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Droid : by Motorola

October 29, 2009 2 comments

droid1Verizon has officially joined the Android party with the announcement of the Droid by Motorola. The Droid has a 3.7-inch touchscreen, delivering an unusual 854×480 resolution. The phone is jam-packed with all of the usual components that a high-end phone must have these days:

  • EVDO Rev. A
  • GPS- Assisted and standalone
  • Removable memory- 16 GB
  • System memory- 512 MB
  • Removable battery
  • Wi-Fi
  • 5 MP Camera- DVD quality video recording supported
  • Slide-out QWERTY keyboard
  • Onscreen virtual keyboard
  • Android 2.0

droid2The Droid will have the standard 3-screen home screen that Android provides but will be augmented by widgets from Verizon for user customization. It will support Exchange email out of the box, in addition to POP3 and IMAP. All of the expected Google apps are present and accounted for: Maps, Latitude, Talk, Voice Search, Gmail and Calendar. Verizon is also shipping the Droid with these apps: Corporate Calendar, Amazon MP3, Gallery, Music, Visual Voice Mail, Android Market and YouTube.

Droid is the first phone to feature the new Google Maps Navigation, offering free turn-by-turn navigation in Google Maps. The phone will be available Nov. 6 for $199 with a 2-year contract. This price is after a mail-in rebate of $100.

The main Power of this smartphone is the fully support from Google, such as Google Apps and Google Maps Navigation.

“Find Similar Images” from Google

October 28, 2009 1 comment

Source: http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/10/similar-images-graduates-from-google.html

Similar Images graduates from Google Labs

10/27/2009 03:34:00 PM

googleToday, we’re happy to announce that Similar Images is graduating from Google Labs and becoming a permanent feature in Google Images. You can try it out by clicking on “Find similar images” below the most popular images in our search results. For example, if you search for jaguar, you can use the “Find similar images” link to find more pictures of the car or the animal.

When we revamped Labs in April, we also launched Similar Images to highlight some of the innovative work our engineers have been working on. Google Labs gives us a way to get some of our new ideas in front of you early in the process, refine them based on your feedback and see what sticks. Your support has helped to make Similar Images the first major feature to graduate from Google Labs since its recent overhaul.

So, let’s say you want to find images of Ancient Egypt. Google Images will provide you with a rich variety of results, including pyramids, maps, relics, drawings and other types of images. Instead of poring through hundreds of images, now you can simply click “Find similar images” to narrow down the results to the results to the type you want. (We’re rolling this out gradually, so the links in the below examples may not work for you yet.)

You could narrow down your results to show you only the Great Sphinx of Giza:


Or illustrative maps of Ancient Egypt:


Or ancient Egyptian-style drawings:


While we’ll continue to use Google Labs as a way to showcase and collect feedback for exciting new technologies, we also want to make it easier for you to provide direct feedback on all aspects of Google Images. That’s why today we’re also announcing the availability of Product Ideas for Google Images. With product ideas, you can post comments that will be seen directly by members of the Images team, as well as vote on ideas that others have submitted. We’ll pay special attention to those ideas that are voted to the top of the list.

Posted by Erik Murphy-Chutorian and Chuck Rosenberg, Software Engineers

IT leaders trust Microsoft more than Google, 2-to-1

October 27, 2009 Leave a comment

Source: http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/hiner/?p=3207&tag=nl.e101

Microsoft has a long history with CIOs. Google is one of the most trusted brands on earth. TechRepublic’s CIO Jury ruled on which one IT trusts more.

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Google has gotten much more aggressive about expanding beyond Web search in 2009. The area where Google is placing its biggest bet is in business applications, a traditional Microsoft stronghold with Exchange on the server side and Microsoft Office on the client side.

Google is making the pitch to businesses that it can save them money, speed up deployments, and provide users with a simpler experience. The search giant has launched a its “Go Google” ad campaign and trotted out the University of Notre Dame and the City of Los Angeles as examples of two big organizations that have made the move to Google Apps.

