Hadoop = Coolness

Stu posted a great description of the logging system he built to make sense of our massive volume of mail logs using Hadoop.  And I gave highscalability.com some follow-up details on how our logging architecture evolved to this point… but the real reason we switched to Hadoop:

> Why didn’t you choose to go to a multiple database
> server
architecture instead of relying on one
> database server?

We
knew that was an option, but we felt that moving to a partitioned MySQL
data set would only buy us time, and we’d still need a more scalable
solution at some point down the road.  And to be honest, the coolness
factor of building something with Hadoop really excited us and that
definitely weighed into our decision.

Ya, we’re geeks.

Btw, Hadoop is now a top level Apache project, no longer a sub-project of Lucene.  Congrats to Doug Cutting and crew!

Update your links

Please update your links so we can get PageRank love.  We are no longer Webmail.us.  We are now Mailtrust.

We made this change for several reasons, which Tier1 Research explains well…

Rackspace has also rebranded its Webmail.us brand, picked up up recently via acquisition. Rackspace decided that there was little equity in the name, not to mention tons of negatives – ‘webmail,’ ‘.us’ vs ‘.com,’ and the connotation of a low-end product. The rebranding of Webmail.us to Mailtrust signifies a major move upmarket to enterprise, SMB and mid-tier customers who are now Rackspace’s bread and butter business. Webmail.us sound like it should be a free service, but who wouldn’t pay for ‘Mailtrust’? The importance of branding is sometimes lost on firms undergoing rapid growth like Rackspace, so T1R gives it a tip of the hat for keeping its eyes on the branding ball.

Mailtrust is the first step in the evolution to ‘IT Hosting’

The rebranding also signifies the last step in the completion of Rackspace’s first acquisition. Mailtrust, which now has 75 employees, will operate as the stand-alone mail arm of the company under Pat Matthews, who is the founder and CEO of Webmail.us . It will also adopt Rackspace’s Noteworthy brand for its proprietary mail platform.

Along with a new corporate identity, Mailtrust disclosed the introduction of a Microsoft Exchange offering. This is not a new offering per se, but essentially the transfer of the Microsoft Exchange product line from Rackspace to the stewardship of Matthews and Mailtrust (which also puts more a few dozen more employees from Rackspace that were focused on Exchange and mail, under Matthews’ watch).

Mailtrust, as T1R has discussed in previous research, will be offering both Exchange and Noteworthy. It has no intentions of trying to displace Exchange, but wants to target different sub-segments of the market. This will also allow Mailtrust to serve customers with diverse messaging needs that straddle both the Microsoft and proprietary platforms or when a single organization has needs that coincide with both platforms.

T1R believes this is a very strong move. Not only does Rackspace widen the scope of its market coverage, but it insulates the company from placing all its eggs in the Microsoft basket. The new messaging division also fits well with the Rackspace rebrand. Rackspace has ambitions of expanding beyond racking and stacking servers (yes, a relatively simplistic portrayal, but it illustrates our point) to being able to serve a wider range of IT infrastructure and application needs. Mail is a logical next step and Rackspace is taking a very deliberate, calculated and well-thought-out approach (as its its habit) to getting the email part of the equation done right before it moves beyond this.

2 more Blackberry tips

> Sent from my BlackBerry wireless device

To get rid of this tagline on your outgoing Blackberry emails, log into your Blackberry provider’s website (from a computer, not your phone, because they hide this setting when you log in from your phone in order to make it hard to
change)…

  Sprint: http://sprint.blackberry.com/
  Verizon: http://www.blackberry.com/go/vzw/
  or just google for "blackberry yourcarrier"

…click on Edit to edit your email account settings …then just delete your signature.

Also, something that I find handy is setting the following address as my "Auto BCC" address: myaccount+sent-blackberry@webmail.us   This stores a copy of all the mail I send from my Blackberry into a folder in my webmail account called "sent-blackberry".  You can do this with any folder, as long as the folder is all lowercase and contains no special characters such as spaces.

Blackberry Sync / Filtering after delivery

I have two new email habits to report…

Blackberry Sync

So as of last week, I no longer add myself as an invitee on every meeting I add to my webmail calendar in order to get the event to show up on my Blackberry.  Now I use our Blackberry Sync product to keep my Contacts, Calendar and Tasks in sync with the data in my webmail account.  It’s in private beta right now and still has a few kinks to work out, but I already love it.

Filtering after delivery

I got sick of having to read mail twice because my Blackberry doesn’t mark things as read in my webmail account.  This was happening because of the funky multi-mailbox forwarding system I set up to simulate folders on my Blackberry.  Blackberry would check these secondary accounts and mark mail as read in there, but it wouldn’t mark it as read in my primary account.  Over the weekend I ditched those secondary accounts and I deleted all of my filtering rules in webmail.  Now everything comes to my primary inbox and I have Blackberry checking just that account.  When I read something on my Blackberry now it marks it as read in webmail.

But I still love folders.  So to manage my 100+ folders I installed imapfilter on my desktop.  I transfered all of my webmail filter rules into this and I also configured it to not move any mail from my inbox which is flagged or unread.  Throughout the day now, after I’ve caught up with everything in my inbox, I simply press a button in my quicklaunch bar and woosh… all my mail gets filed away into folders.

I expect these two changes to save me at least 20 minutes per
day.  And it will save me even more time when I’m traveling and using my Blackberry as my
primary email client.

Coolest mom ever

Last year for Christmas I bought my mom a fast new Dell.  A year later, the computer suffers from “mysterious slowness,” random popups and a couple inches of browser toolbars.  So this year I’ve given her the gift that every mom should have:  Linux…

 

Ubuntu pre-release updates are good.

Since upgrading my laptop (a Dell Latitude 420) last month to Gutsy (code name for Ubuntu 7.10), my wireless network has been crapping out a lot.  I try to never shut down; I use suspend instead.  But one out of five times when I wake the laptop back up after being suspended, the wireless connection breaks beyond repair.  Restarting the network services doesn’t fix it, reloading the driver doesn’t fix it – Only a reboot fixes it.

So after much frustration, I configured Update Manager to install pre-release updates in addition to the standard updates to see if there was a fix that hasn’t officially been released yet.  Within minutes it said there was a pre-release update to Network Manager.  I installed it… problem solved.  It has been 3 days and the wireless network has been perfect.  No weirdness from the 100 or so other pre-release updates it’s pulled down either.

Conclusion: pre-release updates are good.

System > Administration > Synaptic Package Manager > Settings > Repositories > Updates > Pre-release updates (gutsy-proposed)

USA.net spammed me!

Perimeter eSecurity are the folks who bought USA.net.  I’d love to know where they harvested/bought my email address from.  Especially since it is one of my aliases that I never use.

Note to self: Don’t spam our competitors.  It might end up on a blog.

From: Perimeter eSecurity <PerimeterEsecurity@perimeteresecurity.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2007 2:20pm
Subject: Effortless Migration to Microsoft Exchange 2007

We don’t want you to miss out on our Email offers!
Please add our email address,
PerimetereSecurity@perimeteresecurity.com, to your address book or "safe list" today.

</p><p><p><p>Preview Edition</p></p></p><p>


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