Heading to the Microsoft Azure And AI Conference December 5 – 7

By Mike Maddaloni on Tuesday, November 28, 2023 at 09:42 PM with 0 comments

screenshot of Microsoft Azure And AI Conference Web site

Next week, Tuesday through Thursday, December 5 through 7, 2023, I will be attending the Microsoft Azure and AI Conference in Orlando. Will you be there too?

The conference includes a wide array of presenters from Microsoft and partner firms on leveraging the latest capabilities of Microsoft’s cloud hosting platform Azure as well as artificial intelligence, or AI – the hottest topic out there in the tech world and beyond.

I will be attending with colleagues from work who all work with Azure in different capacities. This collaboration among peers will heighten my learning for certain over the 3-day conference. I am hoping to take away from this tangible ideas and potential projects to meet our team and organizational goals.

If you are attending feel free to connect with me here and comment on this blog post or you can connect with me on LinkedIn and please no spammy sales pitches.


This is from The Hot Iron, a journal on business and technology by Mike Maddaloni.


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Google Domains Shutting Down Not A Second Too Soon

By Mike Maddaloni on Tuesday, June 27, 2023 at 11:04 AM with 0 comments

screenshot of Squarespace Domains page

They say, “all good things must come to an end.” Whoever they are, they may have also said “even some not so good things come to an end as well.” The latter will fortunately come true in the form of Google announcing it is getting out of the domain name business and selling their domain registrations to Squarespace.

This news from the Big Tech behemoth came out late in the day on June 15 with little fanfare. I heard about it on a social media post and had to dig to find the press release announcing the deal. Even as of the writing of this post close to a couple of weeks later there is no mention of the deal on the home page of Google Domains. Digging into Google help I was able to find a mention of it. Not surprising to me, there is mention of it on Squarespace’s home page, with a link to a robust welcome page.

If you can tell by my choice of words so far, I think this is a very good thing. Why? Where Google loves collecting information about people, they don’t like dealing with people. You can’t exactly pick up the phone and call Google for support on their end-user consumer products, everything from Gmail to their Web advertising product AdSense. Interestingly on the Google Domains home page it states you can “get 24/7 Google support from real humans” which made me laugh, for as recently as within the last year that was not the case.

Out with the Old and In with the New

In the course of performing my primary income source (aka my job) I deal with many domain registrars, including Google. Many of my clients have had problems with Google domains as the login to the registrar service is integrated with the overall Google login process. Some clients have had turnover in their business and have had issues getting back into their accounts. In one case, a Web site was down for over 2 weeks because of this. No telephone support was available to accept a credit card to renew the domain name and following their automated account recovery process sadly took that long. I’m not sure exactly when they added real humans to the mix, but it is too little too late in my mind, and I have for years been suggesting people use other registrars like Name.com.

Squarespace, on the other hand, is a service designed for the non-technical user, and will likely be a good home for those domain names leaving Google. If you view the landing page I mentioned earlier they have a nice, stylish page welcoming over Google customers and highlighting the services they offer for domains, including reselling Google Workspace. This makes sense, if Google doesn’t like people and Squarespace does, it’s a win-win.

Trust and Track

If you have domain names registered through Google you can leave them there and they will be migrated to Squarespace. However you should watch for emails from both vendors to watch for specific dates and double-check all services using your domain names to ensure they are operating correctly following the move. If you are a little more technical, you may want to capture the DNS settings for each of your domain names in the event there are issues post-migration. You also have the option to transfer your domain names to any other registrar like Name.com that I have personally used for years. Note I have no stake or referral code with Name.com, but they do offer real humans who offer stellar support out of their Denver, Colorado headquarters.

Google Domains is yet another business that the search and more firm has shelved. A nice list is available at Killed by Google which lists all of their former services – some I miss, some I am glad are gone. Google Domains has already been added to the top of the list ahead of their scheduled September, 2023 shutdown.

Deconstructing Google Domains Demise

Internet-based services come and go quite often. Google Domains is one of them, but their door shutting will open a new door for their customers with Squarespace. No matter where your domain name is registered, always update your contact information and payment methods, and keep a list of them and their expiration dates outside of the registrar account for safekeeping of these vital digital assets.


This is from The Hot Iron, a journal on business and technology by Mike Maddaloni.


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Celebrating 16 Years Of The Hot Iron Partially with AI

By Mike Maddaloni on Saturday, December 31, 2022 at 03:50 PM with 0 comments

photo of the number 16

Congratulations to Mike Maddaloni on 16 years of successful blogging at The Hot Iron. It is a notable achievement to consistently produce high-quality content for such a long period of time.

