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Sunday, August 14, 2011

Fridaygram

Fridaygram: "

By Scott Knaster, Google Code Blog Editor



Back in June we launched GoogleCL, an open-source utility that provides command line access to Google services. For our friends who live on the command line and think mice are something cats chase, GoogleCL provides a handy way to perform various tasks, such as posting to Blogger or creating an appointment with Google Calendar. Sample commands look like this:

$ google blogger post --blog 'Lemurland blog' --title 'Latest Madagascar trip' --tags 'vacation, ring-tailed' trip_post.html 


$ google calendar add 'Order palm tree tomorrow at 10 AM'
GoogleCL works with various other Google services, providing access to YouTube, Picasa, Docs, and Contacts without having to deal with that pesky graphical user interface. And now, thanks to Google intern Michael Sittig and our APIs Discovery Service, GoogleCL supports all Discovery-based APIs – a list that includes Tasks, Moderator, Books, URL Shortener, and many others. For example, you can use the URL Shortener API to create a new short URL like so:

$ google urlshortener insert --longUrl www.example.com

As long as our fingers are firmly on the keyboard, let’s talk about words for a moment. The folks who make the Oxford Dictionaries have created Save the Words, a way to preserve wonderful but little-used English words. At Save the Words you can see these words, read their often-hilarious definitions, and agree to use them yourself to help obstrigillate this trend.



Finally, spend a moment taking a look at this article and then ask yourself: have explorers really found the Millennium Falcon at the bottom of the sea? (Spoiler alert: no.)



Even when they cover serious topics like Google APIs and purported spaceship wrecks, Fridaygram posts are just for fun. Each Fridaygram item must pass only one test: it has to be interesting to us nerds.



"

Cloud Computing: Skytap Orchestrates

Cloud Computing: Skytap Orchestrates: "Skytap, the test and dev cloud automation house, has added self-service cloud orchestration and network routing features to its bag of tricks to reduce the time it takes to move complicated virtualized workloads to the cloud.
It’s automated the order in which users want multi-machine virtual data centers deployed or shut down and engraves those rules – including time delays – in stone so the sequence repeats itself. Like, say, Active Directory server first, followed by the Team Foundation server, the database server, the load balancer and the web servers.

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Firefox 6 ist da, Version 8 bringt mehr Kontrolle über Add-ons - heise online

Firefox 6 ist da, Version 8 bringt mehr Kontrolle über Add-ons - heise online: "Die neue Version ist zwar noch nicht offiziell angekündigt, steht aber schon zum Download bereit. In zukünftigen Versionen sollen die Nutzer mehr Kontrolle über die Add-ons erhalten, kündigt Mozilla an."

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Preparing for TOGAF Certification

Preparing for TOGAF Certification: "If you are preparing for TOGAF certification here are links to pages containing free sample practice questions.
TOGAF 9 Foundation Level Certification – Question set 1
TOGAF 9 Foundation Level Certification – Question set 2
TOGAF 9 Certified Level Certification – Question on topics not available on the study guide
TOGAF 9 Certification Multiple Choice Questions by Chris Eaton
iQuiz – Quick Quiz System

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Book Review: Enterprise Governance and Enterprise Engineering

Book Review: Enterprise Governance and Enterprise Engineering: "This is the last book in the Enterprise Engineering Series I had to read. It covers a ton of topics and covers them in-depth.

The book starts out with a nice introduction to the author's point of view regarding Enterprise Engineering and Enterprise Governance.
It then continues with chapters on Mechanistic and Organismic Perspectives on Governance, Enterprise Essentials, System Thinking, Corporate Governance, IT Governance, Enterprise Governance, and The Praxis Illustrated a case study.
One of the things I like most about this book is that it combines corporate governance and IT governance under the Enterprise Governance umbrella. Most larger organizations see IT in a supporting role instead of a strategic ally, which leads to the corporate or business decisions being only partially effective. The business makes their decisions in a bubble that does not provide a realistic view of their true context.
Another thing I really like about this book is that it is an engineering book. Some people may not like that. It lays down the theory as well as the implementation of practices. It is very detailed which at times can make for a difficult read if you aren't used to reading engineering books.

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