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Bankinter outage

My bank here in Spain seems to have some problems, as their online banking service has not been available for a few hours now.

After calling there call center a few minutes ago, they didn’t gave me any solution other than wait. They didn’t tell when they expect the service to be Online again.

It seems their Interactive Voice Response System is down as well, as I did get a real person on the phone this time, instead of the IVR that responds normally.

Update:

La avería “ha sido importante” y el proceso de recuperación de información “va a ser largo”, según apuntaron las fuentes, además de subrayar que la página web volverá a estar operativa a lo largo del día y que los usuarios afectados “serán compensados”.

My translation from this article excerpt of a major spanish online newspaper: The outage has been a serious one and the backup process is going to take longer, different sources have informed. The online service will be back during the day and that affected users will get compensated.

It’s past 20:30 and the service is still knocked out. I’m interested to see who will get compensated and with what. Perhaps they are giving away some new iPod Nano’s to be announced tomorrow by Steve Jobs.

Update: finally this morning the service was Online again. The thing I’m still missing is some kind of official information as being a customer for more than 9 years of what has happened and if the where some new measures taken to avoid this same problem in a future.

Instead I got an Ad in an Email where they talk about 24H/365D availability and the security the Online service has among other banalities and that I can win a Mazda6 car by using their service at least 3 times.

Bankinter Ad

Sigh…

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04/09/2007
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How I built my family a windmill

When he was 14, Malawian inventor William Kamkwamba built his family an electricity-generating windmill using spare parts and plans he found in a library book.

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25/08/2007
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SUNW ticker rename to JAVA

Java needs an overhaul: “I like Jonathan Schwartz a lot, but I think that unless some drastic changes are made to Java, the move to JAVA as Sun’s ticker symbol is going to be as relevant as changing it to COBOL. I’m using Java less and less as time goes by, not more – the heyday of the language and platform has come and gone, and IMHO, it’s going to continue to fade from relevance with increasing speed.

That doesn’t mean I don’t use Java every day still. There’s tons of servers out there with services I rely on whose back end is running on a Java server of some sort. And my phone has at least a dozen must-have apps and games that are all written in J2ME (Google Maps, Instango Jabber client, MidpSSH, MobiTV, Opera Mini, Tetris, Lumines, various GameJump games, and more).

But in general Java is yesterday’s technology.”

Remembering Java Naming Blunders Past: “Jonathan Schwartz’s blogged today about The Rise of JAVA – The Retirement of SUNW. Just when you think that things have changed, along comes a reminder of the Sun I used to work for. The stock ticker rename is cute and all, but it does kind of belittle all those other things that Sun does well that don’t have anything to do with Java. Like, Solaris and those cool Thumpers.”

Russ: People have been tinkering with Java for years now, and there’s still no hope in sight. There’s something about the Java culture which just seems to encourage obtuse solutions over simplicity. As a Java developer, I was always so amazed at how difficult it was to use the standard Java Class Libraries for day-to-day tasks. Every app out there ends up having to include 20MB of .jars in order to get even the simplest functionality working because Java libraries are so low-level and incomplete. Having to write a loop to pull in bytes and assemble them into a StringBuffer myself if I want to get a web page is not only a pain, it’s also incredibly short of implementing the HTTP standard compared to something like libcurl. Why is this sort of basic functionality missing from Java’s standard install?
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25/08/2007
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BumpTop desktop is a beautiful mess

I had seen a demo of BumpTop before on YouTube and for many weeks there where rumors about Leopard, Apple’s new OS X 10.5, getting this sort of interface for it’s new Finder.

Nothing of that will happen, as Steve Jobs told us at the last WWDC ‘07, what we know is that we will get Cover Flow style views in our trusty Finder.

What opened my eyes in this video is that same UI approach used with digital images, which really resembles a shoe-box full of photographs one may have.

A demo of this occurs at the very end in the following video.

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13/07/2007
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Microsoft and Yahoo, Sitting in a Tree

Great John Gruber posted the following thoughts a few months ago. I had this in my Drafts folder, waiting to have some time to discuss some ideas I had about it.

But you know what? I waited too much now it’s not going to happen but wanted to share this with you anyways.

In essence: A Yahoo acquisition by Microsoft to fight Google, not from business perspective (there’s a lot of it on the Web) but from a technical point of view.

Did you know Microsoft invested 3 years in porting Hotmails FreeBSD centered service to it’s proprietary technology?

Don’t miss this really interesting write-up:

Most of the reaction I’ve seen regarding the rumor of a Microsoft acquisition of Yahoo centers around the business aspects. Combined search traffic versus Google, that sort of thing. Given that Microsoft views Google as their new archenemy, a Yahoo acquisition makes some sense.

But at a technical level, it would be quite a thing, because Yahoo’s software isn’t written using Microsoft technology.

One of the least remarked-upon remarkable things about Microsoft is just how much software they’ve written themselves. Not just their software products – the stuff they sell in shrink-wrapped boxes – but all of the developer technology used to build those products. Their own entire operating systems. Their own file systems. Their own compilers. Their own IDE. Their own web server. Their own scripting and programming languages. Their own SQL database server.

There’s no other company that does anything even remotely like this today.

Long ago, Apple did. Apple wrote the entirety of the classic Mac OS. They had their own compiler, their own networking protocols, built computers using Apple’s own proprietary peripheral ports. Originally, they had to, because the ’80s were a proprietary era. But by the ’90s, that ‘let’s do everything ourselves’ mindset nearly killed the company. The biggest difference between the old Apple regime and the new post-NeXT-merger Steve Jobs regime is that Apple now focuses on just a few things. Wherever possible, Apple now builds on open source. BSD and GNU userland tools in OS X. GCC compiler, Apache web server, open source scripting languages like Perl, Python, and Ruby.

Google writes a ton of their own code and tools, but they do it using open source languages, databases, and operating systems.

That’s what Yahoo does, too. In fact, that’s what most web companies do. Web companies built on Microsoft technology are few and far between. When was the last time you saw a new hit web site developed using Microsoft’s web stack? This is what Paul Graham was talking about when he wrote that ‘Microsoft is dead’ – there’s an entire generation of developers who are growing up without ever even considering Microsoft developer technologies.

And so I wonder what Microsoft would do with Yahoo. It would seem utterly insane to acquire Yahoo and then waste years of time rewriting Yahoo’s existing code to use Microsoft technology.1 The whole point of such a merger is that both Yahoo and Microsoft feel the need to act swiftly to counter Google’s growth.

Acquiring Yahoo could be Microsoft’s way out of the corner they’ve painted themselves into. The widespread adoption of Microsoft developer technology, historically, has been very good for Microsoft overall. But while technology matters, products matter more. If Microsoft wants killer web products, they need to embrace non-Microsoft web technologies. Acquiring Yahoo would give them a way to do this without directly acknowledging just how poorly their
current web strategy has fared.






  1. Remember Microsoft’s acquisition of Hotmail? It was founded in 1995 and was the first mega-popular free web-based email service. It was built using FreeBSD. Microsoft purchased Hotmail at the end of 1997 for $400 million. Microsoft then spent three years porting it to Windows 2000. Imagine trying that with all of Yahoo.’




(Via Daring Fireball.)

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12/07/2007
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Jaw-dropping Photosynth demo

Blaise Aguera y Arcas, an employee of Microsoft Live Labs, gives a talk at the TED2007 (Technology, Entertainment, Design) conference about the much (and deservedly so) hyped Photosynth:

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12/07/2007