The primary obstacle Google has to overcome is to convince IT leaders to transfer company data from internal servers to the Google data centers, with all of the security, privacy, and compliance risks that such a move entails. So this type of decision really comes down to trust. Do CIOs trust Google?

We decided to examine that question. On October 20, TechRepublic polled its 90-member panel of U.S. IT executives and asked, “Who do trust more as a technology partner, Microsoft or Google?” The jury – made up of the first 12 respondents – voted 8-4 in favor of Microsoft.

The CIO Jury for this verdict was:

  1. Chuck Codling, Director of Infrastructure for Rocky Brands, Inc.
  2. Chuck Musciano, CIO of Martin Marietta Materials
  3. Jeff Relkin, Director of IT for Quadel
  4. Jeanne DeVore, Head of IT for Chicago Shakespeare Theater
  5. Brian Stanek, VP of IT for NAMICO
  6. Michael Hanken, VP of IT for Multiquip Inc.
  7. David Van Geest, Director of IT for The Orsini Group
  8. Ingo Dean, IT Director of EastWest Institute
  9. Brian Terry, VP of IT for Constitution Corporate Federal Credit Union
  10. Olaf Lund, Director of IT for Lincoln Financial Media
  11. Jeff Cannon, CIO of Fire and Life Safety America
  12. Michael Stoyanovich, CIO of BeneSys, Inc

TechRepublic’s CIO Jury is based on the original CIO Jury concept developed by Silicon.com, where you can find lively opinions from IT leaders based in the UK.

The skeptical attitude toward Google was best summed up by Donna Trivison, Director of IT for Ursuline College, who wrote, “There seems to be some conventional wisdom that Google is the answer to what’s been wrong over the years in the Microsoft universe. That kind of thinking may be dangerous. As consumers of technology we need to keep each and every business partner honest and working for us. Handing trust carte blanche over to Google because, as the wisdom goes, they are good citizens, seems misguided to me. If I had to pick one, it would probably be Microsoft because they have withstood the scrutiny their misdeeds have landed them. Google remains, for the most part, untested.”

When confronted with the Microsoft vs. Google question of trust, Lance Taylor-Warren, CIO of H.A.W.C. Community Health Centers, said, “Neither. While some of the technology that Google has been releasing is intriguing, their track record of leaving things in ‘beta’ for years does [not] lead to a [high] level of confidence.  Microsoft is Microsoft. If I had to pay full price for their products (i.e. we did not have access to non-profit donation pricing), I would have to give serious consideration to other solutions.”

Below are additional quotes from TechRepublic’s panel of IT leaders – beyond just the 12 on the jury – who responded to the Microsoft vs. Google question. I’ve divided them up into the two camps, the ones who trust Microsoft more and the ones who prefer Google.

Microsoft: The devil you know

  • “Microsoft. Mostly a case of the devil whose enterprise business model you know, versus the devil you don’t.” (Patrick Gray, President of Prevoyance Group)
  • “Microsoft, hands down. They have a real enterprise track record and, while not always perfect, they continue to deliver on real business needs and their products eventually exit the beta stage.” (Scott Lowe, CIO of Westminster College)
  • “Google seems to be moving too fast into too many areas. I don’t think they really have a focus on security and trust. Microsoft learned that lesson in a most painful manner. Google seems to have the same irreverence that Microsoft had in their earlier days.” (Matthew Metcalfe, Director of IS for Northwest Exterminating)
  • “Microsoft is an important business partner of higher education and tends to offer very reasonable pricing for higher-ed institutions and higher-ed students. While commercial enterprise may be subsidizing those higher-ed discounts, Microsoft also invests heavily in communicating their technology roadmaps which facilitates planning. Also, Microsoft’s products move from beta to production more quickly. Google and Apple are both providing great products and a great deal of competition with Microsoft in many areas, and we all benefit from that.” (Chuck Elliott, Director of IT for Emory University School of Medicine)
  • “Microsoft. Google, to me, tends to be intrusive and to urge the consolidation of data in remote locations, often before such a move is proven safe or secure. Microsoft just wants our money.” (David Wilson, Director of IT for VectorCSP)
  • “Microsoft. We are not, nor will we be in the foreseeable future, involved in the ‘cloud’ as an integral part of our internal IT offerings.” (David Van Geest, Director of IT for The Orsini Group)

