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Monday, 31 December 2012

Half-Assed Review: Dollar Shave vs. Gillette Disposables

Posted on 21:00 by Unknown
Happy New Year!  I figured I would start off 2013 with something a little different, and I thought it would be interesting to make my first post at the the zero hour of 2013.  And besides, I needed a distraction from writing a bunch of techno-babble articles, and watching the same tired ball drop again on TV, so here goes...

Battle of the Blades

I recently signed up for the $1.00/month, base level "Humble Twin" membership plan with DollarShaveClub.com (hereinafter abbreviated as "DSC").  After the first month I think I have enough shave-time to do a comparison review.  I'll break it down into a few basic categories, and digress into my usual nauseating spewage of quasi-rationale.  Let's cut to it, shall we?  Har Har... :)

I've been a faithful customer of the Gillette Custom Plus disposable razor brand for years.  I've also used many others, from Schick and Wilkinson to generic crap, as well as electric razors from Braun, Norelco and Remington, among others.  I have a face that needs a daily shave, even if I find the routine boring and (mentally) irritating.

Disclaimer

I have not been compensated, endorsed, coerced, threatened, or influenced in any way whatsoever by any manufacturer, vendor, re-seller, or anyone besides myself as it pertains to anything contained in this article.  I have not contacted any other parties in regards to this article or any product mentioned herein.  I am not a professional product tester, although I have been known to pretend to play one on my imaginary TV show.


For clarity: The images shown herein show the Gillette Custom Plus with the green handle, and the Dollar Shave Club product with the silver and black handle.


The Mechanical Aspects

The first thing you'll notice is that the Gillette product is essentially a "uni-form" assembly, with no (easily) removable parts, whereas the DSC "humble twin" product is a little bulkier, heftier, and heavier, with permanent handle, using interchangeable blades.  Basically, the "humble twin" is very similar in design to more expensive hand-held razors, such as Gillette Mach 3 or the Schick Quattro Pro.  Aside from that, the geometry, and size, of these two products are noticeably different.

Shaving Head Angle

The DSC form has a more shallow deflection angle with respect to the "normal" shaving surface and the portion of the handle to which it is directly attached.  Put another way: The angle between the main handle grip and the segment that attaches to the blade assembly is more acute with the DSC model, and more shallow with the Gillette model.  The DSC has a sharper bend.

Shaving Head Design

The shaving head itself of the DSC model, is smaller in surface area, with a different proportional aspect ratio (side-to-side is wider but the front-to-back width is narrower).  The outer edges are not as smooth and actually protrude above the shaving surface more than the head on the Gillette product.  The pivot range is also roughly 20-25 degrees "back" from that of the Gillette product, which affects the angle required to hold the handle for a comfortable shave.
Figure 1 - Pseudo-scientific diagrammatic mumbo-jumbo stuff


Handle Design

The handle of the DSC is about 5% larger and 10% heavier than the Gillette model, due to having more metal content in the handle and a bulkier shaving head attachment mechanism.  The weight balance is also much more towards the shaving head.

The Shaving Experience

Admittedly, this is a subjective comparison in most respects, but I will try to highlight the more objective, measurable differences.  The smaller shaving head, and relatively sharper edges, of the DSC product make for a much less comfortable shave due to the outer edges focusing pressure against the skin in more narrow points of contact.  Also, because of the edges protruding more in front of the blade surface plane, the shave is not as close to the skin.  This results in having to take many more passes over the same area to get as close of a shave as the Gillette.  The net effect is a bit more skin irritation when achieving a comparable result with the Gillette product.

Figure 2 - Relative shaving head sizes and angles

Figure 3 - Relative head designs
The Cost

The DSC base level "Humble Twin" plan is advertised at $1.00 per month.  However with shipping it comes to $3.00 per month, or $36.00 annually, which includes 5 blades per week, or roughly 260 blades per year.  The Gillette Custom Plus sells in a package of 52 at Sam's Club, for $23.88*. If the Gillette blades each last a full week, that equates to a monthly cost of $1.99.

From my personal use, I would say that both products last about a full week per blade-set each.  If that's fairly accurate, then the cost comparison leans in favor of the Gillette Custom Plus by a savings of $1.01 per month, or $12.12 annually.  Yes, I know that's a freaky number (12/12), but I'm not that superstitious, I just act that way.

