df.com v10 Milestone – Release Candidate 1

I’ve been rather busy toiling away on the site (as if you couldn’t tell). Some recent add on’s and updates to the site are:

  • Implemented Star Rating/Yeah or Nay system for posts.
  • New caching engine on the site improving load times significantly.
  • Added over 100 posts into the blog going back to 2000.
  • Fixed broken legacy links using redirects.
  • Cleaned up navigation menu.

Overall we’re about 99 (if not 100) percent operational at this point and with that in mind I’d like to announce we are up to Release Candidate 1. In geek speak, that mean we’re about revision away from the final site. It’s been a lot of work, but as you see it’s starting to pay off.

Once the final new v11 df.com site is in place we’re going to group up on this end and start working on some new things– new Pirate Radio, new artwork, new content, and new music. Plus a few other surprises I’m sure you’ll enjoy. As always, thanks for checking in and be sure to check back to keep up on what we’re up to.

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The Throwback

As part of our celebration of digitalflood.com’s Tenth Anniversary we’re dusting off the old blog entries and moving them into the new site. Yes, you too can find out what I was thinking back in the year 2000. To access this content click on the “Classic DF.com” option on the top news article menu.

We’ve fixed an issue with email not being able to be sent to @digitalflood.com. Was a combo of DNS routing and email server configuration issues. I’ve also updated the “DF Staff” page, which was formally known as the “Pirate Radio Cast” and fixed all the missing pictures/links.

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Moving Forward

Tackled two bugs today not related to the web site itself and more related to some logistical configuration/growing pains with the new server. First we ran into an issue where Firefox 3.5.2 would not render the web page correctly. The main navigation bar was all sorts of screwed up. This turned out to be due to a disk space allocation issue. This issue has been fixed and testing shows clean rendering of all pages since then.

We also ran into an issue where outside viewers could not email any address ending in @digitalflood.com. This was due to some improper routing with our DNS. We have addressed that issue as well and testing again shows email delivery is restored.

We had a large numbers of hits to the site since announcing our upgrade on Facebook and MySpace. I’m glad to see there was some interest in the site. Early feedback seems very positive. As always, let me know what you think and I’ll keep plugging away on this end to push things forward based on that info.

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10 Years And Still Going

On May 21, 1999 at 06:23:21 EST, digitalflood.com came to life. Like the birth of most things both wondrous and mediocre, it was mostly unnoticed by the masses. Slowly over the years we’ve evolved from our early “Everything/Nothing” blog format to a multimedia art project to many things to many people. We explore multimedia in many forms: print/graphic art, prose, poetry, short stories, photography, pen & ink, originally composed music pieces, video, and everything in between. We’ve done web casts of radio shows and pushed out mix tapes that are the envy of many a DJ. We’ve drawn rave reviews and mass acclaim. We’ve also drawn controversy, started arguments that have led to literal fist fights, and offended oh so many people. In short, this is what we do and while opinions may very we do it well enough to keep drawing viewers back in– that’s as close to success you can get in the 30 second Twitter One Day; My Space the Next attention span that is web viewership.

On May 21, 2009 we passed the decade mark. DigitalFl00d Studios itself goes back beyond the 1999. We started in print and cassette tape format back in 1994. Our content was delivered by hand a select (and admittedly small) viewership. We migrated to our first web pages that were homed on home brewed servers in 1997. In 1999 we finally got our own domain. Somewhere around 2004 we jumped to our hosting and now we find ourselves on our own server. The site has grown from it’s original 2MB of disk usage to over 3GB (some 2.5GB alone in MP3 format).

To celebrate our decade of web life, I decided we should do something special in late 2008. I began work on researching a new digitalflood.com framework to birth version 11 (which you see here now in beta form). In February 2009 I began finalizing the underlying CMS engine and decided the only way to achieve what I really wanted required its own dedicated server format. That lead to an initial machine build and alpha launch in April 2009.  I ended up scrapping most of the early work and nothing jelled until May 2009 when I finalized the look/feel overview.

The more brutal work then began– I had to populate content and migrate it from the old hand coded HTML into the blogging engine. That took most of the Summer of 2009. Just before launch a fatal flaw was found in the CMS engine that had to be patched and then I had some issues cleaning up the dynamic database to move the content from the test web site domain name to the final digitalflood.com one we all know and love.

