Free Post plurk Scaling is Hard Been seeing a lot of this for the last few days. Makes me feel better about the problems we had with our blogs for a while…
Free Post blog platforms Rambly Thoughts on MT Upgrade Day Far too knackered to type, so here are my rambling thoughts on the day via Seesmic:
Free Post bloggers Movable Type 4: Live, but a bit poorly My, what an interesting few hours it’s been. We went live with MT4 circa 11am this morning. While, on the whole, its been plain sailing, a couple of issues have cropped up. We’ve been getting internal server errors in the user interface,
Free Post blogging Month(s) of Hell Update Well, it looks like the long wait is finally over. The training is complete, the load testing done, and the templates upgraded. If all things go according to plan, we’ll be running our blogs on [Movable Type 4](http://www.movabletype.com) from
Free Post blog platforms Server Upgrade: Video Status Report Watch me stumble over technical stuff on Seesmic:
Free Post enterprise blogging MT4: Testing Time for 150 Blogs Hmm. I haven’t updated you all on how the [Weeks of Hel](http://www.onemanandhisblog.com/archives/2008/03/the_calm_before_the_storm.html)l are going. And the answer is……surprisingly well. We now have a couple of versions of our
Free Post blog platforms When Servers Go Down It’s going to be a long day: looks like we have a problem with the database server underlying our Movable Type installation, and it’s been down for much of the weekend. Technology is such a bitter-sweet joy, isn’t it?
Free Post blogging The Calm Before The Storm I’m enjoying my last few moments of liberty before heading into what I’ve mentally been terming “the month of hell”. Sometime in the next month, we’ll be upgrading our install of Movable Type Enterprise to the latest version. That means testing
Free Post hosting Publishers Need To Get A Grip On Hosting Martin at Press Gazette has spotted something interesting: The Times website suffered under load this morning, and so visitors were directed to the Typepad-hosted blogs instead. Following The Telegraph‘s problems earlier in the week, this does beg the question: why don’t more