Daily Archives Sunday, September 2008

OOW08: Day -1: Jet Lag = 1, OOW = 1

Oops, forgot to post about Saturday in San Fran at OOW08.

One of the things I like to do when visiting another country is sit down and read some local newspapers to get a feel for what’s happening locally. Though American news filters through the syndicated news channels back to Australia, the pure breadth of coverage is not there.

Of course the news in the States right now is all doom-and-gloom about the economy and Wall Street. Both papers I browsed were 75%, if not 95% about the economic crisis, with a large focus on stocks, federal intervention, politics and the blame game. I was surprised by the inclusion of The Wall Street Journal story As Times Turn Tough,New York’s Wealthy Economize. “Oh boo hoo poor American rich people, you can’t afford a nose job, I feel so sorry for you.” It took me most of the day to find a story that considered the impact on the average American thanks to Time publishing Forget Wall Street. What about the rest of us?

Of course it’s also a fascinating time with the race for the American Presidency, from both inside the States and out. One thing I’ve always found odd as an Aussie travelling to other countries is how patriotic other countries are, and in turn how much the general population is willing to visibly show their preference for political parties. Across from the hotel I’m staying at somebody has placed an Obama for President poster 8 stories up on a balcony nobody can see, and yesterday I spotted this poster near China Town. I just can’t in living memory remember somebody in Australia putting something similar up, like a “I Love Kevin” poster, or a glowing picture of Little Johnny’s glowing mug.

Of course OOW is far away from the local economic and political issues.

Saturday afternoon proved a great day to catch up with fellow Oracle ACEs and bloggers, Doug Burns, Tim Hall, Lucas Jellema, Marcel Kratchovil, with much speculation about the big OOW announcements.

Given that I’ve just sat in on the Sunday ACE Director meeting where some of the announcements have been either made or hinted at, it’s a fun game to think back to our discussions yesterday to see how correct they were. Some of the announcements are completely embargoed until the keynotes so we can’t talk about them. And as I have such poor memory of what we can/can’t talk about, I’ll keep mum till each keynote .

Monday’s my Back to Basics Web Services presentation and the start of the Oracle Develop sessions I’ll attend. Should be an interesting day as long as the jet lag doesn’t kick in.

Disclaimer: I’m at OOW08 as part of the Oracle ACE Director program.

Oracle Open World 2008, Day 1 : User Groups and ACE Director Briefing

Today was the first day of Oracle Open World in San Francisco, with most of today’s sessions being organized by the various user groups. For me, as usual on the first day over here, I was up at around 4am, so I used the time to get my demos sorted out for the two sessions [...]

Mix to the Rescue

On my way to PDX, I caught this tweet from the OCP Advisor (aka Mohan Dutt):

Naturally intrigued, I clicked through on the link to find an “idea” from Debra Lilley called simply:
Get me out of this lift, please , stuck in lift #11 at the Marriott
Eagle-eyed users of Mix, namely John Bedford, an Oracle employee, [...]

OOW 2008: ACE Director Day and Oracle in the Cloud

LewisC’s An Expert’s Guide to Oracle Technology
It’s the second day of my trip to OOW. The real conference starts for me tomorrow but today I got to attend the ACE Director product briefing.
I was hoping for some new stuff (like maybe a big announce…

OOW 2008: ACE Director Day and Oracle in the Cloud

LewisC’s An Expert’s Guide to Oracle Technology
It’s the second day of my trip to OOW. The real conference starts for me tomorrow but today I got to attend the ACE Director product briefing.
I was hoping for some new stuff (like maybe a big announce…

Another 2008 Innovation …

… and the first shockingly bad photo on the blog for this conference, too.

With some gentle encouragement from Mads, we decided to set up and try Skype video. As well as making it easier and cheaper for us to stay in touch, we’re both finding it weird, fun and reassuring - a completely different experience than a phone call. Better still, the whole family can join in the call at the same time (which is normally quite difficult).

As you can see, it’s certainly put a smile on Mads’ face ;-) When the video connection first hooked up, there was just a cuddly toy at each end, with no human to be seen. Definitely a shared sense of humour! It’s not obvious from the picture, but she has Gordon the Celtic bear in one hand and The Rabbit in the other.

Oh, and before Mr. Gorbachev interrupts, yes, he did try to tell me to use a webcam over a year ago when I was working from home so we could have meetings across the Atlantic but then he was my boss and have you *seen* him? Give me Mads, any day ;-) In other words, yes, I know, video conferencing is so old hat, but I’m always behind the curve and I needed a genuine incentive for it.