Google: More open, more hungry

  • “Google. Because between the two, so far, Google hasn’t screwed me with ‘comply or die’ campaigns and there seems, for now, to be an effort on cross platform compatibility on Google’s part, whereas Microsoft wants to be all or nothing.” (Martin Szalay, Director of IT for FWE Co)
  • “Google. They’re more hungry.” (James Riner, CIO for R and R Images)

Liverpool vs ManUnited: Doubts about Rooney and Fletcher

October 24, 2009 6 comments

DR

FLETCHER AND ROONEY IN FIGHT TO FACE LIVERPOOL

Wayne Rooney is “desperate” to play on Sunday, but Sir Alex Ferguson still has doubts over the fitness of United’s number 10 and his team-mate Darren Fletcher.

Rooney has been struggling with a calf injury and missed the games against Bolton Wanderers and CSKA Moscow in the last week, while Fletcher was also absent for both matches with a foot injury.

“On the injury front I can’t give a clear picture, there are still some doubts about Rooney and Fletcher,” Sir Alex said on Friday.

Getting the influential pair ready for Anfield is now the main aim for United’s medical and coaching staff, though Sir Alex doesn’t doubt their eagerness to return.

“He is always desperate to play, that’s the nature of the boy,” said the boss. “Of course, you can’t let that cloud the realistic side of things. It’s going to be important how he does in training on Saturday.

“We’ll see if Wayne does train on Saturday and then we’ll have a better idea.”

The good news for United is that Patrice Evra and Ryan Giggs have both been passed fit after remaining in Manchester while the rest of the squad travelled to Russia, but Ji-sung Park has definitely been ruled out.

Access and Emblaze Mobile unveil ELSE INTUITION(TM) : Linux-based Mobile Phone

October 23, 2009 5 comments

Source: http://www.yourindustrynews.com/access+and+emblaze+mobile+unveil+else+intuition%28tm%29_40589.html

ELSEEmblaze Mobile and Access have released details and photos of their upcoming Linux-based mobile phone: the ELSE INTUITION. (Yes, it has to be all in caps each time.)

ACCESS CO., LTD., a global provider of advanced software technologies to the mobile and beyond-PC markets, and Emblaze Mobile Ltd., a technology design house for cutting-edge mobile devices, today unveiled ELSE INTUITION(TM), a groundbreaking mobile platform jointly developed by ACCESS and Emblaze Mobile.

ELSE INTUITION(TM) combines ACCESS Linux Platform(TM) v3.0, ACCESS’ flagship mobile Linux® platform, with a state-of-the art user experience, innovative user interface and a suite of services provided by Emblaze Mobile. In addition, the two companies previewed the first ELSE(TM), the first mobile device based on the ELSE INTUITION(TM) platform, jointly developed by ACCESS and Emblaze Mobile.

ELSE INTUITION(TM): A Revolutionary User Experience

ELSE INTUITION(TM) is a complete mobile platform developed by ACCESS and Emblaze Mobile. Thanks to the combination of ACCESS Linux Platform v3.0 and an advanced user interface engine, jointly developed by Emblaze Mobile and ACCESS, ELSE INTUITION(TM) delivers a highly compelling and differentiated user experience, coupled with state-of-the-art hardware, accelerated 2D/3D graphics and elegant transition effects. ELSE INTUITION(TM) takes advantage of ACCESS Linux Platform v3.0 to provide advanced flexibility and configurability, enabling users to run multiple applications simultaneously, switching between them with ease. All data and content, including contacts, appointments, videos and photos can be rendered anywhere, not just within a single dedicated application, giving users faster, easier and more consistent access to their information.

ELSE: A New Category of Mobile Device

The first ELSE(TM), the first mobile device deploying the ELSE INTUITION(TM) platform, presents an entirely new category of mobile device that allows for a complete, fully-functional user experience. The device actually becomes the application, providing functionality that for the first time is able to match that of standalone off-the-shelf dedicated devices, such as digital cameras, top-ranked MP3 players, best-in-class GPS devices, and more, while maintaining an exceptional ease and simplicity of use.

