, everyone is welcome. If this is your first Lotusphere, don't miss Andy's Guide to Lotusphere.   See you in Orlando! 

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Lotus Notes: 21 years old this week

I am late to the party, but I also want to congratulate Lotus Notes on it´s 21st birthday on December 7. This is a product that is extremely powerful, simple to use and has a great community where I can always reach out for (and receive) help. The other evening I was watching an episode of Top Gear (the UK version), where they tested three luxury sports salons. One of the cars tested was the Maserati Quattroporte. My best friend, who lives in London, happens to own one, and I got to ride in it this summer when my son and I visited my friend. So of course I was excited to see what the Top Gear verdict would be. Knowing my friend, I was sure he had selected the best car. And of course Top Gear came to the same conclusion.   So what does this have to do with Lotus Notes, you may ask? Well, the final verdict on the Quattroporte could be applied to Lotus Notes as well, perhaps slightly modified: It is like a two year old. Annoying a lot of times, but if someone tries to take it away from you, you will kill them.  That is how I feel about Notes. As with most products, there are annoying things with it, but we all love the product and would not want anything else. So happy birthday, Lotus Notes!  

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Lotus Lessons Learned

This is a guest blog entry by Tanya Delaney. Recently, I had the honor of meeting and working with Karl-Henry Martinsson. I am a Lotus Notes ?ewbie,´ though I have a technical and web-based background. The last time I used Notes was as an end user (limited to checking email) while an employee of IBM in 1993. When Karl introduced himself as a Lotus Notes programmer and developer, I said to him, "People still use Lotus Notes?" The rest, as they say, is history; Karl has been on a mission to educate me ever since.I am a web designer and developer, most fluent in ActionScript as well as the web standards HTML, CSS, some PHP, and I dabble in a bit of whatever is needed depending on my clients´ particular situations. As far as databases go, I always use MySQL. For this reason, Karl has been singing the praises of Lotus Notes and Domino ?though his accolades have fallen on my deaf ears. I was under the [incorrect] impression that Lotus Notes was only good for email, much in the way MS Outlook is, and I had no use for either. Karl gave me a crash course in Lotus Notes as well as LotusScript to show me how efficient Lotus could be. As an example, he created a simple database in mere moments to hold ?ecipe´ data as well as titles, authors, and even country of origin information. He not only put it together (and made it look nice), but also challenged me to write a similar web ready database in as much time. "..."Right. I already knew matching both the power of Notes as well as his programming skill was impossible. So Karl amended his challenge: in ten times the amount of time, write a similar web page utilizing a database with all the same information. What took Karl 5 minutes, I now had 50 minutes to create? I knew how to solve the problem. I could recreate Karl´s steps in my own native tools, but pulling it off without Lotus Notes was going to be a feat. Even without knowing much about Lotus Notes, I knew I was bested. However, I had a MySQL database at my disposal and a bet to try to win.Since our challenge included a web ready version of the database to write to and read from, I started with a simple form://calling our PHP script and setting up the form<form action="process.php" method="post">//All the different labels required for this challengeCountry: <input type="text" name="country"><br>Author: <input type="text" name = "author"><br>Recipe Name: <input type="text" name = "recipename"><br>Type of Recipe: <input type="text" name = "type"><br>//Accolades to the low carb communityIs it Low Carb?: <input type="text" name = "lc"><br><input type="submit" value="Submit"></form> Here is a screen shot of a basic, simple form created for this challenge.  Since I decided to interact with a MySQL database, I decided to use PHP to interact with it. This form calls for a PHP file called process.php (in line 1), a file I had to create. The rest…

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Domino should be free for the web

