I admit that I’m not the most prolific of bloggers as I tend to enjoy constructing class’s more than paragraphs, but the last six weeks have been a poor show by even my own questionable standards. In all fairness though I have been extremely busy, as some of you know the turnkey web mapping software named Mango that the Aruna team and myself have been working on for what seems like a lifetime now was finally launched at the Map Asia 2007 conference in Kuala Lumpur last week.
The conference was amazing in many ways and our slightly ramshackle trade stand attracted far more attention than even the most optimistic members of our party were hoping for. Not only did we get to stand shoulder to shoulder with the big boys – Google, ESRI and Autodesk to name but a few, but we actually held our own and often had larger crowds for our demo’s than our fortune 500 neighbours, I’m not sure if it was the software or the free sliced Mango we were handing out, but whatever it was it clearly worked.
I learned a lot of things at the conference on the marketing front, but the thing that really struck me was people’s response to finding out we were a Cambodian company. Before we attended the conference and were having Cade Creative do the branding and print materials for us, we had decided to brand Mango separately from Aruna and although we weren’t in anyway hiding where we were based, we were also not shouting it from the roof tops. But as it turns out being from
If you like to toy with different operating systems as much as I do then you have no doubt encountered the problem of running out of space on a disk which started out as 'test' install. Here's the scenario, you hear about some new flavour of Linux and decide to give it a try, you dig some old 20GB hard drive out from the cupboard, you hook it up as a slave and run the install so you can dual boot and begin to have a play.
Security is a top priority for any Systems Administrator and keeping your organizations network safe can prove to be a difficult and sometimes costly task.
I have a two year old son, so I am no stranger to watching annoying television, a three hour Barney or Teletubbies marathon would be enough to make James Bond crack, but it gets worse than this and I'm talking about Richard Quest on CNN, I am indeed talking about the show 'Click' on BBC World. Someone asked me the other day if my inspiration for this site came from our BBC namesake; hell no!
A month after installing Ubuntu and my series of slightly boring ‘do this then do that’ articles, I thought it was time to give some feedback on using Ubuntu now that the dust has had time to settle.
One of the biggest challenges living someplace like Cambodia (which I do) is finding all of the cool tech toys that my geek genes tell me I need. Finding software is similarly difficult, at least when it comes to legal copies of software. I can go down the block to my local market and find almost any software program, music CD, or DVD my little heart could desire, for somewhere around $2 per disc. Finding a legitimate copy of, say, Microsoft Office, is much more of a challenge.
For part three of my Linux installation adventures I will be covering the advanced installation, this will be similar to the requirements of the previous article except this time the programs needed are for work use and therefore I can't substitute then with suitable replacements as it would throw me out of sync with the rest of the office. For this installation to be deemed a success I will need to install the following programs:.png)

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