[Support] 全世界で大注目の Get Proactive! ページがついに日本語でも登場!!!

Posted by Unknown Rabu, 09 Januari 2013 0 komentar
原文はこちら。
https://blogs.oracle.com/supportjp/entry/get_proactive_japanese

各製品ライン毎に、重要ナレッジ集へのリンクや、パッチ情報へのリンク、トラブルシューティングに欠かせないツールへのリンクやアップグレード情報へのリンク集に、ワンクリックでアクセスできる Get Proactive! ページの日本語翻訳版が出揃ったそうです。
詳細は原文をどうぞ。


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Collect, Clarify, Organize - Guide to Evaluating Personal Task Managers

Posted by Unknown Selasa, 08 Januari 2013 0 komentar

I've recently discovered the excellent Mikes on Mics podcast and have been listening to some random episodes. One episode I was interested in was Episode 5, Taking You To Task where the hosts talk about choosing task managers. They spent a lot of time talking about OmniFocus and Asana and some time talking about general evaluation of tools, and while they often recommended "find the tool that works for you", I don't think they established a good criteria for selecting a task manager. It got me thinking about the steps I find important.

I'm going to focus on personal task management here. Group / collaborative management rarely applies to a "whole life" scenario and is typically not something that is chosen by end users anyway. Someone who is a freelancer working with various groups of people at different times may benefit by such a system, but for the most part I believe that group/collaborative task management can be a second level system if it is needed in one's life.

So what should a personal task management tool provide? A good system should help you collect, clarify, and organize, to borrow terms from David Allen. To borrow terms from the Rational Unified Process, these steps may be: inception, elaboration, construction, and transition. Finally, there is also review. When evaluating tools, it may help to make a list of these things and try to answer how well each tool helps. The short list is:

  1. How easy is it to rapidly enter things into the tool?

  2. Is it easy to edit and elaborate on things once they're in the tool? Is it easy to defer things off to the future?

  3. How easy is it to group and organize tasks? Does the tool support organization in a way that reflects my system or brain?

  4. Once tasks are in the tool, how easy is it to focus on just the things I need to get done now? How easily does it let me define what 'now' means?

  5. Can the tool be trusted to be with me and reasonably up-to-date wherever and whenever I need it?

I expand on these topics, and more, below.

Collection (Inception)

Collection is an important step. How easy is it to rapidly add new items to the tool? This should be offered in a way that can be as unobtrusive as possible. On the desktop, many task managers feature a 'quick entry' window that can pop up, accept input, and disappear. Some may accept emails, either via special rules and scripts that run inside the mail client; others may have a dedicated email address. On devices, does it support input within a tap or two of the launch screen? Does it support voice? The tool should not only make it easy to add new items, but it should make it easy in a way that makes sense for how you use it. This can be easily tested within any desktop software's evaluation cycle.

A good modern task manager should have an "inbox" which means "collected, but unprocessed items." You should be able to add to the inbox easily and without guilt. You should also be able to process that inbox easily, which is discussed in the following steps.

Clarification (Elaboration)

In collection mode, you may jot down just a couple of words or copy in a few lines from an email. The next step is clarification/elaboration. A good tool should make it easy to start organizing items and their relevant data. A task like "call vet" should be easily expandable with a note about why you need to call the vet. If the tools supports devices like the phone, it should highlight phone numbers in the notes to make it easy to place a call within the task manager. The best way to cut down on the anxiety of tasks is to provide your future self with all the information it needs so that when it comes time to do the task, there's little reason to escape it. When evaluating the tools, think about what kind of information is helpful for that future self and evaluate whether the tool you're using makes it easy to enter and view that information or if it makes it difficult.

When clarifying a task, it may cause multiple subtasks to break out. Does the tool support hierarchies (outline style structure)? Does it let you think about how those hierarchies work (i.e. - are they a chain of dependent or independent actions)? If you're someone like me who thinks in outlines, this is an important thing to evaluate. If you're someone who thinks in flat lists, it's not as necessary.

