Archive for 2011

Ten.

Wednesday, December 28th, 2011

Ten years ago today I married the best person I’d ever met.

Ten years later, she still is. I don’t expect that to change.

Ten years includes some of the best times in my life, and some of the most difficult. At the highest and at the lowest, I haven’t been alone. The person I have most wanted to have there to share the joys and to help me through the sadnesses has always been there. No exceptions.

Ten years ago, I felt like a child pretending to grow up. I still do. I don’t expect that to change, either.

I have ten years’ more knowledge and experience of the fact that nobody’s perfect. Especially me.

Ten years have proved to me what I believed then: life is hard, but worth it.

After ten years, there are now four of us. And a dog.

Ten years ago I couldn’t have imagined what life would be like now. And I love it.

Ten years ago, I loved her.

Ten years into this, I love her, but I understand better than I did then what that means.

Ten years have been spent realising and marvelling at how lucky I am.

Ten years is a long time. Ten years is no time at all. It’s the beginning.

Prose.

Sunday, November 13th, 2011

The man holding a sword near Barnes’s throat was a creature worn down almost to the nub, like a pencil eraser with just enough pink rubber left to make one final correction.

Yikes.

Our house, this afternoon.

Saturday, November 12th, 2011

Mother: “What are you eating?”

Child: “A little bit of snot.”

Stationery.

Tuesday, November 1st, 2011

Stationery

A birthday, and the attendant (generously given, gratefully received) gifts have led to a few new things to feed my not-so-modest stationery addiction. Pictured here, a hint of the Field Notes subscription and the new most stealthy and gruntingly manly fountain pen to join my pen case, the limited edition, all matte black Pilot Capless (Namiki Vanishing Point in some markets) retractable, clicky goodness. It’s very nice, and really needs to be seen in person. Black as black as black.

Joel Ian James Goody

Thursday, August 4th, 2011

Born on Monday morning, all 6lb 2oz of him.

On having chosen a DNS host.

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

Further to my previous post, I ended up going with Nettica. A friendly enough control panel, and a quick and easy to base service makes for sufficient happiness.

I did have my first experience with their support team today (I should clarify that it wasn’t a problem needing solved; rather, it was to do with transferring DNS for a domain between two Nettica accounts), and they were quick and helpful. Happy there for now, then.

On choosing a DNS host.

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

There can be several moving parts to a website. Three big ones are the domain name (the .com address), the hosting (the space on a hard disk somewhere where the website lives, from which your web browser will download it) and the DNS (the Domain Name System which translates the human-friendly .com address to the string of numbers — soon numbers and letters — that computers need to find the hosting).

From a management point of view it’s often easiest to have all three of these handled by the same company, and that’s a very common setup. I’m not too keen on the “eggs in one basket” feel of that, though, and I tend to have the domain name and the hosting for any given website in different places, with the DNS taken care of by one or the other.

I have domains registered all over the place, so keeping track and making updates takes a little bit of doing. I was also thinking about getting in a complete separation, with DNS taken care of by a third provider.

So, I tweeted:

Contemplating a specialist DNS host, rather than scattering amongst domains’ registrars. DNSMadeEasy, DNSimple, who else should I look at?

I got quite a response back, both from friends and colleagues and from DNS hosts who were watching the tweets go by. My research into possible hosts, partly informed by the twitterly response, turned up a number of possibilities.

DNS Made Easy

The first of the two I was vaguely aware of, DNS Made Easy comes recommended by Aaron, who is a difficult man to please. They also sent me a friendly, not too pushy, tweet or two. For my needs, I’d be looking at US$60 a year, probably plus a few US$2s per year for domains beyond the 25 included in that price.

DNSimple

DNSimple was the other one I kind of knew about, although I can’t remember who recommended them to me. A bit more expensive than DNS Made Easy, at US$10 per month. However, that’s for 50 domains and they have a bunch of other useful features and offer a broader range of records for the DNS. They, too, sent me a friendly tweet.

Dyn

Two separate Dyn reps jumped on my tweet. The second one was a little intense. I emailed the first guy to see which of their offerings would suit my needs. They offer a few nice features, especially around import and export of sets of records, but US$95 per month is a fair bit more than I was planning on spending. (Dyn are the folks behind DynDNS, which I have a paid account with as well. That’s a good service, but not quite the same thing as I’m looking for.)