Figure 4 - comparison of size and bulkiness
Final Thoughts

I know this is subjective and based mostly on anecdotal mumbo-jumbo, but I have to pick the Gillette Custom Plus.  I really hoped the Dollar Shave Club razor would win, because they're the David against the Goliath of the shaving industry that includes Gillette, Schick, Bic, and upstart ShaveMate.  At least that's if I am to believe the touching cards they ship with each pack of blades.  I also am a sucker for clever, funny commercials, especially when they star the company founder front and center.

But it's really all about saving money without sacrificing comfort and quality.  And as cheesy and overused as that phrase already is, it's not only true, but applicable here as well.  For all the talk we Americans give about "buying American", when it comes to stocking up on our kids' school supplies, I'll take the 3-ring binder sold at Walmart for $2.99 over the 3-ring binder at Joe's Home-made School Supplies for $4.99, even though Joe makes his in the shed out behind his house and Walmart ships theirs in from China.  The main reason is that I'm not buying just one of them, but three or four, per child, and I have 4 children to equip (or at least I did, until the older two graduated and started into college).

And besides, that binder shipped from China fed a lot of Americans along the way.  From the docks where it was offloaded, to the trucks that transported it around, and the forklift drivers and loaders at the warehouses that stored it, to the store clerks to un-pack it and arranged it on the shelves, to the clerks that rang me up at the front.  And don't forget that Joe can go to work for Walmart if he wants to.  I'm guessing that with the chump change they spend on the 11-year old Chinese factory worker who assembled it, that the majority of that $2.99 went to everyone in between, including Walmart, where it helped plump the wallets of a few golfers in the boardroom as well.  3-ring binders or disposable razors, same difference.

What was it Gordon Gecko said?

Conclusion

Am I sentencing Dollar Shave Club to an eternity of dishonor?  No way.  I will keep an eye on their terms of service and product line and make my decision when it looks like they have something to change my mind again.  I'm not one to commit a business to the electric chair unless they've done me wrong, and Dollar Shave Club has not done me wrong as far as I know.  I'm just not overwhelmed by their product "right now", but who's to say what they will do in the future?

Holy crap!  I sure digressed on this one, didn't I?  Sometimes I amaze even my simple self.
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Posted in marketing, products, reviews | No comments

Skatterbrainz Top Blog Posts of 2012

Posted on 20:30 by Unknown
I'm taking a tip from the awesome Mr. Jeffery Hicks, (okay, "taking a tip" is code for "i'm being a copycat") and decided to pull a report of the Top 10 posts on my blog site (for January 2012 to December 2012), in order of most-visited to least-visited.  Call it vanity.  Call it shameless self-indulgence.  Call being a typical American.  Just don't call me Shirley.

Interesting side note: Google rolled their Analytics engine into Blogger a while back, which was a nice improvement.  Except that they dropped a few features during the "upgrade", such as the ability to drag a custom date window on the timeline to filter report results, and the preset option for "Past Year".  I've submitted feedback to ask if they might restore those features.  I'll keep you posted.  And now, on to the show...


Top Ten (10) Most-Visited Posts of 2012:

[1] Windows 8: Scoring My Predictable Predictions:
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2012/12/windows-8-scoring-my-predictable.html

[2] Windows 8: What I Think About It:
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2012/03/windows-8-what-i-think-about-it.html

[3] Windows 8 on TechNet Not So Great for TechEd Folks:
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2012/08/windows-8-on-technet-not-so-great-for.html

[4] Blog News and Updates:
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2012/11/blog-news-and-updates.html

[5] Deploy Windows 8 Start Tiles Using Group Policy Preferences:
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2012/11/deploy-windows-8-start-tiles-using.html

[6] Books and More Books and More...
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2012/12/books-and-more-books-and-more.html

[7] Merry Christmas! A Few Holiday Thoughts to Share:
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2012/12/merry-christmas-few-holiday-thoughts-to.html

[8] Another Book Announcement
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2012/12/another-book-announcement.html

[9] Dear CEO's: Be Careful with that Cloud PR Stuff
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2012/12/dear-ceos-be-careful-with-that-cloud-pr.html

[10] I Feel That a Feel-Good Feeling Feels Pretty Good
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2012/12/i-feel-that-feel-good-feeling-feels.html

Top Five (5) Visited Posts Since 2008 (aka "All Time"):

[1] Enabling Windows 7 Remote Management via Group Policy (2009)
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2009/08/enabling-windows-7-remote-management.html

[2] Windows 7, MSG.EXE and Group Policy Preferences (2010)
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2010/04/windows-7-msgexe-and-group-policy.html