The first ELSE(TM) is being previewed at ACCESS Day, ACCESS’ annual ecosystem and partner event in Tokyo, Japan on October 22, 2009. The companies have already been actively promoting the first ELSE(TM) to top-tier mobile operators worldwide, and operator evaluations are currently underway. The complete global unveiling of the ELSE INTUITION(TM) platform and the first ELSE(TM) device will be announced separately.

Amir Kupervas, CEO, Emblaze Mobile, said, “Our vision is to create a revolutionary mobile solution that will change users’ experience in the mobile arena. Imagine a device that is not a phone surrounded by gimmicks you will not use; where the camera literally replaces your digital camera; you get real-time push email wherever you are on the globe; almost every song and film in the world is one click away; and any one of its multitude of features is reached with no more than one light gesture of your finger and not buried deep inside folders within folders. If you imagine this, you imagine the first ELSE(TM) and the capabilities created with ELSE INTUITION(TM). And yes – it is definitely something ELSE. Our relationship with ACCESS and the privilege to leverage ACCESS Linux Platform has allowed us to fulfill our vision and bring it to fruition.”

Tomihisa Kamada, president, co-CEO and co-founder of ACCESS, said, “Our goal of providing a complete solution for enabling the creation of advanced mobile devices aligned well with this innovative vision from Emblaze Mobile. ELSE INTUITION(TM) provides a perfect showcase for the flexibility and customizability of ACCESS Linux Platform. It underscores our ability to tailor and adapt our technology to suit our clients’ requirements and to work directly with our clients to achieve their goals. Emblaze Mobile came to us with a thought-provoking concept to shake up the mobile industry, and I am delighted that ACCESS has been able to provide the software to make it happen.”

ACCESS Linux Platform

The first ELSE(TM) and ELSE INTUITION(TM) are powered by ACCESS Linux Platform v3.0, which is compliant with LiMo Foundation specifications and employs ACCESS’ world-leading NetFront(TM) Browser. The ACCESS Linux Platform v3.0 Advanced UI Engine enables development of state-of-the-art user interfaces with advanced graphical effects, and allows complete modification of applications’ “look and feel” without requiring changes to the applications’ code. The ACCESS Linux Platform v3.0 Advanced UI Engine also supports full hardware graphics acceleration via OpenGL® ES 2.0. The ACCESS Linux Platform v3.0 application suite and complete set of middleware enable the unique advanced services now made available by ELSE INTUITION(TM).

About ACCESS

ACCESS CO., LTD. is a global company providing leading technology, software products and platforms for Web browsing, mobile phones, wireless handhelds and other networked devices. ACCESS’ product portfolio, including its NetFront(TM) Browser, ACCESS Linux Platform(TM) and Garnet(TM) OS, provides customers with solutions that enable faster time to market, flexibility and customizability. The company, headquartered in Tokyo, Japan, operates subsidiaries and affiliates in Asia, Europe and the United States. ACCESS is listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange Mothers’ Index under the number 4813.

About Emblaze Mobile

Emblaze Mobile Ltd. is a technology design house for cutting-edge mobile handsets. Founded in 2001 and headquartered In Israel, Emblaze Mobile develops next generation innovative cellular devices, utilizing state of the art Israeli technology and cooperating with global wireless players for manufacturing and global distribution. Emblaze Mobile is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Emblaze Ltd., a group of technology companies, publicly traded on the London Stock Exchange since 1996.

Sir Alex Ferguson voted the Greatest Manager of All Time by Footbal Manager 2010

October 23, 2009 2 comments

Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-1222199/Manchester-United-boss-Sir-Alex-Ferguson-voted-greatest-Football-Manager-time–ahead-late-greats-Sir-Bobby-Robson-Bill-Shankly-Brian-Clough.html

Sir Alex Ferguson may have enjoyed a trophy-laden career with St Mirren, Aberdeen and Manchester United but now it has been confirmed, the Scotsman is the greatest football manager of all time.