Clarification is as important as collection, and tools that make it difficult to edit task titles and notes are to be avoided. Again, within the trial period of most desktop apps, you should be able to get a feel for this.

Organization (More Elaboration)

Most tools offer organization. A good GTD® style tool should promote organization by project and context. How easy is it to turn an individual task or one with subtasks into an new project? How easy is it to assign projects from the collection pool (Inbox)?

This is where tools can differentiate themselves and you can really start to feel out whether a particular tool might work for you. Some tools support projects as top-level list items, and everything else such as contexts are provided by tags. I'm not a big fan of tags (I find maintenance of a tag taxonomy tiring), but it works very well for others. Other tools support both hierarchical project and context lists. Some tools make it was to group things into folders as "general areas of focus".

The important evaluation questions are: is it easy to organize tasks in a way that makes sense to your brain and/or system? If you're a drag and drop person, does the UI support easy organization using drag and drop? If you're a keyboard person, are there sufficient keyboard shortcuts for assigning projects and tags/contexts as well as support for reordering (moving tasks up and down)?

Scheduling

Dates are important for clarification/organization, and allow you to have a good system for handling as much of your life as possible. A good tool should allow setting both start and due dates while requiring neither. Using both start and due dates can be an effective way of reminding yourself about a follow-up communication (i.e., getting an email that says "get back to me in a month if …") or other long-term reminders (renewing a web domain; canceling or renewing a membership; making travel arrangements for a conference). Start dates are also good for deferring or pausing work when interrupted by a more pressing project. If you don't always trust your own memory, a tool that tracks completion dates may be important when you need to look back at when you last paid a certain bill or need to write a report of work activity completed that week for a particular customer.

A particularly good tool should integrate with the platform's calendar if scheduling is important. This could be either being able to publish items as an internet calendar feed, or providing a view of scheduled tasks alongside other calendar items inside of the tool itself. Or both.

Note that items in a personal task system are just that - tasks. It's a good place to store reminders about setting appointments (i.e., call dentist in six months to schedule cleaning), but not a good place for the appointments themselves.

Construction (doing the work)

Your job is not about how well you organize your tasks. Your job is, well, your job. At some point, you actually have to do the work. After it's been collected, clarified, and organized, how easy is it to view? Does it offer views that let you focus on just the tasks you need to do now/next? What you need to do today? Who do you need to call? Who do you need to email? What files were you going to edit? What applications do you need to deploy?

Some days, I feel like the main character from the movie Memento, suddenly asking "ok, what was I doing?" If I've put my tasks together in my system in the right way, I should be able to answer that question pretty quickly by turning to my task manager.

This may be the hardest step to evaluate as this is when the system gets personal. The tool needs to step out of your way so you can do your work, but be able to answer the important "OK, what's next? What was I doing?" question as quickly as possible.

A good tool should help you focus on just the tasks that are relevant, hiding everything else, but make it easy to pull back to the wider view. You don't need to see bills or laundry action items when you're coding in the office or preparing a legal brief; and you don't need to see those office items when you're grocery shopping.

Having a good system or process like GTD® helps you understand the significance of these areas of focus and can help you evaluate the tools better. If you don't have a system of organization beyond basic project or context lists, then the more powerful tools can be avoided and you can get your feet wet with something like the Reminders App.

Transition (moving forward)

Of course, a good task management app should make it easy to mark a task as complete. If it has good "what's next?" views, it should pop the right item(s) into place as soon as you mark one off.

A good tool should keep completed items in the system but out of sight, and make it easy to bring those completed items up again when needed.

What you think should happen when you mark something as complete is a personal choice. I like having access to "what's next" views that just show me the next actions available in a certain context. But I also like being able to switch right to a project and focus on its actions (both next and upcoming), which can work well at work when I'm doing a single coding project at a time and want to see the upcoming steps.