[3] What Does the AutoCAD "PURGE" Command Do? (2010)
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2010/07/what-does-autocad-command-do.html

[4] Packaging and Deploying Autodesk 2011 Products with Configuration Manager 2007 (2010)
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2010/08/packaging-deployment-autodesk-2011.html

[5] Using PowerShell with Microsoft Access Databases (2009)
http://skatterbrainz.blogspot.com/2009/05/using-powershell-with-ms-access.html


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Posted in articles, blogs, bongloads, cranium drainium, reviews, stupidity, thoughts, writing | No comments

Saturday, 29 December 2012

Top 20 Commands Every Windows 7/8 Server 2008 / 2012 Administrator Should Know

Posted on 10:40 by Unknown
TechRepublic posted a list of "10 Windows 7 Commands Every Administrator Should Know", which is very good, and it includes the following:
  1. sfc
  2. sigverif
  3. driverquery
  4. nslookup
  5. ping
  6. pathping
  7. ipconfig
  8. repair-bde
  9. tasklist
  10. taskkill
I would have combined 9 and 10 with a "/" delimiter and added (at least) "reg.exe".  I mean, most administrators use it much more frequently, and with more urgency, than pathping or repair-bde.  Not to discount the value of those two, but there are others that really should be included. I guess I would have probably named that list "10 Windows 7 Commands That Would Be Helpful for Administrators To Know".  A little longer obviously, so how about "10 neat-o Windows Commands"?

In any case, I know this doesn't fit the "top 10" format, but maybe a "top 20" would be more suitable?  I could've just said to open a CMD console and type "HELP" and press Enter.  That will display a summary of CLI commands which are all extremely useful in particular situations.  But that would be un-administratively lazy of me, so I picked out ten of them to use for my add-on list.  For each command, just enter it with a trailing "/?" or "/help" or "-help" or "-?" (Microsoft is so standardized on the dash-or-slash thing).
  1. reg
    • For adding, editing, deleting, importing, exporting, loading and unloading items in the Registry
  2. cacls / icacls
    • For viewing and modifying ACL's (security descriptors / permissions settings) on Files and Folders.
  3. regini
    • For managing ACL's on Registry keys
  4. set
    • For viewing environment variable assignments, as well as assigning new variable/values
  5. shutdown
    • For initiating a shutdown, restart or logoff on a local, or remote, computer
  6. netsh
    • For viewing and managing network adapter and firewall configuration settings
  7. msg
    • For sending CLI alerts to other users or computers over the network (replaces the older "net send")
  8. schtasks
    • For viewing and managing (create, modify, enable/disable, delete) Scheduled Tasks
  9. diskpart
    • For viewing and managing logical disk partitions
  10. systeminfo
    • For displaying computer properties and configuration settings
Regardless, both lists are worth tucking away in your brain if you "manage" Windows clients and/or servers for a living.  Even if you do it as a hobby it's not going to hurt.  The list could easily go on and on.  I didn't include WMIC or PowerShell, which some would argue are equally, or more, important than these legacy CLI tools.
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Posted in command, microsoft, network administration, windows 7 | No comments

Thursday, 27 December 2012

Prediction Confliction

Posted on 18:55 by Unknown
It's been a long time since I tried on my alliteration duds, and these two words seemed to fit just about right. So anyhow, as we approach the end of another calendar year (on the Judeo-Christian calendar) I felt it was time to say some stupid things again. Although, this time I'm wrapping it in a blanket of smoked bacon and quasi-intellect to give it that home-cooked goodness.

My Predictions

1. The Anonymous (aka "Wild West Show") Internet will be Dead

What: Eventually, but not that far off, no one will be able to be truly anonymous or impossible to locate when they use the Internet.

When: On or before 2024

Why: The strongest proponents for this are governments and corporations. The only opponents are individuals. Guess who has more money, power, influence and the ability to basically "make it happen"? Lao Tsu (or Sun Tsu?) would've called this an "unstoppable force", but the only potential "immovable objects" are a bunch of people on their couches with a remote control in their hands. I know you're going to say "but, but, people will rise up and ...", and I'll finish that sentence with "...succumb to the boiling frog syndrome". It won't happen abruptly, but gradually over time.  The way all diabolical plans work best.

2. American Domestic Violence will Rise

What: Incidents of Americans attacking other Americans based on religious, ethnic, economic, political and racial differences will rise in frequency.

When: From now through ...?

