Glad to hear Ernie the Attorney made it out of Nola safe and has been reunited with his kids:
But they don't fully grasp the enormity of this catastrophe. Probably they don't want to. This is not the sort of thing that the human mind can assimilate in just a few hours, or even a few days.
Computerworld News notes Open-source databases grow. "Momentum around open-source alternatives is swelling, with a number of developments in recent months illustrating the market's growing maturity."
1:23:37 PM comment []
Yesterday, I "attended" a web seminar put on by the MySQL folks titled "MySQL for DBAs:
How to be Successful as a Scale-Out MySQL DBA" It was an excellent overview of the many ways in which MySQL can be configured with different data engines, settings, configurations, replication or clusters for various High Availability (HA) situations using OnLine Transaction Processing (OLTP) or Data Warehousing scenarios. The web seminar was put on using WebEx, which gave the presenters the opportunity to maintain a Q&A and Chat off to the side during the presentation. WebEx supports Java clients in most browsers: I used Safari on my iMac. Audio, though, isn't streamed, but rather delivered via a toll-free telephone connection. Overall, it was a good use of an hour of my time, getting me some good information and pointers on where to learn more. Sort of like a vendor presentation at a user group, but without the hours of driving on either end.
Living not far from a large flood control project, Laura and I observe every spring that it's not the rains and snow melt here that are the problem, but the many, many acres of upstream lands that drain through our nearby river.
10:09:00 AM comment []
Doc has an extensive commentary on The Katrina Tsunami. Key points: the networks aren't reporting anything new or timely and the commercials are more obnoxious than usual. We knew what the potential catastrophe would be like years ago and Doc points to some recent computer modeling that's chillingly accurate.
The Mercury MESSENGER (Mercury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging) satellite took some spectacular pictures through the rear view window on the way to Mercury. On the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory site:
The Mercury-bound MESSENGER spacecraft captured several stunning images of Earth during a gravity assist swingby of its home planet on Aug. 2, 2005. Several hundred images, taken with the wide-angle camera in MESSENGER[base ']s Mercury Dual Imaging System (MDIS), were sequenced into a movie documenting the view from MESSENGER as it departed Earth.
Love the snarky "seemingly endless" - how is it the press can complain when Microsoft ships something and complain when they don't? Even worse, this isn't really *shipping* anything - it's just a beta.
It's a beta of an "R2" product - Windows 2003 Server Release 2, apparently not deserving of it's own year moniker (hey, how about Server 2005?) because Microsoft doesn't want to take heat from the folks who don't want to upgrade their servers every two years, but they still have features to ship, especially with Longwait, er, Vista Server, scheduled for 2007. Maybe.
R2? What's the client going to be named? C3P0?
8:18:05 AM comment []