Want to work at Amazon? Can you stand the heat at the executive level?

I was talking to a Microsoft friend and he was saying how many amazon employees are showing up at Microsoft.  For a while there were a large amount of Microsoft employees were leaving for amazon.  Some of the more visible ex-Microsoft employees are Brian Valentine and Charlie Kindle.  These guys would be ones who would be close enough to feel the heat from Jeff Bezos.

Here is an article with 4 ex-Amazon executives in Puget Sound Business Journal.

Uncomfortable. Adversarial. A Darwinian struggle for survival.

These are all terms used to describe Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos’ relationship with his staff, according to four former Amazonians who have branched off from the e-commerce giant to start their own businesses.

One of the things you would need to get used to Amazon is doing more with less.  Way, way less.

“I would go home and throw stuff. One of my roommates was on a team where 20 people were doing the work of 300 engineers. We were all always on pager duty,” Selinger said. “But as I reflect on it, the problems we were tackling ended up having real value. We weren’t trying to solve things that obviously didn’t matter.”

Will Cars be uber connected? AT&T powers Tesla's Connectivity

At last week’s GigaOm Mobilize AT&T’s Chris Penrose, SVP of Emerging Solutions announced the AT&T deal to be the cell data provider for Tesla.

Tesla turns to AT&T to power its connected car strategy

 

OCT. 17, 2013 - 11:29 AM PDT

3 Comments

SUMMARY:

At Mobilize 2013, AT&T announced a crucial partnership with Tesla that brings the mobile company into the driver’s dashboard.

This is the start of having the option to your car being uber connected.

In order to take advantage of AT&T’s offerings, the vehicles must be equipped with a modem and a corresponding SIM card to connect to cell towers. With the connection, the car can take advantage of several maintenance, entertainment and safety features. For example, remote engine diagnostics can keep real-time tabs on how the Tesla is performing, and whether it needs to be taken in for servicing. That same program can also help locate a car if it’s stolen, and even offer Tesla engineers access to data on the performance of vehicles over the long term. The modem provides internet access to provide radio services, live weather and traffic, navigation and even internet search for drivers and passengers.

“We think that you should have the ability to turn your car on as a mobile hotspot for your trip, even if you haven’t subscribed to a data plan,” Penrose added.

Woohoo!? USA carbon footprint drops to 1994 levels due to natural gas, efficiencies and drop in mfg

Arstechnica reports on USA’s carbon footprint  dropping to 1994 levels.

US carbon emissions hit lowest level since 1994 despite economic growth

Efficiency, drop in manufacturing, and a shift to natural gas all contribute.

Last year, the US saw its lowest carbon emissions since 1994, continuing a downward trend that began in 2008 during the economic crisis. It marks the second year in a row that carbon emissions have dropped despite a growth in gross domestic product. Prior to the last few years, economic growth had been closely tied to increased carbon emissions.

The US Energy Information Administration released the data yesterday after having taken a bit of an unwanted break during the government shutdown. In analyzing the data, it identified a variety of causes for the drop in carbon emissions. As shown above, population size and economic activity both grew last year, which would normally push emissions up. But the energy required for that economic activity dropped, and the carbon intensity of the energy supply dropped as well. Combined, those two factors more than offset the economic growth.

Here is a timeline.

NewImage

There are more cool graphs in the report.  http://www.eia.gov/environment/emissions/carbon/

SSD bubble bursting? Fusion-IO posts lost and executives leaving

NBCNews covers Fusion-IO troubles

The management changes came as Fusion-io reported a loss of $27.9 million, or 28 cents per share, for the quarter that ended Sept. 30. That is compared with earnings of $3.9 million, or 4 cents per share, in the same months last year. After adjusting for acquisition expenses and other special items, it had a loss of 7 cents per share versus earnings of 14 cents per share last year.

Fusion-io's revenue fell to $86.3 million from $118.1 million.

Consumer Reports provides some guidance on using Healthcare.gov (Obamacare), Cookie Mess

Who do you trust trying to use Healthcare.gov (Obamacare).  President Obama's reassurances?  Media covering the efforts?

How about Consumer Reports?  Here is a post they put last week.

Let’s jump to the advice that will get you thinking.

Clear your cookies.

Your next hurdle after creating a functioning user name and password is to reach the identity verification section. If you log in to Healthcare.gov and get nothing but a blank page, what’s likely happening, Simo says, is that in your previous visits to Healthcare.gov, your browser got loaded up with lots of cookies, bits of data and code that are implanted for later retrieval and use by Healthcare.gov. The problem is that the cookie files are bigger than what the website can accept back (yes, a design error). Result: a blank page. Solution: either delete the Healthcare.gov cookies from your browser (typically found in the “privacy” settings in Preferences), or log back in from a browser you’ve never previously used to access Healthcare.gov. That advice rang especially true to me because that's how I finally got an identity verification screen: by switching from my usual Safari browser to another that I rarely use.

If all this is too much for you to absorb, follow our previous advice: Stay away from Healthcare.gov for at least another month if you can. Hopefully that will be long enough for its software vendors to clean up the mess they’ve made. The coverage available through the marketplaces won’t begin until Jan. 1, 2014, at the earliest, and you have until Dec. 15 to enroll if you need insurance that starts promptly.

What is hysterical is the unique ID is the reference ID, a 128 bit unique.  Which is good from a technical standpoint, but not when you use it as the users reference number.

Three weeks may be a short time in government software development, but it is a very long time in Internet time. If you call support, I wish you a good connection as you try to read that 36-character reference ID over the phone.
 
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A GUID is actually an integer type - it's a 128 bit integer (16 bytes).

It's often represented as a string of 36 characters - but the actual value is a 128bit integer value.