Archive for November, 2007

Ulib ?

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

Heute ging das „Million Book Project“ mit der Webseite www.ulib.org online. Das nicht gewinn orientierte Project wurde von der der Carnegie Mellon University, der Zhejiang-Universität, dem Indian Institute of Science und der Bibliothek von Alexandrien ins leben gerufen.

Die rund 1000 Angestellten schaffen es pro tag rund 7000 Bucher in eine digitale form zu bringen (diese leute haben vom tippen Fingerkuppen die härter als stahl sindJ) zur zeit sind über 1,2 Millionenbücher online. Ich finde diese Zahl gewaltig.

Ich habe zum Lesen eines Buches a 300 Seiten ca 8 Stunden. Und das Durchschnitts buch hat gemäss Google 431 Seiten. Wenn wir das nun rechnen (8h x 60)/300Seiten gibt das 1.6 Seiten /Minute. 1‘200‘000Bucher x 431Seiten gibt das 517200000 Seiten zu lesen.

Ich bräuchte also ca. 29 Leben um alle diese Bücher zu Lessen (gerechnet 24 Stunden Lesen, und 77.8 Jahre pro leben) Irgendwie finde ich das Frustrierend.

Das Ziel ist es alle Bücher auf der Welt einzuscannen, man schätz das es etwa 100 bis 300 Millionen Bücher gibt weltweit.

Ich würde ja gerne noch einige Worte über die Qualität der Bücher sagen leider ist die Seite im Moment etwas überlastet.

Net Inventory

Saturday, November 17th, 2007

Welcher Admin kennt das Problem nicht man hatte grade einen Benutzer am Draht und hat im irgendwas versprochen, leider hat man wiedermal vergessen was er für eine IP.

net-inventory.JPG

Nach dem Stundenlagen suchen in irgendwelchen Excel Files findet man dann eine IP aber ob diese auch stimmt das wissen dann nur die Götter. Ok ich weiss Mann sollte diese listen immer up to Date halten, aber wir kennen ja das alle.

Jetzt ist Schluss damit!!! Ich bin vor geraumer Zeit auf eine Kleine Software namens „Net Invetory“ Gestossen. Sie ist ein Open Source Project von „WinExperts.de und WinFaq.de“ An dieser Stelle danke für die tolle Arbeit. Das Ganze ist ganz schlicht gehalten und basiert auf VBS (inkl. WMI), etwas ASP und zwei Access Dateien. Also ganz einfach zu managen und man weiss was man hat.

Zum betreiben benötigt man einen WebServer (IIS bevorzugt aber Apache geht auch). Einen Share wo alle Computer schreibrechte haben. Ahm das wäre dann auch schon alles. Das Inventar lasse ich auf einem Alten Pentium 2 Client mit Windows 2k und den Dazugehörigem IIS. Das Ding bracht wirklich keine Power Maschine.

Net Invenory kann:

Über das ADS oder das Login scribt Computer auslesen.

Soft und Hardware Inventar erstellen.

Hardware Veränderungen Feststellen.

Dell Service TAG Auslesen.

Beliebig Erweitert Werden.

Und Noch Files Mehr .

Leider hinken dir Releases etwas hinter dem Forum Hinterher, deswegen habe ich mal meine Eigenen Updates in ein ZIP Gemacht. Ihr könnt diese ganz einfach unter „downloads“ beziehen.

Die 10 Arten von Programmiren

Sunday, November 11th, 2007

Nachdem ich heute wiedermal mein Visual Studio mehr oder weniger erfolgreich geschlossen habe, bin ich noch über eine lustige Webseite geflogen. Es geht darum das Programmierer generell einen etwas schweren Stand in der geschlafft haben. Aber wir eingefleischte Admin’s wissen das es da noch diverse Unterschiede geben kann.

#1: Gandalf

This programmer type looks like a short-list candidate to play Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings. He (or even she!) has a beard halfway to his knees, a goofy looking hat, and may wear a cape or a cloak in the winter. Luckily for the team, this person is just as adept at working magic as Gandalf. Unluckily for the team, they will need to endure hours of stories from Gandalf about how he or she to walk uphill both ways in the snow to drop off the punch cards at the computer room. The Gandalf type is your heaviest hitter, but you try to leave them in the rear and call them up only in times of desperation.

#2: The Martyr

In any other profession, The Martyr is simply a “workaholic.” But in the development field, The Martyr goes beyond that and into another dimension. Workaholics at least go home to shower and sleep. The Martyr takes pride in sleeping at the desk amidst empty pizza boxes. The problem is, no one ever asked The Martyr to work like this. And he or she tries to guilt-trip the rest of the team with phrases like, “Yeah, go home and enjoy dinner. I’ll finish up the next three week’s worth of code tonight.”

#3: Fanboy
Watch out for Fanboy. If he or she corners you, you’re in for a three-hour lecture about the superiority of Dragonball Z compared to Gundam Wing, or why the Playstation 3 is better than the XB 360. Fanboy’s workspace is filled with posters, action figures, and other knick-knacks related to some obsession, most likely imported from Japan. Not only are Fanboys obnoxious to deal with, they often put so much time into the obsession (both in and out of the office) that they have no clue when it comes to doing what they were hired to do.

#4: Vince Neil

This 40-something is a throwback to 1984 in all of the wrong ways. Sporting big hair, ripped stonewashed jeans, and a bandana here or there, Vince sits in the office humming Bon Jovi and Def Leppard tunes throughout the workday. This would not be so bad if “Pour Some Sugar on Me” was not so darned infectious.

