Sunday, December 5, 2010

NSFW: Another year, another possibly depressing visit to London

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Another day – another year, actually – another airport. This time I’m at gate A11 at SFO waiting for my flight to London. My plan was to use the 10 hour flight to write a column about how I’m looking forward to seeing London again but how I’m depressed nervous at the idea of catching up with the state of the city’s tech entrepreneurial scene.


From what I’ve heard from Brit friends who have visited the Valley, it seems that London 2.0 has remained – at best – stagnant since I was last there twelve months ago. In some cases, comically so. This time last year, we were all eagerly anticipating the imminent US roll-out of Spotify – the next big UK-based startup that was going to change the world (see previously Bebo – subsequently killed by AOL – and Last.fm – now set in amber by CBS). Twelve months on and, uh, we’re all eagerly anticipating the imminent US roll-out of Spotiy. And that’s it. As far as I can tell, there’s almost nothing else out of London that’s making even the smallest blip on the rest of the world’s radar.


I was going to write a column about that sad fact. That and the acknowledgement that I’m probably completely wrong about it. How it’s far more likely that I’ve just been stuck in the Valley bubble for the past twelve months, and that, when I get back to the UK, I’ll quickly realize how exciting and vibrant everything really is there, and how many companies are on the verge of making it big.


Or at least that was my plan until about ten minutes ago when I realized two things. Firstly, that I’ve spent so much time traveling domestically in the US that I’d forgotten that international flights don’t offer Wifi; which makes writing and posting a column from 37,000 feet a little tricky. And secondly, that this exact time last year I was taking the same flight, with the same concerns about London 2.0 – and writing the exact same last-minute column about how I was hoping to be proved wrong by the reality on the ground. Spolier alert: I wasn’t proved wrong at all.


For both of those reasons, then – as they make the final call for my flight – I figure it might be a cynically fun idea to simply copy and paste what I wrote last year, with just a couple of adjustments [marked by brackets] to bring it up to date. You might call it laziness, I might call it an ironic underscoring of the depressing rut of London 2.0. Either way, here goes.


It’s depressing how few brackets I need.



I’m tired. Very tired. It’s a little after 4am San Francisco time – noon GMT – and I’m sitting in the arrivals lounge Heathrow airport, thanking the lord for Boingo hotspots and trying to commit these few hundred words to cyberspace before the daylight finally penetrates my brain and my whole body goes into jet-lag meltdown.


And to think I was so organised 24 hours ago. My column was written – 1000 words on a big subject of the week; a big subject that I now can’t talk about, for reasons I also can’t talk about. Don’t ask.


Still, I’m a professional and there’s no use crying over spilt milk – I’ve spent five [six] pounds on a coffee, opened a fresh Google Document and am all set to write an alternative column on how happy I am to be back in London, and how excited I am for the opportunity to catch up with all the amazing and inspiring start-ups my erstwhile home has to offer.


But therein lies the problem. While I’m certainly happy to be here – it’s my 30th [31st] birthday tomorrow, and there is a party planned – the truth is, I’m just not all that excited about London’s current crop of dot com hopefuls.


When I moved to San Francisco at the start of the year, I promised myself I’d head back to the old country twice a year – mainly to keep my cynicism topped up and to make sure I didn’t lose the accent that your American women find so endearing. But also for a third, more serious reason: I don’t want to forget my roots. The London technology scene is where I cut my columnising teeth, and it’s Brit entrepreneurs that first inspired me to try – and fail – my hand at building a start-up. Whereas Valley entrepreneurs point to Facebook and Google as their inspirations, mine came in the form of Moo, Last.fm and Bebo. Smaller fish perhaps, but each with a uniquely British vibe that somehow made them more fun; more human. Also – say what you like about San Francisco as a technology hub, but the London scene’s parties shit all over the rest of the world.


But recently [last year] something has changed. I noticed it when I last visited back in June [2009] and, in what turned out to be my penultimate column for the Guardian, I  called time of death on London’s start-up scene. Everyone was running out of money, I said, people were getting laid off in their droves, and all the real action is – as ever – in San Francisco. Two days later, Guardian Tech’s freelance budget ran out of money, my column was laid off and I was hired by TechCrunch in San Francisco. QED.


And since then London has only become less relevant as a home for dynamic exciting start-ups. Take ‘Silicon Roundabout’. Last year, Dopplr co-founder Matt Biddulph noticed that a number of high profile start-ups – including Moo, Last.fm, and of course Dopplr – were all based within walking distance of the old street roundabout in East London. He jokingly suggested that the region be renamed ‘Silicon Roundabout’. Today the Old Street roundabout remains but Dopplr – and Biddulph – have left for Berlin, Last.fm is owned by CBS in New York and Moo has opened a US base of operations in Providence, Rhode Island. A similar story is true right across the Capital, with Bebo laying off almost all [all] of its local staff and countless other London 2.0 poster children looking to the US for money or a new base of operations. The idea that a company can thrive – or even survive – in London alone seems entirely implausible; ridiculous even.  Off the top of my head I can’t think of a single exciting web business that has come out of the UK in the past six months. Spotify is the nearest candidate and that was created by Swedes.


Moreover, in the few short months since my last trip back home I’ve gone utterly native in my attitude towards my homeland. I see plenty of my Brit friends when they visit San Francisco, but rather than asking for news from the old country, I’m more likely to ask them when they’re going to come to their senses and move to the Valley. I still visit TechCrunch Europe several times a week – Mike Butcher always does a solid job at covering what’s going on over here – but even there I’ve noticed a curious change in my attitude to what I read. Where once I read TCEU through the eyes of a local – noting new companies and inwardly congratulating the latest Belgian company to secure funding – I now look at European technology news in the way American news channels cover foreign stories about escaped bears. Not to learn anything useful, but rather to amuse myself on how parochial foreigners can be. Oh, bless, the French have launched their own rival to Facebook. Ho ho ho.


Things have got so bad that I’ve even started to mentally turn on my friends who are still toiling away near Old Street. A couple of days ago, one such friend – who I won’t name, sufficed to say he’s CEO of a hot London start-up – emailed me an amazing screed in response to a post by one of my TC colleagues hyping a Valley-based rival. The thrust of my friend’s complaint was that his company has been virtually ignored by TechCrunch.com even though TechCrunch Europe had hailed it as one of the continent’s rising stars. This disparity he blamed on the fact that TechCrunch (US) is only interested in local companies, created by people who happen to be friends of our writers. Six months ago, I’d have agreed with him – I mean, there really no need for ten thousand Pandora stories for every Last.fm post, or four hundred Foursquare plugs for every mention of Rummble. But on reading my friend’s email this week, my first response wasn’t sympathy, but apathy. Mate – I thought – that’s just the way it is. TechCrunch is based in San Francisco and so are most of the companies TechCrunch covers. Those are the rules of the game. If you don’t like it, stop whining and get on a fucking plane.


But the fact is, my friend is right; and I’m wrong. There are hundreds of amazing technology companies outside of the Valley, many of which haven’t taken a penny of American money and are making money hand over fist without a single San Francisco-based user. Just read a couple of Lacy’s recent dispatches from India or China; or a week’s worth of TechCrunch Europe posts and you’ll see that’s true. The problem – my problem – is that living in the Valley has it easy to forget, or care, about them. The skin of the bubble is just too thick and the voices from Europe (and beyond) just too faint and distant.


And so I’ve taken my own advice and got on a fucking plane. In the three weeks I’m in town, I’m planning to meet as many UK-based start-ups as possible, to keep half an eye on what comes out of LeWeb next week, to catch up with friends who are still doing cool things near Silicon Roundabout, to re-avail myself of the kick-ass social scene here – and above all to remind myself that the old country is still home to plenty of new thinking. And then at the end of the month, I’ll return to the bubble – re-energised with cynicism and hopefully slightly less convinced that Foursquare represents the most important thing in the future of the world. I mean, everyone here knows that’s Spotify.