Note that the preceding 2 sentences were not written by me, or any human being for that matter. It was generated by the artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot ChatGPT. Not bad, eh? That being said, it took some effort to generate it and put this post together.

Why AI?

Over the last few months I have been hearing more about ChatGPT and how with a query or feeding of information to it will give a reasonably understandable response. Intrigued by this, I created an account with the platform (note you need to provide an email address and a phone number to verify yourself) and gave it a try. The 2 lines above were generated as a result of the following query:

“Congratulations to Mike Maddaloni in the third person on 16 years of blogging at The Hot Iron in 2 sentences”

The query was tweaked several times, the final one here worked for this piece after I added “in the third person” as previous attempts consistently used the first person, likely as it was trying to “chat” with me rather than generate a statement to be used here. Also in previous tries it added a third statement of “well done!” at the end every time until I added the third person language even though I explicitly stated I wanted only 2 sentences.

Once I was satisfied with the text, I thought why not accompany it with an AI-generated image? After trying several AI art generators I found from search engine queries, I gave up. Trying requests with variations on “number 16” did not give me an image that had the words or numerals in it, so I went outside and took a picture of my house number, brought it into GIMP and messed with its filters to create what is appearing above.

A good first try with AI generated content; good but not great. Will future posts here contain more AI-generated content? Possibly, as I am just beginning to explore this area. If there is, I will certainly disclaim it.

Happy New Year!


This is from The Hot Iron, a journal on business and technology by Mike Maddaloni.


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Merry Christmas 2022

By Mike Maddaloni on Saturday, December 24, 2022 at 05:36 PM with 0 comments

photo of an empty mall store decorated for Christmas

Merry Christmas to my friends, family, readers and anyone else who happens to read this!

When I was thinking of what photo to accompany my greeting, I could have easily taken one of the blowing snow amidst the subzero temperatures that has consumed the upper Midwest this week, but the scene above caught my eye the other day. This is the façade of the former Hollister store at the local mall that has remained long after the store moved to a more modern-looking space. With the weather outside as frightful as it is, there was something about the faux California beach scene decorated for the holidays that made me smile.

Whether you celebrate the holiday in any way shape or form, or not, may your day be as full of happiness as possible.


This is from The Hot Iron, a journal on business and technology by Mike Maddaloni.


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Tim McDonald Needs A Live Liver Donor

By Mike Maddaloni on Wednesday, May 11, 2022 at 07:39 PM with 0 comments

screenshot of TimsLiver.com

Tim McDonald needs a live liver donor, could it be you?

For some of you reading this, this may seem like an odd statement; Mike, I only have one liver, how can I donate it? Let me explain.

When most people think of organ transplantation, they think of an entire organ – a heart, a kidney or even an entire liver. However the liver is a unique organ in that you can actually donate a part of your liver to someone else, and it will grow in them and yours will regrow as well. I learned all about the liver from my volunteering for and support of the American Liver Foundation after I lost my Mom to an autoimmune liver disease. Through this association I met people who themselves were recipients of live liver donations. The stories they told were nothing short of amazing in how just a part of someone else’s liver gave them a new lease on life.

So when I learned Tim is looking for a live liver donor himself, and I myself am not a match, I couldn’t help but share this with as many people as possible through my humble blog. Especially as this humble blog is related to how I know him.

Couldn’t Have Happened to a Nicer Guy

Back in the late 2000’s when social media was in its infancy, there was a large culture of people in Chicago who worked in social media or were simply active in it. This is how I know Tim, as he was one of those people I was connected with. Interestingly we only met a few times, but especially in those early days, that wasn’t a detractor to truly connecting with people.

Now years later, neither of us are in Chicago but we are still connected, albeit not as much as before due to my own choices to quit Facebook and quit Twitter (and Instagram too, but I digress – back to Tim). When I saw his post on LinkedIn, at first glance I didn’t think it was about him himself. When I looked further into it, I was sad but hopeful that he can find a donor.

Tim has created a Web site aptly named TimsLiver.com where you can learn more about him, the specifics of who could be a match as well as the overall process. As this is major surgery that will take time to recover, he is looking for a true angel to make this donation.

Please share his Web site to your friends and networks – there’s a PDF on the site that has all of the details as well.

Thank you for reading and sharing this, and I am praying for you Tim!


This is from The Hot Iron, a journal on business and technology by Mike Maddaloni.


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