iCare Blog

The Economics of Monitoring

When I think back to the late 80′s and how the smart guys I knew diagnosed network problems, I am struck by how far we have come. Often the only tools were ping, traceroute and the ability to think analytically. Now we have WhatsUp Gold and other products to map your physical network, monitor whether devices or applications are up, check bandwidth usage, sift through log files for important events, and more.

The industry has advanced not just because technology has improved. It is also because networks have become critical to the daily operations of most organizations. In the late 80′s, if a server went down, people shrugged, poked around, figured out what was going on, and rebooted it. Now there are many more devices, networks are more complex, and downtime costs real money. This has created a market for products like WhatsUp Gold to become increasingly capable and sophisticated.

Now, though, I realize that there is so much more that could be monitored that would make a huge difference in millions of people’s lives. Take, for example, water pumps in remote villages in the developing world. In ‘Fixing the Water Crisis‘, Ned Breslin talks about the lack of clean water in much of the world. People without access to clean water are forced to drink polluted, dirty water, which makes them sick.

Over time, well-intentioned organizations have funded the installation of wells in many villages. After a well is built, a village has access to clean water, health improves, and everybody is better off. The story ends badly in many cases, though. Several years later, the well breaks, and no one outside the village finds out about it. So the villagers revert to drinking unsanitary water. Now, however, some kids have been born and grown up drinking only clean water. When they are forced to drink dirty water, they get very sick, sick enough to die. Ned tells one such sad story in his talk.

What we need is a low-cost way to monitor devices like water wells in remote areas, places without electricity. And when a well breaks, to notify someone who can fix it. At present, the economics are not there. I hope that as monitoring technology continues to improve we or other company will develop an affordable solution and help improve the lives of millions of people.

Racing to save lives. One mile at a time.

Team in Training is a fundraising campaign for The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society (LLS). While training for an endurance event, team members raise funds that are applied directly to cancer research, patient aid, and community service programs of LLS. Team in Training is the # 1 endurance training program in the country, with over 440,000 participants and one billion dollars raised since 1988.

The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society is the world’s largest voluntary health organization dedicated to funding blood cancer research. LLS’s mission is to cure Leukemia, Lymphoma, Hodgkin’s Disease and Myeloma and to improve the quality of life for patients and their families.

On June 5th, I, Amy Williamson, will be participating in [Read more...]

The Pakistan Flood — An update from CARE

In the summer of 2010, Pakistan saw a devastating flood with more than 20 million people affected. Ipswitch responded quickly and generously, with the company matching individual contributions 2-to-1. A total of $40,500 were donated through CARE. CARE just sent an update on the important progress that they have made in the Sindh, Punjab and KPK provinces, working through 17 local partners. Ipswitch’s dollars have been part of the pool that has helped CARE provide healthcare services, tents, food rations, hygiene education, jerry cans, safe drinking water, shawls and mats to over 285,000 people, including almost 118,000 children. More work remains — CARE’s goal is to help 500,000 people affected by or displaced as a result of the emergency. The good news overall is that 96 percent of displaced people have returned home to rebuild their lives. They need all the assistance that they can get, so please continue to donate to the Ipswitch-CARE partnership. For more details, please view the PDF CARE Pakistan Flood Emergency update.

Project Bread — Walk for Hunger, May 1st (Boston, MA)

Project Bread is a program to raise money for food for the hungry.  Funds raised through the Walk support more than 400 emergency food programs in 135 communities in Massachusetts. Every dollar counts for the people who are unable to get through the week with enough food.

On Sunday, May 1st, we, Krystal Martel and Lisa Decourcy, will be participating in Project Bread’s 2011 Walk for Hunger. We did this last year with generous help from the Ipswitch community.  This time, again, your help will be invaluable.  You can donate online (see the links below). We are registered under Ipswitch.  For folks in Lexington, we will also have a donation sheet in the kitchen. [Read more...]

Ipswitch Helps Ronald McDonald House in Augusta, GA


The Ronald McDonald House is gearing up for its 3rd Annual Ronald McDonald House Charities of Augusta Plane Pull on April 30, 2011. The event brings together groups from all industry sectors, such as medical, education, military, firefighters and various other groups in the Augusta area. Teams of 20 compete to pull a FedEx 727 Boeing aircraft 12 feet in the shortest amount of time. The Ipswitch team is the defending champions for the 2009 and 2010 plane pull. Our team pulled the 193,000 lb plane 12 feet in just 6.499 seconds!  The event is lots of fun and it does give the winning groups much bragging rights, but the key objective behind the event is raising money for charity. This event is something our team looks forward to every year. Not only are we helping children in need through a great organization…but we have fun while doing it.

More Pictures from Hot Stove Cool Music

On the left are Mike O’Malley and Peter Gammons, two of the people who work with the Foundation to Be Named Later (FTBNL) to make this event happen. Almost everything (musicians, space, food, promotion) is donated, so the money raised goes to the organizations helping kids. FTBNL does a fine job of finding efficient, high-impact non–profits to support.

And here is Bronson Arroyo doing his Pearl Jam impersonation.

Hot Stove Cool Music Concert

Buffalo Tom rocks it on January 15th to help raise $300k for non-profits who work with kids. Buffalo Tom is a regular at these fundraisers, playing good music and donating their time for a good cause. We were the lead sponsor.

Pictures from CARE – Rwanda School

These pictures of one of the schools in Rwanda we support are from Jaime Stewart, CARE’s country manager. I visited there two years ago, and was impressed with how the kids paid attention and seemed eager to learn.

Another CARE Update on Haiti

We received this update from Monte Allen at CARE this week. My impression is that CARE is addressing the big relief challenges in a pragmatic way.

Roger

Today, on the one-year anniversary of the Haiti earthquake, you may want a brief update on CARE’s response:  where we have placed our emphasis and what contribution we have been able to make to the overall relief and recovery effort.

Here is a link to a very summary review of CARE’s work.  About one-fifth of the way down the page, you’ll find a menu bar followed by succinct descriptions of our areas of particular focus:  shelter, women and girls, water sanitation and hygiene, livelihoods, food security, and children’s education psychological care and well being.  Click on “video” to see a 4-5 minute synopsis.

Thank you for your interest in CARE’s efforts to support the people of Haiti over this last, horrible year.

Pakistan Flood Relief Update

In this 10-page update from CARE, I was struck by this comment: “The geographical scale of this disaster and the number of affected people makes this a bigger and more complex situation than almost any other ever faced by the humanitarian community.”

PakistanFloodReliefUpdateDec2010

18 million people have been affected by the flooding, with millions in urgent need of assistance. CARE has so far been able to offer shelter and medical/health assistance to 100,000 people – a small fraction of those in need. Part of the problem is that this crisis has not led to the same outpouring of support that followed the tsunami or the Haitian earthquake. Aid organizations are working with much smaller budgets in Pakistan. Although our role is small, Ipswitch is glad to support CARE’s relief effort.