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The ins and outs of Yvo’s life.
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30 Mar 10 It has been a year…

So it’s been almost a year since I updated my blog. Every month I pay my Dreamhost fees, but I never update it. I’m not going to make empty promises on keeping this updated or that I’ll start posting tips and tricks to the software that the software company I work for makes.

What I will do is just simply inform those that have some how ended up on this URL what I have been up to.

First of all, my 2nd to last post was about my dad. He is doing very well. In fact his experience has woken him up and he is actually talking about the R word, aka retirement. He is in good health right now, probably better than he has been in the last 10 years. So things are looking up for him. He is planning to retire with my Mom to Aruba.

I still work for the same software company, Likewise Software. Great company to work for, great people to be with and I can’t see myself anywhere else in the near future. Which is a considerably change from the past considering that I have worked for digital.forest, McGraw-Hill and Classmates.com in the last 5 years. All were great jobs and I wouldn’t be where I am today without any of the experience I acquired at the previous positions.

While I am still single, I have lost approximately 30-40 lbs since my last post. I continue to lose weight and find new ways of keeping the weight off. For example I am participating in the 2010 Rock ‘n Roll Marathon. I love to run and I really enjoy doing it in my new surroundings.

Yes, new surroundings. I didn’t move to NYC as my last post may have hinted. Instead I did something different. I found out, after all my traveling that I have done the last 18 months, that I truly love Seattle. So instead of turning my back on something I love, I have embraced it. I am now a resident of Ballard. NYC is still a fantastic city and it is a great place to go to, but I was going for the wrong reasons. Right now every single time I approach Seattle, whether is a south to north landing (over Tacoma) or north to south landing (over Seattle), I get the warm and fuzzies. This is a feeling I can’t simply abandon. It is a feeling I need to respect. So I am staying here for the long haul (well at least another 12 months).

On to the next change. I got rid of my Scion tC. It was a wonderful car. Never had any problems what so ever. However I wanted something… faster. After some shopping around, reading reviews, renting an Infiniti G37 for a weekend and completing testing drives of an Audi S5… I landed on a BMW 335i. My brother, Tjakko, and I went shopping and I remember test driving a 650i and enjoy it but when I test drove a 335i… well it was love at first sight. It has everything I need and more. Thankfully it hasn’t gotten me in trouble… yet… with the law.

So in summary what is different about me between 03/30/2009 and 03/30/2010.
- I lost 30-40 lbs
- I moved to Ballard (20 mile move from previous location).
- I bought a new car

Not too radical and I truly enjoy the changes.

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06 Apr 09 The moving bug

When I was living with my parents we moved a lot. By the time I was 15 I had lived in 6 different cities, each with their own schools. I have now lived in my condo for nearly 4 years in Renton. With my new job I have been traveling all over the US and one place in particular I seem to enjoy going to more then anywhere else… NYC.

Whenever I have a customer or even prospect to visit in NYC I literally jump at the chance. Hell I’ll even arm wrestle people over it. When I’m at JFK needing to go back home I actually don’t look forward to going back home, but rather want to stay. That feeling to me indicates it is time for a change.

So… in hopefully September 2009 I will be moving from Renton, WA to one of the fiv boroughs (focusing on Brooklyn right now) and I wont be the only one that is going. My brother (who is finally graduating college in T-1 month) will be joining me on our new quest.

What does it mean for work? Nothing from what I can tell. The cool part of my job is that I travel and the funny thing is that living in NYC means I am 3 hours ahead of office plus with a 109 million people a year traveling through one of the three airports (EWR, LGA and JFK) in the NYC area, flights literally go almost everywhere in the US or around the world. As a matter of fact, the other day it was cheaper to fly from JFK to LAX then it was from SEA to LAX.

It’s a change but it is a change I really look forward to. With the speed I update this blog, it could possibly mean that the next time I’m posting from somewhere in NYC.

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16 Feb 09 All the right things in a week of hell.

