Blog

My current desktop environment


Several others have listed the applications they use on a daily basis. I've been using Linux for my desktop environment for several years, and thought I would share what I use constantly.

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Random notes


Marc Andreesson, one of the authors of Mosaic, the original web browser, has taken up blogging, and in his first week he's got some thought-provoking posts.

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When all else fails, restore your backup


Quick quiz:

  1. Your computer has been infected with a virus, and it deleted everything on the server. What would you do?

    1. Send the server hard drive to a data forensic/analysis firm to see if they can recover your project data.

    2. Recreate all your marketing material from scratch, scanning your logo and everything else.

    3. File a law suit against Microsoft, Symantec, and Dell for letting this happen.

    4. Call your friendly computer technician who disinfects your computers and then restores your previously backed up data from the Internet.

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What Is Drupal?


At Freelock Computing, we've helped a few dozen companies get started with a content management system to manage their web sites. We've done a lot of work with the popular Joomla package, but have kept an eye on Drupal for customers with more sophisticated needs.

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Condemned To Google Hell


Search engines are crucial to marketing your business online, and Google is the most important of all. However, be careful what you do to try to get better search results--there's a difference between getting organic search results and trying to game the system.

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Complete Web Marketing for $60


All businesses need a web site these days to be in business. It's more important than a yellow pages ad. But it can be much more expensive and take much more knowledge to create than a yellow pages ad.

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When GPL software goes bad


Anyone still using SQL Ledger should be aware that new versions are no longer released under the GPL. When I wrote the book, and for several years afterward, SQL Ledger was the only game in town, and it's been the only viable open source financial web application for quite some time.

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Spam, Spam, and Dspam


We were in Sheridan, Wyoming, half way across the country to Jill's grandmother's house. I logged into my email to find something I hadn't seen in a long time: more spam than real messages. There were a couple dozen spams in my Inbox, and only half a dozen real messages. What happened to my spam filter?

I originally thought it was just a new type of spam not yet recognized by the filter. But then I looked closer and realized that the little signature my spam filter adds to each message was missing-these messages had not even been checked. No wonder they were getting through in such large quantities!

It's only when the tools fail that you come to recognize how valuable they are. In the 5 hours the server spam filter was out, I received more than 50 spams, and many of my customers also noticed immediately. The cause of the outage was a power flicker in the nasty weather Seattle was getting that weekend, which made that server shut down. Fortunately, we had this contingency (and many others) covered for our vacation, and were able to get everything back up and running.

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