Archive for the ‘Future of Technology’ Category

VMware revamps data center tools

Thursday, February 26th, 2009
VMware Inc.
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Virtualization specialist VMware has introduced its next generation of data center virtualization tools, called vSphere.

Speaking on Tuesday at the VMworld Europe 2009 conference in Cannes, VMware president Paul Maritz said vSphere would let companies virtualize all their workloads.

“VMware vSphere will gradually replace our existing generation of infrastructure products,” Maritz said, adding that the first elements of the new suite will be delivered later this year. “On top of vSphere will be the new vCenter Suite. The idea is in a series of steps to move closer and closer to the management of service levels.” (more…)

10 obscure Linux applications you need to try

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

GLASGOW, UNITED KINGDOM - APRIL 12: (FILE PHOT...

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1: Floola

Floola isn’t an open source application, but it does run on Linux (as well was OS X and Windows). Floola takes music management (in particular, synching iPods) one step further. With this nifty application, you can download and convert YouTube videos for playback on your iPod. But unlike some other clunkier applications, Floola does this seamlessly and simply. No commands to enter; it’s all GUI. The only possible gotcha is that before you can add videos from YouTube, you have to install ffmpeg on your Linux box. Floola uses ffmpeg for the conversion process.

Don’t expect Floola to have all the bells and whistles that iTunes has. Floola offers Photo support, Snarl (Windows only) support, Growl (Mac only) support, Notes, repair iPods, export lists to HTML, language support, lyrics, duplicate and lost file search, artwork support, video support, Google calendar support, playlists, podcast, lastfm support, and more. Floola is simple to use in Linux, as it comes in an executable binary that you can simply copy to the /usr/bin directory and run with the commandFloola.

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Project Match: IBM sends laid off workers to emerging markets

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009
Economic Map of the World: Emerging Markets an...
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An interesting concept, if you’ve been made redundant in one of their American or European arms, IBM will offer to help you make the transition to working in emerging markets. Specifically in China, India and Brazil. IBM has laid off an estimated 4,000 employees since the beginning of 2009 and is showing signs that more pink slips may be in the mail, but in order to save a bit of face, they’ve developed this program that sounds good on paper but in actuality is a great way for them to move Western talent into foreign markets, where they can pay them local salaries, far less than they’d be making back home. It’s strategic at best, but they spin it well…

Under a program called Project Match, IBM will help workers laid off from domestic sites obtain travel and visa assistance for countries in which Big Blue has openings. Mostly that’s developing markets like India, China, and Brazil.

“IBM has established Project Match to help you locate potential job opportunities in growth markets where your skills are in demand,” IBM says in an internal notice on the initiative. “Should you accept a position in one of these countries, IBM offers financial assistance to offset moving costs, provides immigration support, such as visa assistance, and other support to help ease the transition of an international move.”

The document states that the program is limited to “satisfactory performers who have been notified of separation from IBM U.S. or Canada and are willing to work on local terms and conditions.” The latter indicates that workers will be paid according to prevailing norms in the countries to which they relocate. In many cases, that could be substantially less than what they earned in North America.

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Microsoft’s Controversy Surrounding Windows7

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009
SAN FRANCISCO - JANUARY 29: (FILES) A Comp USA...
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Today, Microsoft’s Jon DeVaan addressed the controversy on the Engineering Windows 7 blog. The gist of his 2100-word post: Microsoft appreciated the input, but UAC’s behavior wasn’t an issue, because malware could only fiddle with UAC settings after it had gotten on a PC, and Windows 7 is really good at warding off malware. And to change UAC’s default behavior to alert users when UAC settings changed would be inconsistent with the approach which Microsoft’s testing had shown that real people liked.

I make no claim to being a security expert (or even the intended audience for DeVaan’s post, which was aimed at developers). But like the rest of Microsoft’s response to this mini-firestorm to date, it was profoundly unsatisfying. No matter how strong Windows 7’s anti-malware protections are, some bad stuff is going to get on some PCs. Why not make it tough for it to perform one task which would unlock the ability for it to do further damage? Screwy but possibly appropriate metaphor: It’s like an apartment manager telling tenants that a presence of a burly doorman in the lobby meant that anyone found in the building changing the lock on a particular conso must be doing so with the owner’s permission.

That post went up at midnight. At 3pm, another one appeared–cosigned by DeVaan and Windows 7 honcho Steve Sinofsky. With reasonably good humor, it ate crow and said that Microsoft will change Windows 7’s behavior:

With this feedback and a lot more we are going to deliver two changes to the Release Candidate that we’ll all see. First, the UAC control panel will run in a high integrity process, which requires elevation. That was already in the works before this discussion and doing this prevents all the mechanics around SendKeys and the like from working. Second, changing the level of the UAC will also prompt for confirmation.

It’s startling that it took Microsoft so many false starts before they got this right: Even if Microsoft was right on some theoretical, technical level, the issue had snowballed into an argument the company simply couldn’t win, period. Nerds will be nerds, and nerds are often stubbon, prickly, and prone tofalling victim to the hobgoblin of little minds. But good for Microsoft for (eventually) engaging in healthy, bloggy debate, and being willing to concede its mistakes and move on. Knowing when you’ve screwed up and being unafraid to admit it in public is very 2009.

More at Dwight Silverman’s TechBlog, Mary-Jo Foley’s All About Microsoft, and I Started Somethingby Long Zheng (one of the guys who raised the issue in the first place).

 

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Can you access your PC anywhere in the world?

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009
Google, Inc.
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Google is to launch a service that would enable users to access their personal computer from any internet connection, according to industry reports.  But campaigners warn that it would give the online behemoth unprecedented control over individuals’ personal data.