The result is I am five months late with version 11, but as you can see even from this early public release it is well worth the wait.

On the right hand side during the beta (in other words I’m still ironing some bugs out and cleaning up the old content) you’ll find our known issues. This will let you know what I know is broken. Of course if you find something not in this list you are welcome to drop a line. My goal is to be in public final version 11.0 release for the site in time for 1/1/10.

This will include a new season of Pirate Radio (wait till you see what we have in store for you… mawahahahah) starting in October 2009.

Again, I thank you for checking in and coming back. Like many times before, it’s been awhile since I’ve delivered the goods; but the wait is always worth it. Great things are ahead. More will be offended. More will be pleased. History will continue to be written and digitalflood.com itself march ahead. Enjoy the ride, but remember to keep your arms in the bus at all times.

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CPE On The Cheap

I’m on a continuous quest to bring down costs for my clients and part of that involves keeping an ear to the ground for hardware trends that lend itself to reducing installation/maintenance costs of customer premise hardware. It’s as simple as crawling over our supply chain websites and seeing who is offering what. One of the best parts of technology is that what is cutting edge today is yesterday’s news tomorrow. The better part is that once bleeding edge hardware still offers robust performance and a lengthy life span for deployment well beyond year one of its life. We have a sawing in IT/IS, leading edge does not lend itself to industry best performance. In fact, sometimes giving vendors a chance to work out the kinks is your best bet. Typically within 1-2 years of product general availability (GA in geek talk) software matures and security holes are rooted out improving security, as well as, product performance (not to mention price).

Recently at work, we’ve come across a wonderful little router that seems to finally show some positive results for consumers resulting from the Linksys and Cisco merger some year or so back. You take Cisco’s leading edge IOS, VPN, and PIX firewall elements then mix them with Linksys’s low cost small form factor SMB routers. The result is the Cisco 870 series who is not done any justice on it’s own site.

My personal favorite variant is the 871 (who CDW has a great rundown on) which is perfect for Ethernet hand offs (100 Mb/s or less) to an SMB or remote office connecting back via VPN to a larger WAN/central office. The router comes with a built in DHCP server, can perform NAT, has a non-DPI firewall (right out of the ASA/PIX), supports VPN (server or client using IPSec or Cisco Easy VPN), and can be SNMP polled. The result is a beefy edge router for a small LAN connected via an Ethernet hand off (such a metro-Ethernet or xDSL and Cable). Add your favorite Layer 2 switch and you have yourself a decent LAN. There is also a WiFi capable variant and the router can act a WLAN central AP controller when coupled with Cisco APs. That’s good news for SMBs who want secure wireless access or for hospitality users who want to create a “hot spot” for their clients. The product scales well with memory, SSL VPN, and advanced IOS capabilities (if you really want to beef up the unit) when being deployed in a medium-large enterprise environment.

While I’m happy to see Cisco moving a bit down market with products I’m not happy about Linksys’s recent movement with its WRT54G2 revision. In order to drop the price of this residential grade router some twenty US dollars, Linksys/Cisco ditched the external antenna in favor for an internal one. Reach rate changes aside (Cisco claim performance is actually increased over the older WRT54G) the loss of external screw on antenna coaxial connectors means you cannot equip the unit with your own antenna. That type of switch out was a perennial favorite power upgrade for hackers everywhere. Specifically it worked wonders when you wanted a cheap wireless access point to hang off a wired Layer 2 SMB LAN.

The good news is Asus has filled the void with its WL-500gP v2 router. When equipped with 6dBi panel antennas we’ve seen full rate reach at over 300′ with clear line of site. 100′ in real world suburban deployments is possible. The units can be tied back to a hot spot controller of your choice or run via your favorite Linux compressed variant to deliver connectivity and full system control (DD-WRT being my personal favorite).

Not sure how to hook all this up? WVT can design and implement your LAN or WLAN. Drop by our contact page and drop us a line however you please. We’ll gladly setup one of the options above for your business and help with any of your communication needs including network design and upgrades.

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