But all that will have to wait until next week. I’ve got a birthday to have first – and right now I just need to get some sleep.


Hello [again] London. And goodnight.

Us Online Holiday Spending up to 12%-16.8 billion $ to date

comScore just released its weekly about Us online expenditure at the end of the first 33 November and December holiday season, and the numbers are to go from strength to strength the next record in the latest Cyber Monday and Black Friday sales. So far, consumers spent 16.8 billion u.s. dollars, an increase of 12% over the network during the same period last year.

Days after Cyber Monday, Tuesday, November 30; reached online spending 911 million dollars, in which case the third heaviest on the network, resources for the days of the date of the record. On Wednesday (868 million dollars) and Thursday (850 million dollars) has also a strong e-commerce sales days as well.

comScore says that more retailers are doing particularly well at the end of the season, mainly in the top 25 online retailers are left up to the holiday season, an increase in expenditure. These e-retailers have seen seen their total sales dollar grows by 20%, while loans for the financing of small and mid-sized retailers sales have been flat. Top 25 retailers have received 4. (2) the market share level 67,8% from 2009 holiday season.

The company stated that the importance of research in social media on their purchasing decisions of consumers. 33% of the agreed to 500 Internet users were asked how much they agree with the phrase "from your friends on social media sites are a great way to get the recommendations of the gift ideas during the holiday season", compared to 24%, which was opposed to the (43% of the remaining neutral) statement.

While social media is strictly forbidden by the place of the ground, the recommendations of the placing on the market of the product is still young and is much more room to grow.

Of course, the increase in expenditure during the holidays is not all that surprising, taking into account the economy better. And more and more consumers appear to be an item (such as opposed to brick and mortar shops) on the network, e-retail sales have increased also. comScore predicts that total online spending the additional tariff quota increase 11% 32.4 billion dollars this year, so we have a further 16 billion dollars to go.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Apple, Android smartphone-systems of the most desired

It should come as no surprise that Apple and Android has two "most desired" smartphone users in the new mobile phone systems according to a study by Nielsen. But the results vary slightly to the people who were subject to the investigation.

Nielsen, set the current Smartphone owners, the results of the survey among the out today show, 35% is looking to buy an iPhone in the next device, while 28% intend to Android phone may (a). But one of those who currently own property and want to update your Smartphone, 25% is eyeing the iPhone and 28% are likely to opt out from the Android device.

(Credit: Nielsen)

Specify the difference: Smartphones Run third-party operating systems, such as Apple's iOS, Android, BlackBerry, Windows Mobile and Nokia Symbian, and they support third-party-of-the-art portable apps.Feature phones to use their own OS, not as a general rule, the successful third-party applications is carried out, and is usually the other restrictions.

Among the age groups iPhone proved to be a little more than Android phone for people 18-24, 25-34, and in particular of those 55 and older, depending on the circumstances of the case, it is desirable to Nielsen.These 35-54 prefer Android device as their next phone low margin. [1] [2] and sex, on behalf of the iPhone the next purchase of women, while men are more interested in Android.

Smartphone owners were more decisive than feature phone users in terms of their next device operating system that use Them. [1] [2] currently feature phone, 25% said they were "not sure", what their next phone should only 13% of smartphone users who were equally uncertain, compared to 55 and older people were also certain less than what they would like to see in a mobile OS through the following phone with users.

Overall, 29,7% of the total value of all Us mobile subscribers used smartphones 70,3%, which is still the most common feature phones, smartphones compared. environments in the United States is the iPhone's iOS and 27% of the market, with BlackBerry OS Android is now a 22% share of Nielsen's data,.

(Credit: Nielsen)

Chromium lures significant new browser usage

Chrome gained 0.75 percentage points of global browser usage share in November.Chrome browser usage share of the worldwide increased by 0.75 percentage point in November.(Credit: Net Applications)

November was a good month of Google's browser chrome for the intentions of the 1999-2000 won more than a new part of the Web usage.


Chrome usage grew by 8.5% of the worldwide Web usage in October released today by NET Applications, analytics software, monitors Web traffic statistics to 9.3% in November, to the greatest extent.


Chrome claimed most of that share in Microsoft Internet Explorer, which has been a decline in the general use of 59.2% 58.3%. Chrome, Google's not the time, it is easier to carry out the agenda--adding new features to the Web programmers, by modifying the NET communication protocols in order to make them faster and generally tries to make the Internet a place where people spend more life means.


Thirdly, Firefox had yet again 22 .8 percent, mainly flat, while the Safari methods up 5.4% to 5.6% and Opera löystynyt 2.3% to 2.2%.


Microsoft, even if there is a silver lining: the ancient Internet Explorer 6 is gradually Fading off and later IE8 to use October November increased almost as much as the company had a Chrome.(IE9, more radical update still in beta testing.)


"One of our main tasks in this Microsoft's IE team is to get people off IE6 and onto IE later epätodenmukaiset as quickly as possible," Roger Capriotti, Director of product marketing for Internet Explorer, said in the blog post. "During the last six months, the use of IE6 is now declining faster and Community-scale groups of undertakings in a Member State other than the worldwide consumers. We believe that this reflects how organizations are recognizing the need to move to a modern browser. "


Companies software changes can be gated Conservative Member of the administrators, upgrade costs and a particular browser dependency. Consequently, the creation of their IE6 in particular has been a challenge to Microsoft and avid long hours trying to craft the old browser equipped with a modern Web site developers.


NET Applications said, China is still the major holdout IE6 if 45,2% of users use it That is compared to the 14.. 6% of the world.

Microsoft is happy to point to signs of IE6's fading usage.Microsoft is happy IE6 's Fading over the use of characters.(Credit: Microsoft)

Ernst & Young: the people's Republic of China to Remove the leading renewable energy

Guided by the surge in the power of the wind, take place at installations for the manufacture of the people's Republic of China has built a leadership, Ernst & Young, the classification of the countries on the basis of renewable energy sources in the top.

The wind in the people's Republic of China is investing in this quarter, almost half of global expenditure, ensure that one of every two wind turbines to go live at the end of this year, visit Enrst & Young, which is a quarterly "the attractiveness of the country," according to the consultants in the people's Republic of China index.

United States see the jump, a large solar installations before the end of the year, because developers are Rushing projects to start before the end of the year.The tax credit for renewable energy sources instead of aid projects can now obtain a grant but that the practice is not new.

Federal policy uncertainty and financial markets have been hurt U.s. wind industry, which is the second global wind-Low gas prices in the index. [1] [2] also made the Sun and the wind project funding is harder.

Ernst & Young, the report concluded that South Korea, which is a large consumer of energy, has risen substantially based on national policy and well developed in the supply chain.

Outside of the Sun and the wind, the people's Republic of China has elevated the level of national strategic investments in clean technology, so that the core funding for future growth, said Ben Warren, infrastructure Director of Ernst & Young Advisory: n UK energy and the environment, the statement.

"After the index to the top spot for us to achieve in September of the people's Republic of China has opened a gap other healthy. Cleantech withdrawn from the market, including renewable energy sources in the future growth of the country shall be represented by, a significant part of the plans," he said. "China's solar industry is also fast becoming an important role in the global market. "

The highlight of the people's Republic of China renewable energy and green technology development report comes two days after the Energy Secretary Steven Chu, push the calling of the people's Republic of China becomes the new energy technology (a) "Sputnik moment," said, the US needs YhdysvalloissaHän to invest in clean energy research and economic reasons.

South Korea, Ernst & Young report notes that a number of other countries in the context of increasing energy technology programmes to supplement also Romania, Egypt and Mexico, which have risen rapidly in the rankings.

