P. J. Connolly

About

P. J. Connolly began writing for IT publications in 1997 and has a lengthy track record in both news and reviews. Since then, he's built two test labs from scratch and earned a reputation as the nicest skeptic you'll ever meet. Before taking up journalism, P. J. was an IT manager and consultant in San Francisco with a knack for networking the Apple Macintosh, and his love for technology is exceeded only by his contempt for the flavor of the month.

Coloring My World

As surprising as it may seem to anyone who has visited my flat, I can be obsessed with tidiness, at least when it comes to patch panels and server racks. I like patch cords dressed and tucked out of the way, and I have been known to slap a label on anything that stays in […]

Reevaluating Identity: Personal vs. Professional

While I was out of town earlier this month, my colleague Cameron Sturdevant wrote a rather interesting post on the subject of identities personal and professional. To borrow a phrase from the courts, I concur in part and dissent in part, for reasons that have as much to do with my own experiences as they […]

When Following Best Practices Is a Bad Idea

I’m sure that many of you have at least heard of the case of Terry Childs, even if you don’t know the name. He’s the former network administrator for the City and County of San Francisco who balked at his bosses’ demands for the passwords for the networks that Childs maintained for the City, got […]

Is Cisco Shedding Its Baggage, or Its Relevance?

Cisco could be turning into the General Motors of Silicon Valley at the rate things are going, and despite my love for Detroit-based automakers, I don’t mean that in a good way. A few weeks after Cisco announced that it was killing the Flip line of cameras, rumors surfaced earlier this week that claimed the […]

A SIM too Far?

Reuters reports that the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) is working on a proposal from Apple for an even smaller SIM card than those currently available, but I have to wonder to what end. Sure, a “nano-SIM” would be convenient for devices that are too small to accept the micro-SIM that’s used in the company’s […]

What’s in a Number?

(Part 1 of however many posts I can justify.) The latest rumor to make the rounds is that the fifth-generation iPhone will be dubbed the “iPhone 4S” because, in many respects, it’s expected to be a somewhat minor upgrade to the product. I’m not sure who it is who makes up these stories, because from […]

Silver Peak’s WAN Tech a Good Fit For EMC VPLEX Geo

Although EMC and Silver Peak Systems have been playing pat-a-cake for a couple of years now, with the latter making its WAN optimization appliances – physical and virtual – and management tools available through EMC’s Select information infrastructure program, the companies took things a step further today by announcing the integration of Silver Peak’s technology […]

Microsoft-Skype Deal Could Be a Win for Everyone

Microsoft’s offer of $8.5 billion – cash – for Skype raises the age-old question of “Why?” Well, it seems pretty simple to me: Microsoft’s unified communications (UC) services, packaged as Lync, lack a VOIP component; Skype fills that hole rather gracefully. Skype’s UC business package is a Windows-only offering, and it would fit rather neatly […]

Starting from Home

Starting from Home Office 365’s home page gives users access to Lync, Outlook and SharePoint, and provides a download link for Office Professional Plus. Policy-Based Management Setting up ActiveSync policies for mobile devices that connect to Exchange Online is as easy as it is on an in-house server. SharePoint Online Collaboration Collaboration is made easier […]

The iPad Goes Royal

Her Majesty is getting an iPad. Lest any of my friends think I’m speaking disrespectfully of my mother, that’s a reference to Queen Elizabeth II, who is said* to be so taken with the Apple tablet that she’s buying one for herself. It seems that Princes William and Harry have recently let their grandmother borrow […]