Back to work - well almost

January 2nd, 2008

This morning was my first day back at work after the Christmas break, at least it was supposed to be. I had planned to go into High Wycombe today, not because I had any specific meetings there, but I like the social side of being in the office and as I plan to spend much of this month working from home just in case Shelley gives birth a bit earlier than the 23rd January due date.

So I set off this morning at my usual time of 6.45 and the traffic seemed pretty quiet on both the M27 and the M3, as expected as a lot of people won’t return to work until Monday. Just before junction 5 on the M3 (London bound) the traffic alerts announced there had been an accident on the slip road at junction 4a but that the main carriage way was unaffected so I chose to continue. Shortly after Fleet services the whole carriage way came to a standstill and the traffic alerts announced the M3 was closed between 4a and 4 and that a diversion was in place from 4a. After about an hour and a half in the queue of traffic I made it to junction 4a and by this time it was gone 9.30. With the prospect of at least another hour to get to High Wycombe (I had only travelled 45 miles in 2 and 3/4 hours!) I decided it would make more sense to turn round, head home and spend the rest of the day working from home.

It turns out, the accident between a car and a lorry (as reported by the radio traffic alerts) was actually caused by the body of a woman being found on the carriage way (read more) - the second time such an incident has happened on the M3 in the last month (read about the first incident).

It looks like snow is forecast tomorrow, so might be another day at home for me. My thoughts go out to the woman’s family.

2008 - the year of online consolidation?

December 31st, 2007

As 2008 beckons, I thought now would be a good time to think about what I’d like to see from online services in the next 12 months. For me at least, the answer is consolidation. The main online services I use today are: GMail (email), Google Reader (RSS reader), Google Maps (maps - obviously!), del.icio.us (bookmarks), Skype (phone calls), Facebook, LinkedIn and Plaxo (social networking), Dopplr and Plazes (where am I), MyMileMarker (fuel consumption tracking - yeah sad I know), Geni (Genealogy), Yahoo Messenger (instant messaging), plus with my new camera (Canon 400D which has arrived while writing this post :) ) I am sure Flickr (photos) will get added to this list.

Although each service is focussed on something different, all of these services have a number of things in common:

  • A user id and password
  • One or more profiles
  • A contact list
  • A page containing recent updates
  • Current status

In 2008 I would like to think we will see consolidation in these areas so I can have a single user id and password, a single set of profiles (e.g. professional and personal) under my control which I can choose to share with online services (i.e. I enter my information once), a single contact list, and a portal containing all the recent updates from my friends who are using these, and other, online services.

Single User ID, Password and Profiles

OpenID (and OAuth) already go someway to addressing this (although you currently still need a user id and password as well). These are relatively new technologies but quickly being adopted - Plaxo, Dopplr, MyMileMarker and sites such as Technorati already support them and there are rumours Google are going to do so too. Come on Google, get your act together and support OpenID then the rest of the big players will no doubt follow suit :)

Contact List

Most online services nowadays provide a way of importing your contacts from your address book so you can at least find friends who may be using the online service in question, however this is typically only done when you sign up and so is static. Your contact list is dynamic, you meet new friends and colleagues all the time, so what you need is something that keeps your single contact list in sync with all of the online services you use. Plaxo goes some way to doing this and is my online service of choice, although it is far from perfect (see Andrew’s recent blog post and subsequent comments), and is not helped by Google and Facebook not opening up your contacts/friends list for syncing with other online services. If Plaxo could sync with GMail and Facebook, then I would pretty much have a single contacts list so come on Google and Facebook, open up and let people sync their contact data, it is theirs afterall!

A page containing recent updates

Plaxo Pulse, Google Reader, Facebook home page, etc. etc. are just some of the pages I visit regularly to look for information updates from sites I am interested in, and also information from my contacts. Plaxo Pulse does the best job of information from my contacts provided that person is already a Plaxo member - I can add a simple connection and then see the information the connection wants to share with me, e.g. blog posts, del.icio.us bookmarks, Flickr photos etc. The only problem is that it is down to the connection to define what things I can see, even if they are public. For instance, if friend A decides to share their blog posts with me but not their public Flickr photos, I won’t see those in Plaxo Pulse and have no way of adding this in even though I can easily go and view these directly at the site. Facebook’s home page is another solution, although this quickly gets polluted with junk such as advertising, zombie requests, etc. although I notice you can now customise this much more (as you can with Plaxo) which should get rid of much of this.