Demilitarizing networks (Argentina)

Gary McGraw Gary McGraw

(Credit: Cigital)

As if the wars on terror and drugs weren't keeping U.S. officials busy enough, the drum beats of cyberwar are increasing.


There were the online espionage attacks Google said originated in China. Several mysterious activities with Internet traffic related to China. The Stuxnet worm that experts say possibly targeted Iranian nuclear centrifuges. An attack on the WikiLeaks site after it released classified documents damaging to U.S. foreign policy. And don't forget the Internet attack on Estonia from a few years ago.


To deal with the geopolitical dramas that are projected in the online world, the U.S. is using military strategy and mindset to approach cybersecurity, creating a Cyber Command and putting oversight for national cybersecurity under the auspices of the Department of Defense.


But offense isn't always the best defense, and it never is when it comes to Internet security, says Gary McGraw, author and chief technology officer at security consultancy Cigital. More secure software, not cyber warriors, is needed to protect networks and online data, he writes in a recent article, "Cyber Warmongering and Influence Peddling."


CNET talked with McGraw about how the militarization of cybersecurity draws attention from serious threats.


Q: So, Tell me what's wrong with going to DEFCON 1 in cyberspace now?
McGraw: I wrote an article with Ivan Arce, the founder and chief technology officer of Core Security Technologies. He's from Argentina. Every time I talk to him he asks 'what is up with you Americans and cyberwar anyway? Why are you so obsessed with cyberwar?' Because nobody else is talking about it in the rest of the world. I travel a lot internationally and he is right. So we started talking about why that was. One of our main points is that there is a confusing blend of cyberwar stuff, cyber-espionage stuff and cybercrime stuff, and the stories are used to justify whatever political or economic end people may have, instead of trying to disambiguate these three things and talk about what they actually are.


What's the danger with that?
McGraw: The danger is that if we lump everything under 'cyberwar,' then our natural propensity in the United States is to allow the Defense Department to deal with it. The DoD set up a Cyber Command in May. Cyber Command has an overemphasis on offense, on creating cyber-sharpshooters and exploiting systems more quickly than the enemy can exploit them. I don't think that's smart at all. I liken it to the world living in glass houses and Cyber Command is about figuring out ways to throw rocks more accurately and quickly inside of the glass house. We would all be better suited trying to think about our dependence on these systems that are riddled with defects and trying to eliminate the defects, instead.


Is the rhetoric all driven by attracting money? That's a very cynical way of thinking.
McGraw: A lot of people think it is. The military industrial complex in the U.S. is certainly tied very closely to the commercial security industry. That is not surprising, nor is it that bad. The problem is the commercial security industry is only now getting around to understanding security engineering and software security. The emphasis over the past years has been on trying to block the bad people with a firewall and that has failed. The new paradigm is trying to build stuff that's not broken in the first place. That's the right way to go. If we want to work on cybercrime and espionage and war, to solve all three problems at once, the one answer is to build better systems.


You mention that cybercrime and cyber-espionage are more important than cyberwar. Why is that?
McGraw: Because there is a lot of crime, less espionage, and very little cyberwar. (chuckles) And the root cause for capability in all these things is the same. That is dependence on systems that are riddled with security defects. We can address all three of those problems. The most important is cybercrime, which is costing us the most money right now. Here's another way to think about it: everyone is talking about the WikiLeaks stuff, and the impact the latest (confidential files) release is having on foreign policy in the U.S. The question is, would offensive capability for cyberwar help us solve the WikiLeaks problem? The answer is obvious. No. Would an offensive cyberwar capability have helped us solve the Aurora problem where Google's intellectual property got sucked down by the Chinese? The answer is no. What would have helped address those two problems? The answer is defense. That is building stuff properly. Software security. Thinking about things like why on earth would a private (officer) need access to classified diplomatic cables on the SIPRNET (Secret IP Router Network)? Why? If we thought about constructing that system properly and providing access only to those who need it, then things would be much better off.


The term "cyber" makes it seem more scary. We're just talking about Internet, right? Might there be a problem with semantics?
McGraw: There could be. There has been an over emphasis on cyber war in the U.S. The problem with cybersecurity is that there is just as much myth and FUD and hyperbole as there are real stories. It's difficult for policy makers and CEOs and the public to figure out what to believe because the hype has been so great, such as with the Estonia denial-of-service attack from 2007. So that when we talk about Stuxnet it gets dismissed.


So it's the boy who cried wolf problem?
McGraw: Yes.


Stuxnet is real. Is that cyberwar?
McGraw: It seems like a cyberweapon. I think it qualifies as a cyberwar action. My own qualification is that a cyberattack needs to have kinetic impact. That means something physical goes wrong. Stuxnet malicious code did what it could to ruin physical systems in Iran that were controlling centrifuges or that were in fact centrifuges. If you look at the number of centrifuges operating in Iran you see some big drops that are hard to explain. (Iranian President Mahmoud) Ahmadinejad admitted there was a cyberattack on the centrifuges.


So why does the attack on Estonia not qualify?
McGraw: The kinetic impact is important, but also an act of war is the act of a nation-state. The Estonia attacks fail the nation-state actor test. It also fails the real impact test. Sure, their network went down, but whoop dee do! Who cares? If you took that same sort of attack against Google or Amazon they wouldn't even notice. I think people were using that attack--which was carried out by individual cybercriminals in Russia, not by the state--to hype up the cyber war thing. In fact, in my work in Washington [D.C.], the Estonia story keeps coming up, over and over again, as an example of cyberwar.


What is your qualification to discuss cyberwar matters and policy?
McGraw: This year, I've been working more in Washington than I have in past. I've been to the White House, the Pentagon, talked to think tanks. I'm a little bit worried that the discourse is too much about cyberwar. We should try to untangle the war, espionage, and crime aspects and maybe emphasize building better systems and getting ourselves out of the glass house as opposed to trying make a whole new cadre of cyber-sharpshooters as [CIA Director] General Hayden suggests. For policymakers the conception of our field [of security] is muddled.


I'm worried we're not spending on [Internet security] defense at all. There's no way to divide and conquer networks. That is, we can't defend the military network or the SIPRNET but not defend the Internet because we're ignoring 90 percent of the risk. Most of the infrastructure in the U.S., 90 percent of it that's important, is controlled by corporations and private concerns, not by the government. The notion that we can protect military networks and not the rest of it just doesn't make any sense. That's one problem. The other problem is the Air Force has always been about domination in the air and taking away that capability from the enemy early and eradicating infrastructure. This notion of a 'no-fly zone' is kind of interesting. Unfortunately those tactics don't work in cyberspace because there is a completely different physics there. There is no such thing as taking ground or controlling air space in cyberspace. Things move at superhuman speed in cyberspace. So some of these guys who are good military tacticians are having a hard time with cyberwar policy and cyberdefense because of the analogies they're using.


You mentioned in your article that "in the end, somebody must pay for broken security and somebody must reward good security." Are you suggesting that we hold software makers liable for flaws?
McGraw: I don't know what the answer is. We need to change the discourse to be around how do we incentivize people to build better systems that are more secure and how do we disincentive building of insecure systems that are riddled with risk? As long as we can have that conversation then policy makers might be able to come up with right sort of levers to cause things to move in the right direction. We're not suggesting any particular approaches, like liability. We're just trying to change the discourse from being about war to being about security engineering.


Anything else?
McGraw: I think we are at risk and I do think cyberwar is a real problem we have to grapple with. But even though we are at risk, we need to have rational conversations about this. Too much FUD and hyperbole don't do anything to help the situation. The poor guys that are charged with setting policy have a hard time doing that because we're having the wrong conversation at the policy level right now.

IBM: Let the chips may be light signals

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IBM's new processors integrate optical communication technology in a development called photonics.