The Google Drive, or “GDrive”, could kill off the desktop computer, which relies on a powerful hard drive. Instead a user’s personal files and operating system could be stored on Google’s own servers and accessed via the internet.

The long-rumoured GDrive is expected to be launched this year, according to the technology news website TG Daily, which described it as “the most anticipated Google product so far”.

It is seen as a paradigm shift away from Microsoft’s Windows operating system, which runs inside most of the world’s computers, in favour of “cloud computing“, where the processing and storage is done thousands of miles away in remote data centres.

Home and business users are increasingly turning to web-based services, usually free, ranging from email (such as Hotmail and Gmail) and digital photo storage (such as Flickr and Picasa) to more applications for documents and spreadsheets (such as Google Apps). (more…)

Going beyond Hand Scanning - Vein Recognition

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009
City of Las Vegas
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At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas earlier this month, Fujitsu showed off a new idea in security-minded technology that the Japanese company argues could make the fingerprint an obsolete symbol of personal data: vein-pattern recognition.

Put your hand over a computer’s mouse and an infrared camera shines an invisible light onto — and through — your palm.

By measuring where that light is absorbed and reflected, the system maps the veins in your hand, a collection of crisscrossing lines that Fujitsu claims can reliably identify a user far more accurately than scanning the whorls or loops on his or her fingertip.

That innovative system, which Fujitsu calls Palmsecure, has been sold in its mouse-embedded form in the U.S. since August of last year.

It’s not cheap: A single mouse and software setup costs around $430 US.

But according to Fujitsu’s tests, vein pattern recognition can identify a user on the first try 99.99 per cent of the time and mistakenly approves the wrong user in only .00008 per cent of cases, far less often than fingerprint scanners.

“To get beyond this in terms of accuracy, you’d have to look to DNA,” says Joel Hagberg, Fujitsu’ vice president of marketing and business development.  Vein pattern recognition is the latest — and in some respects, most promising — attempt to reach the holy grail of cybersecurity, what professional digital paranoiacs call “three-factor” authentication.

To prove users’ identity and keep out intruding data thieves, a system would test them based on something they know (say, a password), something they have (such as the RSA tokens that show an encrypted, changing series of numbers) and, perhaps trickiest of all, something they are — a “biometric” test of their physical characteristics.

That last factor has traditionally meant verifying a fingerprint, or in some high-security government settings, a high-resolution photograph of an iris.  As cumbersome as that three-step process sounds, it may be increasingly important in keeping data secure, particularly in the business world. (more…)

IBM’s Newest SuperComputer

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

PhotonQ-BlueGene/Q..for Quantique : )

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IBM has devised a new Blue Gene supercomputer–the Blue Gene/P–that will be capable of processing more than 3 quadrillion operations a second, or 3 petaflops, a possible record.  It is designed to continuously operate at more than 1 petaflop in real-world situations and marks a significant milestone in computing.

Last November, the Blue Gene/L was ranked as the most powerful computer on the planet: it topped out at 280 teraflops, or 280 trillion operations a second during continuous operation.  Put another way, a Blue Gene/P operating at a petaflop is performing more operations than a 1.5-mile-high stack of laptops.

The development of Blue Gene/P seems certain to extend IBM’s position atop the Top 500 Supercomputer list, which comes out this week at the International Supercomputing Conference in Dresden, Germany.  IBM had 93 computers on the list when the rankings last came out in November; four were in the top 10.

Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory will deploy the first Blue Gene/P in the U.S. later this year.  Meanwhile, in Germany, the Max Planck Society and the Forschungszentrum Julich research center will start to install a Blue Gene/P in late 2007.

Others will be installed at Stony Brook University and Brookhaven National Labs (New York facilities that have collaborated with IBM on other projects) and the Science and Technology Facilities Council in Cheshire, England.

Like the vast majority of other modern supercomputers, Blue Gene/P is composed of several racks of servers lashed together in clusters for large computing tasks, such as running programs that can graphically simulate worldwide weather patterns.

Technologies designed for these computers trickle down into the mainstream while conventional technologies and components are used to cut the costs of building these systems.  The chip inside Blue Gene/P consists of four PowerPC 450 cores running at 850MHz each.  A 2×2 foot circuit board containing 32 of the Blue Gene/P chips can churn out 435 billion operations a second.  Thirty two of these boards can be stuffed into a 6-foot-high rack.  The chips and other components are linked together in a high-speed optical network.

Do you think that IBM leads the pack in supercomputing, and is this something we will see in a laptop during our generation?

 

The Future of Web Hosting

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

It’s a safe bet that the Web hosting industry of the future will look very different from the one today’s hosting providers are used to, and that’s certainly cause enough.

Over the past year, plenty of signs have emerged that indicate the face of Web hosting is already starting to stretch and shift in new directions. No, the new winds of change include acquisitions of companies that deliver more than just additional hosting customers, a fresh generation of startups that look nothing like your father’s Web hosting company, and experiments with innovative ways to sell hosting to the next wave of customers.

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Datacenters of the Future, does Microsoft have the answer?

Friday, December 12th, 2008

Data Centers are a hot topic these days.  No matter where you look, this once obscure aspect of infrastructure is getting a lot of attention.  For years, there have been cost pressures on IT operations and this, when the need for modern capacity is greater than ever, has thrust data centers into the spotlight.

Server and rack density continues to rise, placing DC professionals and businesses in tighter and tougher situations while they struggle to manage their IT environments.  And now hyper-scale cloud infrastructure is taking traditional technologies to limits never explored before and focusing the imagination of the IT industry on new possibilities.

Image representing Microsoft as depicted in Cr...

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