Why: it was obvious from the most recent election that the public is growing more polarized. It is also apparent that the major press outlets feel they gain from helping to foment this growing divide, possibly from the increased "news" content that is created from the results. Creating news is more appealing than having to wait for it.  I'm not even referencing the recent spate of shootings (Newtown,CT, or the fire-fighters, or the cops in Kansas or Washington State), just general public angst and polarization will be enough to drive this evil crap higher.  Add to that the rising popularity of energy drinks, violence on TV and movies, and you have a little gasoline for the fire.  Enjoy!

3. Electric Vehicles will Finally Take Hold

What: once the right market forces get fully behind it, pure-electric vehicles will become commonplace alongside existing combustion engine and hybrid vehicles. And not just four-wheeled products.

When: On or before 2024

Why: Once the corporate players figure out a good profit angle it will be a no-brainer for shareholders.

4. TV "Reality" Shows will Gain Equal Status with Movies

What:  Award shows will emerge that are devoted entirely to the so-called "reality" shows on cable and satellite TV (okay, they're on the major networks also).  But, more importantly, the public will view them as being of equal "quality" and "value" as cinematic movies and premium cable movies as well.  They will hand out awards that will be of equal status with the Oscar, the Emmy, and the Grammy.

When: Within five (5) years, probably sooner.

Why:  We are becoming dumber by the minute.

We will have to check back in this posting in 10 years to see if I was right. The low-risk aspect of this is I'm guessing nobody will remember this in 2024, an I could be dead and gone anyway.

What do you think?  Am I completely off my rocker?  Post your thoughts in the Comment box below...
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Posted in entertainment, internet, people, predictions, society, technology, transportation | No comments

I Feel That a Feel-Good Feeling Feels Pretty Good

Posted on 03:00 by Unknown
Does anyone else remember the feeling in the air after 9/11?  I'm talking about the public social mood in America (it might have been felt elsewhere, but I don't know, since I don't travel outside the US).  People seemed to be genuinely more polite and courteous to others everywhere I went, for about two weeks.  Then it dried up and we went back to being our normal crusty selves. At least it's little head pops up during Christmas, even if only for a few days.  It would be nice to see it stick around longer.  I apologize if that comes across as a bit preachy.  I'm as crusty and annoying as any American can be, so I know it has to start with me, myself and I.  I'm going to try.
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Posted in american, cranium drainium, people, social stuff, society, thoughts | No comments

Tuesday, 25 December 2012

Survey Time: Choose Your Next Book Topic

Posted on 12:58 by Unknown
Looking over the sales figures for the books I have posted on Amazon, it's difficult to determine what I should focus on going forward.  The best-selling book, by far, is The Visual LISP Developer's Bible, 2011 Edition.  The problem with this however, is that I haven't had the opportunity to work with Visual LISP since 2011.  My career path has taken me away from that type of work (AutoCAD customization), so I don't feel that I can do it justice anymore.  And besides, as I've said (or hinted at) many times before: Autodesk doesn't seem to demonstrate a strong desire to promote that language over the likes of ObjectARX and .NET.  I could be wrong.  I have been wrong before (I think).

So, I need a little help from you, if I may ask?  I'd like to know what you think I should focus on for my next, and future books.  Or let me know if I should find another hobby.

The power is in your hands.  Use it wisely...

Take the Survey here:

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/SZLCWXY 
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Posted in authors, books, projects, writing | No comments

Merry Christmas! A Few Holiday Thoughts to Share...

Posted on 06:57 by Unknown
Today is Christmas Day, and I just want to share a few thoughts with you...

Whatever your faith. Whatever your personal beliefs.  I want to take a moment to THANK YOU, for taking the time to read this.  THANK YOU for visiting my blog.  Whether it's your first visit or you happen to be a regular visitor:  THANK YOU!

It may sound cheesy, maybe a bit insincere, but in all honesty, I appreciate each and every visit to my blog.  Maybe it's vanity.  Maybe it's just knowing someone cares what I think (although I still scratch my head about that).  Maybe it's a tiny little bit of thinking I've helped someone, somewhere, either learn something new, or just helped them to smile for a moment.

I will be the first to admit that I can run rampant with a one-sided discussion to the point of driving it head-first into a mountainside.  My blog is a mess, strewn with the debris of crashed thoughts and the rising smoke of imploded ideas. (hold a second.... that was pretty damn good, I'm writing it down for future use...)

Every now and then I think I can crank out something that works okay, however.  Just once in a while.  But that's okay.  I don't get paid for this in cash.  My reward is maintaining a tolerable level of insanity.  With the ever-increasing tide of information and pervasive noise in our world today, it's amazing that any one person or group can get any meaningful segment of the population to hear what they're saying.

