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Monthly Archive for February, 2008

Can’t Own the Airwaves? Cell Phone Biz Not For You? Do the Next Best Thing

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008  |  by Rajan Sodhi  |   No Comments

Google Invests in One of Four Transpacific Cables

Looks like Google will not be getting into the cell-phone business. Google on Monday signed an agreement with five international companies to construct a new high-bandwidth, sub-sea cable system linking the U.S. and Japan. The search engine giant will join Bharti Airtel, Global Transit, Google, KDDI Corporation, Pacnet and SingTel to form the Unity Bandwidth Consortium, which will dole out approximately $300 million for construction of the cable.

The effort is expected to initially increase Trans–Pacific operational cable capacity by about 20 percent, with the potential to add up to 7.68 terabits per second of bandwidth across the Pacific, according to Unity.

Learn more about this move from Google’s press release.


Drastically Speed up your Linux System

Monday, February 25th, 2008  |  by Rajan Sodhi  |   No Comments

Everyone wants a faster system (computer, pc, box, server). We often spend time tweaking little things here and there, doing whatever we can to speed things up only to find out that half the things we’ve tried just doesn’t work. Well, it seems there’s another option to try out there called Preload.

Preload is an “adaptive readahead daemon” that runs in the background of your system, and observes what programs you use most often, caching them in order to speed up application load time. By using Preload, you can put unused RAM to good work, and improve the overall performance of your desktop system.

Once installed, Preload will start, and no further action is necessary. Check out the information article for configuration options, to learn how to monitor Preload‘s activities, and see what kind of improvements Preload will bring to your system.


Ubuntu 5-A-Day

Friday, February 22nd, 2008  |  by Rajan Sodhi  |   No Comments

Today, the 5-A-Day initiative was announced in which the Ubuntu community are encouraging everyone to work on at least 5 bugs a day, and users, developers and upstreams can all help. There are also tools to share bugs that have been tended to in email signatures and else. This is an excellent way for everyone to make a real difference to Ubuntu!

So, what the heck is 5-A-Day? Ubuntu’s 5-A-Day means everybody, will do 5 bugs a day – every day. With only five bugs that everybody looks at every day, it will cover a lot of ground.

What you can do? That’s up to you, your interests and your abilities.

  • If you’re a developer, you can help out reviewing patches and getting them uploaded.
  • If you want to just confirm new bugs, you can do that.
  • If you’ve experience with a certain package and want to triage bugs you can do that and forward them upstream if necessary.
  • If you know your way around Ubuntu quite well, you can help assign bugs to the right package.

This is a really great idea and I hope to see more communities implement such. This is also a great idea for business to take a look at as far as their internal opertations go.

Take a look at Ubuntu’s 5-A-Day and see what you can do to help!


PEER 1 ‘Growing Pains’ Series In Production

Thursday, February 21st, 2008  |  by Rajan Sodhi  |   No Comments

Growing Pains

We have just completed filming episodes 2 and 3 of PEER 1′s “Growing Pains” series (episode 1 has reached 50,000+ page views). Filming took place last week on location in New York City. We hope to have both episodes ready to go in the next month or so. To see photos from the film shoot, click here.


Alltop – “All the Top” Sites on the Web

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008  |  by Rajan Sodhi  |   No Comments

I stumbled across a website over this last weekend that I found to be useful for keeping up with top stories on the Internet. The site is called Alltop.

About:

Alltop helps you explore your passions by collecting stories from “all the top” sites on the web. They’ve grouped these collections—”aggregations”—into individual Alltop sites based on topics such as celebrity gossip, fashion, gaming, sports, politics, automobiles, and Macintosh. At each Alltop site, they display the latest five stories from thirty or more sites on a single page and they call this “single-page aggregation.”

You can think of an Alltop site as a “dashboard” or “table of contents” for your favorite topic. To be clear, Alltop sites are starting points—they are not destinations per se. Alltop tries to enhance your online reading by both displaying stories from the sites that you’re already visiting and unveiling stories from sites that you didn’t know existed.

The site seems to be informative and user-friendly. Give it a look.


Move Your E-mail Out of Outlook and Into…

Monday, February 18th, 2008  |  by Rajan Sodhi  |   1 Comment

There’s something about Microsoft Outlook that reminds me of the old Soviet Union: the program wants to centralize everything and store it in one big PST file that only it can access. There may be advantages to this approach to managing your e-mail, contacts, tasks, and calendar, but you know what can happen when you put all your eggs in one basket.

So, it makes sense to move copies of your important Outlook files to folders that live outside the Office system. We’re aware that saving data to local storage is relatively easy, whether you move them one at a time or in bunches. Note that this is different than backing up (or archiving) the messages.

To save a single message to a local folder, open it, and in Outlook 2003, click File > Save As, or in Outlook 2007 click the Office button and choose Save As twice. In both versions, navigate to the folder you want to use, choose a file type in the Save as type drop-down menu, and click Save. Note: in Outlook 2003, the message subject becomes the file name, but in Outlook 2007 you have to give the file a name.

The two most common formats for e-mail are HTML (.htm or .html) and Text Only (.txt): the former opens the message in a browser and preserves the look of the original, but the latter ensures that the message will open in just about any program.