Fresh off the back of a fine Champions League win in Moscow, Fergie can now prepare for the clash with north west rivals Liverpool safe in the knowledge that he his held in higher regard than former Kop boss Bill Shankly.

Sir Alex FergusonSimply the best: Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson has been voted the greatest manager of all time by experts behind the new Football Manager 2010

Ferguson who has won 33 trophies in 22 years at Old Trafford topped the poll carried out by the makers of Football Manager 2010 with 26 per cent of the vote, Shankly came in third with just nine per cent.

TOP 10 MANAGERS EVER*

1. Sir Alex Ferguson – 26 per cent
2. Sir Bobby Robson – 14%
3. Bill Shankly – 9%
4. Brian Clough – 8%
5. Sir Matt Busby – 6%
6. Sir Alf Ramsey – 5%
7. Jose Mourinho – 4%
8. Arsene Wenger – 3%
9. Bob Paisley – 2%
10. Jock Stein – 1%

As polled by Football Manager 2010

The poll features other Knights of the Realm such as the late, great Sir Bobby Robson, Sir Matt Busby and Sir Alf Ramsey but despite their fine records, none of them can match Sir Alex’s two decade long domination of the English game.

Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger, who is celebrating his 60th birthday, may be a little miffed at coming just eighth and Old Big ‘Ead Brian Clough would have had a word or two to share on his fourth-place standing.

The self-proclaimed ‘Special One’, Jose Mourinho polled just four per cent of the vote.

Another Premier League crown this year and United will finally eclipse Liverpool’s tally of 18 titles, plus Fergie will have the completed the job he set out to do when he first arrived in Manchester and knock his arch-rivals ‘off their perch.’

Apple reaction video to Windows7: Mac vs PC ads *LOL*

October 23, 2009 2 comments

broken

Interview w/ Google’s CEO: ATM Machine is The Correct Analogy for Cloud Computing Trustworthy Issue

October 22, 2009 Leave a comment

Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-30685_3-10380917-264.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

Google-CEO

Google CEO: Eric Schmidt

CNET News: You have a lot of enterprise information technology (IT) background. You were chief technology officer at Sun Microsystems and CEO of Novell. What did you have to learn–and what did you have to unlearn–when you came to Google?
Schmidt: Google was not founded with an enterprise bias, and I came with an enterprise bias. I can remember during the first couple years, I would describe at length the XML architecture and the data architecture corporations used. Larry (Page) and Sergey (Brin, Google’s two co-founders) found that humorous: why would you need this? Of course there are reasons why you need it, but they’re so specialized. To me the key breakthrough was understanding the browser can be both enterprise- and consumer-capable. The architecture is driven from the browser. That that is the story of enterprise IT today.

So what did I learn? Consumer stuff is as hard or harder than enterprise stuff. When I was growing up, I thought enterprise was the hardest. Consumers are both very fickle and time-sensitive. (Services) have to be always there. The architectural assumptions of IT in the 1990s are not the assumptions going forward today.

You are big advocates of cloud computing. I’ve run into a lot of skepticism here at the show chiefly because of trust issues. What do you need to do to make your cloud-based services trustworthy enough and secure enough that a lot of big businesses will embrace them?
Schmidt: There are some businesses that will never embrace them. For purposes of argument that will be 1 percent. They’ll conclude they want absolute control and are willing to pay a premium for that. What is that? Their own data centers, their own security architecture, their own risk management, and so forth. The vast majority, for purposes of argument 99 percent, will conclude that the analogy about the ATM machine is correct. Eventually the convenience of using ATM machines and the bank outweighs carrying the money around with you. Initially you think, “How do I trust the bank?” You work out the problems and (eventually) people have enough experience to know even if there is a problem it will be fixed.

In our case, the uptime of our servers and services appears to be higher than that of corporate services. When you study the reliability, we’re trying to get to four nines (99.99 percent availability). Most corporate IT departments are not at that level.

With a lot of people I talk to about this, their analysis is in absolute terms rather than relative terms: something bad might happen, as opposed to the likelihood something bad will happen in the cloud versus their own IT.
Schmidt: This is a race where we just have to be better. Our pricing and flexibility is so much better already.

