Archive for the 'Tech' Category

Yahoo Ads vs Google Adsense

Wednesday, September 26th, 2007

I have been running Yahoo Ads and Google Adense on my blog pages for over several months now. Although I am yet to make a few cents on advertising, the reason why I keep the ads running is that I do plan to write a detailed comparison of both tools sometime in the future. Google beats all of its competitors in context search and advertising, but in my opinion Yahoo is so behind only by self responsibility. From several constructive comments I’ve made on their YPN Blog, the answers, if any, were vague and the problems persisted, with completely out of context ads.

But today I found something really fun while browsing trough one of my articles, “The World is Flat“:

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Food for thought:

  • being Friedman’s book such an actual and popular topic, how can Yahoo not find any more relevant ads to publish in this page?
  • Google paying for ads in the Yahoo network? This one makes even less sense :-)   
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Big brother or user customization?

Monday, September 24th, 2007

In a time when more and more person talk about Google Big Brother posture, new examples of their constant supervision of our actions pop up frequently. There are several webpages I prefer to search on google each time instead of bookmarking them. It may look counter-productive, but it is actually quicker, since those sites are the first search result. One of them is the Google analytics website. Today, however, my search had something new on it:

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We all knew that Google saves all the information about our searches, but for some reason, the fact that they even displayed it to me, frightened me a bit, not because of my searches, but because of all the other information that we, sooner or later, exchange in an email, like banking, confidential, login credentials, etc…

I must say that I’m facilitating this task to Goole, as I use Firefox’s GMail notifier plugin, that keeps me logged in all time, giving Google everything it needs to trace all my steps… One must decide whether to surrender to the inevitable or to delay it with counter measures…

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DB2 on Mac

Monday, September 24th, 2007

Last week, after my presentation at University of Minho about the DB2 on Campus and DB2 Student Ambassador programs and the pureXML features in DB2, one student came to me and asked me if DB2 was available for Mac. My answer was a ‘no’, but things will change pretty soon. 

My ‘office neighbor’ Antonio Cangiano just made public IBM’s intention of releasing a DB2 Express-C port to Intel Mac. This is one more big step from DB2 Express-C towards the community, after very open licensing conditions, Ruby on Rails driver and adapter, soon-to-come Python and Django driver and adapter, DB2 Express-C orum and DB2 Express-C blog, etc….

 

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The World is flat

Saturday, September 22nd, 2007

I just finished reading the most recent best-selling book from Thomas Friedman: “The World is Flat”. It is definitely a very interesting read about how the world is becoming leveraged nowadays, mostly because of the surging of high speed internet connections all over the world and the opening of some cultures to the world.

I was both amazed and amused by Friedman’s research! It is incredible the large amount of trips and interviews the author did during the research phase for this book and the perfect location of each and every quotation and conversation. The way Friedman positions the real-world examples makes all of his concepts become simple and clearly understandable.

 

Along with the top quality research, another aspect of the book that captivated me was that describes several perspectives of the flat world, corresponding to several places in the world, from US, Latin America, Africa, Middle East, India, China and many others. It is also noteworthy the effort of the author in promote collaboration over and over again as the way to build our future.

 I definitely recommend this book, and give it 9 in a 1-10 scale. If you decided to read it, take a deep breath, because it is 650 pages long (english version) with a smaller than average size font. Good readings!

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DB2 Student Ambassador

Saturday, September 15th, 2007

After reading Alcides Fonseca’s post regarding is opportunity to become an MSP and asking whether other companies have similar programs, I would like to introduce two programs related with DB2 that are targeted for university students: DB2 On Campus and DB2 Student Ambassador.

DB2 on Campus: The DB2 on Campus Program is a project designed to promote the use of DB2 in universities. The logistics and delivery of the program is performed between the DB2 Express-C team, and the local IBM Academic Initiative representative. The program consists of the following items and activities:

  1. A speech titled “The role of DB2 Express-C in the Information on Demand World”. This speech explains DB2 9 technology, with an emphasis on pureXML™, and encourages students to use DB2 Express-C, create university DB2 user groups, participate in the DB2 forums, and write documents about DB2. All of these activities can help them to advance their future careers.
  2. Introductory DB2 courses to obtain DBA and developer skills.
  3. Free DB2 books donated to the university library
  4. Free DB2 certification exams offered to the students

I will be at University of Minho on September 19th doing the speech for the DB2 on Campus program. There was not enough time to prepare the full-day event, but if you or someone at your university is interested in having this full-day event happening at your university, please feel free to email me and I’ll put you in contact with the program’s manager in order to schedule the event (my email is vrodrig at us.ibm.com).

There is a DB2 On Campus Facebook group. Follow these instructions to join. 

