This is funny!
by philip on Jan.26, 2010, under Uncategorized
I am curious to see what Apple is announcing tomorrow, just like everyone else. This list though, puts things into perspective – you can most likely peg me with the #14 crowd…
http://www.thedoghousediaries.com/?p=1234
VMWare uninstall error 26000
by philip on Sep.30, 2009, under Uncategorized
Did a quick search online and found nothing useful on this- If you are having trouble uninstalling VMWare Server 2 from a Vista machine and you got the Error 26000 message, here is the solution:
1. Disable UAC
2. Reboot
3. Uninstall
Hope some of you find this useful.
Using IT To Add Value – Even In Challenging Times
by philip on Apr.29, 2009, under Business, Productivity, Technology, Work, recession, strategies, web

Ready or not, here the world comes...
InformationWeek posted this entry:
The Value Of IT Investments survey, by ISACA, a nonprofit association of IT professionals, found that more than 25% of companies are increasing IT investments in 2009.
What does this tell me? that 75% of the companies surveyed are not increasing their IT investments.
Maybe it’s because I breathe IT day in and day out, the value that IT adds is quite obvious to me. My regular customers still all agree with this of course, as the demand for Tekglo’s services has been increasing, even in this economic climate.
What is not evident though, is the reasons many reporters have cited in the media regarding companies cutting IT budgets in order to “stay competitive”. To stay afloat I can understand, but stay competitive??
As if the trend isn’t evident enough, regardless of the “economic conditions”, the general bearing of every industry, from transportation to fast food services, is to take more and more business functions and transactions online– whether it is CRM, ERP, sales, marketing, corporate communications, etc. If the business is to stay competitive, business leaders with any kind of foresight ought to be looking at getting additional value out of every dollar invested into the business (Return on investment, or ROI), and IT is the one arena that businesses CANNOT afford to skimp on.
As the society gears itself for instant, simultaneous communication and transactions enabled by technological advances, those that do not keep up will eventually fall behind — and we all know what happens to the businesses that fall behind: they “cut IT budgets to stay competitive”.
The swing of things is rather obvious, no?