Coté Memo #038: No title, just links
Meta-data
Hello again, welcome to #038. Today we have 45 subscribers, so we're +2. Fun! I'd love to hear what you like, dislike, your feedback, etc.: memo@cote.io. (If you're reading this on the web, you should subscribe to get the daily email.)
See past newsletters in the archives, and, as always, see things as they come at Cote.io and @cote.
Sponsors
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Come check out cloud hijinks at 451's HCTS conference Oct 6th and 8th. I'll be speaking there on developer relations and marketing. Use the code
MC200
to get $200 off when registering. Only one person has taken advantage of this snazzy code, so: come on, sign up! -
Come hear me yammer on about DevOps: I'll be in Chicago (Sep 23rd) and Toronto (Nov 18th) giving my DevOps and cloud talk with TechTarget
Tech & Work World
Busy day - and coming week - so just the quick hits for today.
Quick Hits
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Cloud? Nah, we're not bothering with that, say HALF of enterprises - it goes to show you, this stuff is all over the map.
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Why Are Private Clouds Failing? - basically: bad expectations.
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A hedge fund has very specific culinary recommendations to save Olive Garden - just replace shitty asparagus with "shitty technology," and this is what it's like working in corporate strategy for a large tech company.
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Ten rules to stop wasting people’s time - pretty good.
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The makers of WordPress learned years ago that the ultimate office perk is not having an office - nice companion piece to saving people's time.
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Convirture opens a UK based office to explore EMEA market - I need to look into Convirture more
Hey, they just need faster Internet - "waitress, another Dewars!"
Mark drove though West Texas recently and noted how desolate it was, with photos! I typed up the below as a comment, but got trapped in some login madness, so here it is:
We lived a month in Marathon, Texas in 2010 or 2009 It was nice. To your point, there’s not much going on out there (by us city folks’s standards). It took 2 hours to get to an airport (El Paso) and the Internet was slow (I had to go to the Sul Ross library to do a webcast, as I recall).
It seemed to me, though, that if you had faster Internet, things would actually be very nice for a remote worker. I suppose the schools wouldn’t be as good as the “big city” schools, and your dog might get eaten by a javelina. Still, all those abandoned buildings must be dirt cheap and people generally leave each other alone out there.
I suppose that’s sort of a parasitic view of decaying Texas, but I think there’s lots of people who’s be glad to dump their cash into land and housing out there if there was good “first world” infrastructure in place.
Fun & IRL
We started back on some Andersons coffee today and man, it's rocket fuel!