Pick Category

 

As I’ve listed in previous posts I’m the proud and mostly happy owner of a Treo 700w with Verizon.  I, like most other gear-heads out there, really can’t help but salivate over the iPhone.  Face it, it’s beautiful and has a fair amount of cool-factor.  But I don’t own one and really have no intention of looking into getting one till at least two things happen:

  1. I can get it with a true fast internet connection.  I don’t care if it’s from AT&T or someone else, it needs to be able to allow me to do all the sexy stuff they tout at a much faster speed than AT&T is providing.
  2. It has to support all the potential enterprise connectivity I may need in the future.  Sure, right now I’m between jobs and doing everything in Google’s realm, which suits the iPhone perfectly, but it has to be about 95% likely that my next gig will require some kind of Exchange / Outlook / Sharepoint connection.
  3. Optional 3rd item I’d like to see as well is a LOT more storage on it and also removable storage.  16GB wouldn’t hold the various podcasts and videocasts I collect in any given week.  Not a gotta have, but sure would be nice to see something with 30GB+

Then there’s the whole Google backed Android thing.  I found this article and Rich Miner’s comments interesting.  So now I’m definitely waiting till late 2008 to see what the competition is going to come out with.  With Motorola, Samsung, HTC and LG all supporting Android, I’m way more inclined to jump on that bandwagon than bother with another niche Apple offering.  Not sure why Apple seems hell-bent on again claiming the best also-ran-product-hardly-anyone-uses (now if that doesn’t start a flame war, nothing will).  Their closed-world approach is what landed them behind the supposedly inferior, hard to use, unfriendly Microsoft.  This time though not only are they going to insist on only their platform, but only a single network provider.

Maybe this time the world is enough different that their strategy will work or perhaps, as I believe, they don’t really want to be the king.  They like being the niche, contrarian, we’re-fightin’-the-man product.  Funny too because everything Apple does is about them being the man.  Who is more of a control freak than Steve Jobs and his minions?  As a consumer, I hope they continue to push the others to greater heights so I can buy the best products and only capitulate to the Jobs-mind if I choose to, not because I have to.

Originally published March 15, 2008

 

I discussed this over on EYEdentityOnline.com:

G-Archiver Brings Web 2.0 Risks Into Focus

Originally published March 15, 2008

 

As I mentioned several posts previous, I’ve moved a large bulk of my online life to Google.  One of the reasons I did this was because of Google Apps.  I set up a domain for my family in Google Apps as we are always asking for each others calendar information and various shared contact information.  Seemed like a problem readily solved by a single, centralized locale to do that.  Throw in that everyone can have a personalized family named email address and… sweet! all done.

And actually for those points it has worked as planned.  So far I’ve only got a couple guinea pig test users running on the Google App and in the main, things are going well.  But there are a couple shortcomings.  These shortcomings oddly enough come from the fact that most of the properties we all take for granted as plain ol’ Google and Gmail users (Google for Consumers) aren’t available to Google Apps (Google for Business) users.

So far my test users have been frustrated by trying to tie their new Google Apps accounts into the Maps and Picasa (pictures) features.  Unfortunately when they select these options from the “more” link they are unable to login and access these functions with their Google Apps IDs and have had to keep their original Gmail accounts to use these functions.

I’ve done the same thing and this is why I use my Gmail / Google account as my daily working area.  All my e-mail funnels to that account and I perform my mapping, picture management, Blogger (family blog), etc. functions from there.  I share my calendar using the standard sharing feature in G-Calendar.

So what does the family see as the value of Google Apps going forward?  Well, that’s a good question.  I think the new Sites feature could be useful.  The Pages function could be fun for my nieces and nephews to play with in creating their own web pages and keeping them locked away in a protected viewership area.  And of course, it does get family members the ability to use Gmail with an address that’s more friendly than @gmail.com.

Google would be well served in making sure that Google Apps aren’t gimped relative to the rest of Google’s properties.  I’m really surprised there’s this gap in functionality as Google Apps is marketed as a business offering and we Google proper users feel quite constrained when thrown into the Google Apps world.

 

This is a comment I posted over at Digital ID World’s blog post on “The Identity Acquisitions Continue“, but since this is something I have been meaning to bring up here and in the interest of being seriously lazy at heart… here ya go.

