December 1, 2014 archive

A Blog Post A Day For December 2014 – #Finish2014Strong

Over the weekend I decided that I'd set myself the personal challenge of "finishing strong" in 2014 with publishing at least one post across my various different sites for each day of December 2014.

Why?

Well... I started out strong at the beginning of 2014 publishing content very frequently. In fact, I published a post a day on the Deploy360 site for the entire first quarter, mostly just again as a personal challenge. But then as the year went on I haven't been been as consistent.

In running, we talk about "finishing strong"... about trying to keep a little bit of energy in reserve so that you can have a final boost of effort as you get close to the finish line.

With that idea, I'm setting my own personal goal to finish 2014 in a strong way from a content creation / publishing point of view.

My idea is that I'll publish at least one post every day of December, including weekends - and I'll also tag it at least on Twitter with the hashtag #Finish2014Strong. There are others using that hashtag, too, and for similar reasons and ideas, it seems.

I'm writing about this publicly, of course, because if I put it out there in front of all of you reading this... well... I kind of need to follow through on it, eh?

Any of you are welcome to join me! Let's finish 2014 strong from a writing point of view!

TWO Posts A Day, Really

In truth, my goal will really be TWO posts a day. One will be on the Internet Society Deploy360 blog where I am, in fact, employed to be writing every day:

The other post each day will be on at least one of my various different personal sites, including:

  • Disruptive Conversations - how the "social media" of blogs, podcasts, wikis, virtual worlds, etc. are changing the way we communicate
  • Disruptive Telephony - how Voice-over-IP (VoIP) is fundamentally changing the technology we use to communicate
  • CircleID - a site focused on Internet infrastructure where I occasionally contribute articles
  • Code.Danyork.com - a place where I write about programming/developer topics, typically outside the realm of communications/telephony.
  • Voice of VOIPSA - a group weblog from the Voice Over IP Security Alliance on voip security issues
  • Monadnock Curling Club - a site focused on bringing the sport of curling to southwestern New Hampshire
  • DanYork.com - my "personal" site where I write about topics that don't fit in my other sites.
  • Migrating Applications to IPv6, a book published by O'Reilly in June 2011
  • Seven Deadliest Unified Communications Attacks, a book on VoIP security published by Syngress in April 2010

A large part of why I'm doing this is that I haven't been writing very consistently on my personal sites... and I'd like to change that. This is just a personal challenge to see if I can do this.

Quality versus Quantity

A reaction I've heard to this idea is that the quantity doesn't matter if what you do is simply push out a bunch of rather lame half-baked posts. You know the type... a post with one or two sentences that effectively says "Hey, look at this cool new thing..." and then points to another site or article. Or a post that effectively "excerpts" almost an entire other article.

That is very much a challenge with any of these kind of "blog post a day" kind of things... and my goal is definitely NOT to do that.

I want both quality AND quantity!

And the reality is that I have a looooonnnngggg queue of articles I'd like to write - and I need to clean out that queue! In particular, I have a number of more thoughtful/inspirational pieces I'd like to write, probably for my little-used danyork.com site.

The good news is that with the publishing systems I use I can schedule posts out in advance. I don't need to be writing posts each day. For example, there's Christmas in there... and some weekends where I've got some family activities planned. There may be a couple of nights where I spend a few hours getting a number of posts queued up.

The point of the "1 post a day" idea is not so much to guarantee quantity as to motivate myself to get out there and write!

When January 1, 2015, comes around you'll have to let me know how I do. :-)

Plus An Audio Podcast...

And just to keep life interesting, I'm also going to try to record one of my "The Dan York Report" (TDYR) audio podcasts up on SoundCloud each day. Again, I started the year doing one of these a day... and then slacked off a good bit over the past few months. It is so incredibly easy to record these audio segments... I just need to do it!

(And I recorded one for today already.)

DanYork.me - Tracking The Content I Create

I - and you all - will be able to see what content I create this month at my site where I aggregate all the content I write across various sites:

I use a WordPress plugin to pull in the RSS feeds of all the various places I write and display pointers to them on that site. It's a handy way for me to keep track of what I've written and where. A quick scan down can show what I've done.

