Archive for May, 2010


SSD’s are so fast that if you use more than one SSD(which you have to for ANY RAID) you may just hit a wall due to the RAID controllers not being fast enough to keep up.  What’s interesting is at one point they went to purely software RAID and saw the kind of speed increases they knew they should have been seeing.  RAID cards used to be a bottleneck but they got much much faster than any magnetic drive or groups of magnetic drives could get to…now they are once again the bottleneck.  I wonder how long it’s going to take for the RAID card manufacturers to catch up?

Here’s a three part article about SSD’s from an enterprise point of view.  It’s a good series.  Part 1, Part 2, Part 3. The author has other articles as well here, here, here.

SSD versus Enterprise SAS and SATA disks – AnandTech :: Your Source for Hardware Analysis and News.

The SSD Anthology: Understanding SSDs and New Drives from OCZ – AnandTech :: Your Source for Hardware Analysis and News.

I don’t know why I didn’t blog this last year.  It’s becoming more and more relevant though as folks start diving into SSD’s without realizing the major differences between SSD’s and mechanical hard disks.

The times really are getting smaller and smaller.  You really need to have 5 or more machines active.  Running e-mail out of house can be done but it’s not easy as exchange really wants to be the mail hub(which makes since as it IS a full featured mail server).  The issues are the high cost as well as the high system requirements.  You really need a minimum of 8 gigs of ram and you really need true hardware raid 1 or higher.  I have found dual cores to suffice if they are fast enough but quads are so cheap there’s no reason to skimp.  Unfortunately this is another example of Ms products getting very very bloated.

I think for my small clients server 2008 standard or even server 2008 foundation for simple AD and file sharing is going to be the best bet.  If you aren’t tied to the MIcrosoft backed(say folks who run progbrams that require a windows server to share databases) then I have a couple of alternatives:

1. ebox

2. clearos

Both of these are Linux based groupware suites..and you can’t beat hte price…free.  If you aren’t tied to a Microsoft backend and are a small shop there’s no longer any need to spend 2-3k on a ms based server…you can get a $500 server and use one of these packages.  The only additional cost is an installation fee from ECC…that’s it.

If you are tied to a Microsoft backend then SBS may be a good fit for you.  I have been testing using Google apps for business for my own business and personal domains…and it’s worked out well.  With a few addon plugins you can use Mozilla to calendar and check e-mail.  With a few setting changes you can also share calendars between users.  It’s not quite as flexible as Outlook/exchange…yet but Google is constantly putting new features in that means you don’t have to be shackled to the exchange/outlook pair anymore.

Now that there are truly some alternatives it only means good things for my clients as i can now give them the most effective options for their businesses.  SBS 2003 was a great package at a great price…SBS 2008 has gotten really really expensive.  Frankly those consultants that have hooked themselves exclusively to the MS train are doing their clients a grave disservice in my opinion.

I had a horrid experience with Sprint lately.  My current phone, a LG Rumor, has the tendency to power off instantly when it goes into standby.  It’s random in occurrence.  I finally called up Sprint again and asked what’s going on with the phone.  Instead of the usual me having to tell them what’s going wrong the lady on the phone told me it’s a known issue with the phone found by LG.  That is why the Rumor 2 came out.  Even though I had 1 year left on my contract they offered me the $150 upgrade credit to replace the phone with anything I wanted with no out of pocket expense.  I thought i was getting a great deal…I should have known it was too good to be true…and it was.  That’s when the pain started.

First I picked out the phone I wanted…the Samsung Moment.  This phone is basically my Rumor on major steroids BUT it runs Google Android(which is a Linux variant).  I was stoked.  Once the package arrived from Sprint I opened it and saw….an HTC Hero.  An Android phone that has gotten poor review for performance and other issues.  I called up Sprint and told them my issue.  Sprint responded by telling me I would have to pay $500 to have them ship me the Moment i wanted and then they would credit my account once they got the Hero back.  I told them you shipped me something I didn’t order…it’s effectively mine..and i will NOT pay for a replacement because Sprint screwed up.  After several phone calls including one with the Sprint person telling me right off the bat,”i see you don’t want to replace your rumor with another phone” that prompted a series of hangups on my part.  FINALLY I found the number for the executive offices and got a hold of somebody who could actually act like a human being.  I told her…all i want is for them to send me the moment according to the deal I had originally gotten.  She started to say the same line and i ended the call.  She called back and tried again..i ended the call.  A day later I get a call from regular customer service saying they had overnighted the phone to me..free of charge.  I got it the next day.  It’s now been a week since they screwed up.

The new phone arrives and it’s my new Moment.  I’m stoked again and I try to activate it.  NO dice.  I call into Sprint and I am told me account doesn’t support the phone.  I already had the $15 a month data pack rider on the account.  This gives me unlimited data on the account(at least that’s what i was told).  I was then told that’s not the case i have to go with one of the “everything” plans.  This means i would go from a base plan of 99 to a base plan of 130…OR i can split off my phone and go with a $69 month plan by itself.  Needless to say I wasn’t going to do either of those after the screw job I’d already been through.  I told them to cancel the upgrades..revert my plan back to what i had before (which is minus the data rider)and kept the Rumor.  The thing that hacked my off is the fact that two years ago that data rider would have all that was needed for ANY data phone to activate.  I was lied to repeatedly and told it’s “not systematically possible” for them to work that way anymore.  After having that line thrown at me a couple of times I explained to the executive rep about how a cell network is really like a data network and it’s not a design limitation of the network but a conscious decision by Sprint to increase the income from smart phones.  Once i got done with that I was told yes that’s true.  I then informed her I would not be giving Sprint that additional revenue from me and that was it.

What is comes down to is that the cell companies are every bit as corrupt as the landline companies are/were.  Considering that many of the cell companies ARE/WERE landline companies this should be no surprise.  Keep you eyes open with anyone in the telecom industry..none of them are really honest at all.

Report: Facebook caught sharing secret data with advertisers.

Especially with Mark Zukerberg(CEO of Facebook) calling his users obscene names and now being accused of securities fraud, this revelation isn’t surprising.  Right after the first series of Zuckerberg rants the company tried to do some damage control. That obviously is out the window with subsequent privacy issues and of course the potential securities issue. Honestly the fact that Myspace and other social networking sites are doing it as well isn’t shocking either.  If you want to have good corporate security you need to have strict policies that are enforced on  what data you put on these sites both publicly and “privately”.  If Mark believes in being so open..why aren’t his companies internal documents on the website?  I don’t see the business plans, corporate charter, daily operational reports, full listings and detailed bios on everyone there.  Nice try but I’m not buying it.

Terremark vCloud Express: First month « TechOpsGuys.com.

Oucies.  That’s horrendously expensive.  I’m assuming he’s getting great service..:)  There are less expensive options out there…like mine..:)