I believe that whether anyone is ready to admit it yet, the meaning of enterprise IT is changing in the form of evaporation.  More and more services are turning into subscriptions of which the oft-touted Salesforce.com is only one.  It isn’t unusual for even a medium-sized organization to have a dozen or more external service providers and destinations that their employees visit either as pure business applications or other benefits related applications around health-care, 401k plans, etc.  Many of these application relationships to the employee (i.e. user) survive the employer-employee relationship.

Consequently, I believe that over time the idea of an “enterprise log-in” or an “enterprise credential” will disappear.  This won’t happen overnight and probably not even in the next couple of years.  It is coming and I believe the groundwork for it becoming feasible and acceptable from a manageability and security standpoint is being laid by these types of deals along with the recent Microsoft acquisition of Credentica.

Identity is front burner now and combined with the SaaS-dominated world into which we move, will stay front-burner on the development front.  Unfortunately on the delivery front, few seem ready to move forward with innovative credential issuing services for the masses as vendors still focus on “enterprise platforms”.  I guess we’ll have to wait a bit longer till the term “enterprise” gets even dimmer and hard to define any longer.

Originally published March 11, 2008

 

Identity space continues to stay hot and actually heat up more.  Over the last several months OpenID was in all the news as Yahoo and seemingly the rest of the world jumped on that bandwagon, or at least said they did.

Last week Microsoft announced their acquisition of Credentica and their technology for bolstering their Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) and Cardspace initiatives.  If you missed it, I’m not sure how.  Check out these hits to get caught up.  I guess Kim Cameron was serious when he presented at Digital ID World last fall on “Why Claims Will Change Everything” (PDF / MP3).  I certainly believe Ralf Bendrath when he notes that U-Prove technology does more than just strengthen claims, but certainly a quick review of the material shows pretty clearly that “claims are the thing”.

This is an important event in my mind as it shows that Microsoft is paying attention and taking action.  I know that Kim Cameron is influential in the identity community, but I often wonder if his opinions and thought leadership have much sway in Redmond.  Regardless how much the acquisition cost, it was chump change to MS, but at least it shows me they are looking to take Cardspace somewhere as it currently languishes lonely and unused even on my various PCs.

Now today I see that Ping has picked up Sxip.  Not exactly a surprise there.  This is a good fit and while Sxip has some interesting things going for it, I wasn’t seeing much traction in the marketplace.  Ping has real customers and having the Sxip bits rolled into their already strong offering makes perfect sense.
For me the Credentica acquisition is the more momentous of the two by a long shot, but only if MS rapidly moves to make something demonstrably useful out of it in short order.  As an internet user, I’m interested in getting something useful out of this sooner than later and don’t much care whether MS does it in proprietary mode or not.  However, the vendor and industry participant part of me agrees wholeheartedly with those calling for the U-Prove technology to be put in the public domain asap.

Both announcements for me just show that identity is solidly on the front burner and out of the insider-identity-geek-workshop hot-house (not that their stellar work is done by a long shot).  I wish both moves by both companies and all parties involved success in integrating and introducing new and better products.
Now if you all would just please get together something that I can use to actually make my online life more secure and productive, that would be great.  If you are looking for ideas, contact me.  I have several and just so happen to be between jobs <grin>.

P.S.  This was the most interesting bit I took from the Ping / Sxip PR:

  • “Based on customer feedback, Ping Identity will leverage Sxip Access’unique features for SaaS such as batch provisioning, Rich Client support for Salesforce desktop plugins, and deep linking.”
  • “As the leader in Identity 2.0 technologies, Sxip was the first to develop identity management solutions for SaaS gorillas such as salesforce.com and Google Apps. Selling Sxip Access to Ping strengthens their offering and allows Sxip to focus on providing users with Internet identity solutions such as Sxipper, making the Internet simpler and safer,”said Dick Hardt, founder and CEO of Sxip Identity.”

Originally published March 11, 2008

 

Just like the last post, let’s start with some background.  I’m between full-time gigs at the moment as I am blessed to be in the position to resign from my former gig and take some partial downtime while examining where, what to do next.  I state partial downtime as I am still doing some consulting work for my former employer.

My goal is to examine at some depth, all that is going on the Web 2.0 buzz-world and try to separate the wheat from the chaff.  The goal being to find in the wheat what opportunities are there for either putting together a start-up or finding a start-up that found the right opportunity before I did (humility dictates my asserting that this latter is the more likely case).  I figured the best way to do this was to pursue a project I’ve long had in my “rainy day” to do list, put together my own online environment where my public and personal lives could be managed in a unified manner.  My family is relatively online savvy and there’s a lot we could do online to better stay in touch and foster tighter communications as we are flung widely across the U.S..  How to do this and retain privacy while at the same time provide an outlet for the public and professional ramblings, one of which you are now reading?