P.S. Personal/Oracle blog seperation is suspended for the next 5 days.

OOW Day 1

Well, I’ve attended my first couple of presentations - Dan Norris’ "Building an Oracle Real Application Clusters Environment on VMWare for Free". I suppose this is one of those subjects I knew a little about, but I haven’t played with VMWare really enough and I was quite keen to hear Dan speak again. He’s a good presenter despite last year’s presentation not really being right for me. Now I know why they have those 90 minute IOUG presentations though, even though they are far too long for me - to cope with the large number of questions from the audience, some of them only tangentially related to the subject. Dan coped really well with them, though. As Dan pointed out, the presentation slides will be posted in the near future, so you might want to take a look. Good stuff. I did plan on catching up with Dan but there was quite a huddle of questioners at the end - always a good sign.

Next was Tuomas Pystynen talking about the different experience of presenting at European User Group events. He talked about OUGF, Slovenian and UKOUG conferences. This presentation came under the User Group umbrella and (although it was very sparsely attended and two of the attendees were Ronan Miles (UKOUG Chairman) and me (both of whom know the subject quite well already), I thought it was fascinating to see the conferences compared and Tuomas is always a funny speaker. In fact, it was interesting to hear some of Ronan’s informal thoughts on the future of the conference.

Now I’m going to take a short break, clean up and attend Alex G’s "Under the Hood of Oracle Clusterware" presentation at 13:00. After that, Alex and I will be driven off at high speed to attend a barbecue at a friends house, which will make a nice change from the usual atmosphere at the conference. Unfortunately it means that as well as missing the opening keynote and welcome reception (not too worried there) I’m probably going to have to skip the Bloggers Meet-up too. Apologies to anyone I was planning to meet there, but there should be plenty of other opportunities this week. Then again, looking at the social schedule for the whole week, it’s pretty packed!

The Great Jet Lag Experiment

OK, so it’s not exactly the LHC, but I’m running my own experiment this year and the results are pretty impressive so far.

After last year’s Oracle Openworld Jet-lag Fiasco, which involved me being tired, emotional and hopelessly drunk at 7pm every day, after a couple of pints, I decided I needed to approach this year’s conference differently.

a) Take flights at more sensible times. In the end, I was awake at 4:30 yesterday morning, but I always wake up early when I’m flying. It was definitely better to get a lunch-time flight out of Edinburgh, though, and the Star Alliance changes are easier at Heathrow now that you stay in Terminal 1. It was certainly a lot more successful than Tim’s trip!

b) Buy a discounted business class ticket. United’s is definitely looking tired these days and I’m not surprised they’re upgrading it, but the extra space and calm helped a lot and I managed to get something to eat for a change.

c) Stay out as late as possible when I get here. Tim Hall sent me a mail to say they were going to the pub and so I went straight there at 6:30pm and ended up getting home at 1am! Hooray! Finally, a really late night in SF (well, late for me). It meant I didn’t wake up until 6am today and, despite the fact that I still know I’ve had a long trip, I’m feeling much better than last year, even with a hangover and a cold I’ve been carrying all week ;-)

d) This is the weird one. I decided that I was going to try to fool myself into San Francisco time as early as possible, so changed every time - laptop, phone etc - straight away and tried not to think about what time it is at home. Now I pride myself on not being stupid enough to think myself into a good state but, blow me down with a feather - it appears to be working. Mads has been told that she has to mess her hair up when we use Skype video so it looks like she’s just woken up ;-)

It was touch and go whether I was going to make it here for all sorts of personal reasons and the decision was only finalised a few days ago, but there were several moments in the pub last night with Marcel, Chris, Tim and Alex, when I felt the cheeriest I’ve felt for weeks so I’m really glad I did make it and I owe them thanks for such a good time and a good laugh. That was all I needed really, the opportunity to rip the p*** out of Tim for a few hours. Cheers, lads ;-)

OOW08 - Registration, dinner and drinks

The weather on Saturday was good, not very warm, but not too cold either. I went down to Moscone to register. It was still quiet, which will be very different from the next days ;-)As John didn’t arrive yet (he drove from LA to San Francisco, a 10h dri…

onwards and upwards

After over five varied and enjoyable years working for Siebel (and then Oracle) in Expert Services, I am changing jobs. However, I will continue to work for Oracle as part of the group responsible for ‘Social CRM’.Although this was a internal transfer,…