Category: blogger posts

Change of Plans

I realized that I have some pretty huge changes coming up that I haven’t actually mentioned here… mostly for the reason that the only people who actually read this are people I would have already told.

Megan and I have done a complete 180° on the Seattle-based plans: I was under the impression that my lease expires at the end of November; wrong-o. It expires at the end of this month. Therefore, the job search was cut much shorter than I had been anticipating, and I wasn’t able to find a Seattle-area position during the brief window that could have allowed me to flee the dairy state.

Instead, Megan is coming to live in Madison. We’re getting the second floor of a triplex in a really cool section of town. If you’re interested, you can take a little tour here. Have you ever seen the Chad Vader shorts on YouTube? They’re filmed a couple blocks away.

I’m flying out on 24 October so we can load up her car and drive back to Wisconsin… and it’s going to be an adventure. Driving a ’95 Toyota Tercel across most of the country is enough of a challenge: now add a hopefully-drugged-up-cat, a trailer full of all of Megan’s worldly possessions, and the fact that long car trips tend to make me completely batshit insane.

Well, it’s nearly 3:30AM, and I have a lease to sign tomorrow morning.

Microsoft Exchange vs. Unix Sendmail – Rant and Comparison

[Microsoft Exchange and Sendmail are server programs for sending email. You have almost certainly sent mail to one or the other before, and there’s a pretty good chance that your email service is using one and you don’t know it. They operate behind the scenes, so most people don’t even notice them.]

I absolutely loathe Microsoft’s server software. There has yet to be a single occasion where I have said, “Wow, that was way easier than doing the same thing in Unix.”

This is not to say that I believe that all Unix systems are superior to all Microsoft systems. That would be a broad generalization, and a stupid one at that. I’m sure there are applications where Microsoft server products outperform equivalent open source and Unix offerings.

I just haven’t found any.

Case in point: minor changes, the focus of this rant, are far easier to deal with in Unix. Tonight, I had to change the address that some guy’s email was being forwarded to. Sounds simple enough, right?

This is a link to how to change someone’s forwarding address in Microsoft Exchange. Look at it. Don’t bother to read it, that’s not really important. Just take a look at the number of steps necessary to do something this simple.

Go ahead, I’ll still be here when you get back.

You didn’t read it, did you? Is it really so much work to click the link, and then click “Back?”

Fine, here’s the synopsis: you need five printed pages of explanation.

Now, here’s how you do the same thing in Sendmail, a Unix email server program. (You don’t really need to read these either, but I’ll write it out for the sake of completeness.)

  1. Open /etc/mail/virtusers in a text editor.
  2. Find the email address for the guy that wants to change his forwarding address. It will be in the format
    someguy@here.com forwarded@somewhereelse.com
    .
  3. Replace forwarded@somewhereelse.com with the new forwarding address.
  4. Save and exit the text editor.
  5. Restart Sendmail so it knows about the change.

Seriously, that’s it. Five steps as opposed to five pages. I don’t think I’m wrong here.

I’m sure some Microsoft fanboys will say, “But Exchange has so many more features than Sendmail! It has to be more complex.” Let me take that argument apart here.

  • I really don’t think that complexity is an excuse for really, really terrible user experience.
  • Simple tasks are the tasks most likely to be performed on a regular basis. If you know that a task is a pain in the ass to do, find a way to make it easier. Add a wizard, find a way to obfuscate the complexity, do something that doesn’t make your admins want to cut your throat.
  • Most Exchange users don’t use the extended features offered. (The server I was using today did email for three people. It’s in a closet behind the receptionist’s desk.) If they’re not in use, disable them until they are. It will not only speed up the system, it will eliminate the painful need for five pages of text to do a simple task.

I’m well aware of the fact that a good user interface is difficult to write, and that the more complex something is, the harder it becomes… but come on, Microsoft. You are the premiere software developer in the world. Is this actually the best you can do?

Carfuck follow-up

I called Meineke back today to calmly and politely explain the problems I was having with my brakes.  (When you’re complaining, never start by screaming.  That just pisses off the other person and makes them not want to help you.)  The manager, Tad, offered to take another look at my car.  I brought it in, and he fixed the problem that their brake check had created yesterday.  He apologized for needing to bring my car back in.

So, will I go back to Meineke?  No.  While I have to admit that their customer service was quite good, that doesn’t make up for the fact that they screwed up my brakes, charged me an arm and a leg to do it, and it required two return trips to fix the problem.