Given the recent data portability issues arising in the social networking world, I was and remain reluctant to put much, if anything, in the hands of Facebook, MySpace or any of them for that matter.  I want to retain the capability of managing at least two of my online identities, Hahleq and Tim Renshaw, but centralize my communications so I wasn’t having to monitor multiple e-mail accounts.  Last, I wanted to set up something that any family member could participate in that would get them the abilities to blog, share calendars, chat, etc., but without the cost of our all having to subscribe to an Exchange hosting service.

I’ve read a couple things recently where Microsoft is getting ready to rollout their Office Live, or whatever they’re calling it today, service.  The problem was that it wasn’t here yet.  I haven’t revisited the beta version recently, but I’ve got a solid month of organization and construction under my belt and I won’t be looking at remodeling for at least 6 months.

I’d done some playing around with Google Apps and it was indeed available and ready for use.  So I setup up RenshawHome.com in Google Apps where I’ve begun issuing family members accounts so they can have their own @renshawhome.com email address, calendaring with sharing, etc..  I created a home page for RenshawHome.com with pointers to the Google Apps portal page as well as pointers to the various blog pages family members have setup.  Interestingly enough, both my siblings had started blogs on Google’s Blogger.com without any coaching from me.  I also have my private family blog on blogger.com and we all have them set with very strict, private “vetted members only” permissions.

Obviously, I have this blog here at TimRenshaw.com with my public, professional, “real me” email address under that domain.  It however forwards to my Hahleq email address at Gmail.com.  I run this blog with WordPress hosted at a reputable ISP.  Mostly because I wanted to learn more about WordPress and have full control over look and feel, structure, etc. as well as have the flexibility to branch it into various directions over time.

All of this was readily accomplished using Google properties, services and functionality.  I have all my various “real me” and Hahleq email addresses (at least 12 addresses from at least 5 different email providers) funneling to a single gmail account and appropriately filtered, labeled, categorized, blocked, etc..  My father and I are able to view each others calendars.  My communications with my siblings and my nieces and nephews has increased tremendously in just the last couple of weeks.  I’m hoping other family members will catch the buzz and join in the fun.

It took me about 2 days banging around with Google to at least conceptualize that what I wanted to accomplish, could be accomplished.  It took me 3 days with Microsoft to figure out that it was nigh unto impossible to accomplish, let alone as elegantly.  The cool thing is that I’m still discovering fabulous features of my new setup with various Google properties (Google Reader) that are further confirming that I made a great choice between the two parties as they currently stand.

At this point, Microsoft owns my home and travelling operating environment (Windows runs every online device I own), they have my networking, media sharing, backup, disaster recovery (Windows Home Server, Media Connectors, Xbox 360s, Xbox Live) and those are huge things I can’t see anyone taking away from them anytime in the next decade at least.  However, Google owns my online life with regard to communications with the exception of this WordPress installation.  This can be shortened to this over-generalized statement:  Microsoft is how I get there, Google is where I go.

Next, some observations on Google shortcomings.

Originally posted March 7, 2008

 

To explain my thought and decision taking processes, it is probably helpful to understand my digital life environment.  Here is a list of our family’s digital life gear we own and use on a regular basis.  Yes, it is overkill and a tad bit embarrassing to let the world in on the fact that my wife and I are such gear hogs.  We admit quite freely to being spoiled rotten.

  • 5 Laptops running Windows (1 Media Edition, 2 Vista, 2 XP)
    • Gaming, surfing and internet video device hooked up to main TV
    • Lightweight surf-while-watching-TV device available in TV room
    • Two nice new personal XPS laptops, one each for my wife and I.  These are the Vista devices.
    • My wife has an itty-bitty Thinkpad provided by her employer.
  • 1 Desktop running Windows XP
  • 1 Microsoft Home Server
  • 2 Xbox 360s (one attached to main TV, one attached to bedroom TV)
  • 1 Treo 700w
  • 1 Blackberry Pearl
  • Several iPods of varying models (fighting rant impulse)
  • 1 Zune
  • 2 Nintendo DS
  • 2 Sony PSP