Two weeks ago today is when reality caught up with my family and myself. Two weeks ago my dad had a heart attack on board flight DL162 over the middle of Montana. The crew on board that plane is what saved his life. The flight was JFK bound but was instead diverted to Great Falls, MT.

Flight DL162 diverted to Great Falls, MT.

Flight DL162 diverted to Great Falls, MT.

What came next were hours of getting the entire family out to Great Falls. After dropping everything at work I used my iPhone to find out he was in Great Falls, then did a Google search to look up hospitals in that area. In my favor, they only had one major hospital, which I called right when I got out of the car. By 3pm (plane landed in GTF at 2:02pm PST) I knew where he was and that they were taking care of him.

Made all the phone calls / flight arrangements while getting updates from the hospital which wasn’t forecasting a good recovery. By 6pm I had my brother driving from Pullman, WA in a rental (his car wouldn’t make it) from Hertz and 3 plane tickets ordered from Alaska Airlines with two hotel rooms at a local Marriott hotel.

By 11pm Mountain time (10pm Pacific) we were in Montana next to my Dad’s bed seeing him in probably the worst state I had ever seen.

Thankfully over the next few days he got better (faster then the hospital predicted) and we were once again reminded how lucky he was that he was at hospital (Benefis Healthcare) that is able to perform primary angioplasty.

On Thursday the media in Montana got wind of what was going on in their state and my dad was over the news. We also got to meet the entire staff that saved him.

The staff at Benefis.

The staff at Benefis.

By Friday he was allowed to go home and we took a Friday afternoon flight back to Seattle from Helena, MT.

I’m incredibly thankful for all the things that went right. Right flight crew, right doctor on board and an incredibly good hospital (all in the middle of Montana).

This experience also taught me how precious family is and that the time on this earth can be cut off at any moment but I’m glad to still have my Dad for what I hope is a lot more years.

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02 Jan 09 My New Year’s wish

We all have wishes and I only have one for this year and that is the return of some decent customer service / support at companies. With the economic downturn right now (just because it is a new year, doesn’t mean its not a problem anymore) and seeing stores like Linen ‘N Things, KB Toys, Circuit City and other retailers go poof, other retailers must be wondering how they can set themselves apart from “the rest” and have us, the consumer, come into their store and spend money.

A prime example is a new airline that launched towards the end of 2007 called Virgin America. Not only are their prices competitive ($61 one way to SF for MacWorld next week and you arrive at the International Terminal as opposed to one of SFO’s “older” terminals), but their customer service both at the airport and over the phone have been rock solid. If my job takes me to SFO or LAX, I fly with Virgin America. It is the same reason why I will do anything to avoid American Airlines. I fly AA from SEA to JFK a few months ago and the flight attendant spilled a drink all over my lap. Thankfully I was in a window seat and the flight was long to where my pants were damp / dry by the time I got off the plane. However the flight attendant didn’t even apologize. She didn’t say sorry or offer anything (not that I was expecting much) other then an angry look that I made her job more difficult.

Lets not forget post sales support either. Companies like Costco and Nordstrom have great post sales support. Have a rip in your pants, bring it back to Nordstrom. The vacuum cleaner hose has a rip in it the size of a small orange 18 months after you bought it at Costco, bring it back to Costco. These are companies that are still doing very well through this economic downturn. You’d think that Nordstrom would be losing business as if it were todays rage but they aren’t.

So that’s my New Year’s wish, I hope that 2009 will mark the return of good customer support/service into the world of buying consumer goods.

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29 Dec 08 Bluetooth: This installer be run on Windows Vista only

“This installer be run on Windows Vista only”

That is the exact error message that my friend’s Dell Inspiron 530 with Windows Vista Home Premium had when I tried to install an IOGear Bluetooth Adapter (Model GBU221). The device is just a Broadcom device that IOgear has slapped their logo on and the setup was from Broadcom themselves. Going online for a solution proved to be fruitless, various people had this error and some of the solutions were so ridiculous that I wasn’t even going to attempt it.