Conversely, it's amazing that people have time to read one more blog, especially from a relative "nobody" like myself.  I really appreciate it.  I know I've called it quits at least two times in the past, but I think I'm going to stick with it until my time is used up on this planet.  Again: THANK YOU!
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Posted in bongloads, cranium drainium, holidays, people, society, thoughts | No comments

Sunday, 23 December 2012

Windows 8 - Scoring my Predictable Predictions

Posted on 18:37 by Unknown
Some of you, okay, two of you, might remember that I posted a semi-quasi-kinda-sorta-prediction about Windows 8, back in March of 2012 (it's almost 2013, so I didn't want to say "of this year" as it might confuse even myself).  (see "Windows 8 - What I Think About It").  I ended the post by promising to follow-up when Windows 8 was "closer to final release".

Well, I'm following up on it now:
  1. I still stand behind what I posted.  That sounds bold, but it's really an easy thing to say, since I'm really standing (ok, sitting) "behind" miles of Internet circuitry, bazillions of electrons, a bunch of ISP connections, wireless signals, a million smartphones and mobile devices, and a glass of milk with some half-eaten cookies.  At least my trusty, and sleeping Beagle will protect me.
  2. Today's news has been reporting that holiday sales of Windows 8 have been "disappointing".
  3. Enterprise customers are still Microsoft's bread-and-butter
  4. Even with some signs of hope, the Consumer market continues elude Microsoft (as compared with Google's Android eco-system, and Apple's iOS juggernaut)
  5. The volume of high-profile Windows 8 migration projects appears to be non-existent.  Compared with Windows 7 (remember the impressive list of big customers announcing early adoption?  Yeah.  Not quite there with Windows 8)
  6. Lastly, my statement about the "marketing stupidity" is still as valid.  The ads are still aimed at consumers, not the enterprise.  Until they can coerce the market forces to be aligned otherwise, ignoring the enterprise customer base is shooting themselves in the foot.
I'm not Mini-Microsoft, and I don't have any "inside" knowledge of what goes on out in Redmond like some other folks do.  But as an IT consultant, I see a decent cross-section of municipal, education, and business environments, at least for the scale of our local region (the largest city by population in Virginia).  And what I see doesn't look promising for Windows 8.  As bleak as that may sound, I haven't heard a peep about Office 2013, which is even bleaker.  Customers just aren't asking about it.  When Windows 7 was rolling out, all I heard was one of three things:

[A] "I like it a lot more than Windows XP!"
[B] "I've heard Windows 7 is better than Windows XP.  Should I/we upgrade?"
[C] "I/we didn't like Windows Vista, is Windows 7 really worth skipping Vista for?"

I've heard none of these comments about Windows 8 from any of my customers, and from my discussions with other local consultants and IT workers, they're not hearing it either.  It's a shame too, in some respects.  The parallels/similarities between Windows 8 and Windows Vista are almost uncanny:
  • Most of the UX changes feel unnecessary from a functional aspect.  Some aspects are nice, like the "metro" theme motif itself, but the tiled UI on a desktop or laptop is just not happening for most users.  Even if you happen to disagree with that, it's hard to argue that there shouldn't be at least the option to continue using the traditional Start Menu design.  The astounding number of downloads of third-party add-ons to do just that should be enough to warrant a second consideration.
  • Some features seem more difficult to access (shutdown, restart, Windows Update, etc.) as compared to the previous version.  With Vista it was that whole Network Neighborhood shuffle.
  • The "classic" UI fallback is either crippled or non-existent, opening the door for third-party solutions (Stardock, ClassicShell, etc.) which is a concern for managing a taller "stack" for enterprise deployments.  Many (actually most) enterprise environments I've seen skipped Vista entirely, instead focusing on migrating from XP to Windows 7.  That incurred hardware upgrades, and at least some targeted education of their users, officially (intranet how-to's, e-mails, etc.), or otherwise (ad hoc, over-the-shoulder training).
The solutions to these challenges are already posted to death across the Internet, so I 'm not about to regurgitate yet another spin on all that.  Just read Paul Thurrott's thoughts on it, he's pretty much spot on (I recommend reading the other related "Fixing Windows 8" posts on his site as well).

