FSJ Redeems Himself (a la Twitter)

After “PodtechGate” ( see this, this, this and this). With this:

TWITTER UPDATE: This just in from Scoble’s Twitter feed. PodTech receiving an investment from unnamed large industry player at a $20 billion valuation. Bubble be damned!
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble denying on Twitter the rumors of investment at $20 billion valuation.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble now in his car, talking on iPhone about $20 billion rumor.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble now off iPhone, thinking about $20 billion valuation.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble believing it may actually be true.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble stopped at red light.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble making right on red.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble thinking about coffee.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble in Starbucks.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble tells barista PodTech now worth $20 billion. Offers to pay for coffee with a share of Podtech stock. Barista declines.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble on phone to Google, asking for Sergey.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble on hold.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble on hold.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble on hold.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble realizes line is dead.
TWITTER UPDATE: Scoble redialing. Willing to settle for $15 billion.

Windows Media Home Server

Now that I have the time, I’d like to respond extend Terry Walsh’s article reporting on rumors of WHS v2.

The potential of a Windows Media Server (possibly a WHS v2 box?) is an exciting proposition for many people – my concern would be a [boosting] of WHS’ minimum hardware requirements. One of the main reasons Windows Media Center was such a problem to self build was TV tuner drivers – I’m no longer a big Media Center user (I’m a big fan of the UI and TV Guide, but it’s a cumbersome solution compared to Sky HD), and I’m sure tuner drivers and the built in MPEG decoder in Vista Media Center are helping drive a better experience, but I love WHS’ simplicity – both hardware and software – and I’d hate to see it be compromised in the future through more complex hardware.

The fact is that Home Server and Media Center are separate entities. The WHS team was right to do it this way since they both perform entirely different function. WHS is a backup and file server while MCE is a  TV and recorded media server.  I can see the sense of having both  and syncing files back and forth at 4am or something.

Terry makes a valid point about hardware. Could this server backup and stream media at the same time? It’ll probably be HD stuff by the time it comes out so we’re talking some pretty large data files here. Sure, the network will probably sweat a little, but that’s not the problem. 

If you’re going to actually write this thing, its going to have to be a pretty large undertaking.  Its going have to be able run on two or more cores efficiently. So in the four core environment that’s going to be pretty common two years or so  from now ( given Redmond’s release cycle) , its going to have to distribute the load across all four cores. Different hard disks will have to be used by each core ( i.e one for backups and one for media to avoid I/O conflicts and such). That’s one hell of a lot of programming logic right there,and that’s before we get to using network bandwidth efficiently.

It’ll be using the Vista networking stack, so we can expect a modest improvement (bearing in mind that I actually haven’t seen this with Vista yet). One possible answer to this is Sun’s Project Neptune:

That’s why we just introduced Project Neptune – a silicon project that marries the parallelism of the microprocessor (for Intel, AMD and SPARC systems), with the parallelism of the underlying operating system (Solaris, Linux or Windows), with parallelism in the network itself. Which in  concert with some software magic (which goes by the name of the Crossbow project) allows enterprises to collapse cabling, ports, cards and spending – by bringing parallelism to basic network infrastructure (for geeks, you can take multiple TCP streams and allocate them to different processor threads, spreading out load and freeing up CPU’s/ports). Ports become a physical convenience, just like a server – what’s happening inside depends upon rules or policies set by the user/administrator to automate such decisions. Like I said, the network is the computer, and the computer’s virtualized, so why not the network?

Jonathan Schwartz

Now I’m assuming that we’ll see a less-than-enterprise offering of that could be part of the hardware.

Then there’s the  task of combining two codebases, the logic of how we combine WHS’s interface and WMS’s, how WHS’ duplication is going to work with WMS, how back-ups are gong to work and so on for a thousand and more items.

For now, SageTV or  the WebGuide WHS Add-in do the job quite well.

Quote of The Day

Yeah, I know. I have plenty of ideas, just gotta find the time to write a proper post.

I usually stay away from politics, but this was just too good:

"I have a million ideas. The country can’t afford them all."
– Hillary Clinton

Same with programming. You get a million ideas, but time to code only a few of them.

Quote of the Day

Greenpeace, as I live and breathe, by Grabthar’s hammer, by the sons of Warvan, I shall see your offices and ships destroyed. I shall see you crushed and driven before me. I shall hear the cries and lamentations of your women.

Fake Steve Jobs

If it doesn’t work, remind them of the Rainbow Warrior and call the French. Way to go, Steve.

PodTech:Get collaborative with Chandler

Chandler ProjectThis is a great video. Pity Mitch Kapor didn’t make an appearance 🙂 .

If you want the background to all of this take a look at Scott Rosenberg’s Dreaming in Code which chronicles the early years of the Chandler Project. He really does it well. The projects problems come across so well  you want to throw the book down in frustration.

Now, the video:

[podtech content=http://media1.podtech.net/media/2007/10/PID_012817/Podtech_Chandler.flv&postURL=http://www.podtech.net/scobleshow/technology/1651/get-collaborative-with-chandler&totalTime=3108000&breadcrumb=9b238c04b2c847d8a149547da5e5b294]

Windows Vista Desktops

If you browse the desktops that are included with Vista and you find it lacking, there is always the collection from Hamid Darwish to spice up your desktop.

He’s the Flickr photographer that Microsoft hired to do something special for  the desktop. These are the Photos that didn’t make it:

Lost Sensations( OH ) ZoneDestination - vol. IIBeyond ClarityThe Planet of LifeExplore The RomanceThe Endless Journeydaylight editionNorthwest.OutdoorsS!lkReign of FireA Peek [ at the ] PeakThe Living SymphonyImprisonedEndless HorizonsExplorer in a world of giantsColors [ of the ] NorthwestAlone ... and facing the stormMt. ShastaInvasion of the liquidWhispers Of The PacificAngry ShoresEssential Colors of Middle EarthWizard [ of the ] Northwestheavens of the northwestAging Lands of Middle EarthThe BeastEchoes of a DreamVisions of InspirationShores of FireBy A Snowy HillsideNo Steps FurtherThe Distant Mountain - vol. II

You can download  the whole collection as a ZIP file from  his site. I’d unzip it directly to C:\Windows\Web\Wallpaper\ so it’ll show up when you personalize your desktop.

I’m using this one on my Laptop at the moment:

http://www.hamaddarwish.com