NEWS: Crime novelist Ed McBain dies

Ed McBain died yesterday July 6, 2005, of throat cancer. He was 78. Ed sold more than 100 million books and wrote over 100 novels, plays and filmscripts.

This author is one of the few from which I have read almost all the books (I’ve got 59 from the 67 books of McBain – 54 books from the 87th Precinct series and 13 from the Matthew Hope series). Some of them are very difficult to find because they weren’t re-published so often. I read my first McBain when I was 12. In a sense, he was always part of my life. My father made me discovered this author. My mother, my wife, my parents-in-law have also read almost all his books. I will surely also give them to my son…in some time!

In 1956, writing as Ed McBain, he launched what became known as the police procedural genre, focusing in detail on the work of police squad as it investigates and solves a single crime.

The 87th Precinct series were set in an unnamed city which bore a strong resemblance to New York.

There were more than 50 “Precinct” novels, forming crime’s longest ever series. They were set in Isola, a city clearly based on New York. Although they had no central hero, the viewpoint was often that of Detective Steve Carella, who, like McBain, was of Italian descent and the father of twins.[…]
McBain began a second series of novels in 1977, featuring Florida lawyer Matthew Hope. Each title was that of a nursery tale and included Goldilocks (1977), Three Blind Mice (1990) and Mary, Mary (1992).

Wikipedia
BBC News
news.telegraph

NEWS: London bombings – Part II

Number of death > 50
Number of injured > 700

And the situation should evolved badly….

A good point from Tom Peters:

“We may not be interested in chaos, but chaos is interested in us.”

Welcome to 2005.

And to pick up on a theme of Re-imagine: “We are not prepared!” Regardless of the might and advanced technology of Superpowers, the power of determined (fanatic!) individuals to disrupt nations and wreck havoc on individuals in vast numbers has never beeen higher. On the good side, that’s the ability of consumers or irate citizens to band together in a flash on the Internet. On the bad side it’s New York and Madrid and London.

eCENTER: we are recruiting a SysAdmin!

«Are you proactive, communicative and independent? Welcome in our Team!»

Helvetia Patria is a leading Swiss insurance service provider with core competencies in risk management and private pensions. Mutual appreciation, open communications and clear objectives are important principles of management and collaboration in our company.

We are looking in our ecenter for a professional, client-oriented and motivated

System Administrator to strengthen our Infrastructure and Architecture Team.
(ID 340281)

The ecenter, a small and very specialized unit of the Helvetia Patria Group, is delivering a central e-business infrastructure and platform, based on the J2EE specifications, to the Group’s subsidiaries already for the past 5 years. We differ from others in offering a great team spirit and a motivating environment where technical and business expertise is thriving. Our office is based in Zurich, Switzerland.

In cooperation with our outsourcing partners and internal architects, you will be working on ensuring a secured and highly available delivery of our e-business infrastructure and platform to our clients.

We are expecting you to bring to the position a deep knowledge and expertise of – as well as a minimum of 3 years experience in – the administration and operation of Linux systems (SuSe distribution), of Oracle and MySql databases, of Apache and Tomcat components, and last but not least, of the BEA WebLogic application server. General competency in network and security is also necessary as is experience with scripting languages (shell, perl, ant). German and English (written and spoken) are required while knowledge in a third European language is appreciated.

Competencies in Microsoft Windows 2003 Server and SqlServer are a plus.

If you are interested in working in a growing and fast moving international environment, if you are interested in learning and discovering, do not hesitate to contact me at:

didier DOT beck AT free DOT fr
– or –
didier DOT beck AT helvetiapatria DOT ch

The advert on the Helvetia Patria website.

NEWS: London bombings….

[via Wikipedia]

Again, the horror… My thoughts are with my colleagues and my readers in the U.K. and London in particular.

On 7 July 2005, beginning at 08:49, during the height of morning rush hour, a series of four bomb explosions struck London’s transport system. Three Underground trains were hit within half an hour, and a bus a further half an hour after that. At least 37 died. The number of injured treated is at least 700. At least one news report has quoted 360 injured. Fox News reported 700 injured. This number is expected to rise as authorities survey the impact of the blasts. It is the worst terrorist attack to take place within the United Kingdom since the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, which killed upwards of 200 people.

BUSINESS: Some MySQL insights

[via Software Only]

MySQLAre you using MySQL? We are, and quite intensively, but not everywhere. Oracle (what an arrogant company…) is still in place in some of our e-business high-available productive environments. I am dreaming of the day when we will be able to get rid of the last Oracle database….
Anyway, Marc is writing about European Innovation. Marten Mickos from MySQL took part at this discussion. And Marc gives us some insights of MySQL.