This can be another hard one to evaluate. Try the different tools and just get a feel for how they present the items you're supposed to do now, and what happens when you mark those as done, and if you like the flow. Since this is where customizations may come in, you may want to read into the help files and videos and communities if you're not sure the tool does what you want.

Review

This is a major part of GTD® and, I believe, any good personal task management system. Review is what keeps your system from being "a place where good ideas go to die".

To evaluate review, just try to see if a tool has a good way of seeing and navigating through everything active or future so that you can evaluate if that's something that should stay, should go, or needs new clarification. This is hard to evaluate during the limited free-preview times offered by most tools because it might take a while to build up enough data to review. Some tools offer full on review modes, with the ability to timestamp the last review and when next to review a project. If this kind of review mechanism is important, look for that when evaluating tools. It's not a killer feature, but it can help ease the mind.

Ubiquity (everywhere you want it to be)

In GTD®, David Allen talks about needing a "trusted system" which is something you can rely on as being always available, always working, always up to date. The best system for this for the longest time was pen and paper. But now with smart phones, widely available internet, "The Cloud", etc, this can be handled by software. Is the tool you're evaluating available on the devices you need? Is it easy to keep all of those devices up to date?

You may not be able to evaluate software on the phone or tablet for free, but when looking at these systems, you can get a sense from the tool makers web sites and communities around that tool about how well ubiquity works.


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[Identity Management] Oracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition 11gR1 certified with SAP NetWeaver AS

Posted by Unknown Minggu, 06 Januari 2013 0 komentar
原文はこちら。
https://blogs.oracle.com/directoryservices/entry/oracle_directory_server_enterprise_edition

LDAPを使ったユーザー管理のためのDirectory Interface(BD-LDAP-USR)として、SAP NetWeaver ASとOracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition 11gR1の組み合わせがSAP AG社により動作検証され、動作が保証されました。詳細は是非SAP AG社のサイトのページをご覧下さい。
SAP Partner Finder - Partner Information Center: Search
http://www.sap.com/partners/directories/SearchSolution.epx

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[Java] JMS 2 Public Review Draft Published

Posted by Unknown Kamis, 03 Januari 2013 0 komentar
原文はこちら。
https://blogs.oracle.com/theaquarium/entry/jms_2_public_review_draft

JMS 2.0は間違いなくJava EE 7の最も重要な構成要素の一つです。 JMS 2.0のEGは本日、正式にパブリックレビュードラフトを公表しました。JMS 2のスペックリードであるNigel Deakinは、すばらしい仕事のやり方をうまくやり通したように思います。彼は、Java.netのJMS 2.0プロジェクトページにパブリックレビュードラフトに関してかなり詳細を説明するページを作成しました。
JMS 2.0 Public Review Draft
http://java.net/projects/jms-spec/pages/JMS20PublicDraft
Nigelは読者に対し、ドラフトやJavadocを読み、参照実装(スタンドアロンまたはGlassFish)をダウンロードし、JMS 2のサンプルコードををちょっと動かして、NigelまたはEGにご意見・ご感想を送ってほしいそうです。このページには、JMS 2.0の実際の変更点をきちんとまとまっています。公式レビュー期間は1月3日から2月4日ですので、ぜひ今すぐチェックしてください。

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Remembering What You've Done, with OmniFocus

Posted by Unknown 0 komentar
This year, the Christmas / New Year holidays brought about a pair of very short work weeks. This first day back brought with it our usual semi-weekly meeting, and one of the items that was still on my list was a pair of support tickets that I had completely forgotten. My boss said "no, you know about them, you were working on them last week and talking about them!" Yet there were no active action items or projects related to these items in my OmniFocus, and I was sure that if I was still working on these issues, they'd be written down. Did my system fail me?

