Monday November 28, 2005 | Claire's Alternate Version of Reality Blogged by Claire Giordano |
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Cross posting this to my old Sun blog http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/cmh and my new blog at http://clairegiordano.org/blog/ It's true, I'm leaving Sun. And in the last few weeks of farewells, I have discovered the obvious: goodbyes are not easy. Another discovery: Cliches such as "It's difficult to leave my friends and colleagues at Sun" are trite but oh so very true. It's the people that I will remember, and the little everyday joys of working together to make something happen. But I'm not leaving the community (or the valley.) Sun has been good to me over the last 16 years and I have much to thank this company for. I worked on the operating system in all sorts of roles over the years and together with some extraordinary people accomplished a lot. But those things that endure are the most important. I'm proud of the Solaris Platinum Beta program that I created to put engineers in close contact with our customers' most important problems. And of course I'm proud of the OpenSolaris project, which I was privileged to kick off back in the fall of 2003. OpenSolaris is now well on its way and I feel comfortable leaving it at this point - there is a lot of community support and leadership to move the project forward. [Update: And, yes, I'm proud of my engineering team's many contributions to Solaris 10!] My decision has little to do with Sun, and everything to do with the exciting opportunity ahead of me at A9. A9, a subsidiary of Amazon.com located in downtown Palo Alto, is doing all sorts of interesting things to improve the search experience. If you haven't yet checked out the A9.com website, please do. And the A9 toolbar. I'm particularly jazzed about the A9 OpenSearch technology which makes it easy for content providers to publish their search results. I'll be Director of Product Management at A9 starting in mid-December and can't wait! So, it's ciao to Sun and hello to A9. I'll remain a part of the OpenSolaris community, of course. And I'll still be blogging - just not on the much-loved blogs.sun.com. You can find my new blog at http://clairegiordano.org/blog/. I hope you keep reading. I'll definitely keep writing. ![]() Technorati Tag: A9 Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris Technorati Tag: SunMicrosystems (2005-11-28 08:53:31.0) Permalink Comments [4] Cross posting this to my old Sun blog http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/cmh and my new blog at http://clairegiordano.org/blog/ Those of you who read my post about OpenSolaris and Flickr and went over to Flickr to check out the OpenSolarisEnthusiast group may have noticed that I had not yet posted a photo of myself. Bad bad bad. Well, I've fixed that problem. I was in the Palm Springs area for Thanksgiving, with OpenSolaris t-shirt in tow, and my photo is now part of the collection. Complete with fuchsia bougainvillea in the background. Other recent additions to the OpenSolaris Flickr group are from Jim Grisanzio and lovely daughter in Japan, Eric Boutilier in Vienna and Wez Furlong in Paris. Don't try to look in Flickr at the instant I post this blog entry, though. When I just went to look, I encountered a classic Flickr message - classic in that it has spunk and shows that the creators of Flickr were having fun: "Flickr is having a massage." ![]() Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris (2005-11-26 23:42:44.0) Permalink Comments [1] Cross posting this to my old Sun blog http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/cmh and my new blog at http://clairegiordano.org/blog/ Teresa Giacomini just forwarded me a link to the schedule for UCSD's CSE 120 class, more descriptively known as Principles of Computer Operating Systems at the University of California San Diego. What I find cool is the agenda item for Nov 29. Yep, that's right, they'll be talking about OpenSolaris. Sweet. Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris (2005-11-26 22:36:48.0) Permalink Cross posting this to my Sun blog http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/cmh and my new blog at http://clairegiordano.org/blog/ ![]() Chandan is an artist. Of colors and pixels as much as of code and usability. He has a well-developed sense of design. As someone who's made the mistake of debating Chandan on aesthetics, I have to say that he knows his stuff and he stands his ground. In a good way. Whether you're more interested in graphic art or in code-as-art, I recommend you checkout the wicked fast OpenSolaris source browser. And also the tool that powers our source browser, open sourced last week and dubbed OpenGrok. Back in the day, as they say, I used to be an avid cscope fan, and with cscope as my comparison I was hugely impressed when I first tried the OpenSolaris source browser. Yes, it's fast. But more than that, it clearly showed the connections between different parts of the rather complex code base we deal with in OpenSolaris. And by making those connections rapidly and visually, well, it made it easier for me to grok the code. Did I mention that it's written in Java? Or that it's released under the open source CDDL license? Kudos to Chandan and Andy and all involved. From developers everywhere, thanks. Wicked thanks. To find out more: Andy Tucker talks about the conception of OpenGrok and how he's already using it to browse VMware code. Chandan's blog entry about OpenGrok Announcement on OpenSolaris.org Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris Technorati Tag: OpenGrok (2005-11-22 00:40:24.0) Permalink Cross posting this to my old Sun blog http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/cmh and my new blog at http://clairegiordano.org/blog/ Andy Tucker, formerly a DE on the Solaris and OpenSolaris teams at Sun, now a Principal Engineer at VMware, is blogging again. Yippee. Welcome, Andy. At Sun, we used to say that Andy had a "45 minute rule." The story goes that Andy wouldn't weigh in with a comment for the first 45 minutes of any meeting. Of course, it wasn't true. Not even close. More like urban myth - people thought it true because they'd heard it said. It certainly wasn't the case for 1/2 hour meetings. :-) But there was a kernel of truth - Andy was a good listener, and didn't storm into a room like a 200 lb gorilla intent on taking over. He gave other people room to be. Of course I'm pleased to see that of Andy's first three blogs, the second is titled "VMware and OpenSolaris" and the third is "A new source browser is born" - about our open source operating system and the wicked fast OpenSolaris source browser called OpenGrok, respectively. He may have left Sun but the OpenSolaris project still has some of his mindshare. Good good good. When Andy left Sun earlier this year to make his mark at VMware, I tried to write a blog to say thank you and wish him well. And failed. I found it difficult to figure out what to say. I know that's a lame excuse, but we had worked closely together closely for such a long time. First on Solaris 2.5 Platinum Beta, later in Clustering, later in Resource Management, then Zones, then OpenSolaris. Not only is Andy brilliant, not only does he possess incredibly sound judgement, but he's also flexible and willing to be questioned and challenged. And I'm sure he'll confirm that I asked him a lot of questions. :-) Andy: I hope that Steve Herrod and team at VMware know how blessed they are to have you on board. And I look forward to reading more of Andy Tucker's Blog. Thanks. Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris (2005-11-18 23:59:33.0) Permalink ZFS Announcement on OpenSolaris - and Question of Voice The "Welcome to the ZFS Community" announcement on the frontpage of OpenSolaris.org has a very succinct and to-the-point opening paragraph: "ZFS is a new kind of filesystem that provides simple administration, transactional semantics, end-to-end data integrity, and immense scalability. ZFS is not an incremental improvement to existing technology; it is a fundamentally new approach to data management. We've blown away 20 years of obsolete assumptions, eliminated complexity at the source, and created a storage system that's actually a pleasure to use." and the closing sentence of the announcement is worth repeating as well: "Give it a spin, and let us know what you think!" I've been asking that the announcements on the front page of OpenSolaris.org be personally signed and be written in conversational voice (not the written voice that so many of us learned during our education which is formal and stuffy and fails to capture the reader's imagination!) I agree with much of what Kathy Sierra says in her "Your user's brain wants a conversation" and "Conversational writing kicks formal writing's ass" posts. I also appreciated Stephen O'Grady's discussion of the importance of voice as well in his "The Problem of Voice: On Paul Graham, Press Releases, and More" post. If you haven't thought about the role of voice, or think conversational voice is only for "dummies", I encourage you to read the above posts and start caring about the readers you lose as a result of using "formal voice", "press release voice", "man page voice" and "legal voice". This announcement is signed by "The ZFS Team" (who on the ZFS team wrote it, I want to know!) so at least it is signed. And it does appear to be written in authentic voice. So, thanks to the ZFS team for a an announcement that is not robotic. And a question for all my readers - what do you think of the language in the ZFS announcement? Is it conversational enough? Does it keep your attention? Does it seem authentic? If you want to know more about the Zettabyte File System, read the rest of the OpenSolaris announcement about ZFS. Or check out the ZFS community here. And be sure to check out the inaugural ZFS Screencast that I blogged about earlier this morning. Enjoy! Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris Technorati Tag: ZFS (2005-11-16 12:10:39.0) Permalink A ZFS Screencast for the ZFS Blog Carnival Dan Price's gift of love to the ZFS BLOG CARNIVAL this morning is near and dear to my heart: a ZFS SCREENCAST. w00t! Check it out! You do have to be a bit of a geek (it's good to know what a filesystem is) to appreciate it, but the simplicity of the administrative model should come through regardless... I fell in love with the concept of an authentic voice, natural demo with both visuals and an audio track when I first saw Jon Udell's killer del.icio.us screencast. Jon later wrote an article titled, "The New Freshman Comp" (which is worthwhile reading, particularly for developers) which he concludes with: "Writing and editing will remain the foundation skills they always were, but we'll increasingly combine them with speech and video. The tools and techniques are new to many of us. But the underlying principles--consistency of tone, clarity of structure, economy of expression, iterative refinement--will be familiar to programmers and writers alike." I think Jon's right (as I've said before) and it's not a surprise to me that Dan is the one of the first in the Solaris (now OpenSolaris) engineering team to pave this screencasting path. Dan's always peeking around corners, looking for what's coming, critiquing how we approach problems and coming up with ideas for how to communicate and how to spread the word. In addition to doing his day job of engineering great technology. In summary, I have 4 things to say: 1. Here is my Huge Welcome to the ZFS bits into OpenSolaris. This next-generation Zettabyte File System is sure to have a positive impact on the lives of system administrators - and the bottom lines of businesses. Congratulations to the fabulous team behind this great accomplishment. 2. Big thank you to Dan Price (and the other folks who helped him) for creating the First ZFS Screencast! 3. Please note that the ZFS bits are available in the OpenSolaris source code first - before showing up in a product anywhere. We really are serious about this open source and open development thing. 4. Thank you to Dave Johnson for giving a name (via Siflay Hraka) to what we're doing today (and what we did on the OpenSolaris Opening Day) - a Blog Carnival. I like it. Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris Technorati Tag: ZFS (2005-11-16 09:30:41.0) Permalink ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The provocative title of "Was OpenSolaris a Mistake?" kept me away from Paul Murphy's blog entry for a few days, I admit. I'm usually lightning-quick to open a letter to discover its insides, regardless of whatever qualms I might have about the unknown (I'll never forget those much-anticipated college admission letters of decades past.. boy did those get opened quickly!) For some reason, I hesitated to read Paul's blog entry. When I finally did read it, a big huge gigantic beaming smile slowly spread across my face. I love Paul's closing statement. Let me tell you why. When I first started building the team to open source the Solaris Operating System (I was the senior manager in the Solaris engineering team given the "make it so" directive by Johnny Loiacono) I told the same story to all the candidates I interviewed: "This project is full of challenges and obstacles and also tremendous opportunity. And no matter what the result, this project will be written up as business school case study. I don't know whether it will be a positive case study, or a negative one... But it WILL be a case study!" So what was Paul Murphy's conclusion in the article? Here it is: "So, bottom line: is openSolaris a mistake? Nope, it's business school 101 strategy in practice." Emphasis and underlines all mine. Paul gets the double-indirect strategy. Of course, the jury is still out on whether we will succeed in building this community - and community building takes a lot of hard work, sincerity and an ability to weather the