About the author
Christian Stottmeister is a technical projectmanager responsible for large website setups with a personal interest in security, web technology and projectmanagement issues. Contact information and more details about Stotti can be found here.
@cstottmeister on Twitter
- What you just saw whas the first tweet of my son. ;) At the same time it was my last tweet for the next two weeks. We're on vacation. Twitter 2010/07/24
- vce3434q2w33s37zthblxc te tr5 gtr5f Twitter 2010/07/24
- RT @xperseguers: Relatively unknown feature of #TYPO3: the trash in fileadmin: http://bit.ly/dvCK3k Your editors won't lose files anymore! Twitter 2010/07/21
- Had a nice evening at @GameDuell_DE's listening to @andremichelle. Thanks for the event! #gdtechtalk Twitter 2010/07/21
- Heading for #gdtechtalk at @@GameDuell_DE. Unfortunately we'll be a bit late. Twitter 2010/07/20
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This work by Christian Stottmeister is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Germany.
Author Archives: stotti
Google will inform webmasters about their vulnerable software
As announced earlier Google will soon start to inform webmasters if they’re running out-of-date or vulnerable software. All webmasters registered with the Google Webmaster Tools will soon get notifications in case of using outdated software. Google is trying to achieve this by parsing the HTML code of the website, especially the generator meta tag. Quoting [...]
Checklist: the 20 most important steps for a successful relaunch including domain transfer
You want to relaunch your site and / or move it to a new domain name? This posting tells you which points to follow during that process. It has been originally published by the T3N Magazine in German. I have translated it to English and am publishing it here with permission by the original author.
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Posted in management issues, world wide webtech Tagged dns, documentation, domain, howto, http, relaunch, transfer, webmaster Leave a comment
Amazon limits the bandwith of EC2 instances
Jonathan of Peritor Consulting just informed the world that there is in fact a bandwith limit in Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) instances. In his case – using a small instance – a limit of 35 MB/s takes place. The folks of Peritor benchmarked it by hitting it with several EC2 instances and ‘normal’ servers [...]
Update went wrong, blog gone mad