B’musings

January 29, 2009

DAOS Estimator Results for Domino 8.5

Filed under: Lotus — Mike Burford @ 1:42 pm

IBM have made a very handy utility available for estimating the disk space savings for an existing Domino server if it were to be upgraded to 8.5 and Domino Attachment and Object Service (DAOS) enabled. 

I ran into a few problems to start with as the initial version of the tool would hang during the process, but version 1.1 is now available  and works well (albeit with a small numerical display issue in the final table – anything over 1 million loses the end digit(s)).  

Here are the results I got after running the Estimator against a mail file directory on an 8.0.2 server with 1,384 mail files:

Total DB’s analyzed:  1,384

Total DB’s skipped due to errors:  0

Total Size of NSF’s Examined:  335.9 GB

Total Attachments found:  1,027,758

Total Duplicate Attachments found:  664,369

Total DAOS Eligible Attachments:  1,027,758

Estimated Size of DAOSified NSF’s:  101.8 GB

Estimate Size of DAOS dir:  102.0 GB

Total Disk Savings:  145.9 GB

 

That’s a 43.4% saving in disk space!

The Wisdom of Crowds – James Surowiecki

Filed under: Reading,Social Networking — Mike Burford @ 9:59 am

I’ve been a bit slow with my reading lately, but managed to catch up on this book over Christmas.  There are lots of reviews of it on the Internet so I won’t go into detail here, but there’s some great stuff in this book for anyone who is interested in group dynamics. One of the key points that stood out for me was:

“The idea of the wisdom of the crowds is not that a group will always give you the right answer but that on average it will consistently come up with a better answer than any individual will provide.”

He discusses the importance of diversity in group decision making so that outcomes aren’t limited by subject experts; how strong leaders can negatively impact the decision making by encouraging the group to lean towards the leader’s perspective; and how too much information reduces the accuracy of the decision making process.

I remember the argument when Wikipedia started out that the contribution of everyday people to an online encyclopedia instead of leaving it up to the knowledgeable experts would result in the “dumbing down” of both Wikipedia and those who referred to it.  Surowiecki gives various examples of why this isn’t usually the case:

“A survey on the question of overconfidence by economist Terrance Odean found that physicians, nurses, lawyers, engineers, entrepreneurs, and investment bankers all believed that they knew more than they did.  Similarly, a recent study of foreign-exchange traders found that 70 percent of the time, the traders overestimated the accuracy of their exchange-rate predictions.  In other words, it wasn’t just that they were wrong; they also didn’t have any idea how wrong they were.  And that seems to be the rule among experts.  The only forecasters whose judgments are routinely well calibrated are expert bridge players and weathermen.  It rains on 30 percent of the days when weathermen have predicted a 30 percent change of rain.”

He presents some very good examples from business and industry and it was an enjoyable book to read.  I highly recommend it.

January 5, 2009

Good checklist for Quickr 8.1 install on Windows

Filed under: Lotus,Social Networking — Mike Burford @ 12:24 pm
Tags:

I made the most of some downtime over Christmas to build a demo Quickr 8.1 server.  I always refer to the infocenter, but came across a great checklist/walkthrough for the installation here, set up by Michael Urspringer.  I found it really helpful for a quick review and check of the installation and configuration process and even picked up on a couple of things I’d missed.  It’s an excellent Wiki and I highly recommend it.

Theme: Rubric. Blog at WordPress.com.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.