Case Study: Impact of XML Sitemaps and Key Words

Submitted by Stefan Schneider on Sun, 01/30/2011 - 12:56

Key words, meta tags and XML site maps are known technologies to increase the reach of a web site. The following article is a case study with some quantitative numbers on the effects of adding them to a web site. It shows how XML site maps, meta tag and key words impact the number of daily sessions, Google referrals and web ranking.

Solaris 11 Changes: Where is the BSD style ps command?

Submitted by Stefan Schneider on Fri, 01/21/2011 - 09:35

Short Answer: In /usr/bin/ps

Background

Oracle's new operating system Solaris 11 (Express) is a modular operating system based on the IPS installation technology. This feature has been used by Oracle to make the BSD commands in the directory /usr/ucb an optional package which doesn't get installed by default (see previous post). The BSD commands shouldn't be used since they're a backwards compatibility courtesy allowing 20th century applications written for SunOS 4 to operate without changes.

Solaris 11 Changes: Where is /usr/ucb ?

Submitted by Stefan Schneider on Thu, 01/20/2011 - 16:43

Solaris 11 Express as a predecessor to Solaris 11 ist out and a few things changed and improved...

The directory /usr/ucb isn't there anymore ...

The usage of the BSD commands in /usr/ucb has always been discouraged. The BSD commands have been provided as a backwards compatibility option for SunOS 4.1. People used them in Solaris 2 since they had interesting features. It has never been a good idea to rely on them in Solaris 2

Make your Application work on Solaris 11

Submitted by Stefan Schneider on Wed, 12/22/2010 - 18:43

Oracle just published a white paper about making applications work on Solaris 11. Most applications working on Solaris 10 will work without any modification on Solaris 11. The most senior engineers from ISV-Engineering came together and compiled this document with the very few corner cases where an application may see hick ups. All known cases deal with general innovation like upgraded frameworks or retired very old frameworks.

Workaround; Apple Java Update(1.6.0_22-b04-307) breaks OpenOffice 3.2.1

Submitted by Stefan Schneider on Mon, 10/25/2010 - 15:01

 The Apple Java Update 3 from Oct. 20, 2010 breaks OpenOffice 3.2.1. OpenOffice can't find the Java JRE anymore. OpenOffice becomes fairly crippled and it shows lots of popups depending on what you do.

The workaround for this problem is described in the OpenOffice bug report 115180.

Workaround

Use command line (Terminal):