We checked the live site in relation to in question and they appeared partially done. "That's funny," I thought, "why didn't I have an action for the remaining items? Did my system fail me?" I was stumped, trying to remember the previous Friday. I had worked on these issues, and towards the end of the day they opened up a larger topic that we discussed in our week-closing get together (half meeting, half beer bash). Maybe I got these support tickets nearly-finished, but the week closer had killed the final one. But again, if that had happened, I would have that final action written down. Right?

Enter my Recently Completed OmniFocus perspective, which shows all of my completed actions, grouped and sorted by their completion date. I flipped back to last friday, and sure enough, there were both support tickets as OmniFocus actions, and they were both marked as completed. My system didn't fail me! I double checked our source code repository and found the related commits and was able to verify that all the actions were, in fact, completed.

So what happened?

When the support issues came in via Basecamp, our company's project management system, I then entered them into OmniFocus which I use as my personal system. With OmniFocus, I then have much more control over editing items, grouping, organizing, splitting, etc. As I completed the items, I marked them as complete in OmniFocus, but I forgot to mark them as complete in Basecamp, which caused my boss to bring the items back up in our Wednesday meeting. A new trick that I've added to deal with this is to make a new context, Work : Basecamp, with an action to go in and close out tasks and/or leave comments as necessary.

The takeaway from this is that when using OmniFocus as your complete system, it becomes a trusted resource for not only "what am I supposed to be doing?" but also "wait, didn't I do that already?"

Side Story on Bills



A few years ago, I remember getting a phone call from American Express, asking why I hadn't paid my Amex Bill. It turns out that I had just forgot to do it. I had paid the previous bill pretty close to the deadline, and then spent the next month thinking I had paid the latest bill because my brain said "yeah, I just paid that!"

Now I put all bills into OmniFocus, even if I intend on paying the bill immediately upon arrival. Why? I have a Bills Paid perspective which is like my Recently Completed perspective but focusing on just Bills, and I can refer to that if I'm thinking "wait, it feels like I should be paying the gas bill right about now. Did I do that already?" Also useful for any paper-mail or other check based situation (like my rent checks) when I notice that I have too much money in my checking account and want to see if I did pay that month and the recipient was being slow, or if I was the errant party.

 


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[SOA] Oracle SOA Suite 11g Developer's Cookbook has been published

Posted by Unknown 0 komentar
原文はこちら。
https://blogs.oracle.com/SOA/entry/oracle_soa_suite_11g_developer

Antony ReynoldsとMatt Wrightという、既に数多くのSOA Suiteに関する著作を残している2人が、Oracle SOA Suite 11g Developer's Cookbookを先ごろ発行しました。
Antony Reynoldsの著書
http://www.packtpub.com/authors/profiles/antony-reynolds
Matt Wrightの著書
http://www.packtpub.com/authors/profiles/matt-wright
新著は346ページで$59.99ですが、現在発刊特別価格として、Packt Web Siteから印刷本とe-Bookをあわせて$59.99でご提供しています。



この章立ては以下のようになっています。
  • Chapter 1: Building an SOA Suite Cluster
  • Chapter 2: Using the Metadata Service to Share XML Artifacts
  • Chapter 3: Working with Transactions
  • Chapter 4: Mapping Data
  • Chapter 5: Composite Messaging Patterns
  • Chapter 6: OSB Messaging Patterns
  • Chapter 7: Integrating OSB with JSON
  • Chapter 8: Compressed File Adapter Patterns
  • Chapter 9: Integrating Java with SOA Suite
  • Chapter 10: Securing Composites and Calling Secure Web Services
  • Chapter 11: Configuring the Identity Service
  • Chapter 12: Configuring OSB to Use Foreign JMS Queues
  • Chapter 13: Monitoring and Management

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January 2013 Mid-Sized Smartphone Buyers Guide

Posted by Unknown Selasa, 01 Januari 2013 0 komentar
Yesterday I came up with a list of 4-inch smartphones which I consider to be the best options in the market. Today we will go up one level in size and take a look at the 4.3 to 4.5-inch, or mid-sized, options available in the market.