Subscribe to the DB2 Express-C blog to keep updated on news regarding this free to develop, deploy and distribute database(1). 

DB2 Student Ambassador: This is a program for individual students that want to promote the use of DB2 at their education institutions. Though the program is voluntary, it gives students a chance to learn more about DB2, develop presentation skills and marketing skills. All of these skills will be valuable in their careers. At the end of the program, the student will receive a letter of recommendation from IBM including all the details of the activities performed. The more activities performed, the better the letter of recommendation! We hope this will help the student get a job more easily in the future.

I consider this to be an excellent opportunity to get involved and interact with developers from a huge project like DB2, distributed across Toronto and Silicon Valley laboratories.

More information  about this program can be found here: http://www-306.ibm.com/software/data/db2/express/students_programs.html#ambassador

 

Although I’m only familiar with the DB2 programs, for the ones interested, there is also an IBM Academic Initiative program, focused on Open Standars, Open Source and IBM resources for the academic world.

The opportunities are out there, so just grab the one you like and boost your career :-)

(1) Yes, it is the fully loaded version available for free, with one limitation: it can only use up to 4GB of RAM :-)  

 

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Discovering Portugal

Sunday, September 2nd, 2007


Originally uploaded by Vitor Rodrigues.

This year’s vacations were spent discovering Portugal’s typical villages (Idanha-a-Velha, Sortelha, Castelo-Novo, Almeida, Monsanto, Belmonte, Castelo-Mendo) and also visiting some Unesco World Heritage sites in Spain (Caceres, Merida and Sevilha).

We visited about 60% of the Portuguese villages classified as :”Typical Portuguese Village” and, in addition to last year’s vacations, completed the visit to all but Tarragona in Spain’s mailand Unesco Heritage Cities.

More photos to come on my flickr set: Vacations 2007

 

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XML and Databases

Monday, August 13th, 2007

I just stumbled across an excellent resource regarding XML technology in databases. Ronald Bourret has the most extensive research I’ve seen on the global XML and databases state of the art. It has an extensive list of databases with XML support (native or by means of extenders/adapters) recently updated and several papers on XML and databases

A must read, that I will be consuming over the coming weeks. 

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US national body votes NO to Open XML

Sunday, August 12th, 2007

The executive committee of the International Committee for Information Technology Standards (INCITS) fell one vote shy of the nine required to approve Microsoft’s Open XML standard. It voted 8 to 7 in favor of approval with one abstention, the group announced last week.

The ballot description here: Open XML ballot

The voting details here:  Open XML US voting

It’s unfortunate that some companies didn’t add comments to their votes. I would be interested to know the reasons for Apple and Intel voting yes, being that they are not strongly affiliated with Microsoft.

Another topic that can lead to some discussion is the fact that the two government agencies present in the group had different votes. the DHS thinks that the existence of 2 standards is a good thing, while the Department of Defense did their homework and based their negative vote on the following technical issues with Open XML:

From the several government agencies present in the voting body, it is interesting to see the different voting positions. The Department of Defense clearly identified the technical reasons for their negative vote: 

  1. Binary information in the standard that would lead to security concerns.
  2. The referencing of unexplained backward compatibility modes that might pose a problem for third party implementers.
  3. The use of proprietary file formats within the open standard appear to cause potential intellectual property ownership concerns.

The Department of Homeland Security voted yes, even though they also found technical issues with the proposed standard:

The XML naming and design practices of OOXML, for example, are inconsistent with Federal practices detailed in the Federal XML Community-of-Practice’s Federal XML Naming and Design Rules and Guidelines which prescribes best practices such as ISO/IEC 11179-5 element naming rules; OOXML uses a proprietary naming scheme.

Although this is a though result to Microsoft, I do think that eventually Open XML will be considered a standard format. Microsoft may have to do some work on addressing some technical issues like the ones pointed by DD, but eventually they will get the majority of votes. They just need one vote, and most of the NO votes were “conditional approvals”, voted as NO per the voting guidelines. I’m sure they will try to do some lobbying as a mean to get the missing vote.

Source: pcworld.com

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Recent readings

Tuesday, August 7th, 2007

 Latest articles checked out from my “toread” folder in delicious:

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Smoggy TO

Thursday, July 12th, 2007


Originally uploaded by FireinCairo.
Snow covered in winter, smog covered in summer. This is Toronto.

If you are an outdoor person, Toronto is not the city for you. In winter, people are advised to stay at home due to extreme cold. In Summer, people are advised to stay at home due to extreme heat, smog and high UV radiation (levels 10+ sometimes).

Still, most of people still thinks that the few weeks of Spring and Fall are of such extreme beauty that are worth the cold and heat during the rest of the year.


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