You can also save multiple messages simultaneously by Ctrl-clicking to select them, or Ctrl-A to save them all, and then choosing File > Save As in Outlook 2003, or the Office button and Save As twice in Outlook 2007. They’ll all be saved as a single text file, and you’ll have to give the file a name. Each message in the file begins with the word “From”.

To move an entire folder to your hard drive or other local storage, click File > Import and Export, choose Export to a file, click Next, select Comma Separated Values (Windows), click Next again, choose the folder you want to export, click Next yet again, browse to the location you want to store the folder (unless you want to go with the folder and file name Outlook chose), give the file a name, click Next once more, and then Finish.

Thank you Dennis O’Reilly for posting the above instructions. You can view the complete instructions along with screenshots from Dennis here.


What Are the Most Wired Countries in the World and Why?

Friday, February 15th, 2008  |  by Rajan Sodhi  |   No Comments

Monks browse the Web at an Internet cafe in Lhasa, Tibetan

The Internet’s history began in the United States, where Americans had the best access to the Internet’s resources for several years. According to technology experts like S. Derek Turner, as more countries began to link to the Internet, a strange thing happened. The U.S. began to lose its dominant position as world leader of Internet access. Other countries began to support Internet access more effectively than the country that invented it.

But other sources disagree, arguing that the United States is still a leader both as a content provider on the Internet itself and in giving citizens the access they need. What do these different perspectives mean?

Much of the reason has to do with the way Internet access is measured. Is it measured by each country’s physical Internet resources? Or do you measure it according to the number of citizens who have Internet access out of the overall population? One company’s method was to simply survey a sample of the population of different countries by asking each interviewee if he or she had accessed the Internet over the last month.

Take a look at the world at large and find out which countries have the strongest broadband here. networks.


PEER 1 Coming to a City Near You!

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008  |  by Rajan Sodhi  |   No Comments

p1_la_social.jpg

PEER 1 traveled to Los Angeles, California last week to host its first “PEER 1 Social” at the Elevate Lounge. Having a diverse geographic footprint across North America gives us an opportunity to travel and meet our customers, which isn’t something that is very common in the hosting industry today.

Our goal is to have PEER 1 Social events on a quarterly basis which will allow us the chance to mingle with clients and to thank them for their business. We offer a casual environment with good drinks, great food and most importantly, real people.

This quarter was Los Angeles, next quarter we might be stopping by a city near you! Keep an eye on your e-mails!


10 Things That Can Go Wrong When You Upgrade Your Operating System

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008  |  by Rajan Sodhi  |   No Comments

Upgrading to a new operating system can be a stressful experience. We generally upgrade to take advantage of new features or to be able to run new applications. You approach it with trepidation because you know there are always things that can go wrong. In this article written by Jody Gilbert, you can look at some of those potential problems and explain how you can prevent them or work around them if they do occur.

The short list of potential problems:
#1: Insufficient hardware
#2: Setup errors and freezes
#3: Driver problems
#4: Activation error
#5: Application incompatibilities
#6: Wrong OS edition
#7: Data loss
#8: Performance problems
#9: Permissions/access problem
#10: Interface problems/learning curve
Check out the rest of the article here.


Get a Free PEER 1 Sandbox Server!

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008  |  by Rajan Sodhi  |   No Comments

You read correctly! Get a Free PEER 1 Sandbox Server!

PEER 1 and Microsoft are offering 50 sandbox servers (valued at $1,000 each) free for 30 days, packed full with the very latest MS development software for you to work with. This is a limited time offer and available to qualified applicants only. To become eligible for this rare opportunity, please fill out the online application. If you are selected, a PEER 1 representative will contact you directly with details on accessing your server.

SANDBOX SERVER SPECS:

* 2 x Intel Xeon 5320 Quad-core CPU
* 2 GB RAM
* 1 x 250GB HD

Each sandbox server includes:

PLATFORM

* IIS 6
* .ASP.NET 2.0
* .NET 2.0

* PHP 5.0
* Silverlight
* SQL Server Standard

EXPRESSION TOOLS

* Expression Blend
* Expression Web
* Expression Design

VISUAL STUDIO EXPRESS EDITIONS

* Visual Web Developer 2005 Express Edition
* Visual Basic 2005 Express Edition
* Visual C# 2005 Express Edition

As a bonus, we are also giving away the following to each Sandbox user that establishes a new Microsoft dedicated hosting account with PEER 1 at the end of their sandbox server trial period:

* Microsoft Expression Web (valued at $299) – a professional design tool to create modern, standards-based sites that deliver superior quality on the Web.

* FREE Microsoft Training (valued at $1099) – A free one year online subscription for Microsoft® Expression Studio & Microsoft® ASP.NET training delivered by Total Training™.

Included in Your Subscription:

o Total Training™ for Microsoft® Expression Studio – 27 hours: Watch and learn as we show you how to take your creative possibilities to a new level using the professional design tools and innovative technologies in the Expression Studio.
o Total Training™ for Microsoft ASP.NET – 23 hours: These training videos will get you up to speed quickly, exploring all of the key features of AJAX and Building Web Applications, and then guide you to mastery level with advanced topics and techniques.

Check out the full details here!