The message here is it’s coming. I think smart people will come depending where they are in the adoption curve. Are they an early adopter, late adopter, in the middle?

The sales model is different (for selling enterprise services). So is the support model. You need more people to get customers to sign on to services, and you need more people to hold hands when things go wrong. I’ve seen a lot of complaints that there’s nobody at Google they can call. Do you need more faces and people out there and an actual phone line to do this?
Schmidt: Be careful to distinguish between paying customer and free customers. Their service levels are quite different.

So if you’re a paying customer you don’t need to just send an e-mail or fill out a Web form, you can talk to a human being?
Schmidt: That’s part of what we sell. If you’re the CIO and you’re going to take your e-mail system and throw it out, are you going to send an e-mail to somebody you don’t know (when something goes wrong)? That’s not a credible sale. The first thing a CIO is going to say is, “where is that person and how do I wring their neck?” You’re going to have to provide high-quality service or people are going to pay for it.

When you saw the iPhone, the first version was really interesting. But where it got more interesting was the arrival of connectivity with Exchange servers.
Schmidt: And also the App Store.

They were simultaneous and both important, though the App Store was not populated initially.
Speaking as a former board member, Apple executed extremely well.

For me the App Store is really nice, but the Exchange connection is mandatory. Do you think Android (Google’s mobile phone operating system) needs that, or are you going to rely on third parties to supply?
Schmidt: I don’t want to talk about product features. The simple answer is we have to solve the problem for the exact same reason the iPhone was able to solve it so well. If you think about it, Android is on its way to being a very, very high-volume smartphone for enterprise use. We need very powerful integration with things like BlackBerry services. You can go through the list.

Google Voice is an interesting service. It has some nice features for consumers, but I think as a business case it’s got a lot more merit.
Schmidt: We’ve been having this debate. How do we turbocharge Google Voice? It’s obviously incredibly useful to a CIO. We could take a couple paths. One would be to get more connected into PBXs (private branch exchanges, or corporate phone networks). Another would be to adopt more voice over Internet services (VoIP). All those are possible within the enterprise.

When you talk about launching more VoIP services for Google Voice…
Schmidt: You can think of Google Voice as a launching pad for telephony. The more you cross-integrate the stack, the more efficiency there can be.

With your higher-touch sales and support model for enterprise customers, is that totally offset by $50 per user per year? Or is this a lower-profit business than your present, more consumer-facing business?
Schmidt: It’s certainly lower for gross margin. The text-ad business has very high gross margins. We don’t do the math the way you ask. We try to say, does it cover our costs? The answer is sure. The price was set, to be very honest, arbitrarily. Because it’s such a scale business, whatever number we set will be the perfect number because we’ll grow into it. It’ll be a very profitable business at scale.

I see a lot of interest in Gmail but not nearly as much interest in Google Docs–spreadsheet, word processor–and I’d put calendar in between. In the future, are those going to reach parity, or is Docs just going to be this bonus feature?
Schmidt: The way it plays out tactically is almost every sale is e-mail, calendar, and instant messaging. It doesn’t start with Google Docs. They’re playing with it, but fundamentally it’s about e-mail and calendar. That’s a pretty good project for a year for a significant company. They have to do a trial, convert the existing system, train users and support people. When you talk to those customers, they will tell you they will use Google Docs in conjunction with the e-mail accounts that they’re already putting in place. That’s how it plays out. It’s first an e-mail sale, but once you have that, then you get the benefit of Google Docs.

The nontechnical press describe it as Microsoft Office versus Google Docs. They’re not comparable.

This year.
Schmidt: This year. The reason they’re not comparable is Microsoft Office is expensive and ours is free or cheap. The other thing is there are an awful lot of workflow features in Microsoft Office we don’t have today. What we’re doing is adding appropriate functions to Google Docs from the bottom. We’re adding the common cases. We’re not trying to build a full copy of Microsoft Office. I don’t think that’s good use of our time. What will happen is a corporation will end up having both around for awhile.