Current status

Many of these services also have a notion of current status, e.g. online/offline, your current location, a short message about what you are doing/feeling. Some of these are integrated, e.g. Plazes allows you to share your current location as your Skype status which is really useful although it would be nice to have a single online status message which I can update and then have the option to share my current location with people.

Here’s hoping we see some consolidation in these areas next year - just imagine how much time you would save having a single user id and password, a single set of profiles, a single contact list, a single page of recent updates and a single status message!

Let me know what you would like to see from online services in 2008.

Back to normal

December 19th, 2007

If you have visited my blog over the last week or so you may well have noticed it has been hacked. Things started with an extra link appearing in my blogroll, which I removed, and then the front page got modified for a page advertising the hacker. Since then it has been down while my friend  Sean, who hosts my website, has been upgrading Wordpress to the latest version and  checking everything looks OK. Luckily it looks like the database was left untouched but it will definitely encourage me to ensure I am at the latest version of Wordpress. If you are using Wordpress you may also want to take a look at hardening your security.

What Digital SLR should I buy?

December 2nd, 2007

With the imminent arrival of our baby and the nice cheque I recently received for reviewing this book I thought it was about time to get a new digital camera (my current point and click digital which cost over £200 quite a few years ago now, is now beaten in to the ground by most mobile phones!). After seeing the pictures taken by some of my friends, particularly Adrian, Richard and James, I am definitely looking for a digital SLR and am looking to spend around £500 on a body and lens. As a total newbie to SLRs I have done the normal thing of having a look around online and have bought a copy of What Digital Camera but think the best advice typically comes from people who have actually got and used the camera, which is why I have posted this, to gather some opinions from you all.

In terms of what I am looking to do with the camera (obviously this will affect lens choice) I plan to use it mainly for taking photos of people (the baby obviously!) and landscapes - I’m unlikely, at least to start with, to do extreme close ups or fast photography.

Any advice would be most welcome!

Blogging at BEA

November 16th, 2007

Those of you who read this blog will probably know I used to post about work related topics at the SOA Tips ‘n’ Tricks blog along with a number of my IBM colleagues. Rather than continue to post there (think it might be a bit awkward - people from 2 major competitors posting on the same blog) I have just started my own BEA dev2dev blog which can be found here.

My aim is to post about how to do real things with the product and offer my own tips and tricks as to how to get the most out of the products - focusing mainly on AquaLogic Service Bus and AquaLogic Registry and Repository. My first post, entitled “How to add a service to AquaLogic Service Bus” is available now. I have got lots of other posts in the pipeline but would really like to hear from you about what you’d like me to write about. Before you ask though, I am not allowed to do any comparisons between IBM and BEA’s products - although I would really like to :)

Hope you enjoy reading it - if you do (or even if you don’t) - go ahead and leave a comment its always good to get feedback.

The end of the valley

November 16th, 2007

Well its finally coming to the end of my week in Silicon Valley on my New Hire Field Training at BEA’s headquarters. All in all its been a good week - I’ve learnt lots of stuff and most importantly met lots of really great people. I’ve got to take a peek at all the main products - a really impressive line-up - and got to meet many of the key folks in the various teams, plus I’ve got to see the existing BEA headquarters before they move to their new home in downtown San Jose.

My time at the DoubleTree hotel has also been fine in terms of the room and staff, however last night was my 3rd false alarm fire bell in under a week - slightly excessive. The problem is they don’t announce on the tannoy it is a false alarm and so you end up going down stairs and back round to reception before you find out - definitely a bit annoying at 11pm like it was last night.

San Jose and the surrounding area is OK too - nothing special - but nice nevertheless. If you are looking for some restaurant recommendations - check out Sino (an Asian restaurant on Santana Row) which serves a great mix of Asian food and McCormick and Schmick’s which serves excellent fish downtown.

Lets hope air traffic control at San Francisco airport are a bit better than when I arrived so I make it home before work again on Monday!

Exploring the valley

November 12th, 2007

As I had today free before my course starts on Monday I thought I would go and do some exploring. Walked 2 blocks to catch the VTA Light Rail train to down town San Jose (about 3.5 miles away). Learnt my first lesson - never pay for train tickets at the vending machine with a $20 bill (I had no change) - got $15 in quarters - it was like playing the fruit machines!