I ignored the iPod, Zune, Nintendo DS and Sony PSP components as they had zero bearing on this debate.  Also, the Blackberry Pearl is my wife’s and provided by her employer, so that also did not come into play.
So back in December I decided it was time to get serious about my central storage and backup situation in the house.  I read some great reviews of Windows Home Server (WHS) and especially about the ability to take multiple internal and external drives and have them be treated as a single massive “drive” and with duplication to sweeten the pot.  I had a spare desktop laying around and with a couple minor upgrades (under $200) I installed WHS ($179) and have been quite happy with it despite the very serious corruption issues that have still not been fixed.  Fortunately, I haven’t been bitten by this as I do my processing to local disk and then rely either on backup or move media files to the server purely for storage and playback, not editing.  Anyway, before I digress any further…

Consequently, I decided in December to just jump in without experimentation and give my soul to Microsoft.  As you can see above, all my PCs are Windows-based.  My Treo runs Windows Mobile.  I have a Hotmail and hence a Windows Live account.  I just installed WHS.  So might as well go whole hog!

The good news is that everything worked on all my devices:

  • I could get to my mail via Hotmail on all my PCs
  • Hotmail came into my Treo in the Windows Mobile Outlook program just like my Exchange based e-mail did.
  • Hotmail has an add-in for Outlook such that Outlook on my desktop was able to also deal with syncing and also provided offline archiving.  Yes, I know I stated that dumping Outlook was a requirement, but I do like to offline archive my e-mails annually, so needed a reliable client interface to do that.
  • Also, I liked the new Live Mail client on Vista and could see dumping the bloat-ware that Outlook has become.
  • Live has a compelling group of services that all worked both in a PC and mobile environment.  Blogging, maps, search, IM, etc.

But then the cracks began to show:

  • Many times I’d have to sync my Treo repeatedly to sync with the email server.  This got to the point I just synced twice a a matter of habit to make sure I got all or any of my email.
  • Live Search on my Treo proved to be clumsy in daily use, not to mention grossly inaccurate even around my home turf, so who knows if it was going to seriously mislead me when travelling.
  • The latest version of Live Mail would only load on about half my PCs, such that I’d have to load the old version when I got tired of watching the spinning “loading” circle.  I couldn’t isolate this to any OS version or ad-blocker as it appeared and disappeared on the same PC in any given day.
  • Hotmail / Live Mail doesn’t support folders inside folders, so I couldn’t organize my e-mail storage as I was accustomed to doing in Outlook.  If dumping Outlook use on a daily basis hadn’t been such a big goal, this wouldn’t have mattered as much.

So e-mail and maps / location search were the first Microsoft casualties.

Google’s mobile browser interface is fabulous on my Treo and since it isn’t syncing, there’s no issues in getting to my latest and greatest emails.  The Google Maps application for Windows Mobile is also just as easy to use on a small form factor device as it is on a PC.  Gmail doesn’t do folders at all, let alone folders within folders, but after a couple days playing around with Labels and Filters I am spending less time messing with my e-mail organization than ever before, while retaining full easy-to-find functionality.

Microsoft, the early leader takes a couple solid blows and yields ground.  Next post, I’ll cover Calendaring, Blogging and how Google Apps came into play.  Check back to see if Microsoft can hold ground or gives up yet more territory.

Originally posted March 5, 2008

 

So, recently cut loose from a corporate Outlook / Exchange world, I struck out through the wastelands to find a new home base from which to operate.  It needs to work seamlessly from:

  • My main PC
  • My current and any near term mobile phone / PDA (currently a Treo 7oow) 
  • My secondary PC which is attached to my 65? plasma in the great room where I both surf, game and even work from time to time 
  • Though I’m a security / paranoid Internet user, I’d also like to be able to use it from my wife’s, my parent’s or other friend’s PCs
  • Work with, but not require Outlook

Of course there are a lot of the usual suspects and some new players that could serve, but I really only considered three contenders:  Google, Microsoft and Yahoo.  I have accounts on all three under the name Hahleq and since I was going to be using that as my main working name, no problems there.

However, I’ve never been a fan of Yahoo as a portal or really for anything, for that matter, though that is where most of my IM friends reside.  I always found their interface too cluttered, cutesy, ad-ridden and consequently a site to be avoided.  Needless to say, they fell away from the table very quickly.
That left Google and Microsoft.  Over the next couple of days, I’m going to post about various components of my experimentation with both and how they each fared.  Of course, I’ll also reveal where I landed.

Originally posted March 4, 2008

 

Thanks for stopping by.  Just getting organized here.  Stop back soon for actual content.  Then you can let me know if it is interesting or not.

Originally posted February 27, 2008

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