storms along with the sunshine. So, will OpenSolaris change the dynamics of the operating system space? Will more and more university computer science departments use OpenSolaris in their curriculum? Will developers get hooked on the benefits of DTrace? Time will tell. The early OpenSolaris numbers are quite encouraging, as are the early distributions based on the OpenSolaris code (SchilliX, BeleniX, Nexenta) and the fact that grassroots OpenSolaris User Groups have cropped up across 6 continents in the space of just 5 months. I for one believe that the OpenSolaris combination of technology and community will spawn all sorts of previously unimagined and creative endeavors. I await them with bated breath. Bring it on, folks! Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris (2005-11-15 16:14:42.0) Permalink Comments [3] AND ![]() Back in September I married my interests in Flickr and OpenSolaris by creating a Flickr group called OpenSolarisEnthusiast. The idea - to give people a place to post cool photos of themselves wearing their OpenSolaris gear - and to show the rest of the world how very real the growing OpenSolaris community is. After all, it's one thing to know that almost 10,000 people have registered in the OpenSolaris community in the first 150 days but it's another to see a picture of Patrick sporting his OpenSolaris shirt on his honeymoon no less. So how's the Flickr group going in its first 50 days, you ask? So far, 25 enthusiasts have joined the Flickr group. And 22 photos have been posted from the Dead Sea, Paris and the Coliseum in Rome, from the Great Wall of China and an OpenSolaris User Group meeting in Texas, from a winery in Israel and from the OpenOffice.org conference in Slovenia! There's a great shot of Alan and his daughter in Australia and a photo of Bart on the Monster Garage boat wearing his OpenSolaris cap. One of the OpenSolaris Pilot members (a group of almost 150 people outside Sun who helped us prepare for launching this community) even posted a snapshot of his IKEA-framed, numbered OpenSolaris Pilot poster. (#037/150) For those of you who haven't tried using the Flickr photo sharing service yet, I entreat you to try it. It's an easy-to-use and addictive way to share your photos. Flickr was originally a startup and was bought by Yahoo earlier this year. One of the things I like best about the service is how they use metrics to communicate what kind of attention things are getting. Such as how many times a photo has been viewed, how many photos have been tagged with a particular tag (tags such as OpenSolaris), how many photos in a group, how many members in a group. Some call this the Interestingness of Flickr. If you're passionate about OpenSolaris, and if you like the cool t-shirts (I prefer the black to the white), here's a good way to share that passion. Join the OpenSolarisEnthusiast group on Flickr. Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris (2005-11-12 00:48:46.0) Permalink BeleniX - a Live CD distribution built from OpenSolaris source code - is the "Featured distribution of the week" on DistroWatch. Thanks, Ben, for pointing it out. Congrats to Moinak Ghosh for the recognition. Gotta love the quote at the end of the article: "Products like BeleniX are a clear indication that momentum is building behind Solaris and that many people find the product interesting enough to join the rapidly growing Solaris developer community." Also to love - the beautiful artwork, by Chandan: ![]() Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris Technorati Tag: BeleniX (2005-11-10 19:23:08.0) Permalink Check it out - a video story about the making of OpenSolaris. Called Open Minds. Mary Mary aptly titled her pointer to this mini "making of" video clip "6 minutes, 24 seconds". Since I lived, ate and breathed the OpenSolaris project for about 18 months before we launched on Opening Day, I think we could have populated a 60 minute documentary, but then again I have a thing for documentaries. The idea for Open Minds crystallized when Laura Ramsey and I ran into each other in Menlo Park back in May and sat down for a few minutes to chat in the California sun. We thought it might be interesting to get a bunch of the OpenSolaris team members to talk about why we open sourced the operating system and why we care so passionately about the project. Here it is... Enjoy! Thanks to Sara for making it happen. And if you like the story, please pass it around... Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris (2005-11-10 16:32:23.0) Permalink Comments [2] Communicating with del.icio.us You know you're not blogging enough when other people blog your stories. Of course, that's a rather negative view, isn't it? I suppose the more positive perspective is that you know your stories are interesting when other people blog your stories. :-) Here's my story. I presented on OpenSolaris to an IT exec from an Australian University last month. During the conversation, I decided to pull up del.icio.us (yes, my favorite social bookmarking service) to show the exec the growing library of bookmarked information that has been tagged with 'OpenSolaris' at del.icio.us/tag/opensolaris. Why? Whenever I talk about OpenSolaris, I try to do two things: 1. Draw a crystal clear picture of how the OpenSolaris Project will benefit whoever I'm talking to. 2. Outline ways in which they can participate in the community. One way to participate in OpenSolaris is to share information about OpenSolaris happenings. Which you can do quite easily with del.icio.us. Your bookmarks are public. You can annotate a bookmark with a compelling one-liner that explains why a bookmark might deserve a click. (Thlinking, James calls this.) And you can tag your bookmarks for e-z sorting and viewing along with other similarly tagged bookmarks from other users. I've discovered all sorts of valuable stories and ideas tagged with OpenSolaris by looking here on a regular basis. So, during the preso, I clicked over to look at the OpenSolaris bookmarks on del.icio.us, and lo and behold, one of the most recent bookmarks included a note from Stephen O'Grady to me and a few others. He knows I keep an eye on his del.icio.us bookmarks, so it was an easy and effective way for him to pass along a suggestion. (It turns out that Glynn Foster had already responded to the item in question, so I didn't need to weigh in as Stephen had suggested.) The point? O'Grady put it well: "it's a quick, easy way to collaborate in a more permanent fashion than email." Here's what my Australian customer saw: ![]() Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris Technorati Tag: del.icio.us (2005-11-09 22:59:43.0) Permalink Comments [1] Opportunities are what you make of them I spent time at the Symposium ITXpo at Gartner this week. A few days before boarding a plane to Florida, someone asked if it was really going to be worth my time. Wouldn't it be better to stay in Menlo Park and get work done? Good question. I had an Ops Review coming up the next week (tomorrow, now) and it was important to have my ducks in order - plus my team has an aggressive set of goals and there is tons of work to do. Jennifer Henderson - Analyst Relations manager extraordinaire - and I put our heads together and concluded that the trip would be worth it. We were right. But that's not the point. It could have been a poor use of my time, were it not for the determination of people on Joanne Master's AR team - Jennifer included - and Laura Ramsey - and a little bit of luck thrown-in as well. The point is that opportunities are what you make of them. The Gartner conference is huge, almost to a fault, which makes it either exhilirating or overwhelming or both, depending on your tolerance for chaos and noise. At times, there are as many as 15 sessions running in parallel - plus the show floor to choose from. 'Tis not for the faint of heart. The trip started with serendipity. I ran into Dinesh Bahal on the shuttle to SFO. Dinesh is a senior sales director in the Education arena. We first met 8 years ago, had just reconnected the week before and it was great to spend time figuring out where our work overlaps and how we can help each other. In fact, our shuttle conversation was so absorbing that I missed my stop and had to walk through several terminals to get back to where I needed to be. Sigh... Face time with Laura Ramsey and Eric Boutilier was hugely valuable. Laura and Eric manned the OpenSolaris pod and spoke with lots and lots of Solaris customers, some of whom didn't yet grok how OpenSolaris helps them. If you're busy, as most are, it's easy to assume OpenSolaris is some developer program you don't need to worry about. When you peel back the onion, the possibilities jump out at you - such as the fact that there will be more Solaris sysadmins familiar with the technology and available for hire in five years time. Joanne Masters invited me to join her and her team - Jennifer, Lara, Allison - for lunch. We sat outside in the Florida sun (and humidity!), and the conversation was an eye-opener to the world of analyst relations. Joanne also gave me some great ideas about how to connect with our sales force. Next, I connected with Dan Berg, CTO of Sun's Services organization and all-around intelligent guy, to plot what kind of seeds we should sow in the services sector because