So, getting more to the point: How would I score my hit-list of predicted fixes for Windows 8?  Let me enumerate thy ways:


  1. A "Windows 7 Classic" theme, that looks EXACTLY like Windows 7.  For businesses to roll-out onto their already shell-chocked XP-to-7 users.  Then we can shift to Metro later when the Xanax runs out.  
    Score: A+ / Start8 by Stardock, ClassicShell, and other add-ons appear to be flying off the virtual shelves as users look for ways to restore their Start Menu comfort zone.
  2. A native App-V client included in the base product.  App-V is cool, but I'm really sick of how hamstrung it is within MDOP and EA/SELECT and it's really holding back a lot of potential.  Sick isn't the word.  Disgusted is more like it.  Score: C- / The XAML (Metro/Tile) application model is a half-way solution to the portability aspect of App-Virtualization models. Nothing has really opened up as far as the App-V/MDOP licensing constraints are concerned, but XAML shows promise for future cross-(Microsoft-based)-platform development.
  3. A native MED-V feature as an option.  My feeling is the same as described for App-V.  
    Score: B / While Embedded XP has kind of been forgotten, at least Microsoft took the rather bold move to offer Hyper-V 3.0 for client devices.  It still lags behind VMware for desktop 
    Virtualization in some respects, but it's still a good move.  Competition is good for the customer (hence VMware Workstation 9's somewhat hurried release).
  4. A better approach to COM activation than DCOMconfig.  
    Score: F / No change.
  5. A better solution to keep the Registry clean.
    Score: F / No (significant) change.

Personally, I feel Microsoft has an easy "out" right now.  They can accept credit for what customers end up favoring, while assigning blame on Stephen Sinofsky for whatever they dislike.  Either way, it's what a Politician would call a "win-win" situation.  Maybe they can repeat the lesson's learned from Windows Vista when pushing ahead with Windows 7:  Mop up the challenges in Windows 9.  Maybe.  There is no crystal ball, so no one really knows.

If Microsoft had a crystal ball, they would name it "Microsoft System Center Crystal Spheroidal Prediction Device 2012 Ultimate Enterprise Edition".  Geez.  I crack myself up. How pathetic.

And there you have it: Another dose of my completely useless, mind-numbing stupidity, shrink-wrapped and stamped with a scratch-n-sniff label that says "Check this out!".

Merry Christmas!
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Posted in bongloads, business, marketing, microsoft, office, technology, thoughts, windows 7, windows8 | No comments

Another Book Announcement!

Posted on 04:54 by Unknown
My new book is on the conveyor belt inside the Amazon factory, heading for a Kindle store near you. In fact, I was notified just this morning that it's available right now!  Yeee-Haaa!  Just in time for Christmas or Kwanzaa!  A bit late for Hanukkah though, oye.

Why Your Next IT Project Will Fail
(and what you can do to avoid it)



So, what's in this bundle of joy?  Here's the book description that I typed up while on Cold medicine, you'll have to excuse the typo's (if any)...
Why do Projects fail? More specifically: Why do IT Projects fail?  Is there a common thread or pattern that exists among failed IT Projects? Is it predominantly a failure of technology; of people; or a failure of both?  Are there warning signs that make it easy to spot the causes before they become problems, with sufficient time to correct them? Are there steps that can be taken to correct the problem once it's begun?  Are there strategies that can help prevent these potential issues from occurring again?
These are some of the questions I address, one by one.  For each potential cause, I offer a list of warning signs, corrective actions, and some straightforward suggestions for preventing them from arising in the future.  The goal of this is to help you keep your IT projects on track, keep your project team focused, and develop the strategies for making future projects more likely to succeed.
If you're still awake (hello?), you may be thinking, "Holy crap! This could lead to the cure for Cancer, or world hunger! How much will this miraculous piece of literature cost me?".  Maybe you blurted it out loud and scared your dog or cat out of the room.

$4.99 USD is the selling price (the price is automatically converted for other countries by Amazon, not by me).  Billy Mays would be flipping out right now.  A possible cure for world hunger for only $4.99?!  No way!  Way!

Merry Christmas! and Happy Holidays! - to you, your family and friends!
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Posted in amazon, books, kindle, management, people, projects, technology, writing | No comments

Tuesday, 18 December 2012

Books and More Books, and More

Posted on 04:07 by Unknown
First things first: to everyone who has purchased one of my books: THANK YOU!

I mean that sincerely. This month I received the largest payment yet, and it actually made it possible for me to fill my gas tank and buy a few Christmas gifts for our kids. I won't say how much, but it's in the low three digits.

The amount isn't really important. What is important, and what really surprised me are the facts that (A) people actually wanted to buy something I wrote, and (B) I haven't received any death threats yet. So, once again: Thank You!

