Archive for November, 2007

I have a pig…

… and his name is Mohammed.

You can call him Jesus, if you like, it’s just the same old shit.

This god is either blind or deaf

Sonny Perdue to God: “I said G-E-O-R-G-I-A, not Bangladesh.”

Obviously God is American: most Americans would not be able to place Bangladesh on a map. Well, maybe not even Georgia ;).

debugger;

I guess some developer at alitalia.com forgot to remove a statement from one of the website’s scripts:

alitalia-debugger.png

I noticed because I have Firebug installed and it popped up the Javascript debugger window while loading the home page.

It’s a race to the bottom

Mary Jo Foley: “If you’re Microsoft — especially a member of the Vista team — there’s no way you can help but gloat. Very few Softies or their loyal followers are gloating publicly. But there’s no way they aren’t enjoying this turning of the tables.”

21B3gn+D6eL._AA_SL160_.jpgNow this is just ridiculous. Softies are gloating because Leopard is as buggy as Vista, if not worse? I’m sure Mary Jo’s article is very much tongue-in-cheek, but reading some of the MS fanboys’ blogs linked by Dave Winer, it’s no doubt that they are damn serious about it: they seem to be glad that Vista has reached parity with OS X not by virtue of becoming less obnoxious, but by virtue of Leopard being bad.

218Eqq+t7JL._AA_SL160_.jpgAnd so they are happy, while everyone’s life—or at least the life of everyone who upgraded to either Vista or Leopard—is just a little more miserable.

Bidplaza: Is it for real?

Via an article on corriere.it, I just learned of the existence of Bidplaza. If you do not read Italian, don’t worry, it’s exactly the same mechanism as limbo unique, except for the cost. Basically, the player who makes the lowest unique offer for an item wins.

While I wasn’t able to determine how much placing a bid on a limbo unique item costs, it’s very clear from Bidplaza’s website that each bid will set you back 2€ (that’s almost USD 3 nowadays).

Since online forums in Italy are ablaze with questions about Bidplaza, with people wondering whether it’s a scam or a legitimate business, I figured I could do some research about it. Here are my conclusions. Take them with a grain of salt and remember that I am not a lawyer, I an not in any way involved in Bidplaza, nor I have any other knowledge beside what can be gleaned from the Web.

What is the business model?

The business model is very clear, so people should stop wondering how they can give away cameras, computers and cars for such low prices. If they put up an iPod Touch 16GB (list price 399€) for bidding and 200 people bid on it, the site will have made a 1€ profit. If 400 people bid, they will have made a 100% profit on the sale. Of course, this implies that they will get a high enough number of bidders, but if they have some capital they can afford losing some money at the start while the media-driven buzz heats up and the site becomes sufficiently popular.

Is this an auction site?

This is not an auction in any way. It’s more akin to a lottery, as guessing the lowest possible amount that no one else will bid on is more a matter of luck than anything else. I’m not sure there can’t be a playing strategy that gives a better change of winning, but if there is it isn’t obvious and the odds must be only marginally better than a strategy based on picking values at random. If it’s a lottery indeed, is it legal according to Italian law? I have no idea, I’m not a lawyer.

Who is behind Bidplaza?

The bidplaza.it domain is registered by a company named Es Media Srl, based in Segrate (MI). They do not seem to have a website, but if the company is real, anyone could go to the Chamber of Commerce in Milan and ask for information about it. However, their CEO Semih Sadi has a profile on LinkedIn and he’s listed as the admin contact for the domain.

The only entry mentioning Bidplaza on LinkedIn is for Sadok Kohen. Sadok has a blog and if he keeps an eye on his incoming links and notices this one, he is welcome to visit and leave a comment.

By the way, where do these guys come from, since their names are obviously not of Italian origin?

Turns out they’re apparently Turkish. Just to be clear, this is a fact I have no problems with.

Who are all those smiling Scandinavians driving Porsches and Ferraris show on the website?

I have no idea. Various articles on the Italian Web hint at Bidplaza being an emanation of some nordic entity, but I could find no trace of this. One article references bidplaza.co.uk but that website is just a page with an address and some phone numbers. The bidplaza.com domain is registered to the same people who registered bidplaza.it and indeed www.bidplaza.com redirects to the Italian version.

My educated guess is that their business just started, but they wanted to show some history to make it look more legitimate. Unfortunately, you just can’t hide anything in the era of Google and it’s not true that on the Internet nobody knows you’re a dog. If you’re a dog, somebody will find out sooner or later and this kind of strategy risks backfiring. Of course it’s entirely possible that those Swedes are real and I welcome Sadok or Sami or any other representative from the company to come here and tell us more about them.

Would you play on Bidplaza?

Matter of fact, I already did. I registered on the site and gave my mobile phone number, so I could get the 2€ bonus, which I used to place one bet. Unfortunately I bet on an amount which was not unique, so I lost. I guess that if it cost much less than 2€ per bet, I’d be tempted to try playing some more. I would feel relatively safe in doing so, since I could simply budget 10€ via PayPal and not risk anything more, but I’m not a gambler.

Update: I found where the happy Scandinavians come from: bidster.com. The graphics of bidster.com and bidplaza.it are obviously the same, so I wonder what exactly the relationship between bidster.com and bidplaza.it is. A bit more transparency would be appreciated.


Scarlet

Kudos to my colleagues Ugo and Sergio for releasing Scarlet:

Sourcesense is proud to announce the first beta of Scarlet, a clustering solution for Atlassian Jira bringing high-availability and scalability to the award-winning Jira issue tracker. The solution is based on Terracotta DSO, the Open Source clustering framework from Terracotta, enabling easy and trasparent scalable Java solutions.

Scarlet provides a full-fledged clustering solution for Jira, bridging an important gap when it comes to enterprise architectures based on high-availability: rated as one of the most popular requests from Jira users, clustering support makes Jira a truly distributed enterprise-class solution for organizations relying on simple yet effective scalable architectures.

Scarlet is distributed as an Open Source extension to Jira under the Mozilla Public License 1.1 and it’s available from http://confluence.atlassian.com/x/woQuBg. Jira users and developers are encouraged to dowload the extension and provide feedback: Sourcesense is committed to support and manage contributions, under a transparent and meritocratic Open Development process. Commercial support and additional services are available from http://www.sourcesense.com.

One of the interesting facts about Scarlet is the fact that it’s based on Terracotta DSO, an insanely cool distributed object system, network-attached memory, or what you call it, and Open Source to boot. Ever since I first heard about it, I was under the impression that it could be a great solution to a large class of problems, but was never able to personally verify this assumption. With Scarlet we have a great example of its validity.

Autumn colors

FoliageWhat best way to spend a november Saturday than taking a trip to the Lake of Como under a beautiful sun and having lunch out in the open right by the lakeside?

If you happen to go by there, take one of the boats that leaves from Como and stops in Tavernola, Cernobbio, Moltrasio and Torno. They leave every 30 minutes from one of the main piers in Como’s central Piazza Cavour. Disembark in Torno and go eating at Hotel Belvedere, which is on the southern side of the small square where boat pier is. It’s a quite inconspicuous 1-star hotel but it’s got pretty good dishes prepared from typical lake fish, like lavarello, agone and a variety of perch. You won’t find these anywhere else but around lakes.

The beautiful colors of the autumn leaves prompted me to shoot a fair number of pictures that I’ll be sorting in the coming days and posting to this set.