Prices indicated are for phones with a manufacturers warranty.

1. Cherry Mobile Flame (Php6,299) - Good but a bit underpowered 

Like in the compact category Cherry Mobile Flame provides the lowest cost handset I am inclined to recommend.  The Flame is a 4.5-inch Android handset with a qHD display (540 x 960). Inside it has a  Qualcomm MSM8255 S4 Play chipset, with a 1.2 GHz dual-core processor, Adreno 203 graphics and 512 MB of RAM. This chipset is used in a lot of WVGA (480 x 800) phones. Pairing the Adreno 203 graphics with a qHD display does push the graphics chip close to its limits.

With a WVGA display, the graphics chip has to push a total of 384,000 pixels. With a aHD display, the graphics chip has to push 35% more pixels, or a total of 518,400 pixels. Still the phone does work.

The Cherry Mobile Flames specifications are pretty much the same as what you find in other lower cost models, with dual SIM support, 512 MB of RAM, 4 GB of storage (half of which is user available), a MicroSD card slot, and a 5 MP camera and VGA front camera. The battery is a good sized 1800 mAh unit and dual-sim support. This phone also offers 5-point multi-touch support, while most lower cost phones only offer 2-point multi-touch support. 

For an operating system, it comes Android 4.0.4, rather than the newer Android 4.1 or 4..2, but that is not a big issue since the Android 4.x line maintains software compatibility.

This phone is good enough for doing all the typical smartphone stuff. I would advice games to consider something else however. 


2. Cloudfone Thrill 430x (Php7,777) - The endurance king

The main issue with smartphones today is battery life. Keep the 3G turned on, have it automatically sync data, browse websites, download email and checking social networks leaves most with just about a days worth of power. The 4.3-inch Cloudfone Thrill 430x has a solution for that. It equips it phone with a 4160 mAh battery.

This phone has the same Android 4 operating system, Qualcomm dual core processor, chipset, storage and dual SIM capability as the Cherry Mobile Flame, but it does comes with a smaller 4.3-inch qHD display (540 x 960). This is not a bad thing, as the slightly smaller display, with the same resolution, also means it is sharper.

Aisde from the larger battery, the Cloudfone Thrill 430x has 50% more RAM than the Flame, at 768 MB. The Thrill 430x also has a larger 8 MP camera, but not necessarily better picture quality, than the Flame. The larger battery and additional RAM easily justify the higher Php7,777 asking price.

This phone is not for everyone, though. The larger battery means that it is all of 14 mm thick and 182 grams in weight. Basically, if the size and heft don't bother you, it is easy to recommend the Cloudfone Thrill 430x over the Cherry Mobile Flame. On the other hand, if the Thrill 430x feels like a brick to you, pick up the Flame instead.

Some users have reported problems with the bundled charger. 



3. ZTE Grand X V970M (Php9,990) - A nicely balanced qHD smartphone

The ZTE Grand X is another 4.3-inch qHD (540 x 960) powered by a dual core processor, but this one is on a MediaTek chipset with PowerVR SGX531 graphics. The PowerVR SGX531 graphics is a bit more powerful than the Adreno 203 graphics chip found in our lower cost mid-sized options, and is better suited for running a qHD display. 

The other features are pretty standard for the class with 512 MB of RAM, 4 GB of internal storage, expandable via a MicroSD card slow, a 5 MP camera and a VGA secondary camera. The battery is a decent size 1650 mAh unit.

ZTE is a big manufacturer. If you are not ready to give Cherry Mobile or Cloudfone a try, this one should comes from an established enough manufacturer to suite you. The PowerVR SGX531 also makes the additional money worth it.

Going past the ZTE Grand X, and the options start to thin out. 


4. HTC One S (Php19,500)  - A bit expensive for what it offers.

The HTC One S is the most beautiful smartphone HTC has ever built. The phone is just 7.8 mm thick, and when combined with its fairly large 4.3-inch screen and contoured aluminum case make it look sliver thin. The display is a qHD (540 x 960) Super AMOLED display.