Nettica

David chimed in with a recommendation for Nettica. Their Bulk DNS service sounds pretty great, especially the template setup and the straightforward-as-a-straightforward-thing US$50/50 domains/year pricing.

Hover

Stuart, supported by Ryan, really likes Hover. It’s not really what I’m looking for, though, as it’s a registrar with good DNS management. I’m not looking to shift domain registration at the moment, and it misses the separation I’m after.

Amazon Route 53

Amazon’s Route 53 is part of the Amazon Web Services lineup, and I kind of half expected it to be the answer I was after. Pricing of US$1/domain/month, plus low per-request charges, place it at the higher end of the mid-price range. However, there’s no control panel — everything is done with straight API calls by feeding a little Perl script with XML. While I may be intrigued by the possibility of writing a decent client, I don’t want to have to faff about with that in the meantime.

Conclusions, then

I have none solid, yet. Hover’s out, as it’s not really what I’m after. Dyn is too expensive and Route 53 is too fiddly. That leaves DNS Made Easy, DNSimple and Nettica. All the services make nice, reassuring promises about uptime, with a couple of solid guarantees in there, but everyone has downtime sometimes. I’m working on the basis that a reputable provider will manage it acceptably.

My decision would be an approximate toss up between the first two, with a slight bias to DNSimple for their wider range of services, but I am intrigued by Nettica’s Bulk DNS service. A little more research is in order, then. Shifting a whole bunch of domains around is too painful to want to do it more than once.

Credit where due.

Friday, May 13th, 2011

Some industries get a bad reputation; telecoms, including ISPs, is one of them.

For almost five years we got our broadband from Zen. They aren’t the cheapest out there, but they provided us with a solid service that I can only recall flickering once or twice in all that time. When necessary, their staff were helpful and pleasant.

When fibre hit our area we ended up moving away from Zen (BT seem to offer the best balance of cost and features on the service). I expected to be paying an extra month’s charges for the 30 day notice period on our contract. Instead, they sent me a statement saying I was £16 in credit with them. Today I received another letter, asking for bank details so that they could send the £16.

I suppose it shouldn’t be remarkable that a company is offering to refund a customer money that they overpaid, but it is. So, well done to Zen.

Tuesday Tunes: I Am The Doctor

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

For an SF nut, I never really got Doctor Who. I remember watching Peter Davison and Sylvester McCoy when I was a kid, but don’t remember them as being very good.

The current, eleventh, Doctor has really grabbed my attention, though. I’ve been well and truly sucked in, and it’s some cracking TV. The BBC has been making some interesting science fiction over the last few years. Russell T Davies, the showrunner for the previous two modern Doctor Whos (Eccleston and Tennant) seems to have had something to do with bringing the genre back into the mainstream, landing Doctor Who on Saturday evenings, then getting more mature with Torchwood (Children of Earth was a stormer).

Today’s tune (the first here in quite some time) is from the soundtrack of last year’s series of Doctor Who. It’s from the first episode, and introduces the Eleventh Doctor’s theme. The soundtrack for the series is very high quality, and this is probably its high point.

“I Am The Doctor” [Spotify]

Three short bits.

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

I got my access code to Orchestra.io today. It looks interesting if you’re a PHP-type. Haven’t had a chance to get anything running on it yet, but look forward to doing so, albeit mainly for the novelty. It appears to be something similar to Heroku for PHP, but the difference is that whereas Heroku seemed to get traction because it provided easy Rails hosting (something which I understand — I’m not a RoR guy, so I may be wrong — used to be at least a bit of an issue for some), but now focuses on fitting into your workflow for easy deployment, that latter seems to be where Orchestra comes in, since PHP hosting definitely isn’t an issue. We’ll see how it goes.

Basecamp is the web-based project management software all the cool kids apparently use. We rely on it pretty heavily at Banjax, too. I’m not much of a fan, but it’s there as an “it’ll do until someone comes up with something better” kind of option. If you’re in need of some PM workflow gubbins, the free plan has been beefed up a bit, so it’s maybe worth giving it a whirl.

Finally, Apple’s World Wide Developer Conference sold out in less than a day, yesterday. A technical conference, aimed at developers, sold out in hours. That’s nuts. Someone’s doing something right, it seems. And no, I’m not going. This year is not that year for me.