Welcome to my Iphonoegraphy gallery. The series of photos started as a result of an iphonoegraphy challenge on Twitter that required taking and editing pictures with your phone. The photos displayed here have all been taken using my iPhone 4. All editing has been done on the phone using various apps. I hope you enjoy my work.
NULL
No items
Latest Blog Entries
I just came across this post by Kelly Herrell, and it highlights some of the key facts on why implementing Vyatta over Cisco makes absolute sense. The amount of R&D that goes into Cisco’s routing and security (approximately $0.5B) is at least 20 times less than the amount that goes into the x86 platform ($300B+).
Scaling Networks the x86 Way: Vyatta/Intel vs Cisco
I’ve been dealing with technical issues over the past while getting my network address translations to work on the wonderful, virtual, kicking butt in the cloud, Vyatta router. Finally, it looks like this chapter is coming to a close.
Moving forward, as a choice for routing platform, Vyatta stands up to the test and lives up to its name. And with some tweaking, you’re able to build a high availability solution in the cloud at literally no cost (except for server fees). Architecture shot below;

In the earlier post of building a Vyatta router on the cloud with Amazon EC2, I mentioned that I had issues with setting up a SNAT (source NAT) and made the assumption that it was either a bug or the OS image of Vyatta on Amazon.
I’ve been working through this issue with Stig from Vyatta on their forums. You can view the messages at http://vyatta.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2908

This will be my first Demo Camp to attend and I’m actually excited about it. Apparently, I’ve missed the last 11. Considering I’ve recently heard about it, I think I’m ok.
Date: October 19th 2009 6pm to 9pm
Location: Clocktower Brew Pub (downstairs), 575 Bank St (http://bank.clocktower.ca)
Check out this link for full details.
Hopefully on the next one, I’ll sign up to demo our application.
Of the countless things you do as a designer or developer of a website, the most important aspect is actually understanding your website. Being able to take the statistics pumped out by your analytics engine and making sense of it is solving the first part of the puzzle.
Many sites come prepackaged with Webalizer. It’s pretty straight forward and let’s you know how well your site is doing. However, I just don’t think its intuitive at all. More or less, it’s not in a form that is readable to me.