Tom Duff wrote about Domino as an application platform, and in some of the comments there was a discussion about making the Domino server free as a web platform, at least for smaller companies. Go and read the comments.Here are some excerpts:[W]hy pay for a Domino server for only applications when you can do stuff in open source platforms like Plone, Alfresco, Joomla, Drupal, CMS2, etc. that are completely free? The only way that the slide would stop is for IBM to recognize what it has and market Domino heavily as a Web server. In addition, they need to price the server accordingly compare to the open source solutions out there. I actually have a solution already built on Domino and will be offering the same solution as SaaS. Sadly the Domino licensing model does not support our business model. So although I want to use Domino, Domino can do the job, does it well, the pricing rules it out. It is cheaper for me to have the application rewritten on a different platform than to buy the Domino licenses.The last comment, by Carl Tyler, is actually a response to me (comment #26). I was recently approached about developing a web application (online product catalog, simple shopping cart, then a CRM system to handle the processing of orders between several separate geographic locations) which I could put together in Domino in a fairly short time. A very good friend was thinking about using MySQL, Joomla and Magento to build the application, but that is a lot of downloads and installs. Why not use Domino, especially when I can build the application in very short time? Well, mainly because the customer would not pay thousands of dollars for the Domino server license. Domino Collaboration Express can not be used for web applications by unauthenticated users, if I understand the licensing correctly. So no public web server allowed. I would have to get Domino Utility Server Express, which requires PVU licensing. Even with a single core, single non-Intel processor we are talking over $1000, and quite a bit more if going to say a dual core single CPU Windows server. According to "Sonny" at IBM (see chat to the right), that option would use 100 PVUs at $205/PVU, for a total cost of $20,500.00! That's insane! So could IBM not provide Domino as a free web application platform? At least some restricted version, or as someone called it "community version". Let's say unlimited anonymous access and 100 (250?) authenticated web users, but no mail, just applications. Any Notes users or mail users still need a Lotus Notes Collaboration Express client license.  Promote Domino as the great web application platform it is, a RAD platform with strong security, built in database and much more. This would have the effect that more people would start using it. Isn't that why Domino Designer was released for free, to promote Notes/Domino development and spread it to new developers? The next logical step is to provide a server.…

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Free (restricted) Domino web application server – vote at IdeaJam!

As Peter von St??l suggested in a comment to my previous post, I have now added a suggestion at IdeaJam.Please go and vote. Don't forget to add your comments, especially if you are against it, please motivate. I am curious to hear opposing arguments. Update: I have been having some issuesembedding the IdeaJamcode, so please use this link. 

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Code Snippet: Display Message on Client or Server

Most Notes/Domino developers have probably been in this situation: you are creating an agent that is running both on the server as a scheduled agent, and manually launched on the client. On the server you want to displaysome information on the console, using the Print statement.Butsincemost regular users do not look at the status bar and read the output of print statements, youwant to display the informationto the user usinga message box. This way,when the agent is launched manually, the userhave time to read it. Here is my solution. Nothing fancy, but it works for me. I simply create a small function that check if the code is running on the server or not, and execute slightly different code. I also use Getthreadinfo() to get the name of the calling procedure to display in the title. Sub PrintMsg(text As String) Dim session as New NotesSession If session.IsOnServer() Then Print text Else Msgbox text,,Getthreadinfo( LSI_THREAD_CALLPROC ) End If End Sub Note: You need to include LSCONST.LSS for the constant LSI_THREAD_CALLPROC to be available.  

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Internet is Amazing

The other day I was talking to a friend, and wondered what we did before we had access to Internet. She pointed out that we watched the news on TV and went to the library to look things up. Of course, that all works, but think about how more convenient it is today. With the Internet, we have the information at our fingertips. Back in 1990, Bill Gates gave the keynote address at Comdex. He talked about some new exciting software, including Lotus Notes. But his main subject was what he called "information at your fingerips": Someone can sit down at their PC and see the information that's important for them. If they want more detail, they ought to just point and click and that detail should come up on the screen for them.  Sounds to me like a good description of the Internet as it looks today. Of course, he did not mention the Internet, the first web browser was still being worked on at this time. But I still think he was extremely accurate, even if it took much longer for his vision to become a reality. Here are just some of the things I used the Internet for this morning: Tracking my sisters transatlantic flight from LHR to DFW, including getting updates on arrival time   Checking my monthly electricity consumption for the last year.   Looked up the directions to my ex-wife's new place and what the traffic looks like, for later when I go there to get my son.   Looking up the the latin name for bobcat, and reading more about them, after a friend mentioned them in a conversation. I would never have been able to do those things that quickly and efficient without the Internet. And the most amazing is that I can do all this from my mobile phone as well! One wonder where the next 10-15 years will take us. 

