Rob Paller A blog about databases, business intelligence, and an outlet for my inner geek

Wordless Wednesday: April 21, 2010

Posted on April 21, 2010

Photo via Flickr under terms of Creative Commons License: via horizontal.integration

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Earth Hour 2010

Posted on February 25, 2010

You probably have noticed the small banner across the top of my site recently. I have decided as part of Earth Hour 2010  - March 27, 2010 at 8:30PM EST - that my website will go dark during Earth Hour. On Earth Hour millions of people across the world join together in solidarity for climate change in one simple act, turning of their lights. This simple act shows that we can join together and have a positive impact on the climate.

Ironically, LCD monitors may require more power to generate a black pixel vs a white pixel. A comparison of 27 LCD monitors was done and confirmed that in most instance a small increase in wattage was required to display Blackle vs Google. You can find more information about the comparison performed by Darren Yates.

If you would like to support Earth Hour on your Wordpress blog you can get more information about the Earth Hour plugin at Brave New Code. For more information about Earth Hour and how you can show your support in your community you can check out MyEarthHour.org.

Regardless of your personal opinion about global warming, it can not be argued that we can be better stewards of our natural resources and the impact we have on our planet. There are plenty of things within our ability to leave this planet a better place for generations to come.

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Themeword 2010: FOCUS

Posted on December 31, 2009

Focus

I have never been one for putting together a list of resolutions every year only to forget about them before the new year is a month old. However, there was a discussion and game of tag that emerged on Twitter among the SQL Server tribe recently about choosing a themeword instead of listing resolutions. After reading about the themewords that were chosen by Thomas Larock (@SQLRockstar), Colin Stasiuk (@BenchmarkIT), and doing a little reading about the concept over at HPC, I decided that I would jump into the ring and try it out this year.

My themeword for 2010: FOCUS

The one thing that I realized over the past year that has been missing in both my professional and personal life is focus. I need to focus more on my career development this year. The role of a Teradata DBA has been a great source of achievement and satisfaction for me over the past several years. I still enjoy the thrill I get when I hyperfocus on a performance tuning a query, writing a statistics maintenance routine, building an object catalog or developing a multivalue compression routine. But I also have the desire to learn more about data management, data quality, and data governance. While I blogged about data governance, data management and business intelligence this past year, many of the issues that I have dealt day in and day out with have centered on being a DBA and less on theses other areas.  This year I want to spend more time focusing on these areas because they are going to continue become increasingly more important in both the public and private sectors.

I have also made several great connections on Twitter. I would like to focus on strengthening theses connections over the course of the upcoming year. In doing so, I need to also make sure that I focus on the value that LinkedIn can provide through its discussions and even local meet-ups that occur on a semi-regular basis. This also includes branching out into new realms such as attending the local SQL Server PASS meetings on a regular basis.

However, just as important as focusing on career development there needs to be equal amounts of time spend focusing on developing as a father and husband. I have been very fortunate that I have been able to be an active participant in the activities that both my sons have been involved in over the past several years, from coaching Little League to bowling tournaments to roller skating and school parties. But I need to work harder as they grow older to serve as a role model and provide guidance for them as they face the transition from childhood to adolescence and adulthood. As a husband I need to focus on setting time aside for my wife and I to do things together. All too often we are so caught up in our children's activities, day-to-day life, or my Playstation 3 gaming habits. It doesn't need to be anything elaborate like cruises or vacations abroad (although I wouldn't mind either!). Just something simple like catching dinner and a movie or having take-out dinner and watching a movie at home.

How to Pick Your #ThemeWord for 2010

  1. Think of a word that reflects your hopes and dreams for 2010.
  2. Share your ThemeWord with friends on Twitter, Facebook, or Your Blog.
  3. Be sure and use the hashtag #ThemeWord.

Tag Your IT!

I am going to tag a couple of the people that I have met on Twitter this year:

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All Your URL are Belong to Us

Posted on December 14, 2009

Today's Lesson

Today, Google announced the launch of goo.gl, its own URL shortening service. It is currently in a "limited" release for users of its Google products such as Feedburner and the Google Toolbar. This was done in concert with Feedburner's new enhancement called Socialize, which will currently send your feed to the Twitter account you specify. In order for your feed to be socialized in near real-timte they suggest you leverage Feedburners "ping" feature whenever you publish a post. Overall, the Socialize feature of Feedburner is a nice enhancement and I hope that we will see additional services like Facebook, MySpace, and LinkedIn included in the future.

However, the most important feature that was launched today was the URL shortening service.  Why is this so important? Because several URL shortening services have come and gone over the past couple years. With the demise of these services comes the inability to redirect the user from the shortened URL to the target URL, also known as linkrot.  Brent Ozar wrote about his suspicions of using free web services to shorten URLs for this very reason. With Google the chance that your shortened URL will rot is virtually nil given Google's appetite for data.

While Google has said it will protect users of its URL shortening from malware and phishing it would be nice to see a link preview feature enabled. The current version of TweetDeck (v0.32.1) simply opens your web browser with the resolved goo.gl link while for other services such as bit.ly a preview of the full URL is given in a pop-up window . This is either due to TweetDeck not understanding how to handle goo.gl's URL preview or because goo.gl has not exposed a URL previewing feature. Google would be doing its users a disservice if a URL previewing feature is not exposed sooner than later.

Finally, how long before the current crop of URL shortening services fade away or are bought by Google. With the adoption of bit.ly as the default URL shortening service by Twitter in 2009 combined with Twitter's explosive growth in 2009 the loss of bit.ly's URL resolution over time could be troubling for many.

Will goo.gl become the dominating URL shortening service or do you think services such as bit.ly and ow.ly can survive?

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