Join Me?

Do you, too, want to "finish 2014 strong" from a writing point of view? Do you need some extra motivation to pick up the electronic pen and create some more content?

Please do!

This is just my own personal challenge to myself... written publicly... but I welcome any others who want to #Finish2014Strong - having others out there doing the same thing can be an added inspiration for those times when it would be so much easier to do something else rather than write! :-)

Let's see how this goes!


P.S. On day 1 I'm off to a great start with so far these 5 posts plus the audio podcast:

... let's see how the next 30 days go! :-)


An audio version of this post is available:


If you found this post interesting or useful, please consider either:


TDYR 187 – 1 Blog Post A Day In December – #Finish2014Strong

I've set myself a personal challenge to "finish strong" in 2014 and write at least one blog post each day of December. More info at: http://www.disruptiveconversations.com/2014/12/a-blog-post-a-day-for-december-2014-finish2014strong.html

FIR #784 – 12/1/14 – For Immediate Release

Black Friday in the US and UK; Quick News: UK ad watchdog raps YouTube stars over Oreo videos, Bell Canada employees offer no disclosure along with 5-star reviews for company app, Nordstrom test fitting room mirrors that turn into interactive touchscreens, Amazon activism is now a thing; Ragan promo, News That Fits: native advertising takes root, Dan York's Tech Report, Flipboard is the next big thing for PR, Media Monitoring Minute from Customscoop, listener comments, a talk with Effective Edge's co-founders, the past week on the FIR Podcast Network, Igloo Software promo, social media is being misused by researchers; music from Shockbox; and more.

Australia (.AU) and Grenada (.GD) Are Latest ccTLDs To Sign With DNSSEC

Today’s DNSSEC Deployment Maps have two great new additions for country-code top-level domains (ccTLDs): Australia’s .AU domain and Grenada’s .GD domain both had their DS record published in the root zone of DNS over the past few days.  What this means is that anyone who has registered a domain in .AU or .GD may soon be able to gain the increased security of signing their own domain with DNSSEC and tying it into the “global chain of trust” of DNSSEC.  To be clear, these two ccTLDs have entered the 4th of 5 stages of DNSSEC deployment where the DNSSEC chain of trust now extends from the root of DNS to the ccTLD itself.  The next “Operational” stage is where the ccTLD starts accepting DNSSEC records from registrants.  Hopefully that time will not be far away for both of these ccTLDs.  (To get ready, please visit our Start Here page to find out how you can prepare your organization to work with DNSSEC.)

Given Australia’s large size on a map, the new “DS in Root” bright green shows up wonderfully in the global view:

Global DNSSEC Deployment map as of 1-Dec-2014

and even better in the Asia Pacific view:

Asia Pacific DNSSEC deployment map as of 1-Dec-2014

Unfortunately with the resolution of our maps you can’t really see Grenada on the Latin America map, but I can tell you that it is one of the six ccTLDs in the “DS in Root” stage in the map:

Latin America DNSSEC deployment map as of 1-Dec-2014

Congratulations to the teams at both ccTLD registries!

In the case of Australia’s .AU, the registry organization, auDA, has been experimenting with DNSSEC since back in 2008 and 2010, and signed the .AU zone back in April 2014 (entering into our “Partial” state on the maps).  The news this past week is the culmination of all that work over several years.  AuDA has also published two pages of interest:

We look forward to learning that auDA is accepting DNSSEC records from .AU registrants and enters the fully “Operational” state.

In the case of Grenada, the first we knew was when the DS record was published in the root zone (seen on stats sites like this one). I couldn’t see any further information on Nic.gd, so I don’t know their further plans at this point.  Regardless, it was a wonderful surprise to learn that .GD was signed and had the DS record in the root zone!

In fact, November was a great month for ccTLDs and DNSSEC with Norway’s .NO signing and Ireland’s .IE signing and also entering the “Operational” state.

All great to see!  We’re looking forward to the day when our DNSSEC deployment maps are all green!

If you want to get started with DNSSEC – or just learn more of what it is all about, please visit our Start Here page to find resources tailored for your type of organization or role.

