Author Archive
Overclocked Intel Core i7 920 and AMD Phenom II 940 virtualization performance – Part 1.
by philip on Feb.11, 2009, under AMD, Intel, Technology, Virtualization, i7

Core vs Phenom II virtualization showdown
With the wounds from competitive price cuts still fresh, I decided to make some small deposits into the pockets of both Intel and AMD. I picked up the Core i7 920 chip as well as the AMD Phenom II 940 CPU/Asus board combo from Fry’s about a week ago, and recently picked up an Asus P6T Deluxe from a friend who works at Newegg.
The consensus online seems to be that the Phenom 940 offers slightly more performance per dollar, while the Bloomfield is capable of providing the higher performance if budget is less of a concern.
Well, I am giving it a tally for the parts of the both systems, and will be butt-benching the both systems using Hyper-V and seeing which system offers better bang for the buck in terms of VM’s performance.
Thus far,
The Core machine’s cost:
Core i7 920 – $219
Asus P6T Deluxe – $220
Patriot 4GB DDR3 – $90 – $25 Rebate = $65
——————————————————-
Intel Total = $504
The Phenom II machine’s cost:
AMD Phenom II 940 Black Edition – $203
Asus M3N78 Pro – $96
Corsair DDR2 4GB – $50 – $30 rebate = $20
——————————————————-
AMD Total = $320
The rest of the components will be identical between the two systems, so I’ve left them out of consideration.
Once I am able to get these systems thrown together and get some VMs on, I will report back.
In the meantime, have any of you done this already, and what are your thoughts on either/both systems?
The Shape of Businesses to come…
by philip on Feb.05, 2009, under Business, Technology, Work, recession, strategies, web

What will the future look like?
No doubt the state of the global economy has many of us contemplating on what the future may be bringing in the near future. The geek inside me has always been curious on how technology will end up reshaping how business will be conducted.
For the past 20 years or so, the biggest impact of Technology can be summarized into the following two points:
1. Ubiquity of the internet, and
2. Ubiquity of the affordable internet enabled devices.
As the persistently-connected population worldwide reaches Critical Mass, how will the methods of inter-personal idea exchange– (and along the same vein, the exchange of Goods and Services) — evolve?
Like sunflowers, Social Networking sites that endlessly mushroom out on the ‘Net already give us a pretty clear indication of how people prefer to communicate. Already, many of us are substituting phone calls with emails, and occasionally IM’s for emails, and now, Tweets and Wall Tags for IMs.
How will the business landscape be changed? Everyone’s got different ideas, and once in a while I run into articles that I am surprised to encounter through that chance RSS sub. While I largely agree with most of Tim O’Reilly’s thoughts, sometimes I think he is a little too optimistic in assuming that most of his readers are perched in the exact same echelon as himself on Maslow’s hierarchy of needs.
Babbling aside, occasionally I hit upon other blogs that practically “stole the words out of my mouth”. Which is great, because it means I am not too far out in the left field, and others can see the exact same trend I am seeing.
Take a look here. Granted, Naseem did not mention anything new here that hasn’t been mentioned before, but it’s a great summation of the general consensus of modern technology thought leaders.
How do you predict things will be going? Do you agree or disagree with any of this?
What to expect from this bleak outlook on the economy
by philip on Dec.08, 2008, under Business, Microsoft, Personal, Productivity, Technology, Work, recession, strategies
No matter where you turn, you can’t escape the depressing mood that has all but permeated all of media. Blogs, Destination sites, TV, Radio– even ads have started using “The Downturn” to start their segment or its headlines. For people that are constantly soaking in business news, I can’t see how there is any bit of ray of optimism left.
Then just a few minutes ago, I hit this blurb.
Downright discouraging, isn’t it?
So what is going to happening to the millions that have or about to lose their jobs? With the job market shrinking rapidly, will these people just sit at home and hang their heads in despair?
Nope. That’s not how the economy works.
For the fortunate few that have what it takes to immediately re-enter the workforce, things will immediately go back to normal. Out of those that are not as lucky? What will happen to them?
Of course, some (perhaps many) will suffer through some pretty rough times. But as long as people are willing to fight and plow ahead, I have yet to hear that people can die from economic depressions. Emotional depression can be deadly, but people do not die from the lack of money.
In this Land of Opportunity, it means a big chunk of these folks are actually enterprising enough, and will try to use this “down time” to try their luck at entrepreneurship. After all, isn’t that how the Economy usually pulls itself back on its feet?
See this post here. And if you are too lazy to, let me just spit out a quote from it here:
“Students are increasingly open to taking entrepreneurial risks now that the economy doesn’t exactly guarantee a dream job anyway” – Peter Winicov
So while we are only at the beginning of this downturn, and it may seem like the rain is really pouring down hard, the lesson here is – Don’t let it get you down.
Why? Because! Just because everyone is jumping off that bridge, doesn’t mean you have to. The herding pattern is what got us here in the first place. To quote that famous Apple marketing campaign: “Think Different.”
For some perspective on why there is never a better opportunity, let me quote our great friend Al:
“In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity” – Albert Einstein
Paul Graham also wrote about this subject here. And since he may be infinitely more successful than I ever will be, perhaps you will listen to him.
If you’re too lazy again, here’s the gist: “Fortunately it has gotten very cheap to run a startup, and a recession will if anything make it cheaper still.”
Let me put it this way – You have to take risks to succeed, and if you don’t have a job anyway, you really aren’t risking much.
With the cost of running businesses being so low nowadays, you really don’t lose much even if you fail anyway.
So what are you waiting for?
Update: This topic seems to be the subject du jour. See articles here.