IBM's new processors integrate optical communication technology in a development called silicon photonics.

(Credit: IBM)

IBM has achieved a major milestone in making the dream of silicon photonics, in which computer chips send signals of light rather than electricity, into reality.


At the semiconductor industry conference Semicon in Tokyo today, IBM photonics leader Yurii Vlasov is detailing how IBM has created a chip that integrates many of the necessary elements of optical communication between a processor and other devices. Significantly, the design uses conventional rather than exotic chip manufacturing technology, involves very small components, and essentially permits a fiber-optic communication line to be attached directly to a processor.


And more significantly, it's headed for real-world use, a sign that IBM's work is serious. That initial use is in IBM's relatively exotic Exascale project to build a computer that can perform a quintillion mathematical calculations per second--roughly 1,000 times that of today's fastest supercomputers.


"In three to five years, silicon photonics will be the main enabler for that level of computation," said Solomon Assefa, an IBM research scientist and one of the members of the team that developed the chip. And in the years after that, it'll follow the traditional computing industry trend and spread to more ordinary products, he predicted.


IBM's project is called SNIPER--short for "silicon nanoscale integrated photonic and electronic transceiver"--but the company is labeling it with the slightly less ungainly term of silicon nanophotonics. It's been under way for a decade, an indicator of just how difficult it is to develop.


The technology is a breakthrough and shows Big Blue well ahead of competitors such as Intel and Samsung, said Envisioneering Group research director Richard F. Doherty. Much previous work about optical connections involved much larger devices that were separate from the processor itself, he said.


This image shows how an optical fiber can be connected directly to the chip.


This image shows how an optical fiber can be connected directly to the chip.


(Credit: IBM)

Specifically, IBM said a transceiver that can send and receive signals measures 0.5 square millimeter, and a single-chip transceiver with a capacity of 1 terabit per second could fit on to a chip measuring 16 square millimeters.


"We expect Intel and Samsung will dust off some optical research and home in on what IBM has now proven," Doherty said.


Assefa is keenly aware of where his competitors stand. "We're many steps ahead of Intel," he said, but one start-up, Luxtera, has silicon photonics products now on the market. In November, it announced silicon photonics links that can transfer data at 25 gigabits per second.


Optical communications, which today are used chiefly for heavy-duty networking tasks such as the core of the Internet, have advantages over the more conventional method of sending electrical signals over wires. For one thing, optical communications use less energy and can span longer distances. For another, sending light down optical fibers enables tremendous data transfer capacity--in part because a technology called wave division multiplexing means that multiple colors of light can be sent simultaneously to pack even more capacity into each communication link.


But optical communication technology is expensive. It's expanding to premium services such as Verizon's Fios and BT's Infinity and to Intel's Light Peak high-end computer connection technology, but costs are still high. What IBM's Sniper project does is bring down the cost by marrying it to the semiconductor chip manufacturing industry.


IBM's technology today consists of a processor with six optical communication links. The chip itself has six transmitters and receivers, each capable of handling eight channels of data through the multiplexing technology. The built in are modulators, which govern how a laser is switched off and on to send signals, though the laser is a separate component. Each modulator can oversee bandwidth of 20 gigabits per second, a major step toward IBM's goal of a chip with an aggregate capacity 50 times that, 1 terabit per second.


For reference, today's conventional Ethernet operates at 1Gbps per second and sometimes at 10Gbps in higher-end servers. A capacity of 1Tbps would be enough to transfer the data of 26 DVDs in a second.

IBM's ultimate goal is a multilayer chip that combines processing, memory, and photonics for optical communication. IBM's ultimate goal is a multilayer chip that combines processing, memory, and photonics for optical communication.

(Credit: IBM)

"The limitation to processing now is not really a computation limitation," Assefa said. "The problem is they can't talk to each other fast enough or with higher bandwidth. They waste a lot of power. What you want to do is be able to communicate between processors with much more bandwidth. If you can do that, you can make processors work much faster than they do now."


Building links into silicon makes them cheaper to manufacture and therefore more mainstream. "A single high-performance computing machine will contain a similar number of optical communication channels as currently exist in all parallel optical links worldwide," Vlasov said in his presentation.


The photonics work initially will be used over relatively long distances, connecting separate computers or groups of computers housed in racks. Ultimately, though, IBM expects it to be used within a processor, connecting the independent processing cores, Assefa said.


While IBM has been a pioneer in processor manufacturing and hasn't yielded to more powerful chipmakers such as Intel, its fabrication volume tends to be low by industry standards. It uses those chips in premium products, though, such as its own servers and mainframes, and its research gives it clout when it comes to patent licensing partnerships with rivals. IBM has more than 30 base patents involved with silicon photonics, the company said.


One problem with sending lots of data over electrical wires is that it requires significant electrical power--and much of that is lost to waste heat that holds back processing speeds and requires extensive engineering within computers and data centers to keep things cool. Light-based communication reduces that problem.


"A large part of computer power draw is the high-speed buses and cabling between cards and modules and systems. If even a small number of system go optical, processing efficiency and power savings will both soar," Doherty said.


In addition, high-speed electrical communication produces electromagnetic waves that interfere with neighboring electrical operations, since each tiny wire in a computer can act as an antenna. With optical communications, that interference is reduced, Doherty said, with one benefit being that it's easier to develop low-power chips because there's less need to overpower all the interference.


The next steps for IBM are to focus on efficient, reliable manufacturing of its silicon photonics products and building it into its exascale supercomputer. After that, eventually, it will be a part of a larger industry spreading the light farther.


"The way technology works, usually those [supercomputer] technologies find their way in five to ten years back into the lives of ordinary people," he said. "Down the road i'm sure the tech will find its way into the lives of all of us."

Mac is exported to the countries of the Flock, not chrome with bump

Flock shifted gears from its Mozilla-powered core to Chromium 6 earlier this year, but only for Windows users.Today, the company released a Chromium 7-based version for Mac users, as well as updating its Windows version to Chromium 7.



Flock 3.5 is situated in the Centre of the city is Chromium 7, but it's still behind the most recent version of the Chromium 8-based Google Chrome. (Credit: Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)


Available for Windows and Mac, Flock 3.5 adds LinkedIn support and include our login system. If you log in to a social-networking site that Flock supports the browser itself is automatically logged in to it, too. Updating to Chromium 7 also pushes Flock ahead of its social-networking loss.rdl RockMelt, and the update includes all the security fixes and performance enhancements that Google Chrome received when it revved to version 7.Flock is still behind the chrome, which is now based on Chromium 8. The security fixes are substantial, so if you do use Flock 3 it's absolutely worth updating. Pre-existing users are expected to receive the update automatically, as Chrome users do.


Flock is concurrently developing the original Mozilla Gecko-based Flock, now up to version 2.6.1 for Windows and Mac users.It supports more social networking services, but is noticeably slower as well.While the social networking browser isn't for everybody, both versions of Flock are in Facebook's top 10 list.

Level 3-Comcast understanding spat (FAQ)


Internet backbone provider Level 3 says that cable giant Comcast is threatening the openness of the Internet and Comcast is accusing Level 3 of trying to get a free ride on its network.


Which one is right?


Accusations between the two companies have been flying since the end of the day Monday. Level 3 has accused Comcast of violating Net neutrality principles by insisting that Level 3 pay for sending more traffic over Comcast's network. Level 3 has recently won a contract to deliver video services for Netflix, which is the largest single producer of Internet traffic on the Web in North America.


Comcast argues that Level 3 is trying to use its free peering relationship with Comcast to add twice as much traffic onto Comcast's network without paying for it. Meanwhile, Level 3's content delivery network competitors are forced to pay for the same access Level 3 wants to get for free.


Much of the dispute is focused on business relationships, largely hidden from the average consumer. To help people better understand what's going on, CNET has put together this FAQ.