The 15 minute ride down there was good - it gave me plenty of opportunity to take a look round the bay area and the heart of San Jose. Walked round the down town area for a while and watched some of the veterans parade (a bit God Bless America for my liking - although good to see so much support for the armed forces who give up so much to protect us) before deciding to head into The Tech (the museum of innovation and technology) which was currently hosting the Body World 2 exhibition. I felt the $22 entrance fee was a bit steep but the Body World exhibition was definitely worth it (although it wouldn’t be for everyone). If the only human anatomy you have seen is a skeleton in the school class room then you should definitely see this in my opinion. Just about every organ from the human body is on display and they are pretty much all real, preserved using the controversial plastination technique invented by Dr Gunther von Hagens. Not only are healthy individual organs on display, but examples of un-healthy specimens too - e.g. a smokers lung, an arthritic knee, cancerous organs etc. as well as the stars of the show - the full human bodies in very recognisable poses including the baseball player, the ballet dancer, the skateboarder and even a pregnant woman. There are also unborn foetuses and embryos from women who died before they could give birth. The accompanying audio tour gave a useful commentary to the exhibits but I found it a bit long winded at points and so gave up about half way through.

The rest of The Tech museum was designed mainly for kids and included areas on the environment, silicon, the internet, robots, ideas for the home and a few more things which obviously had a great impact on me :) Other than the Body World exhibition the highlights were the dust room where you could dust off your clothes and see how many dust particles were on you (over 6000 in my case!), a robot which picked up wooden blocks to spell out your name and a section on text speak (where else could you see lol, brb, afk, etc. in a museum!). A good idea if you have kids, but if you don’t I wouldn’t bother apart from the Body World exhibition.

The rest of downtown San Jose wasn’t very awe inspiring - perhaps that explains why its the safest city in the US (supposedly)!

As I’d bought a day pass for the light rail I decided to go to down town Mountain View (the north end of the valley). On the trip I passed numerous company headquarters (or at least sizeable buildings) including Cisco, Yahoo, eBay, BEA, Sun Microsystems, Canon, Motorola, Lockheed Martin and even the NASA Ames Research Center which looks like it has 2 garages for space shuttles! Down town Mountain View is much nicer than San Jose - much more cosmopolitan with some nice looking restaurants, shops and coffee shops. After taking a walk down the main street (mainly in the shade to avoid the incredibly bright sunshine) and grabbing a drink I headed back. I got off the light rail at the  metro/airport station, grabbed a fajita burrito to eat at Chipotle Mexican Grill (highly recommended - plus check out their very flash web site) and then headed back. All in all a good days exploring.

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San Jose (eventually!)

November 12th, 2007

Yesterday I arrived in San Jose in preparation for my New Hire Field Training course at BEA headquarters. I have visited California before on my round the world trip, just over 5 years ago, when I visited San Francisco and LA but this is my first time in Silicon Valley - the home of many of the worlds top internet, software and telecommunications companies (check out the Silicon Valley link for the full list).

I was told travelling to San Jose via London was a bit of a pain and everyone flew to San Francisco and then made their own way down to San Jose (about 40 mins away). The trip started well: I’d checked in online and printed my boarding pass the night before for my BA flight; my taxi arrived a few minutes early to collect me and we made great time down a pretty empty M3 (if only it was like this when I commute to High Wycombe). Things then started to get worse - first I realised I had forgotten my mobile (no problem really as I can only use it in the UK) and then I was told I was too early to drop my bags off (oh well, better than being later). After grabbing a tea to kill the time things started to improve: I dropped off my bags; made my way through security; had a good look round the shops and got on my flight on time.

We left a few minutes late and the journey was good (BA’s touch screen entertainment system keeping me amused for the 11hr flight) until we got to San Francisco. We started to descend and couldn’t have been long from the captain lowering the wheels when we pulled up (not too sharply but enough to know something was wrong). The captain came on the tannoy to tell us San Francisco air traffic control had brought us in too close to the plane in front - the heavy rain and tail wind meant hadn’t helped the situation and the plane on the runway was pretty slow - so we had to circle.

