I'm currently working for an established networking equipment vendor after having entered the company via a startup acquisition. My experience includes from mobile, enterprise, web, ops, people management, and lately, network automation. I'm coming up on 10 years work experience.
I'm looking for an organization that is trying to make a dent in the universe. I expect to have to wear multiple hats and learn lots of things on the fly.
POPFile has an IMAP module that makes something like this pretty easy to set up. You just need to connect POPFile your GMail account, set up some buckets for POPFile, and then tell it how to map those buckets to IMAP folders.
It takes a little time to train the filters, but once that's done, the accuracy is pretty good. My only problem now is coming up with a good labeling system.
Yes, it does, and for power users they can certainly go that way. Although, POPFile doesn't support OAuth for IMAP at this point so you have to trust your configuration with your GMail password.
This may not be a perfectly generalized solution, but is it possible to structure your system such that when upgrading from version i to version i+1, version i of your app is compatible with both versions i and i+1 of your database and vice versa?
Say, for example, your factoring a column into it's own table. Don't just drop the column, set up a trigger to synchronize the original column value with a value from one of the rows in your new table.
You could then finally drop the column in version i+2.
I seem to remember finding a book on database refactorings that covered this technique in more detail. It was online so you could try Googling for it.
When your company has no revenue, the "obvious" answer is to sell as hard as you can until your cashflow positive. But it's not going to help unless the product actually works.
This seems to be the gist of the comments here, but I'd like to propose a third requirement: operations.
Ultimately, a business has to become self-sustaining, and that can't happen until the acts of building the product and selling the product become sufficiently well defined that they can be handed over to a professional staff. (See also: E-Myth)
It'd be interesting to see how far we could take a loosely coupled network for Wordpress installs towards this goal. How actually to make that work is something I've been pondering lately.
Also, I think the work that Dave Winer's been doing around realtime RSS is a huge step in this direction.
I know that some of the larger operations get live market data from Bloomberg and Reuters. You may want to take a look at https://loginabout.reuters.com/Home/RMDS.aspx although I have no idea how much it costs.
I'm definitely having second thoughts. I'm probably not going to upgrade until my contract expires next summer, but when I do, I'll have options. A Palm Pre or one of the forthcoming Android phones plus Verizon will probably be enough to get me off the iPhone.
Stack: - (Current) Ruby, Ansible, Puppet, JunOS, NETCONF, SLAX, Linux - (Previously) Java, C#, Symbian/C++
Resume: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mpfefferle Contact: matthew.pfefferle@gmail.com
I'm currently working for an established networking equipment vendor after having entered the company via a startup acquisition. My experience includes from mobile, enterprise, web, ops, people management, and lately, network automation. I'm coming up on 10 years work experience.
I'm looking for an organization that is trying to make a dent in the universe. I expect to have to wear multiple hats and learn lots of things on the fly.