What is a content delivery network?
A content delivery network or content distribution network (CDN) is a system of servers that is placed throughout the Internet to bring content and data closer to end users. By storing data closer to consumers, Web pages can load faster and streaming movies can be transferred faster than if the data was stored in a central location.


The problem CDNs solve is that they maximize the speed at which content can be delivered into people's homes. CDNs also cut down on the amount of traffic that must travel across Internet backbone networks. This reduces bandwidth costs and saves money while also creating a better experience for end users.


CDN providers, such as Akamai, Limelight, and Amazon CloudFront, have created businesses that send significantly more traffic over another carrier's infrastructure than they receive on their own network. For that reason, they typically purchase services from Internet backbone providers. A source close to Comcast confirmed that Comcast had a commercial arrangement with Akamai to deliver all of its services to Comcast customers, including the Netflix content.


Comcast said in its statement that the dispute with Level 3 is over a peering relationship. What does that mean?
Comcast and Level 3 are services providers who each own their own infrastructure. Comcast is one of the largest broadband providers in the U.S. It connects thousands of homes and businesses directly to the Internet via its local and regional network.


Level 3 is what is called a backbone Internet provider. Traffic from regional and local networks, such as Comcast's broadband network, are aggregated at various points and then connected to Level 3's network. Think of it like the road system in the U.S. Level 3 is a big interstate highway that carries data long distances. At some point, the traffic must leave the interstate highway and get on state and local highways to reach its final destination.


Carriers charge for access to their networks. But if two service providers each own infrastructure, they can create a peering arrangement. If they each carry roughly the same amount of traffic from the other carrier on their network, they can simply swap the traffic for free.


Does money ever get exchanged for these transactions or do they swap the traffic for free?
It depends on the terms of the deal and the nature of the relationship. Networks may charge a fee for using their network, but if each provider is sending equal amounts of traffic onto another carrier's network, then they may simply swap traffic without money changing hands at all.


But when one network sends more traffic to another network, the sender usually pays a metered fee for the traffic it has sent. This makes sense because when more traffic is sent to a network, that network operator must upgrade its network to handle the additional traffic.


Is this the type of relationship that Level 3 and Comcast have had?
Yes, Comcast said in a letter to the FCC today that the amount of traffic the companies sent to each other was roughly equal. Comcast said that Level 3 typically send more traffic to Comcast than Comcast sent to Level 3, but under traditional peering arrangements this was considered roughly equal. And it made sense, since most consumers download more content and media over their broadband connections than they upload.


So is Level 3 a backbone provider or a CDN provider?
The answer is that it's both. Level 3 is one of the largest Internet backbone providers in the world, but it also runs a content delivery network business. Because it owns its own nationwide backbone network, it has an advantage over its competitors, such as Akamai, which do not own any network infrastructure. The big advantage is that Level 3 doesn't have to pay to access its own nationwide backbone that carries traffic to regional networks, such as Comcast's network. But Level 3 does not own the local and regional broadband networks.


Is this where the dispute with Comcast comes into play?
Yes, it is. This is the heart of the disagreement. In that letter Comcast sent to the FCC today, it said that under its former agreement, Comcast and Level 3 exchanged all on-network Internet traffic for free. But Comcast actually paid Level 3 to interconnect its network. Even though the parties exchanged traffic on a 2:1 basis in which Comcast actually terminated twice as much traffic from Level 3 as the company carried from Comcast, the companies considered it an even swap.


Comcast said in its statement yesterday that Level 3's deal with Netflix will double the amount of traffic that Level 3 will send to Comcast's network. The ratio of traffic will soon be 5:1, in which Netflix sends a greater amount of traffic over Comcast's network than Comcast sends over Level 3's network.


What's more, Comcast had been charging Akamai, which previously delivered Netflix's video content. Now that Level 3 has won that business, Comcast is not collecting that fee from Akamai. As such, Comcast argues that it must charge Level 3 the fee to deliver the traffic.


So Level 3 doesn't want to pay Comcast to deliver its traffic even though its competitor, Akamai, was charged for delivering the Netflix content?
That is correct. Level 3 likely won the deal with Netflix because it was able to undercut its competition in terms of pricing. And it feels that since it is a network peering partner with Comcast that it should not have to alter its agreement, even though it is adding a new CDN customer that will consume a lot more bandwidth than other customers using its CDN network.


What does all of this have to do with Net neutrality?
Level 3 claims that Comcast is singling out the Netflix video traffic and attempting to charge a fee for delivering a specific type of traffic to customers on its network. The company argues that it has no other option but to agree to this fee if it wants to deliver Netflix video to customers in Comcast's territory. And so Level 3 claims this is a violation of the Net neutrality principles that the FCC has already established and is currently working to make official regulation. These principles state that network operators should not slow or degrade Web traffic from a competitor in an effort to make its own service more appealing to consumers. Net neutrality supporters have also been pushing the FCC to adopt provisions that would prohibit network operators from charging companies higher fees to deliver high bandwidth content at a higher quality.


What do you think? Is Comcast violating Net neutrality principles or is this merely a peering dispute?
My gut tells me this is more of a peering dispute than a true violation of Net neutrality. And there are several reasons why I think this.


For one, Comcast isn't stupid. I doubt very much Comcast would risk rattling the FCC's cage as it puts the finishing touches on new Net neutrality regulations or as it deliberates over conditions on Comcast's merger with NBC Universal, both of which are happening right now.


Second, Comcast has said that it doesn't care if Level 3 is delivering video from Netflix or high-capacity files from NASA, the fact that Level 3 will be more than doubling the amount of traffic it dumps onto Comcast's network is the problem. Comcast summed it up this way, again in today's letter to the FCC:



"Level 3 is trying to game the process of peering--one that has worked well and consensually, without government interference, for over a decade--in order to gain a unique and unfair advantage for its own expanding CDN service. Level 3's problem apparently arises out of the fact that it recently won a bid to become one of Netflix's primary CDN providers--in competition with the major national CDNs that already send Netflix and other traffic to Comcast's network. In order to undercut its CDN competitors, Level 3 wants to avoid the commercial arrangements other CDN companies use to terminate traffic onto Comcast's and other providers' networks, and instead force Comcast to accept its CDN traffic for free, under a 'peering' relationship. This is not how peering works, here or anywhere in the world. What Level 3 is suddenly pushing--a "new theory" of peering--would throw the traditional, "balanced traffic" peering rulebook out the window, give Level 3 an unfair cost advantage over its competitors, and shift all of the costs from Level 3 and its content customers onto Comcast and its high-speed Internet customers."


Lastly, I find Level 3's assertions somewhat hypocritical. In a press release issued five years ago when Level 3 was in a peering dispute with Cogent, it argued, as Comcast has, for fair and balanced free peering. In that statement, Sureel Choksi, executive vice president of Level 3, said "In order for free peering to be fair to both parties, the cost and benefit that parties contribute and receive should be roughly the same."


Level 3 said that there were a number of factors that determined whether a peering relationship is mutually beneficial. And it determined that the arrangement with Cogent was not fair because it sent far more traffic over Level 3's network than Level 3 sent over Cogent's network.



"It is important to keep in mind that traffic received by Level 3 in a peering relationship must be moved across Level 3's network at considerable expense. Simply put, this means that, without paying, Cogent was using far more of Level 3's network, far more of the time, than the reverse. Following our review, we decided that it was unfair for us to be subsidizing Cogent's business."


It sounds to me like Level 3 is asking Comcast to do something it has refused to do for its peering partners.


So what happens next? Will Comcast customers not be able to watch Netflix movies?
No, Comcast is not blocking Netflix. And it has no intention of blocking Netflix.


"Any rumors about blocking Netflix are false," a Comcast spokeswoman said in an e-mail. "Our customers can and do watch video from any online video provider, including Netflix and dozens of others, on our high-speed Internet service."


FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski said during a press conference today that he will look into Level 3's claims. As I mentioned before, Comcast has already written a letter to the FCC explaining its position. Level 3 has not lodged any formal complaint at the FCC.


Smaller peering disputes are usually settled in court. And the two parties in dispute usually cut off access to each other. But that's unlikely to happen in this case. Level 3 and Comcast are too dependent on each other for sending massive amounts of Internet traffic for their customers. It would make them both look bad if they refused to provide service to each other. It's more likely the companies will settle their dispute between now and January when the bulk of Netflix's traffic is transferred to the Level 3 network.

Google expects to launch an e-book sales soon

We can check out Google's long anticipated event for the digital book sales on the market before the end of the year.

Google-versions, which was announced in the spring and summer starts is expected to be available in the United States, it is expected by the end of the month, a Google spokesperson told CNET today Jeannie Hornung. in September, Hornung spoke with some of the difficulties in launching THE CNET on an ambitious project, saying "the real answer is we start the service when it is ready."

Google versions are expected to open a new distribution channels in digital book publishers and give Amazon and Apple's new competitor in the market for a digital book-Booming. the main difference between Google, however, the "buy" anywhere to read "approach, which means customers buy titles exclusively through a Web browser instead of through an online store, such as Amazon and Apple's customers.Customers also can be used with any Internet-connected device--a personal computer, Smartphone, or a Tablet PC-the use of Google's servers in bookstores.

Google has revealed who or how many partners in pursuing the traditional revenue-sharing but models can interfere with the fact that customers do not actually have their own copy of the books they buy.

Amazon has a dominant player in e-book field are installing 80% of the market upward command, however, occurs in the effort to stave. defections e-book sellers compete off recently announced, Amazon plans to give to the publishers of newspapers and magazines in the higher proportion of revenue, it collects.

Google is not a stranger to digital books; Internet-giant announced plans in December 2004, scan, digitoida and make searchable collections of the five largest libraries in the world. [1] [2], however, quickly became embroiled in the fishing effort for the client and, as a result of the negotiations on copyright issues.

Make magazine shakes up the Sales Department, in the form of a blog

Gawker's new lookMake magazine: a new look that 2011 (Credit: screenshot of Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

Make Magazine Media intends to change the way users strongly in the Web Publisher interactively to start next year redesign sites network that allows users to go to the stories and interactive advertising, like using a RSS-reader.

The new design was unveiled earlier today, make magazine founder Nick Denton to be "the most significant change in the year 2002, together with a press release and make magazine since the beginning of the make magazine model", and something that "represents the blog magazine and television, some convergence."

What this means for end users is that they be able to Browse News stories in the right-hand navigation bar, such as a typical site page without scrolling. One of the big reasons, Denton, explains that certain, so can be pinned to the top of the stories, regardless of what you want, that works better for the company's high number of published template.

Denton noted that a large part of the amendment to be concentrated in a limited number of advertising, in particular the content of the section for the latest news of the offset some of the stories is large, and other small-advertisers, which are the data if the content is displayed around the choosy.

"We cannot foresee the surge in traffic; and often advertisers want to join a scandal, but it is enticing readers," Denton said."But the make magazine, Deadspin and other sites that experience has shown that--when the dust has been decided--advertisers flock buzz and growth."

The use of video ads as part of the redesign is one item that is causing controversy already.These have now been incorporated, the reading experience in such a way that readers must sit in the clip before reading through a story,.They are similar to where additional information can be found a number of (including but not limited to CNET) publishing sites, click through ads, but their placement on the site now better is similar to the content.

Global change is to be applied to, in part two of a high level of make magazine sales employees, leaving the Business insider, make magazine sales boss stated. Chris Batty and travelling salesman Michael Caesco have left the company because of what is called a private employee email Denton strategy which "roiskunut unhealthy conflict between editorial and sales," according to the story, "serious" opinions.

"However, all the media companies make magazine Media is one that is built around itself to the public in the growth of the belief, which follows the advertising," Denton said in an e-mail message. "That is not available;the only strategiase takes place only the one who chose; and that all logs when connecting it to the company. "

Spread Christmas cheer Angry Birds

Angry Birds Christmas ornamentsA beer for the rest of us: first, the birds of Christmas ornaments and Angry now Angry Birds Christmas version.(Credit: NickandChapin channel/YouTube)

All your favorite finch flinging frolic is going, as well as the feast of the iOS that Android devices (just try saying that quickly downing five times in the egg nog after the glass).

Rovio Mobile next great upgrade Angry Birds who celebrates Christmas, has been hinted, in detail, and the company, and now screenshotted has made official, even if we do not have the exact release date yet.

Angry Birds Christmas is free if you bought the 99-cent Angry Birds Halloween Edition iOS devices. Rovio was originally tweeted that Christmas, item only coming to iPhone and iPod Touch, iPad, but today posted a message in which it is flying … onto Android too.

Now we are just waiting to hear from you, if the Angry Birds fans, MeeGo, WebOS and Symbian devices will be able to see their will jeer Yuletide cheer this holiday.

Angry bird has been continually increasing (the No. 1 most of the mobile app stores for some time to do it for you) phenomenon and Rovio is riding a wave of Angry Birds official Day, 11.December with Almost 1,000 scheduled. Human 65 countries have already registered for meetups, which is a celebration of flavoring Rovio popping 3 trillion piggies and meet, play, and compare scores Angry fans the opportunity to the birds.

I have a fairly decent Angry Birds, and has had many three-star rounds, if can brag a moment, for the purpose of comparing the scores against others. [1] [2] can be an intimidating, even though I fear that grand. the master of the Angry in the field of my most likely appear in the list of the birds and the school for all.

Angry Birds Day promo(Credit: Rovio)

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Why Android devices are such necessity during this Holiday Season

 


In principle, this post was the inspiration for one of these Mashable article 10. Mashable concocted a list of the top 10 hottest gadgets, which was practically the only reason for us, on the other hand, an interesting reasons may be the Android based devices during the holiday season.


Let's take a slow; Apple-iOS do it big transfer by offering a lot of interesting apps and flexibilities this year. It was, however, as a matter of priority, the Android platform that has been requested as part of our attention better.Frankly speaking, we do not correspond to any grudges against the iPhone; it is a little stiff Android platform.


We have selected some of the large star studded Android phones throughout the United States, only for you. learn how to use the messaging functions:


• Samsung conquers-AT&T:


If it becomes a captivating thousands of cellphone users it singlehandedly, they are better than Samsung conquers. Android device is a Galaxy s. steroidaaliset versioEhkä some users does not consider Captivate AT & ts due to participation, but the Smartphone to connect to it by offering:


• 1 GHz Hummingbird Processor
• 16 GB internal Flash Memory.
• 4-inch 800 x 480 Super AMOLED touch screen
• 5-megapixel camera.
• Android 2.1.

• 12th droid X – Verizon Wireless:


This is one of the most popular devices, starting with the 12th droid series lineup.Still above that when Verizon plaster it "12th droid Does" ad campaign, the wireless carrier really means. If you've been Ameida-powerhouse, this is the perfect device for you. Verizon offers 12th droid X $ 200, 100-discount and 2-year contract. [1] [2] the main highlights of this device are:


• 1 GHz processor
• 8 GB internal memory
• 16 GB MicroSD Card 720 p video recording
• 4.3-inch 854 x 480 resolution touchscreen
• 12TH DROID x is HDMI out, and HAS DLNA
• Android 2.2.


Stay tuned for updates on this list, we conclude that the entire. throughout the holiday season.

GSL StarCraft Tournament results: Good, Bad and downright terrible players

 


Hello seriously folks, we are happy to bring you the GSL StarCraft II players an astounding results. Long, tight battles became active Jung Jae Hoon and duck. Both had quite an interesting knack nicknames.