When attempting to exit the installer a nice little Visual C++ runtime error popped up. Big clue here folks. A quick visit to Vista’s “Programs & Features” option in the Control Panel (come on Microsoft what was wrong with Add/Remove Programs. When I select Classic mode on the left pane I expect Classic wording too) showed me that Microsoft Visual C++ 2005 runtime was installed not once but twice. One was ~460kb and the other was ~2mb. It seems that Dell has created a small problem in their install image. Perhaps they were trying to install both 2005 and 2008 but decided to install 2005 twice. Not sure really. However this could explain that the only other people getting this error (so far at least) are Dell owners. Another reason that anything Dell continues to suck, but that’s a topic for another time.

Solution time:
I proceeded to download Microsoft Visual C++ 2005 SP1 Redistributable Package (x86) and Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 SP1 Redistributable Package (x86). Removed both runtime packages then rebooted, installed (2005 first, then 2008) the two downloaded runtime packages, rebooted but of course once more and suddenly the setup recognized I had Windows Vista and no more runtime error.

Ah the joys of Vista and Dell….

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04 Dec 08 It’s 5:00pm and your flight leaves at 7:30…

and you’re literally in Rockefeller center on the night Christmas tree lighting ceremony.

Imagine the following situation:
- Gigantic crowd, closed subway station at 47-50th because of the chaos at Rockefeller center and streets closed off
- Hotel is 9 street blocks north of you with your luggage (gigantic suitcase)
- The plane at JFK will leave with or without you.

That is the situation I found myself in yesterday. I literally had to push my way through a crowd of thousands of people to get to the hotel to pickup my crud. Finally got there at 5:25. Rushed upstairs got my stuff and thought about options on how to get to JFK.

* Taxi cab – $45, takes about 80 minutes.
* Subway Line A to Howard Beach station – $2 + $5 for Airtrain, takes about 70 minutes
* Subway Line E to Jamaica Station – $2 + $5 for Airtrain, takes about 60 minutes + time to get to Line E
* LIRR to Jamaic Station – ~$8 + $5 for Airtrain, takes about 35 minutes + time to get to Penn Station

Cab was out of the question. Battle came down to Line A (since it was right next to the hotel) or a trek to Penn Station. With the fact that having a giant suitcase on a subway at rush hour is *no* fun at all, I decided on the railroad. Made it to Penn Station at 5:40pm, train left at 5:45pm and I was pulling into Jamaica station at 6:15pm.

I thought to myself the entire way that I can’t even make it in 35 minutes by car or any form of public transportation to Seatac when stuck in Bellevue at 5pm… whereas in a city just barely under 10 million people and about the same distance to the airport I have options and the ability to do exactly that.

Soon, very soon, options wil become available in Seattle….

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14 Sep 08 A new direction

Starting this Monday my already adventurous but short career is going to take me in a new direction. For years I’ve been building up my skills on the *NIX platform becoming increasingly better by the day to the point where I feel comfortable hacking up C code in order for it to compile on say… Solaris 8 (not by choice :-) ). I remember it was only 3 years ago that I was answering phone calls and performing tech support and since then have been doing system administration, with the last 6 months being more storage (Netapp & Hitachi USP) re-implementation & administration.

After my relationship ended in May I thought to myself “If a company offered me a job to travel 50% or more of my time, I’ll take.”. It would be the only reason I’d leave Classmates. Such an event happened in August. An usability study in June turned into a job offer by August after various delays on my side. So this Monday I start. First I need to get acclimated with the product (which is called Likewise) and hopefully I’ll be soon traveling all over. This is a big change career wise for me. Going from system administration to deploying software is a pretty big change but it’s a huge challenge for me. My fear is that I’ll get rusty when it comes to system administration but I’m going to do my best to keep my “A” game.

