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Life Technology

Why No Google Apps

Last year I moved my main email address from a generic Gmail account to my own domain. The reasons were many, but the main gist of it is so that I will control my email no matter what happens with a service provider.

In the past I had signed up for my first email account with Yahoo, then Hotmail, then finally Gmail. Having my email under my own domain name allows me to switch providers for whatever reason while still using the same address. It also gives me more control, which I am a fan of when it comes to my online life.

However, I moved to Google Apps instead and that created a number of problems for me.

  • ANOTHER Google account of some sort … which included work, my Gmail account, my business, and then my personal one
  • Google having access to my personal email, which wasn’t a problem for my conscience in the past, but was becoming more of one
  • Google’s mail is not your generic IMAP account with folders, they do a lot of other stuff
  • Google has begun limiting Apps accounts and might do so again in the future

Now, the Google Apps service is still superb, and as I have said before, it is good enough that I think it has killed a good portion of the hosted email business, but I still wanted to move to something else.

Well, for now, that “something else” is Atmail Cloud. As of earlier this evening, both my business and personal email (along with This One Podcast) is now going through Atmail Cloud. They have been wonderful so far and are still working out some kinks in the whole thing, but their support has been superb. I’ll write up more about Atmail Cloud later.

So I no longer have a personal or business Google Apps account and this has simplified things nicely. Now I can enjoy Google’s services without thinking about which account I should be using. I now have only one (my old Gmail account) … and that mail is already forwarded to me.

Categories
Technology

A Twitter App Decision

As I posted before, I have been looking for an app to replace Tweetie/Twitter for iPhone 3.x for a while now and I think I’ve finally stumbled upon it. While it might not satisfy every need I have, it does everything that I need and then some.

So, with the announcement of an iPad version, I’ve settled on Tweetbot as my Twitter application of choice for iOS.

With version 2 for iPhone and the new iPad version, Tweetbot really has taken the lead in the Twitter client arena. While I have not tried out Twittelator Neue (what a strange name), I have settled on Tweetbot both because it fits my needs on the iPhone and has an iPad app that is beautiful and functional.

I recommend that you give it a try for yourself.

Categories
Technology

Backups with Backup

I’ve been manually making backups of my main web server for the past year and I finally got fed up with it and decided to get an automatic system set up again. I had used the Backup gem in the past and decided to do it again.

It did everything I wanted and more.

This is the basic setup:

  • Archive entire home folder so that I can grab all of my data and my client data as well
  • Grab my custom Apache configuration
  • Dump everything in MySQL
  • Gzip the whole thing
  • Move it over to my FreeNAS box on a dedicated ZFS dataset for web server backups
  • Send me an email when everything is complete (or, in the case of errors, send me an email then as well)
  • Do this once a day when I’m (supposed to be) sleeping

Hopefully I’ll wake up tomorrow morning to an email from my server and everything will be working well. Currently the size of a total backup sits at 234 MB, which is not bad. By my estimation, it will take me about a year to fill up my current dataset to the point where I will have to think about adding some storage.

I think I’m good for now.

Categories
Life Technology

Some Tiny Thoughts on Patents

Now that Honeywell is suing Nest, the whole patent issue is coming back in the software community again. A tweet conversation I had with Ben Bleikamp ended with this:
https://twitter.com/bleikamp/status/166677721269800960

I’m not a fan of patents mostly because they’re now being used to stifle and intimidate than to protect. I would much rather see all patents be dismissed than add any more strength to the patent system.

I do wonder, though, what the economic impact would be of dismantling and destroying the patent system. A lot is focused on the innovation that would be possible if people were not afraid of getting destroyed by a larger company (looking at the Nest vs Honeywell situation, you can understand that), but I think it would be interesting to look at the other issues it would cause.

Licensing agreements go away. Partnerships born out of mutual destruction go away. There is a lot of economic destruction that would need to happen if it did happen. Is it good? Is it bad?

I don’t know, I just hope that cooler heads prevail.

Categories
Technology

The Death of Hosted Email

I have this sinking feeling that Google Apps has killed the hosted email business. While there are many providers still slinking around, they’re essentially zombies as Google Apps continues to gobble up more and more people and businesses.

I also think this is bad.

I’m hoping that the new Atmail Cloud offering will fill the needs that I have which is basically just mail, webmail, and ActiveSync so that I can get push mail to my iOS devices. If I’m not happy with it, then my next step is to run my own server and cobble together the pieces so that it will fulfill my needs.