When you work solo as an IT administrator, you pretty much handle everything that tech touches, and sometimes that means keeping your maps as alive as the world they represent. When you work solo as an IT administrator, you pretty much handle everything that tech touches. From servers and security to databases and GIS, it all finds its way to
Virtualization did not fade because it failed; it faded because it worked. The technology became so good, so stable, that it disappeared into the fabric of everything else. The best innovations are often the quiet ones, the ones that become invisible because they’re everywhere. There was a time when virtualization felt like magic. Spinning up a new server from a
ArcGIS does not just test your certificates. It tests your process. Every PFX is a confession that trust must be built correctly, and every renewal is a reminder that shortcuts will always cost you twice. When our SSL certificate expired this month, I found myself performing the same ritual every administrator (ArcGIS, systems, network, application – yes, that’s me too)
Windows Server 2025 is not the future. It is the foundation the future still depends on. You cannot containerize discipline, and you cannot outsource reliability. When the cloud forgets its promises, this is the system that will still remember yours. There is something almost tragic about Windows Server 2025.It arrives not with the swagger of innovation but with the quiet
There is a quiet precision in Lidar work. Every return pulse is a story, every elevation layer a whisper of the terrain. What looks like color and code is a dialogue between light and surface. This lab took that conversation apart, from raw LAS files to a three-dimensional rendering of life above and below the canopy. Importing Lidar Data and
We thought the cloud would free us from risk. It simply reminded us that every solution carries its own kind of failure. When the Cloud Blinked The world slowed down for a moment, not because of disaster or conflict, but because a few servers inside Amazon’s vast digital empire stopped responding. AWS went down, and suddenly, students could not log
(Inspired by “American Pie” by Don McLean) A Long, Long Time Ago A long, long time agoI can still remember howCanvas used to make me smile.And I knew if I logged in then,I’d get my grades and check again,And maybe I’d submit my work in style. But early that October day,The pages froze, then slipped away.Bad news on the website—I
The cloud isn’t magic—it’s someone else’s network, rented by the minute. Master it, or it will master you. The Illusion of the Cloud People love saying “it’s in the cloud”—as if that erases the need for cables, routers, and subnets. It doesn’t. Every byte of “cloud” data still travels through copper, fiber, and radio waves. The only difference is that
The Philippines once guarded someone else’s peace. Now it guards its own. The Center That Never Wanted to Be One The Philippines never asked to be at the center of the Indo-Pacific. Geography made that choice for us. We sit in the path of ambition, where trade routes meet, where power projects, and where history keeps repeating itself. In the
A secure Windows network is not built on trust or technology. It is built on doubt, discipline, and the refusal to believe that anything is ever safe. The Illusion of Safety We like to think a Windows network is safe because it is Windows. Familiar. Polished. Backed by billion-dollar branding. The truth is, Windows is only as secure as the