And now for another announcement: I have another book on the way. It's related to computer technology, but also a little business stuff tossed in. Before you start choking on your lunch, I assure you I know very little about computers, and almost nothing at all about business, so you can relax. The working title should give it away, so I won't explain it any further at this point...

"Why Your Next IT Project Will Fail (and what you can do to avoid it)"

I'm hoping to publish it before the holidays, but its getting really close. I will keep you posted.

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Posted in Books writing kindle amazon technology business projects | No comments

Sunday, 16 December 2012

Who is Ralph Grabowski? And Why CAD Pro's Should Read His Stuff

Posted on 10:27 by Unknown
Ralph Grabowski has been writing about the world of engineering-related and design-related software for quite a long time.  And that world has continued to grow and evolve without slowing down.

When I started working in the "design" field, it was 1984.  The predominant technology of the time was a wooden board covered with a plastic-film graph paper, a cable-mounted "drafting machine", and a stack of stencils and templates.  The medium was one of the following:  Tracing paper, Sepia, or Mylar.  The instrumentation was usually a mechanical pencil with either an H-series graphite lead, or (more often) plastic "lead" of either E0, or E1 grade.

In 1985 that relatively arcane world started to fade away at a steady pace, and a new breed of computers and software began taking its place.  First were the mainframe systems, like Autotrol and CADAM.  Then came a few more, like Computervision, UniGraphics, Pro/Engineer, and Intergraph.  Then wallets started to evaporate.  The cost for mainframe, and later the more compact "workstation" packages, was astronomical. As in: you'd need an observatory telescope to see the end of the price tag.  It was scary.

Renegade companies, with dreams of producing cheaper alternatives on the newer (and more affordable) MS-DOS PC-platform, started springing up, with names like GenericCAD, DesignCAD, Autodesk, FastCAD, Drafix, This-CAD and That-CAD, and too many others to recall now.  Some survived for a while, some died out, and a few remained and exist to this day.  And through a big portion of this timeline, most of it actually, there have been a few journalists who've tried to get a handle on just what this "CAD/CAM" and "CAD/CAM/CAE" stuff was all about, and more importantly: Where it was all going.

One of them has been, and still is, Ralph Grabowski.  His newsletter, upFront.eZine, has been cranking out in-depth reviews, interviews, news, and events for as long as I can remember.  A mix of web-content and e-mailed content, it is an enormously valuable resource for engineers, designers, managers, software developers, start-up visionaries, and anyone just plain curious about this unique segment of the technology world.

Although my personal and professional involvement with the design world somewhat ended a few years back, I'm still tied to parts of it by way of my role as an IT consultant.  I still package and deploy CAD products for various environments, and I still get called in to consult and work with FlexLM and FlexNet implementations.  For that reason alone, I still read the upFront.eZine newsletter to stay current with what's going on.

For continuing to push forward and keep us all clued-in:  Thank you Ralph!


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Posted in blogs, business, cad, engineering, events, marketing, news, reporting, technology, upfront ezine | No comments

Sunday, 2 December 2012

Big Announcement: Book Promotion Event

Posted on 15:35 by Unknown
To honor this past week's Autodesk University 2012, I am making my e-book "The AutoCAD Network Administrator's Bible, 2013 Edition" available for FREE for ONE DAY ONLY!

That's right. You heard (or read) correctly.  On Monday, December 3, 2012 only, you can download the e-book for free and read it on your Kindle, Kindle Fire, Kindle Reader App (on iPhone, Android, Blackberry or whatever) or read it online using the Kindle Cloud Reader.  Choices, people. You have choices.  It's mind-bottling.  So, as the Marines would say: "Get Some!".... Enjoy!



UPDATE: I received some clarification from Amazon regarding the time "window" for this promotion. According to Amazon, it should begin at "approximately" 12:00 am Pacific Standard Time, and should end at approximately 11:59 pm Pacific Standard Time.
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Posted in amazon, book, books, kindle | No comments

Saturday, 1 December 2012

Dear CEO's: Be Careful with that Cloud PR Stuff

Posted on 07:50 by Unknown
Jimmy Bergmark posted an interesting item on Google Plus about some quotes from Autodesk CEO Carl Bass regarding the future of Cloud services.  The quotes were posted on Ralph Grabowski's World CAD Access web site...
"There are a lot of applications that will [still] be done on the desktop. Whether Autodesk does it or not, I can't think of a single function that won't necessarily be done in the cloud." - Carl Bass, CEO of Autodesk
As Jimmy commented...