Jae assumes "Nes Tea" and Hoon's accompaniment was "Boxer" and "as available" basis. Sorry to break the Boxer fans, was released for the NES Tea, which received out of the profits.The highlights, however, was quite interesting; seven series of nail biting competition was rather heavy Boxer's side.


Boxer jumped forward two at an early stage, but a strong win.One of them was sought through this lucky fella, all-in Marine rush, the plateau of Shakuras. Boxer's Thor Drops, however, was more than enough packed punch. Spectators were surprised at the Boxer's ability to control units, which were, in addition to the Marines, something quite rare to express the equivalence of the fast paced action Star Craft II.


NES got lucky 3rd round. [1] [2] he is the Zerg favorer, ricocheted Scrap Station and Jungle Basin such as a bullet.All he had was to create a heavy Roach/Baneling units, is responsible for a couple of Nydus Worms and there it is. Boxer was easily harassed.


Zerg class does not give priority to reviewing plant protection products on behalf of the Jungle-the swimming pool.Perhaps the Boxer over stressed or tense, he has drawn attention to the Marine Bunker: when you use a push strategy, which made him lag general performance.


The fifth game took steppes of war;It is a small 1 1 on the map, little or no space wasting time with.Give me all the days of the war of the steppes and its the first time bashing, within a period of five minutes was slightly aggressive. Boxer in this round, which pays him for almost all of the Siege of the game. [1] [2] due to the NES, Tea from attacks by Bike were countered by the 11th hour.


The competition ended with profits of $ 87,000. Probably, Boxer scurried back to his room is even in the absence of a change in his Nes Tea announced nickname. Start the player going for Optimus studded, now, because he belongs to the Prime clan, Optimus Prime, you should be able to do much in mind.

Microsoft relative Angels Are Back: thank you, Verizon Wireless

 


Some people call them "Zombie Phones", while others propose a lot of lethal name, such as; "State-of-the-art, Tyhmin Phones". In one way or another, may be used in the debate ends up how dreadful Microsoft relative Mobile Phones. Pulled back to the enterprise solely for the purpose of 6 weeks after their release, which is essential to calculate the compensation by itainvest for the losses of millions of dollars in a bad rep, and only 10 000 disgruntled customers.


Because we are hearing relative handsets has been revived to be paid to the Verizon – Microsoft cooperation, let's see what it is, in the case of:


The first healthy thing relative Onem and relative Twom (new names) has been entered in the register of 120 euros, and $ 220, which is quite expensive price. it means that users receive these smartphones for more than $ 15, $ 25, with the same old two-year agreement. As usual one relative is a 5 MP camera, 4 Gb internal memory and a QWERTY keypad easy-to-Tip tap.


Relative-two is 8 MP camera, QWERTY keypad, and internal memory 8 gigs of traditional Bluetooth, Wi-Fi services.Rest assured, if anyone is looking forward to staying at the top of the social networking game, these smartphones are not that bad. Microsoft to install a new relative browser at this time, which is sitting in front of a priority less than 25/month, Verizon Wireless data plan.You have the options of $ 10 or $ vouching 195/MB data plans are all up to the users of the deranged relative.


From the perspective of the Greater the possibility of hitting Kins Cloud 9 fame and popularity, is the type of thin, and above that, remain in full force and effect. [2] [3] the previous relative reviews were too intense, these smartphones. And it is true, such as the appearance of grudges, Kins. you can throw a couple of bricks, tiles, and passes along the second one to someone you hate.

A newly discovered Plaguing Internet Trojans

 Trojan-program

Never heard tojan.spy.yek? There is a small possibility is to know about this malicious program. Is a newly discovered a Trojan that computer security specialist, BitDefender is a very dangerous as authors touting off.

This so-called serious "Virtual enemy" is received with respect to the application down to the company's State-of-the-art display environments without any problems.BitDefender tojan.spy.yek officials said that the examination of the important information that is stored on servers in the Organization are sent back to the attacker. Files, provide him or her look a microscopic image of your organization's sensitive information.

-It seems to work perfect tojan.spy.yek displays the virus Might for some development team. [1] [2] the Organization create its Yksinäisen competing companies spy on. BitDefender HQs Octavian Minea and Doina Cosovan said, "the threats to online security-the increase in the amount of the community is the latest tojan.spy.yek spy malware is one of its kind."

Malware researchers further said that the Trojan does not work like a virus. Its primary script is just like any other Normal program and, therefore, the antivirus program doesn't recognize it that easily.Researchers have found an encrypted file tojan.spy.yek package that automatically fills in its roots Windows\System32\-kansioon.

"If this malware inspection system in the Explorer.exe file with nothing to prevent it from sending information about the attackers" – Minea said.In addition, the spy malware are known to have a special Backdoor spyware, "backdoor element will allow the program to compress the identity of the critical system as a tool in this way, it does not. [1] [2] get encountered when sending data from outside sources."

Tojan.spy.yek-the program does not, moreover, take a normal e-mail addresses It loads only aid. information that you want (screenshots, passwords, recent activity, etc) the pre-created to an FTP server or Web site. [1] [2] Who programmed the accused, the authors of the malicious software was a lot of thinking in compatibility.

The software is fully compatible with Windows 95 on a computer that is running Windows 7 platforms!

Why Facebook messages are Lethal?

 


Many times Facebook has taken it to a new messaging service credit. The media is just ranting about the cool new feature, which was mainly due to a conflict of interest in Google, and Facebook. However, certain features of the new messaging service prove problematic you … How so? Read:

• Not much transparency


Yeah, we know that MS Office productivity suite that has a dominant position on the market. However, the attempt to close the Facebook also all other attempts to be consumers ' first choice for millions of Office-Group Executive. [1] [2] wrote, "I am really excited about, so as to be able to make it easier for people to deal with, and share information using Office different devices, networks and platforms."


Transparency requires, of course, easy to use, regardless of the hardware and software based on the presence of obstacles.


• Limited interoperability


Facebook has tight integration with Microsoft Office suite can be a lot of tight. It is a good idea to interoperability with other people, but others who used million for the construction of open Office and LibreOffice. What about them?


Facebook is a friendly relations with Microsoft.No, it does not grant you, because we see the Bing and Facebook-cooperation.However, Facebook mostly focuses on Microsoft Office messaging service that is not good.Social media needs to open its doors in other companies in the area as well.Facebook users are connected to Microsoft Office, if they do not have to exchange documents over the network.


• Limited choice Criterion


Microsoft wants to protect, and lock its clients within the properties of the Tornado glazy. Apple wants to do the same thing, is too exclusive. Thus the effect of such air services on its inside Facebook? that is honest, social media platform for continuing partnership with Microsoft eventually delete it comes to the sort order of the Court of Justice in case kultaisten Garden. People be able to use the software, which is outside of the box ….

The online Service was launched, only Netflix Streaming

 


Taking care of the Hulu plus-development, Netflix also launched its streaming only the contents of the recently. Still above, that are kept intentionally same price package for streaming media in the enterprise is based on the system disk. It is just a push of a new strategy vis-à-vis customers $8-per packet.


In addition, several market studies have indicated that people prefer watching content directly through online sources.Nobody wants to wait for the DVD IN THE Mail and return them all when they came back to the way the. Netflix also said that subscribers watching more content over the Internet, rather than DiscFlix factor goes.


Netflix is a good move. The company is expected on the basis of the program once a new drop $ 8 package is fully in line with the mail and in use.At the very least, they do not want to stop such as "Stylish" according to Recent news feed. Netflix has grown based on mail program, the price of $ 1.Users receive only 1 DVD order and, in addition, the company has grown to a total number of videos that can be rented on a monthly basis on the basis of the price.