A few minutes later we were told we didn’t have enough fuel to circle and we would be landing at Oakland airport (the other side of the bay from San Francisco) where we would refuel and then fly back to San Francisco as BA didn’t have any ground crew at Oakland. On landing we were told to stay in our seat in case immigration wanted to come and check the plane (you can just imagine the commotion - a large plane landing unexpectedly at an airport in the US post 9/11) - luckily there were no spare walkways so immigration wouldn’t have been able to get on anyway :)

After just over an hour we took off bound for San Francisco and came in to land again, only for the same thing to happen - we were brought in too close to the plane in front. The co-pilot announced over the tannoy this was only the 4th time this had happened to him in 10 years of flying including the twice on this flight! This was followed by the cabin crew director announcing it had only happened to him 3 times before this flight in 33 years and the captain saying this was one of the worst pieces of air traffic control in his 38 years of flying and he would be making an official complaint as soon as we made it into the terminal building!

On our next attempt we landed, made it quickly through customs (even with having to have my photo and fingerprints taken as is now customary for people visiting the US), and then to baggage reclaim. After 10 minutes waiting at carousel 7 (where the screens said our luggage would be) we were told to go to carousel 8 instead where after another 10 minutes or so my bag finally arrived (luckily I wasn’t one of the few people who’s names were called out whose bags had been lost/left in London - how hard can it be!). I then made my way to the shuttles and managed to get one to my hotel - the DoubleTree, San Jose, although had to wait for about 25 mins before we left the airport in order to get enough passengers. Then after a tour round much of the valley (taking 4 other guests to their hotel) we finally made it to my hotel - just over a full 24hrs since I’d got up!

After finding my room, sorting out the free internet connection, chatting to Shelley and the customary flick through the TV channels I headed to bed - a really long day but I’d eventually made it to the valley!

Only a few people have their finger on the Pulse

October 23rd, 2007

A number of my friends and colleagues, like me, have started using Plaxo in order to keep some semblance of order over their social network of contacts (formerly your address book). As of a few months ago, the latest version of Plaxo has a feature called Pulse which allows you to share feeds from other online sites you might use such as Flickr, del.icio.us, Last.fm, shared items from Google Reader, etc. etc. as well as your own blog(s) with your network of contacts. Unlike Facebook, it is a) open and b) gives you the opportunity to share different feeds with different groups of people (e.g. you can choose to share your Flickr photos with your friends and your blog postings with just your business network). I find this a really useful feature, although most of my contacts don’t seem to use it - they obviously don’t have their finger on the Pulse! So, if you are a friend/contact of mine who uses Plaxo, go into Pulse and hook up some feeds so I can see what you are up to. If I am already in your address book you should see a number of my feeds depending on whether you are a business contact or friend. If you haven’t joined Plaxo already, I strongly advise you to check it out.

As of this week you can now add a lifestreaming widget (i.e. the aggregation of your Pulse feeds) to a widget which you can then display on your blog which some people may find useful.

Update on 23/10/07: The lifestreaming widget can be found here, and some other feeds people may be interested in which can be added include Jaiku and Twitter.

100 LinkedIn Contacts

October 23rd, 2007

I noticed this week I’ve reached a milestone on LinkedIn - 100 contacts. OK, so I know lots of people have more than that, but I feel this is a pretty good number and all of the people I am connected to are people I have worked with, have studied with or people I have linked up with online through a variety of different mechanisms (not just anyone and everyone). Some other interesting stats about my connections:

  • They come from a variety of places including the UK, US, Denmark, Japan, Ireland, Poland, Norway, Canada and Singapore
  • Only 8 people in my network currently have more contacts than me
  • The highest number of contacts of anyone in my network is currently 318!
  • I have no contacts with surnames beginning with E, I, Q or Z
  • I have 13 invites that have not been accepted

But is LinkedIn still important, with Facebook’s domination in the social networking space? I think so, yes.

Facebook for me is definitely the more social with LinkedIn being more for business contacts. Features such as the CV style profile, references, the LinkedIn toolbar and jobs insider and the question and answer system on LinkedIn are incredibly useful and don’t really have parallels in Facebook (yet). Yes - I have contacts in both and yes - it would be good to have a single set of connections (Plaxo helps me a bit here) but I still think there is a place for both. LinkedIn is adding new features (albeit slower than most people would like) such as photos and there is talk about an open API for people to contribute approved applications (hopefully none of the zombie/vampire/pirates style of app in Facebook) to the platform which will make things interesting. If any potential LinkedIn application developers are listening, a few features I would like to see are:

  • A place to put certification details in your profile
  • A way of displaying all contacts on a map
  • Integration with a service like Dopplr so I can see where my contacts currently are

But anyway, I’ve reached 100 contacts (and I’ve even added a few more today!) and I plan to keep using LinkedIn for the foreseeable future, so if you know me and want to connect, send me an invite.