I personally think the spreadsheets are much more compelling. As a data capture mechanism built into the document (through online forms that fill spreadsheet entries) it’s quite powerful.
It mediates against sharing. It’s the perfect enterprise solution. You just throw the thing up there, it takes three seconds, and this interesting experience occurs.

The object is that if you add insight, you will have a new way of thinking about workflow and collaboration. That ultimately may relate to Google Wave and other things. You can think of the Microsoft Office model as the incumbent. Ours is a different way of solving the same problems.

You guys like to build your own servers, your own software, your own networks. Why not use off-the-shelf technology? Are the companies that do use off-the-shelf technology misguided?
Schmidt: Give me an example of off-the-shelf technology.

Servers from various companies.
Schmidt: Everybody thinks we use PCs. What we really do is build supercomputers. The supercomputers we build are made out of PC parts. They’re highly specialized to the data architecture Google uses. It’s a very pragmatic cost-benefit analysis.

So are other companies misguided?
Schmidt: I would never criticize another company. The Google model is sufficiently specialized that I don’t think you can even compare. There have been a series companies created to build the Google architecture as a generalized rack server. I don’t know how well they’re doing.

Google is unique in many ways, but the general trajectory of very large data centers with a lot of x86 servers and reliability at a higher level rather than individual server level–that’s a general trend. Maybe the rest of the market will intercept you at some point.
Schmidt: Maybe we are the specialized solution the generalized solution learns from. In many markets there’s an iconic solution so that’s so overengineered, but there’s this trickle-down of ideas. I have lots friends in the venture industry working with start-ups with products. I say, “Ship us one and we’ll beat the crap out of it. We’ll tell you very precisely whether your claims are any good or not.

OK, to wrap it up, when people talk about Microsoft or Oracle, they understand what their enterprise strategy is. How would you sum up Google’s enterprise strategy?
Schmidt: We’re trying to build to bring the benefits of the consumer architecture of the Internet to all the people using enterprise services today with the same or better level of security and control.

And in terms of the actual services you offer?
Schmidt: I describe it as horizontal–those that will effect everybody in the organization. The ones everybody uses. We try to avoid specialized business logic like enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems. It’s very interesting, but it’s highly unlikely Google will be interested.

97% Recomendation for Windows 7, from Intel testers

October 22, 2009 Leave a comment

Source:  http://arstechnica.com/microsoft/news/2009/10/97-percent-of-intel-testers-recommend-windows-7.ars

97 percent of Intel testers recommend Windows 7

Intel recently posted the results of a study titled “The Value of PC Refresh with Microsoft Windows 7″ in which it describes its experience while testing Windows 7 during the second quarter of 2009 for its own use within the company. As one would expect, Vista’s successor received much praise. 291 Intel users out of 300 said they found that Windows 7 showed improvement performance and stability over Windows XP.

Despite these positive results, Intel won’t deploy Windows 7 till the next year, according to the study: “During 2009, we plan to continue preparing for deployment by creating a Microsoft Windows 7 build and by installing the OS on systems in test labs to enable business groups to test applications and perform any necessary remediation. In the first quarter of 2010, we plan to begin deployment of Microsoft Windows 7 on new PCs with Intel vPro technology as part of our established refresh cycle. We intend to roll out the new PCs to segments of our user community based on factors including their job role and application requirements.”

The other nine users said they would not recommend the operating system to colleagues after using the beta for three months; yes, these results are based on the beta that arrived in January 2009 and which is no longer available because the RC and RTM versions have been subsequently released. “We encountered two issues during the evaluation, related to OS performance tuning and user account control,” the study states. “Both cases were due to a lack of understanding rather than the technology itself.”

Here’s the abstract of the report:

Following participation in Microsoft’s Technical Adopter Program (TAP), Intel IT found that Windows 7 running on PCs with Intel vPro technology delivers the best productivity for our employees & the best managed solution for IT. After three months of trial with over 300 users, 97 percent of our test users would recommend the new OS to peers and Intel IT sees the potential to save $11M over the next three years. Because of improved employee productivity, reduced costs, ease of deployment and enhanced security, Intel IT is rolling out Windows 7 to early adopters this year and enterprise deployments starting early 2010. Authored by John Gonzalez (OS Product Line Manager, Intel IT), this paper describes these benefits and results of Intel’s participation in the Windows 7 TAP.