The new prices are expected to remain static, until the subscribers (2) and (2) the language elements, and determine that streaming media players-network service is a lot cheaper. Netflix's public finances, the reports suggested that the company has closed its third-quarter with staggering 16.9 million subscribers and the general revenue and $ 500 + million.


That is not all, of the revenue projections are way more than $ 560 million, fourth quarter, such as Netflix. Display is still better when compared to its competitors the shape:

Open to its own app Store … planning Mozilla Soon

 


Think of the second, on the basis of the application to store and a cloud of Mozilla does not have a mute your thirst. Yes, it is correct; only browser-the company announced that it will be launching the app store in the near future. Last week, Mozilla released its report "the State of Mozilla". It was then, when the tech Gurus to hear about future cloudy for the management of the joint venture.


Future plans for the component is connected with Android is based on the functioning of the internal market, in the case of a still more mystery-related matters between the European Community. The company has made the maters interesting saying, open the Web application Ecosystem based on application-the motto of the store.Do you know what this means?, it means that, when fully functional, illustrate that the app store in an environment that is independent of the app store.


Mozilla State according to the report, "the current application template is a features that threaten some of the features that have made the Web so lively forum, in particular in the mobile space. Applications are often a specific device and platform-specific. We create the application data is stuck on this application and/or the environment. One does not relate to a uniform size than one can be on the Web.App-related information is not normally capable of being connected to, or text representations. developers must, moreover, often obtained the permission to have access to the people-from the manufacturer of the device, the system operator pursuant to the ' save ' operator in one or more of the gatekeepers.Similarly, consumers have to go through these filters use the new features. "


Now Mozilla application is stored in the waters of the Test prototype. Company focuses on the potential problems, so that all could work before the transfer date. [1] [2] is a video, YouTube, who provide a full explanation of this phenomenal upcoming app Store.

MacBook Air handling all of the Windows-based notebooks record performance

 


If you download the Windows 7 to MacBook Air under any chance, you'll find that they load faster than other notebook. The overall performance of competition in the new MacBook Air outlives its predecessors. So the big question is, how the MacBook Airs 2010 models to a stack of Windows 7 is based on the notebooks in the same category?


First off, a judge on the basis of the performance of the notebooks only. Only then you can find the MacBook Airs are on the top. Try to perform a new installation of Windows 7 to MacBook Air, it will load faster.Although Not the same gig questions., at the same level in the notebook MacBook Air, to experiment, there will be a slow process of Windows 7, will be downloaded.


All hail PCWorld Labs experts for use with Apple's apps to download Windows 7 no later than 11 inches and a 13 inch MacBook Airs. Used in WorldBench 6, experts tried to Call of Duty, and in the event of such a category-DiRT2 games. results were aesthetic; all the same size Airs was difficult to original Windows counterparts to win.


Here is the Excerpt directly from PCWorld;report on the listed


• First we tested, State-of-the-art 11-inch MacBook Air package, 1.4 GHz Core 2 Duo processor, 2 GB of RAM, 128 GB flash storage space and an NVIDIA GeForce graphics chipset with integrated 320 M. I would like to purchase from our test unit for us $ 1199, a lot of the search of the most Windows-based netbooks. But on the basis of the size of the similarities, we compared to that part of the top-scoring Windows netbooks 2010.


• WorldBench 6-our software is run through the gantlet popular systems, subject to certain consumer applications, such as Adobe Photoshop, and Mozilla Firefox, flipped off the overall results and spits score. 11-Air WorldBench 6 Score 74 deserved, very impressive Me you have tested the netbooks WorldBench 6-average Score of 45 has recently.

Is Steve Jobs Headed is New Age Journalism?

 


News Corp and Apple are working on currently based on journalism means any vessel on board which iPad. It is known as the "Daily", the first and only News will be published early in the iPad. Do you think that Apple's Steve Jobs and Rupert Murdoch is figuring out what to contribute to the evolution of journalism of the 9th degree online?


What is therefore particularly this Newspaper data?


No amendment, saying that they have is not in the Paperback edition of the newspaper or the appropriate Web site. Views, only the source is downloadable. it is, how it must be possible to acquire all of the newspaper.Every issue is intended to pay the $. 99, which makes sorting, $ 1, to be honest.


Just like all other Newspapers this is also the different sections and categories in the articles.According to him, women's wear Daily tabloid that publications can be covered with the broadsheet intelligence. sensitivity of the project itself is not that interesting to see. people are just thrilled, because it is one of those Apple "private" employment contracts, which are based on the gigs with another company.Who could possibly means something interesting to look forward, to criticize and also use.


What is Murdoch stance is IT?


Murdoch, like his counterparts to understand the News media benefits. He that believeth on the iPad is going to be a game Changer is based on journalism platform. According to the experts, even if Murdoch gets his hands on 5% of the overall population of the iPad (40 million +), he is more than enough money to get business going on in the right direction.


"Daily" to keep the promises that the next best online publishing. Let's see how things blank in the near future.

Insomniac MacBook Pro Mysterious thing

 


Last month, I had a really weird experience on my MacBook Pro. I put it to sleep when it reawaken in itself. And God, I hate the same wallpaper ever staring me again and again? Yes, I have done. It was like a kid on the establishment of a low-power/"sleep". You are one inch away from the door knob currently he cackles again and is activated.


I had to finish, click to select the Sleep command a couple of times before hiring in my MacBook Pro a deep Trance. Kind of like patting or lullabying device to sleep. Thanks to the online forums will aggressively enforce its intellectual property rights on this matter; I looked at the They said that the problem was the "Wake up a connection to the Internet for" phenomenon.This option is enabled in the system preferences menu through the task pane of energy saver preferences. If you are disabled, insomniac MacBook Pro attitude is gone forever.


However, the big question, hung on balance.I was in such a way as to give to sleep whenever it can, without having to start the Sleep command a couple of times I wanted to MacBook Pro in addition to the ever I wanted to find out. network deployment. And, in the case of Internet access option allows you to boot any kernel image on its own, you Wake me shall never be repeated in the same process is repeated again.


Mac Book enthusiasts are well aware of the fact that some of the major system settings are stored in the Com. Apple. PowerManagement info.plist file. do you do custom changes, if you have a knack for the sort of stuff a little.The best way to deal with this problem is to go online and search for the program:



This software is primarily the responsibility of the MacBook Pro is the original software., there is no online version of the various information (if only there to give a little tutorial). do not have to do is go to the advanced program and enable the "Wake on Lan" setting. And viola, insomniac MacBook Pro-the problem is in the past, such as a nasty smell.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Head to head: Linux vs. Windows 7

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How to Create Setup Disk for Windows XP

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iYogi Offers Superior Global Technical Support

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Dell announces new thin and light Z-series Inspiron laptops

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Spyware Tech Support

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Special Windows 7 for various Users

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Technicians Provide Tech Support to Diagnose Computer Issues

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Microsoft’s withhold discover to users: no upgrade to Windows 7, exclusive Vista requirement apply

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The Multi-Touch Technology in Windows 7

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Technicians Provide Tech Support to Diagnose Computer Issues

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Economics and Software Piracy

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Experience Our Tech Support Services

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Know How to Get HP Product Support

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Google Wave offers first 100,000 invites

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PC Laptop Computer for Smart Computing

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How to perform a repair installation of Windows XP

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Why Has My Computer Slowed?

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Windows Live Movie Maker

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Are Your Applications Compatible with Windows 7? This Spreadsheet Knows

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Google Voice Finally Marries SMS and Email

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What Google needs to learn from Buzz backlash

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Experience Better PC Computer Game with Revised Configuration

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Google Sidewiki -- At a Glance

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Fix the Most Common Windows 7 Upgrade Problems

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How to Fix Slow Computer

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Wednesday, August 18, 2010

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