Gridget > Interviews and Demo on the Scoble Show

http://powersunfiltered.com [Powers Unfiltered] Robert Anderson, Dan Ciruli and I were invited to spend a morning at Podtech’s headquarters in Palo Alto last month. Robert Scoble interviewed Robert and me about Digipede, then shot a video of Dan doing a demo of our software.

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Gridding .NET : Gridding .NET :: 2 computers or 2 CPUs running any version of Windows supporting .NET 1.1/2.0) Read more abour Digipede grid computing from these blogs:http://powersunfiltered.com/ http://westcoastgrid.blogspot.com/ http://krgreenlee.blogspot.com/ http://et.cairene.net/ (via Cosmos)

Pilka: I’m coming back from the 2nd Microsoft ISV CTO Summit up in Redmond (I blogged about the first one here). A good trip with worthwhile content … (via Cosmos)

http://krgreenlee.blogspot.com  A Day in the Life: About two weeks ago I installed VS2005 SP1 onto my laptop and a few days ago I was asked to retest all the sample code that ships with the Digipede Framework SDK. Everything worked fine until I got to IComWorkerCPP. (via Cosmos)

http://westcoastgrid.blogspot.com  West Coast Grid: T hree of us headed down to PodTech's palatial offices in Palo Alto yesterday to spend a little time with Robert Scoble. John and Rob did a half-hour interview on camera, then I did 10 minutes of show and tell using some of our demos (I even showed some code, which must have felt very Channel 9-y to Robert; (via Cosmos)

http://powersunfiltered.com  Powers Unfiltered: I use a password manager and form-filler-outer called RoboForm.  It is by far the best solution I’ve found to creating and remembering multiple non-trivial passwords.  (Like much of the reliable technology I use, this was recommended to me by Robert Anderson, who is almost as good at finding technology that works as he is at building it.)  RoboForm is simple to learn, works flawlessly, and is published by people at Siber Systems who clearly care passionately about quality, customer service, and security.  I have two licenses — one for my laptop (my “work computer”) and one for my home desktop. (via Cosmos)

Bill Boebel: I must have been doing the situps wrong or something, because that morning I could not get past number 25. And a few minutes later I was on the couch and everything hurt.  (via Cosmos)

http://microsoftstartupzone.com/blogs/cliff_reeves/default.aspx  Cliff Reeves: There is a wealth of unbiased and non-vendor specific information (kudos to Microsoft) that have been assembled and provided as it concerns a wide range of SaaS architectural issues -- including choices that established and emerging software vendors need to make when designing their multi-tenant models. (via Cosmos)

[Podtech.net] ScobleShow: Videoblog about geeks, technology, and developers: Seagate generously sponsors the ScobleShow (no one else pays to get on here, so we really appreciate the ability to do what we're doing) and I thought it would be good to find out what Seagate's been up …

http://powersunfiltered.com [Powersunfiltered.com] Powers Unfiltered: to refer to the feeling of waking up with a monkey on his back, which he could only remove by doing hundreds of pushups.  And while there were days when I got all my pushups and crunches done before work, those days were the exception, not the rule.  What’s more, for much of the summer, and into the fall, at least four (and sometimes five or six) of the folks at Digipede were on this program.  So for a pretty significant fraction of the year, there were times when, say, someone would have to recompile something, and he’d get up and do a set of pushups — and three or four more guys would jump up and do the same.  Now I realize most of you have never seen Digipede World Headquarters, but let me just say it’s not big, and it’s quite a sight when four or five large-ish guys jump up and start doing pushups.

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