There is nothing worse than a blog entry titled Dear Diary - hence
the title - but this is my humble submission for One Day in
History so
please forgive me. Of course, I could author this piece directly on
the site but that would mean checking I am within the 650 word limit
which is far too much work (unless I use Microsoft Word).
Get up at 7am and unload dishwasher. My one and only household chore
but one I perform very well. Breakfast of cereal, tea and orange
juice.
Quick scan of work email to see if anything needs my attention. Today
I am going to be onsite with a customer and unlikely to have access to
email.
Quick scan of Netvibes. The
only thing to interest me is the recent update to
TailRank. I
have occasionally played with various meme trackers
(TechMeme, Digg,
Reddit, populicio.us)
but usually my feeds contain the same stories of interest. I also like
popurls as a quick dashboard of current and
breaking news.
Today I am visiting a Siebel customer in Ascot. This location is
convenient for me (no hotels, no flights, no lengthy drive) and is a
shorter journey than to Oracle's offices in Thames Valley Park.
That's strange. For some reason, the traffic in Kingston upon Thames
isn't completely gridlocked and I actually cross the bridge over the
River Thames in less than 20 minutes. Then I remember why. This week
is half-term for some local schools (my son is on holiday) but, much
to his glee and her chagrin, my daughter is still at school.
Drive through Sunningdale and marvel at the size of some of the houses
(mansions would be a better description) here. Although I keep hearing
that
Sandbanks in
Dorset is the richest area in the UK, Sunningdale must run it a close
second.
Arrive at client offices. I am slightly early which is better than
slightly late so I make a quick call to an account manager with a
('political not technical') query from a customer about a review from
last week.
This customer has a serious data issue in production. On July 22 2006,
a 'consultant' advised the customer to configure Siebel to use
Universal Time Co-ordinated (UTC). This proposal was a good idea (TM)
but poorly executed.
Key elements of the UTC migration were omitted (migration of
pre-existing non-UTC data, specification of timezones for each group
of users who are located around the world, modification of the
database timezone). Apart from that, the conversion to UTC went very
well.
The net result was obtuse behaviour and incorrect appointment times
observed by different users. The issue is compounded by the fact that
this customer also has mobile Web clients who use Siebel on a
disconnected laptop and then synchronise with the server. In addition,
the Siebel administrator reports that server components (EIM,
Workflow) function but now report incorrect submit/start times.
Fortunately, Siebel has a conversion utility (documented in the Global
Deployment Guide) to address the issue so I spent some time
configuring and testing to fix the data quality issue for the various
scenarios.
Get home. Eat tea. Settle down to watch United versus Copenhagen.
Discover that the wife is going out (how very inconsiderate) and I
have pop out to collect my daughter from trampolining.
Count words using Google Docs - 560.