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Stuff I Use Every Day (SIUED): NoteMan

A couple of days ago John Roling (Grayhaw68) posted Shit I Use Every Day about Dropbox, a service that I also use. I think to post tips about useful tools is a great idea. I want to push for a few tools I use on a daily basis. The first tool is the Notes tool i have been using the longest, NoteMan from Martin Scott. The NoteMan Suite consists of several programs, and they can be purchased separate or together. But for $395, it is a no brainer to buy all of them. Here are the programs which are part of the NoteMan Suite:     NoteMan.Editor This tool can easiest be describe as "Infobox on stereoids". You get a great overview of the fields in a document, and you can add, delete and edit fields, and even change the data type. It's easy to see the UNID of a document, you can make a document a child/response to another one from within this tool, and much more. I use this tool pretty much every day, often multiple times. The MultiEdit tool is great to update a collection of documents, and you can even perform the search from within the tool.   NoteMan.DocDelta This tool compare two documents, or a document and a replication conflict. For replication conflicts, they can be resolved in different ways, either by switching the two documents, making the replication conflict the main document and vice versa, or by copying the values of individual fields from the conflict to the main document.   NoteMan.Design I don't use this tool that much, but it let me look at the design, see what elements inherit design from other templates, have "Prohibit design refresh" set, etc.   NoteMan.ACL A very convenient tool, that I only use on occasion. But when I use it, I save a ton of time. It lets me export the ACL of a database as XML, then I can import it and apply it to another database.   Conclusion: NoteMan is a suite of inexpensive but very powerful tools that every Notes developer (and admin!) should have in their toolbox. Martin Scott usually have a pedistal at Lotusphere, go there and take a look. Disclaimer: This is a tool my employer purchased. I initially got NoteMan.Editor for free at Lotusphere a number of years ago, and we purchased the rest of the tools within a few months.  

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Is geek the new chic?

I just noticed on twitter that something called Geek Girl Meetup (#ggm10) took place in Sweden this weekend. From the tweets (in Swedish), it sounds like a very interesting conference, with some seminars, people meeting up, etc. And of course in the Notes community we have our own Nerd Girls.I think it is great that women now can show their techology interest, or other "nerdy" interests. When I grew up as a teenager, as a computer and RPG playing nerd, I was not very interesting to girls. Then, when the Internet starting to take off in the mid 90´s in Sweden, I noticed an increased interest/acceptance for nerds and geeks. As long as they were male. It was still kind of taboo for a girl to be a geek.I think that in the last 5-6 years, the acceptance of female geeks have been increasing dramatically. Non-technical people see that girls can have a good career and enjoy a technical job. Personally I find intelligence (and geekdom) in a girl very attractive. So I hope this trend will continue. I also hope that the issues I know some (many?) girls experience in a male dominated area, like technology, will soon go away, and that everyone get judged on their merits and knowledge, not their gender. However, I think that some participants in events like the above mentioned Geek Girl Meetup and SXSW Interactive are not "true geeks", but marketing people who want to hop on the bandwagon, because the fact that geek is the new chic/cool. I am sure not everyone with titles like "entrepreneur", "venture angel" and "founder" have the real geek/nerd mindset. That is ok. But don´t try to pretend you are something you are not.However, if you code (creating web pages with Frontpage does NOT count as "coding", though!), administer servers, build/repair electronic hardware and love gadgets, you are a geek. :-) And if you like me started writing code on a computer with 16 kB memory (like the ABC 80 pictured here), you are absolutely a geek. :-)There are of course many other kinds of geeks. Comic book geeks, Harry Potter geeks, Manga geeks, just to mention a few.Image of Role Playing dices by Sabbut , licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported. I resized the original picture and made the background transparent.  

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SIUED – MyDefrag

I may not use MyDefrag every day, but almost daily, so I place it in the category "Stuff I Use Every Day". I use it at work, at home and I also install this small and free program on every computer I build/rebuild for my friends.As the name indicate, it is a harddisk defragmentation program. It is, like most other free and commercial defragmentation programs, using the Windows defragmentation API, so it should be quite safe.The program is simple to you. It comes with a number of scripts that are sufficient for most users, but the advanced user can write his/her own scripts.The user interface is minimalistic as well. You select the kind of defragmentation you want and then select one or more drives to process: The screen displaying the progress of the defragmentation is simple. You can hover over files and see their names and what part of the harddisk they occupy. You can also zoom in and out, making it easier to see the files. In short, a very capable and easy to use free program. 

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My next server at home?

The other day I went to my local Fry's store (a chain similar to Best Buy, but with much fewer locations and many more products/components in stock), and I saw the case I want for my new server at home. Not only is it quiet (according to the reviews), but it also looks good: It also is sale for $39.95 right now!I have been thinking a while about building a new server at home, to host my personal Domino server and possibly a few other servers (Sametime? BES Express?), just so I can play around with new technology. The network admin here at work suggested that I use the free XenServer. So I might just do that. It is always fun to learn new things. 

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