Worst. Presentation. Ever.

As you may know I’m a skeptic about “Cloud Computing”. I’m not skeptical about the technology, I’m mostly skeptical about how the concept is being seized by the marketers and bent to define anything and everything. It is as if the term is suddenly a magical spell that can make all your economic woes be cured. Cloud Computing, as it is practiced by Google for example, makes a ton of sense. But it seems as if the entire industry has decided that cloudiness is the next big thing and they have to jump on the bandwagon, even if they have no idea what the bandwagon is, or where it is going.

I saw this presentation posted on Rich Miller’s excellent blog, DatacenterKnowledge, entitled “What the heck is the InterCloud anyway?” (perhaps Rich shares my skepticism?) and I as I generally respect what Cisco does, I watched it.

My first thought: Douglas Adams is in his grave, launched into perpetual rotation.

I have said many times that I’d rather spend an hour in a dentist’s chair being drilled upon than sit through 30 minutes of a PowerPoint presentation. Steaming piles of presentational crap such as this is the reason why. I would hope that an organization with the resources of Cisco could produce something that is not only aesthetically reasonable, but also clearly communicates complex concepts. This presentation appears that its creator swallowed a giant bowl of industry buzzwords & clipart, downed an ipecac chaser, and then barfed them up onto the screen. Just about every rule of thumb concerning effective presentation is broken here, on damn near every slide.

If he’s trying to convince me to lose my skepticism about cloud computing, it isn’t working.

So what about the actual content, not just the poor use of media? I would hope it makes more sense when accompanied by a speaker, who can lay out their ideas verbally to try and make sense of the jumbled mess on-screen. In reality I see a lot of hand-waving, assumptions, and glossing over of details. I guess if you call something a cloud because it runs virtualized in a datacenter, then you can make the logical leap to multi-tenant clouds, and then “InterClouds”. But seriously, why would say a Fortune 500 company, who is subject to all sorts of external scrutiny concerning the integrity of their data, want to have that data just out there drifting about on who knows whose hardware? A virtualized OS with virtualized storage, in a virtualized cloud spread over multiple sites in an Enterprise or InterCloud… sounds great if you are the guy selling the hardware to make it happen [cough]Cisco[/cough] but how about the guy who is writing the Purchase Orders to buy it? To them it should sound terrifying, especially to their auditors, and probably does. There are a whole lot of buzzwords being thrown around here, but very little hard and useful data.

This is yet another product marketer hitching themselves onto a buzzword bandwagon, and creating new buzzwords in the process, while punting the hard work of actually defining, building, and operating buzzword-compliance to others.

Car Photo of the Day: Nice Paint!

I never did note the make and model of this truck (30’s Chevy IIRC) because to be perfectly honest, old trucks hold no special place in my heart. But I can recall spending quite a bit of time looking when I saw it at our local home town car show for two reasons:
1. The mechanical restoration was very well done, in that it was not OVERdone as so many cars are these days.
2. Almost in violation of what I just said, the paint was truly gorgeous.

Here was a flat lacquer job that had a deep lustrousness to it that you could swim in. Two-tone blue/black with a business name hand painted on the doors, it was exquisite. My photo does not do the paint justice though, especially since yours truly is reflected in the fender, big floppy hat and all.

Glad to see CorvairDad pull off a win on this weekend’s CPotD. And here I thought it was an easy one. 😉

Speaking of the Going To The Sun Rally, this is for Mark C…

St. Mary's Lake, Glacier Park, Montana

THIS is that viewpoint I was telling you about when we were driving down the east side of Logan Pass, but somehow missed the turn for. I said to you, “as a photographer, you’ll recognize this vista” and then managed to go right past it (was I driving or you?)

Anyway, this is that view I promised you and failed to deliver. Note this was from the 2006 Rally when all of the northwest was blanketed by smoke from forest fires that were burning everywhere that year.

Speaking of photography, I’ll hopefully be picking up that new camera soon, Stay tuned.

Car Photo of the Day: Eagle? Jet? Rocket Ship?

I can not recall what sort of car this was on, sorry, but my first instinct says “Oldsmobile”. The shape of the ornament took me aback as it seems to morph from one item to another depending upon how you look at it. I don’t know if it is stock, or an aftermarket add-on. I’ll defer to those who know, so feel free to clue me in.

This was shot in Libby, Montana at the lunch put on by The Libby Igniters car club for the Going To The Sun rally a few years back. The Igniters are a great bunch of folks and they lay out an AWESOME barbeque, with amazing food and deserts that’ll blow you away. Their cars are nice too! I recall hearing that they are the second or third oldest car club in the USA.

Car Photo of the Day: Joy

These two guys spent an entire week with a smile plastered across their faces. They attended the 2006 Going To The Sun Rally is this lovely little Coventry-built car and always motioned us to pass them whenever we came up behind them. When I finally asked them why, they said because they loved to hear the exhaust note of the E-type as it roared by. True car guys!

Yes, they are all low-hanging fruit, but lets name all the cars in the photo shall we?