MySQL is not the primary topic of his talk so he just states that it is the largest open source company, doubling revenues every year, growing 20 times over the past 4 years – to $20M run rate (not sure if this is their run rate, or their 2004 actuals). MySQL is used by the largest corporations in the world now, Internet “giants” and is THE standard database for most startups as part of the LAMP infrastructure. Just one data point: it is downloaded 40K times a day (1 every 2 sec). Marten refers to the company as the “RyanAir” of databases.

MySQL today is a company with 200 employees, 70% working from home, in 22 countries, and almost 100 locations. This created a lot of HR, legal and logistical headaches… but is also a great asset from a support standpoint. Employment contracts and stock options plans were a big issue because of the different tax and regulation systems MySQL had to deal with. Also they implemented a five weeks of vacation policy like in Sweden, no matter the country. Healthcare benefits are adapted to each country, with a policy of not being equal, but to be fair.

During the Q&A;, Marten pointed out that the database market was worth $15B, which means that MySQL still has a massive growth potential. The will maintain its sheer focus on being the reference database vendor for all types of applications, not competing with its clients/partners going “up stack” like Oracle did/does.
He also pointed out that Open Source is a software production model (and philosophy), not a business model. Each Open Source company needs to come up a clear value proposition that allows it to grow profitably without offending the community. Example is Apache: most successful Open Source piece of infrastructure in the world, and nobody is making a lot of money from it.

PICTURES: NASA’s Deep Impact mission

You have surely heard about the NASA’s Deep Impact. I find this mission really great, what a technological success!!

  • Comet impact: July 4, 2005 (surely, by accident ;-)
  • Impact velocity: 37’000 km/h
  • Spacecraft Size: nearly as large as a Volkswagen Beetle automobile.
  • Impactor spacecraft: about the same dimensions as a typical living room coffee table

Deep Impact

Deep Impact consists of a sub-compact-car-sized flyby spacecraft and an impactor, about the size of a washing machine. The dual spacecraft carry three imaging instruments, two on the flyby and one on the impactor.

The impactor has an auto-navigation system that will make final corrections to its flight path just minutes before the scheduled collision. Scientists hope the resulting crater will expose fresh material from below the comet’s surface and subsurface.

“That is the whole point of Deep Impact,” said mission principal investigator and University of Maryland astronomer Michael A’Hearn. “We want to find out what are the guts of a comet.”

The flyby spacecraft will use medium and high resolution imagers and an infrared spectrometer to collect and send to Earth pictures and spectra of the event. Space-born science platforms will also be watching Deep Impact. These include NASA’s Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes, the Chandra X-ray Observatory, the Swift and Submillimeter Wave Astronomy satellites, the European Space Agency’s XMM-Newton X-ray observatory and Rosetta spacecraft. Observatories on Earth will view the impact and its aftermath.

Update: NASA logged about 1 billion connections in one day on July 4. Wow.

NEWS: Skype served ten billion minutes

[via Skype Community News]

With some delays (post published on June 20, 2005….) but impressive anyway…

Today, we hit the 10 billion Skype-to-Skype call minutes served mark at around 18:00 GMT. Let’s recap. Skype was released in August 2003. We hit 1 billion minutes served somewhere in July 2004. Now, it’s 10 billion minutes in June 2005.

So it took roughly the same time to get from 0 to 1 billion, as it took to get from 1 billion to 10 billion. Does this mean we’ll be able to celebrate 100 billion next May?

TOOLS: Foxit PDF Reader

I personally don’t find the last developments of the Adobe Acrobat Reader (now v7.0) very interesting: a huge package to download (hey guys, it is a *reader*) – about 27 MB for WindowsXP, a huge memory footprint and a quite bad performance. Adobe solved a part of the issue by….uploading automatically the whole application in the memory at the start of Windows. Great…..

Since about one month now, I am testing a promising alternative to the Acrobat Reader: Foxit PDF Reader, realized by FOXIT Software. It is free (for non-commercial use), *very* fast, very small memory footprint and great performance. Just a .exe to place somewhere on your disk (2.4 MB) and …let’s go!

Worth a try!

BUSINESS: what kind of company you want to build?

[via Rodrigo]

Marc Andreesen on launching start-ups. I like these “rules-of-the-games” ;-)

We have been around the start-up block enough times to have a very clear idea of what kind of company we want to build. Here are some of the things we believe in:

  • Run fast, fly low, and be cheap
  • Promote from within–quickly
  • Keep everyone informed, both on the good news and the bad news
  • Organize based on a cell structure for both technical and non-technical functions
  • 3-5 person teams
  • Flat organization

  • Be transparent
    • Review projects every 2 weeks

  • Reward innovation, ingenuity, and hard work
    • Meritocracy
    • Evaluate and reward managers based on development of people
    • Top down reassignments of high achievers

  • Build a team with potential, drive, curiosity, intelligence and ambition
    • Don’t have to have experience or a track record
    • We want people to build experience and track records with us

  • Train people
    • Everyone teaches
    • Honest, frequent feedback
    • Weekly 1:1, staff, and all hands meetings
    • Written career development plans