of the doors opened by OpenSolaris. [Note to Dan - Please Blog!] I attended Chris Ratcliffe's Myth Busters talk about Solaris 10, Ashesh Badani's talk on SOA, and Mark Herring's Open Source in the Enterprise talk. Then, I met Mark Driver (an open source analyst for Gartner) and talked about OpenSolaris and CDDL with him. The Gartner folks organized a gathering for us on Tue eve and I had the chance to meet and greet with analysts Laura McLellan, Daryl Plummer, Stan Zaffos, Roger Cox - and Tim Szumowski. (Although Tim didn't tell me he was a serious tennis player...) Later that night - thanks to Laura's gracious invitation - Ashesh and I joined an impromptu dinner of sushi and karaoke with Laura, Eric, David Berlind and Dan Farber. A Frank Sinatra fan made the karaoke enjoyable and we took turns taking goofy photos wearing David's glasses. Out of respect for my dinner-mates, I didn't sing. Hope they appreciated my restraint! I met James Dias of Selectica - another Malcolm Gladwell fan - and we shared notes about marketing and tipping points and del.icio.us and blogging - and how to make the kernel of your idea viral so the message propagates. On the flight back I sat next to Vinnie Gupta, Sun's Market Development Manager in the Edu arena, and learned quite a bit about how the Edu team gets their job done. Then, as soon as I was back on the ground at SFO, serendipity kicked in again and Stephen O'Grady and I were just a few miles from each other and were both free for an hour, so we squeezed in lunch just before Steve's keynote on simplicity at the Zend/PHP conference. I'm sure he kicked butt. All in all, a good trip. Thanks, everyone. p.s. Kim Gerton did a phenomenal job keeping our Gartner activities organized. Many thanks! Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris (2005-10-23 14:37:48.0) Permalink Comments [1] ![]() I'm in Orlando, Florida this week for the Gartner Symposium ITXpo along with Laura and Eric to talk OpenSolaris with the many customers and community members and potential community members and customers who flock to Disney to, as explained by the ex-Army IT executive who rode to the hotel by shuttle with me, keep their fingers on the pulse of what's happening in IT. My trip was planned by the impressive Jennifer Henderson (who had lots of help from other good folks at Sun as well) and it should be interesting. On the airport shuttle to catch my flight in San Francisco, I ran into an APAC (that's Asia Pacific) sales exec who, it turns out, I had met years ago and who I needed to connect with in order to do my job now. So we're planning on having coffee here in sunny Florida in the next few days. If you're here and want to connect, please post a comment on my blog or email me to let me know. Thanks... And in the meantime, there is lots going on across the Atlantic at the EuroOSCON conference in Amsterdam this week. Patrick gave a good overview of the OpenSolaris plans for EuroOSCON here. Thanks, Patrick. (And since both Casper and Patrick live in Amsterdam, yep, you guessed it, they're both at EuroOSCON this week...) Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris (2005-10-17 22:37:15.0) Permalink Comments [1] Murphy on OpenSolaris and CDDL For the record, I have never met him, never spoken with him, have not bought him flowers nor given him stock tips. All the same, he gets CDDL, and he gets the problems we were trying to solve when drafting CDDL. Jim blogged it here, and Chris Baker sent me a timely email pointer to the article as well. Thanks, guys. Paul Murphy's article is here, and for those of you who are link averse the relevant quotes about CDDL and OpenSolaris are: "The best answer so far, at least in my opinion as a non lawyer, is Sun's community development license. Basically this is a have your cake and eat it too deal: developers keep proprietary code proprietary, participate in the free as in freedom world being built up around openSolaris, and work inside a patent umbrella held up, not just by Sun, but by mutual agreement among participating developers. In other words, Joe developer can adopt openSolaris and the CDDL ( Common Development Distribution License) without spending a nickel on legal fees and be reasonably confident that not doing something criminal (or just criminally stupid) will suffice to protect himself from legal action." "Combine the CDDL with the fact that Solaris is the best OS around, and it's easy to see why the openSolaris community is exploding..." p.s. to Paul: I'm a proud 'vi' user, too. But not on a Sun 60. :-) Technorati Tag: OpenSolaris (2005-10-06 18:50:55.0) Permalink |
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