Vince is generally a fun person to work with, and actually has a ton of experience, but just never grew up. But Vince becomes a hassle when he or she tries living the rock ‘n roll lifestyle to go with the hair and hi-tops. It’s fairly hard to work with someone who carries a hangover to work every day.

#5: The Ninja

The Ninja is your team’s MVP, and no one knows it. Like the legendary assassins, you do not know that The Ninja is even in the building or working, but you discover the evidence in the morning. You fire up the source control system and see that at 4 AM, The Ninja checked in code that addresses the problem you planned to spend all week working on, and you did not even know that The Ninja was aware of the project! See, while you were in Yet Another Meeting, The Ninja was working.

Ninjas are so stealthy, you might not even know their name, but you know that every project they’re on seems to go much more smoothly. Tread carefully, though. The Ninja is a lone warrior; don’t try to force him or her to work with rank and file.

#6: The Theoretician

The Theoretician knows everything there is to know about programming. He or she can spend four hours lecturing about the history of an obscure programming language or providing a proof of how the code you wrote is less than perfectly optimal and may take an extra three nanoseconds to run. The problem is, The Theoretician does not know a thing about software development. When The Theoretician writes code, it is so “elegant” that mere mortals cannot make sense of it. His or her favorite technique is recursion, and every block of code is tweaked to the max, at the expense of timelines and readability.

The Theoretician is also easily distracted. A simple task that should take an hour takes Theoreticians three months, since they decide that the existing tools are not sufficient and they must build new tools to build new libraries to build a whole new system that meets their high standards. The Theoretician can be turned into one of your best players, if you can get him or her to play within the boundaries of the project itself and stop spending time working on The Ultimate Sorting Algorithm.

#7: The Code Cowboy

The Code Cowboy is a force of nature that cannot be stopped. He or she is almost always a great programmer and can do work two or three times faster than anyone else. The problem is, at least half of that speed comes by cutting corners.  The Code Cowboy feels that checking code into source control takes too long, storing configuration data outside of the code itself takes too long, communicating with anyone else takes too long… you get the idea.

The Code Cowboy’s code is a spaghetti code mess, because he or she was working so quickly that the needed refactoring never happened. Chances are, seven pages’ worth of core functionality looks like the “don’t do this” example of a programming textbook, but it magically works. The Code Cowboy definitely does not play well with others. And if you put two Code Cowboys on the same project, it is guaranteed to fail, as they trample on each other’s changes and shoot each other in the foot.

Put a Code Cowboy on a project where hitting the deadline is more important than doing it right, and the code will be done just before deadline every time. The Code Cowboy is really just a loud, boisterous version of The Ninja. While The Ninja executes with surgical precision, The Code Cowboy is a raging bull and will gore anything that gets in the way.

#8: The Paratrooper

You know those movies where a sole commando is air-dropped deep behind enemy lines and comes out with the secret battle plans? That person in a software development shop is The Paratrooper. The Paratrooper is the last resort programmer you send in to save a dying project. Paratroopers lack the patience to work on a long-term assignment, but their best asset is an uncanny ability to learn an unfamiliar codebase and work within it. Other programmers might take weeks or months to learn enough about a project to effectively work on it; The Paratrooper takes hours or days. Paratroopers might not learn enough to work on the core of the code, but the lack of ramp-up time means that they can succeed where an entire team might fail.

#9: Mediocre Man

“Good enough” is the best you will ever get from Mediocre Man. Don’t let the name fool you; there are female varieties of Mediocre Man too. And he or she always takes longer to produce worse code than anyone else on the team. “Slow and steady barely finishes the race” could describe Mediocre Man’s projects. But Mediocre Man is always just “good enough” to remain employed.

When you interview this type, they can tell you a lot about the projects they’ve been involved with but not much about their actual involvement. Filtering out the Mediocre Man type is fairly easy: Ask for actual details of the work they’ve done, and they suddenly get a case of amnesia. Let them into your organization, though, and it might take years to get rid of them.

#10: The Evangelist

No matter what kind of environment you have, The Evangelist insists that it can be improved by throwing away all of your tools and processes and replacing them with something else. The Evangelist is actually the opposite of The Theoretician. The Evangelist is outspoken, knows an awful lot about software development, but performs very little actual programming.

The Evangelist is secretly a project manager or department manager at heart but lacks the knowledge or experience to make the jump. So until The Evangelist is able to get into a purely managerial role, everyone else needs to put up with his or her attempts to revolutionize the workplace.

Neuse Macbook mit Santarosa

Thursday, November 1st, 2007

Apple bringt nun auch seine MacBooks auf den aktuellen Stand und rüstet sie mit Intels Santa-Rosa-Plattform aus. Zwar steht noch eine entsprechende Ankündigung aus, doch in Apples US-Online-Shop sind die Geräte bereits zu finden.

Was sicher zu den grossen Neuerungen gehört ist der IntelX3100 Garfikchip, bisher war einen Intel GMA 950 Verbaut. Neuerdings können die MacBooks auch bis zu 4 GB Ram verwalten.

Leder sind im Schweitzer Store die neuen Modelle noch nicht zu finden.

Für alle glücklichen Leo Besitzer die Firma pumera bitet noch ein kostenloses Handbuch zum Download an. http://www.pumera.ch/