Guy Kawasaki interviews Marten Mikos, CEO of MySQL

As usual, Guy Kawasaki does an excellent job with his Ten Questions with series. This time he talks to Marten Mikos, CEO of MySQL. Even though the interview is short, there are so many things I’d like to quote. Really. Here they are. I’ll try to limit myself. You better go read the whole thing.

On the importance of users and in the open source business:

At MySQL we LOVE users who never pay us money. They are our evangelists. No marketing could do for us what a passionate MySQL user does when he tells his friends and colleagues about MySQL. Our success is based on having millions of evangelists around the world. Of course, they also help us develop the product and fix bugs.

On the success story:

So we have always been focused on marrying the best of business with the best of free and open source software. It is not an easy line to walk, but it is highly rewarding. A few times we have erred to one or the other side, and then we have corrected our course.

On customers:

YouTube, Craigslist, Flickr, Habbo Hotel, LiveJournal, Technorati, Second Life, Trulia, FeedBurner, and Right Now are our customers

and more:

Omniture runs over 250 billion transactions per quarter on a farm of MySQL servers. Google uses MySQL for AdSense and AdWords. Other large installations include Wikipedia, Travelocity, Weather.com, etc. The databases can be hundreds of gigabytes. Sites run on hundreds of servers, some on thousands.

and more:

We were used in the earth unit for the Mars rover. The special effects of The Lord of the Rings were based on MySQL. HotorNot runs on MySQL. Even the Oracle FAQ runs on MySQL ().

and more:

Google and Yahoo run mission critical applications on MySQL. Nokia and Alcatel build mobile phone networks that run on MySQL. MySQL was used in various emergency systems during the tsunami in South East Asia and during hurricane Katrina.

On open source:

I think the architecture of participation that is embedded in the open source philosophy is a superior innovation method. And it is not limited to software—look at Wikipedia. It just so happens that software developers were the first ones to adopt it in the modern world.

Excellent interview indeed…

Top 10 Ways to Get a Technorati Top 100 Blogger to Link to Your Blog or Website

Here is the best ever list of Top 10 Ways to Get a Technorati Top 100 Blogger to Link to Your Blog or Website.

If you really want to pump up the traffic to your blog or website, at least temporarily, just get a link from any of the Technorati Top 100 bloggers. No, it’s not easy, but here are ten ways that might gitterdun for ya.

Even if you don’t want to pump up the traffic to your blog or website, go read this list anyway – it’s funny!

Trying out MyBlogLog. Fantastic so far.

After reading this post I’ve decided to try MyBlogLog. It’s been less than a day and I already absolutely love it. Users, comments, communities, and, above all, real time statistics – great job! If you have no idea of what I am talking about, here is a really nice definition of MyBlogLog:

In a way, I feel as if this is bringing the MySpace / LiveJournal type of social networking to regular blogs like ours. Definitely much needed since the current way we see one another is generally through conversations based on comments and trackbacks.

Read the rest of the post for more details about MyBlogLog.

In the meantime, I think, I’ll be paying for the service. There’s no way I can survive without it now, knowing that it’s out there and that it costs only $25 USD per year. Can you?