Cyber Monday: 50% Off Ebook of "Seven Deadliest Unified Communications Attacks"

Oreilly cyber monday 2014Want to lean more about how to increase the security of your unified communications (UC) / voice-over-IP (VoIP) system? Today you have a great opportunity to buy "Seven Deadliest Unified Communications Attacks" and hundreds of other ebooks and videos from O'Reilly and associated publishers at a discount of 50% off or more. Simply go to:

http://oreil.ly/Cyber-Monday

and start shopping! Or you can go directly to the book's page at O'Reilly at:

http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781597495479.do
As I've mentioned in the past, buying direct from O'Reilly offers multiple excellent benefits, including:
  • DRM-free - no stupidity with license restrictions.
  • Free lifetime access
  • Multiple formats (ex. ePUB, PDF, Kindle, etc.)
  • Free updates
  • Sync with Dropbox and other similar services

... and more!  All you do is enter "CYBERDY" as the promotion code when checking out.  The deal expires on Tuesday, December 2, 2014 at 05:00 US Pacific Time.

P.S. While you are there at O'Reilly, you can also purchase my "Migrating Applications To IPv6" ebook and gain insight into what you may need to do to migrate your UC applications over to IPv6 as the Internet moves increasingly to being based on IPv6.

Can You Please Rate or Review 7 Deadliest UC Attacks On O’Reilly’s Site?

Oreilly-book-logoIf you have read "Seven Deadliest Unified Communications Attacks" and found the book helpful, could you please take a moment to rate and/or review the book on O'Reilly's website?  Even if you just enter the number of stars and say something very basic it would be helpful.  All you need to do is go to this page:

http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9781597495479.do

and click on the "Write Review" link.

In preparation for today's Cyber Monday sale, I looked at the page and noticed that ever since O'Reilly started selling the book as an ebook there have not been any reviews there.  There are a few reviews on Goodreads and several very nice reviews over on Amazon.com, but none yet on O'Reilly's site.

These kind of ratings and reviews do help people decide whether to purchase a book - and they are helpful to me as an author, too, to understand what people did (or did not) find useful and helpful.

Thank you!

Cyber Monday: 50% Off Ebook of “Migrating Applications to IPv6″

Oreilly cyber monday 2014

Today you have a great opportunity to buy “Migrating Applications to IPv6” and hundreds of other ebooks and videos from O’Reilly and associated publishers at a discount of 50% off or more. Simply go to:

http://oreil.ly/Cyber-Monday

and start shopping! Or you can go directly to the book’s page at O’Reilly at:

http://shop.oreilly.com/product/0636920020974.do

As I’ve mentioned in the past, buying direct from O’Reilly offers multiple excellent benefits, including:

  • DRM-free – no stupidity with license restrictions.
  • Free lifetime access
  • Multiple formats (ex. ePUB, PDF, Kindle, etc.)
  • Free updates
  • Sync with Dropbox and other similar services

… and more!  All you do is enter “CYBERDY” as the promotion code when checking out.  The deal expires on Tuesday, December 2, 2014 at 05:00 US Pacific Time.

While you are there you can purchase any of O’Reilly’s other IPv6 books for the same discount. Do note that this sale is for ebooks and not for the print versions of the books.

IPv6 deployment is accelerating – make sure that your applications and networks are ready for the IPv6 Internet!

P.S. My “Seven Deadliest Unified Communications Attacks” book is also on sale as an ebook at O’Reilly’s site… if you are interested in voice-over-IP (VoIP) security, please do check that book out, too.

FIR #785 – 12/8/14 – For Immediate Release

Neville's Twitterversary; Quick News: agency staffers need to disclose, impact of a breastfeeding protest, who's watching online videos?, Netflix tests tweet reminders; Ragan promo; News That Fits: Attributes of social CEOs, Dan York's Tech Report, we're not ready for mobile messaging apps, Media Monitoring Minute from CustomScoop, listener comments, Augie Ray says we've heard it all before about social media marketing, Igloo Software promo, the last week on the FIR Podcast Network, a culture of content; music from Special Guests; and more.