In addition to the 97 percent statistic, Intel listed four other key results:

  • Performance: More responsive for key tasks such as booting and launching productivity applications.
  • Stability: Fewer users experienced blue screens.
  • Application Readiness: No remediation required during evaluation; application readiness does not appear to be a roadblock to adoption.
  • Total Cost of Ownership: Initial estimate of potential USD 11 million net present value.

Intel’s IT environment includes more than 100,000 PCs running Windows XP; about 83 percent of these are notebook PCs. Back in June 2008, we learned that the chip giant decided against upgrading its computers to Windows Vista after a lengthy analysis by its internal technology staff which found no potential benefits of upgrading to the newer operating system. The company did the same for Windows 2000 back in 2002: it simply waited a bit longer and moved to Windows XP.

In an open letter titled The New Efficiency, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer named Ford, Continental Airlines, Convergent Computing, Baker Tilly, and the city of Miami as organizations that had deployed Windows 7, in addition to Intel.

Apple Magic Mouse !!!

October 21, 2009 Leave a comment

Source: http://www.apple.com/magicmouse/

We’ve built a better mouse.

It began with iPhone. Then came iPod touch. Then MacBook Pro. Intuitive, smart, dynamic. Multi-Touch technology introduced a remarkably better way to interact with your portable devices — all using gestures. Now we’ve reached another milestone by bringing gestures to the desktop with a mouse that’s unlike anything ever before. It’s called Magic Mouse. It’s the world’s first Multi-Touch mouse. And while it comes standard with every new iMac, you can also add it to any Bluetooth-enabled Mac for a Multi-Touch makeover.

Seamless Multi-Touch Surface

Magic Mouse — with its low-profile design and seamless top shell — is so sleek and dramatically different, it brings a whole new feel to the way you get around on your Mac. You can’t help but marvel at its smooth, buttonless appearance. Then you touch it and instantly appreciate how good it feels in your hand. But it’s when you start using Magic Mouse that everything comes together.

The Multi-Touch area covers the top surface of Magic Mouse, and the mouse itself is the button. Scroll in any direction with one finger, swipe through web pages and photos with two, and click and double-click anywhere. Inside Magic Mouse is a chip that tells it exactly what you want to do. Which means Magic Mouse won’t confuse a scroll with a swipe. It even knows when you’re just resting your hand on it.

Laser-Tracking Engine

Magic Mouse uses powerful laser tracking that’s far more sensitive and responsive on more surfaces than traditional optical tracking. That means it tracks with precision on nearly every surface — whether it’s a table at your favorite cafe or the desk in your home office — without the need for a mousepad.

Wireless

Magic Mouse connects wirelessly to your Mac via Bluetooth, so there’s no wire or separate adapter to worry about. Pair Magic Mouse with your Bluetooth-enabled Mac and enjoy a reliable and secure connection up to 33 feet away. When you combine Magic Mouse with the Apple Wireless Keyboard, you create a workspace free of annoying cables.

And because Magic Mouse is wireless, it can venture beyond the confines of your desk. A quick flick of the on/off switch helps conserve battery power while Magic Mouse is tucked in your bag. Even when it’s on, Magic Mouse manages power efficiently, by detecting periods of inactivity automatically.

  • Click

    Magic Mouse is an advanced point-and-click mouse that lets you click and double-click anywhere on its Multi-Touch surface.

  • Two-button click

    Magic Mouse functions as a two-button mouse when you enable Secondary Click in System Preferences. Left-handed users can reassign left and right click, as well.

  • 360° scroll

    Brush one finger along the Multi-Touch surface to scroll in any direction and to pan a full 360 degrees.

  • Screen zoom

    Hold down the Control key on your keyboard and scroll with one finger on Magic Mouse to enlarge items on your screen.

  • Two-finger swipe

    Using two fingers, swipe left and right along the Multi-Touch surface to advance through pages in Safari or browse photos in iPhoto.

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