One thing I hate from all of this is way my resume is starting to look. Sure my last two gigs were over a year but not anywhere near 2 years and that makes me fairly unhappy with myself. That will be my next thing to improve…..

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04 Aug 08 Buh bye Dell

So today I had the pleasure of a recycling company picking up our old Dell inventory (pe X550 through pe X850). It felt great throwing them on a giant stack. Nothing better then going office space on a bunch of crappy pos servers.

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22 Jul 08 The ever changing life

Life would be boring without change and lately I’ve gone through a lot of it. Other than my lack of updating of this blog, things have changed.

Some of the things that have changed, in no specific order:
- In May, after almost 4 years, Cam and I broke up. While she may have written extensively about this in her blog, I feel that there is nothing left to say on it. She cheated on me and that is just simply a deal breaker. Attempts to justify this is simply wrong as there is no excuse for that type of behavior.
- The colors of my condo have finally changed. The living and dining room was this nasty mustardy dark dark yellow, bordering light brown, now its bright yellow with a tint of orange. The bedroom went from a dark brown (with green) to a ice blue. Yum. Pics will be made soon.
- As of today a new couch. This thing kicks ass; fantastic to lay on.

My focus at work has also changed. Previously I was doing just system administration stuff but over the course of the last few months I’ve taken on more responsibility in the area of storage. So now I work with HDS, Netapp and a few Sun X4500s. Each have their own specific uses and it truly is exciting stuff, especially since who used to administer it left room for some major improvements to be made.

I have realized that I’d like to travel more. I am definitely not looking for a new job as I’m actually having a good time at Classmates with the one exception that if a job landed on my doorstep that would require me to travel a good amount (like 50%+) then I’d go for it.

Welp thats all for now.

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03 Jul 08 Deploying Zabbix once again

So 18 months ago I deployed Zabbix at McGraw-Hill. Now I am doing exactly the same, only with a bit more hardware at Classmates.com

The setup.
Run Zabbix 1.5.3 in all 3 environments. Don’t customize so we can upgrade to 1.6 when that’s released in Q4 08.

Web / zabbix_serverd process server
1 for each environment (corp, prod, va). Machines are HL DL385 with an exception in VA where is a DL365. They are Opterons with RAID 1+0 and about 8gb of ram with dual nics connected to 1gbit ports. The work load isn’t here, its just the messenger. Runs RHEL 4.6.

Database server
3x Sun Fire T2000 servers, one for each environment. Running Solaris 10 05/08 and an source compiled optimized coolthreads build of MySQL 5.0.51b. Specs are 16 core Ultrasparc T1 procs with 8GB of ram again. Chuck Goolsbee would love these servers due to the amount of lower power they use but yet are so very functional These make perfect MySQL database servers. With about 200-300 hosts doing about 20-30 checks per host in each environment, they’ll need it too.

All three are in a distributed monitoring environment, where two child/slaves report back to the parent/master node. The big kahuna node will be in my corp environment with the child/slaves reporting back; similar to how our BI dept collects data.

Rolled out zabbix agent installation via cfengine packaged in a RPM for our RHEL4 based installations and added auto discovery rules as such in Zabbix. With 10 minutes I had an entire environment reporting various items back to the server. Unfortunately the configuration of server wasn’t this quick :-) .

Things left over to do:
- The T2000s come with two filler trays for two more SAS drives. Plan to get 2x 146gb 10K SAS drives and run a ZFS pool on them for the MySQL db.
- Perform nightly db dumps to each environment’s Sun Fire X4500, Sun’s not so eco friendly 48TB disk drive monster.

Observations
-With corp completely done. The load on the mysql database server is about 7.x-8.x, thus there is still a full 50% left for expansion.
-Database is growing at a rate of 100MB a day, in part because historical data takes up a ton of space. This should slow down to a crawl on day 90 when it takes trending data (about 10% the size of history data) until day 180. The total DB size I am guess will be around 10-12GB.

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