Two versions of the HTC One S exist. The first is the US/Euro version which is powered by a 1.5 GHz dual core Krait processor with Adreno 225 graphics which is built on 28 nanometer technology. In that form the HTC One S performs at par with the first generation quad core phones and give excellent battery life. Unfortunately, because a shortage of Kraits, the Asia/Philippine model is powered by the older Scorpion processor which is clocked at 1.7 GHz and paired with Adreno 220 graphics, which is pretty much what was used in the 2011 HTC Sensation. This older chipset is built on less power efficient  45 nanometer technology. Had the Philippine gotten the Krait version, this would have been one of the top smartphones in the market. Still the price has dropped over 25% since its release, and it is looking like a more reasonable proposition these days.

As compared to the ZTE GrandX you get double the RAM at 1GB, and a much better 8 MP camera and 1080p video capture. You also get more internal storage at 16 GB, but it is not user expandable.  So couple with a low cost 16 GB MicroSD Card the Grand X would offer more storage. The battery is  a 1650 mAh unit, like the Grand X. The phone comes with Android 4.0 out the box, but the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean update is rolling in the next few weeks.

It is a better phone than the Grand X, but I am not sure that is is worth twice as much.


5. Sony Xperia acro S (Php22,650) - Sharpest display on the Philippine Market

The Sony Xperia acro S brings a HD display  4.3-inch 720p display (720 x 1280), which makes it the sharpest display on any smartphone available in the Philippines, even sharper the the iPhone retina display. This gives it an edge over the HTC One S. It also comes with a larger 12 MP camera and 1910 mAh battery. The Xperia acro S has 1 GB or RAM and internal storage is 16 GB like the HTC One S, but the Xperia acro S has a MicroSD card slot. The Xperi acro S is also a ruggedized phone, being IP57 certified to be dust and water resistant, and with a reinforced front glass. All in all, it can justify it 3K price difference with the HTC One S.


The Xperia acro S still has the same dual core 1.5 GHz Qualcomm Scorpion processor as the One S, clocked at a slower 1.5 GHz. The Adreno 220 graphics is pushed harder running the HD display, hence the HTC One S will get better 3D performance due to its lower resolution display.  The HSDPA radio is an older 14.4 Mbps unit, which is another area where the HTC One S has the advantage.

This phone come with Android 4.0.4 out of the box, but an update to Jelly Bean has been confirmed for this phone.


6. HTC Windows Phone 8S (Php24,150) - Best Windows Phone in the market


Like the Xperia acro S, the Windows Phone 8S has a 4.3-inch HD (720 x 1280) display. Inside you will find the powerful dual core 1.5 GHz Qualcomm Krait processor. Mated with a 1800 mAh battery, this phone promises good battery life. The other specifications are standard for the class, with 1 GB of RAM, 16 GB of storage (which is not user expandable) and a HSDPA+ 21.1 radio. 

The main reason to choose this phone is if you want a high end Windows Phone 8 device. It is the best Windows phone available in the market right now, well until the Nokia Lumia 920 arrives anyway.


7. Sony Xperia V (Php26,990) - LTE onboard 

The Sony Xperia V is an upgraded version of the Sony Xperia acros S. It has the similar specifications to the Xperia acro S but is powered by the dual core 1.5 GHz Qualcomm Krait processor. It has a slightly higher resolution 13 MP camera. Most importantly, this phone has a HSPA+ and LTE radio,  and is available from Smart Communications with an LTE plan. All in all, despite the price, this phone is easy enough to recommend. 

Internal storage is less than the Xperia Acro S, at 8 GB, but it does come with a MicroSD card slot. The battery is a smallet 1750 mAH unit, but with the more efficient processor, it should give good battery life.

This phone come with Android 4.0.4 out of the box, but an update to Jelly Bean has been confirmed for this phone.


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