Asked whether there was some resistance by Autodesk users to make the move as fast as the company is making the switch he said that people are already living in the cloud with their personal applications and that there are somewhat different issues for them.
"Foremost in people's mind is security, privacy, reliability, confidential information. Some of those concerns will fall by the wayside."
Here's the rub I have with folks like Carl (not with Jimmy, he's a genius):  When it comes to Public Relations (aka "PR") these guys are making a HUUUUUUUUUUGE mistake and it is already having a detrimental impact on their business.  Let me itemize, if I may...

  1. Understand the difference between a PUBLIC Cloud and a PRIVATE Cloud!

    I'm not going to spoon-feed you here.  That's what Google and Bing are for.  But, when the CEO doesn't understand how f***ing important this distinction really is, how can anyone beneath them fully grasp the importance of it as well?
  2. Be prepared to explain that difference to your customers

    Every single time a CEO/CIO/CTO/CxO opens their mouth and says with a smile "We're going to the cloud!  Come along with us!" it scares the living shit out of their customers.  Why?  Because they translate that directly into the following:

    A. The products are moving into a Public Cloud platform
    B. Customer data is going to move into someone else's sandbox
    C. Customers will lose at some control (possibly even intellectual property rights) over their content
    D. More points of failure will be inserted between the Cloud point and the customer point
    E. The more points inserted in the middle, the more likely potentially interrupting business operations

    Rather than saying "Cloud", make damned sure you elaborate on what your vision and execution plans are for both Cloud types.  Reassure your skiddish customers that they will have an option to retain all the control over their operations and content that they currently have, while having the additional (potential) benefit of leveraging the Public Cloud for (possible) cost savings.
  3. Make SURE your products are fully-aligned with both Cloud platforms

    A lot of products are being shoe-horned and relabeled to become "Cloud" products/services.  IT administrators and power users can smell that a mile away.  Don't assume your customers are idiots, that's a dangerous place to go.  This is especially true for larger customers (enterprise-level corporate shops, the kind that tend to buy subscription pricing contracts to leverage volume discounts).

    If you (Mr./Ms. CEO) are sincere about pursuing Cloud services, on both Public and Private environments, break out your cattle prod and put the fear of God into your chain of command to insure they design, and execute, a strategy that natively works in a real Cloud environment on both environments (public and private).

    If you really don't intend to support Private clouds, don't fake it.  But also be prepared for a tougher hill to climb when it comes to winning over big-shop customers.
I'm sure all the CEO's of the world read my blog and will take this to heart.  So by the time you've read this, all will be corrected and working fine.

P.S.  Follow Jimmy Bergmark at JTB World.  Follow Ralph Grabowski at UpFront eZine, and World CAD Access

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Posted in autodesk, blogs, business, cloud services, jtbworld, management, marketing, technology, upfront ezine | No comments

Writing for 4Sysops.com

Posted on 03:00 by Unknown
I may have mentioned it before, but I've accepted an offer to write articles for 4Sysops.com.  So far, I've submitted two multi-part articles:

  • SCCM Right-Click Tools - Part 1
  • SCCM Right-Click Tools - Part 2
  • SCCM Right-Click Tools - Part 3
  • Configuration Manager - The Evolution of Security - Part 1 (coming soon)
  • Configuration Manager - The Evolution of Security - Part 2 (coming soon)
You may be wondering (all three of you who read my blog) what impact this may have on this blog.  Or maybe that question never crossed your mind.  That's ok, I'll pretend you were wondering about this and I will pretend to address your pretend concerns.  Mmmkay? :)

First, I will continue to post things here on this blog.  Things I find interesting and, hopefully, you find interesting as well.  I will at least shoot for "peculiar" if I can't attain "interesting", but either way, I will do my best to entertain whilst shoveling loads of techno-babble into your eyeballs.

Second, 4Sysops.com will get first dibs on upcoming topics.  That way I don't create any conflicts with our agreement.  Contracts matter, after all.  Most of what I submit to 4Sysops.com will be purely technical in nature.  Most of what I post here will be a mix of technical and philosophy, with a pinch of stale humor thrown in.

Third, I really don't have a third.  But I will try to avoid confusing readers and do my best to cross-reference things so it doesn't become a chore to access content on either site.  I hope this works for everyone.  After all, trying to please everyone always works well.

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Posted in articles, blogs, humor, psychology, technology, writing | No comments
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