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DAILY TECH- 28 July 2012
DAILY TECH- 28 JULY 2012


   
Today’s Latest News 

Twitter goes down just as Google Talk back online 

NEW DELHI: Google Talk, the popular instant messaging service, and Twitter suffered outages on Thursday, affecting millions of web users. 

 

Google tests 1Gbps internet network in US

CHICAGO: After more than two years of anticipation, Google finally announced on Thursday that the company's ultra-high speed internet service Google Fiber would become available to the residents of its test community Kansas City starting in September.  

 


Low cost Android handsets may come with Swype

Swype is also in talks with operating system developers for integrating Swype keyboards in their OSes.

 

Apple pitches gadget security to hacker crowd

LAS VEGAS: Apple pitched security measures in its mobile gadgets on Thursday during its first presentation at a premier gathering of hackers and those intent on thwarting cyber attacks.

 

Microsoft begins start-up accelerator programme

BANGALORE: Microsoft has begun a powerful mentorship programme for technology startups across four locations - India, US, Israel and China. 

 


Video of the Day:


Red Hat Linux 5.0 Step By Step Installation.

Must See Tricks 4 Computer(Click on Image)

 

 


 









Twitter goes down just as Google Talk back online 


 

NEW DELHI: Google Talk, the popular instant messaging service, and Twitter suffered outages on Thursday, affecting millions of web users. While the problem with Google Talk started around 4pm and lasted for over four hours, Twitter's woes began barely minutes after Google had restored its service. The problems plagued the social networking website for nearly an hour.

The outage at Google and Twitter affected millions of users across the world. Google Talk service was restored around 8.25pm while Twitter came back online around 12.30am.

"This issue has been resolved," an update on status.twitter.com said.

Ironically, the Google Talk outage was first reported by users on Twitter.

Many Google Talk users reported that they could log into the service, saw their contacts with the respective status but failed to send messages to them. Some other users could not log in. The service is not only used by people to keep in touch with friends but has also become a popular way to interact with co-workers in offices.


 


Featured Technology Talk

OS X Mountain Lion gets positive reviews

 

 

 

OS X Mountain Lion 10.8, the next major Mac operating system (OS) from Apple, is finally available in the Mac App Store as a digital download. A flurry of Mac owners have raced to download the new OS and are already calling it a “great release.” The operating system has captured

the number one spot in both the top paid and top grossing charts in the Mac App Store in countries including Australia, Canada, France, the UK, and the US. At the time of writing the operating system had also achieved an average customer rating of 5 out of 5 stars.

Technology blogs have started posting their opinions of the OS too. TechCrunch dubbed it “Quick, Familiar, Cheap, And Drenched In iOS Goodness,” John Gruber said “That mindset and development schedule — “What can we do to make this nicer by next year?” — may well be the most important thing from iOS that Apple has taken back to the Mac,” and Ars Technica concluded “Think of Mountain Lion as the best desktop iCloud client Apple knows how to make.”  

 





Google tests 1Gbps internet network in US   

 

CHICAGO: After more than two years of anticipation, Google finally announced on Thursday that the company's ultra-high speed internet service Google Fiber would become available to the residents of its test community Kansas City starting in September.

Offering an internet connectivity speed of one gigabit per second, Google said the service will be about 100 times faster than the speed most Americans have with current broadband connections, reported Xinhua.

Instead of a broadband connection, Google Fiber is composed of thin optical fiber lines that run directly from a person's home to a data centre, which is then in turn connected to the national internet backbone.

According to Google, it is this "direct connection" from a person's home to the national backbone that will allow users to experience such high internet speeds.

Google said it was inspired to develop Google Fiber in line with the Federal Communication Commission's 2010 National Broadband Plan, which calls for making high speed internet more widely available in the US.

Despite the fact that internet was invented in the US, according to content delivery network Akamai's 2011 State of the internet report, the US ranks only 12th globally in internet connection speed, with an average connection of 5.8 Mbps. South Korea ranks first, with an average speed of 17.5 Mbps.

In an interview on telephone, Google Fiber spokesperson Jenna Wandres told Xinhua that Google had already done advocacy work around the development of the National Broadband Plan and improving US internet connectivity, and that it set the stage for the company to do even more once the Plan was released.

Wandres added Google hoped greater internet accessibility and speed could additionally lead to more technological innovation, and set the stage for the future of internet browsing.

"When we think back about the way we used to use the internet when we were still listening to a dial tone, there were all sorts of innovations that we couldn't even imagine - we were sitting waiting for it to dial in," Wandres said, comparing how much the internet had changed since it was first developed.

"We're hoping that with Google Fiber and its higher speeds, these things will lead to new and unpredictable innovations that as a whole will move the web forward in the US," she added.

After months of laying the infrastructure and groundwork, Google Fiber will finally start home-installation after the pre-registration deadline September 9. The internet service is priced at $70 a month, which is competitive with most US broadband internet providers.

Google also announced the new internet service could be paired with a television component, Google Fiber TV, which Google says will include regular broadcast channels and thousands of TV shows on demand.

Although Google already owns video-sharing site YouTube, it will be the company's first venture into serving as a television provider.

The Google Fiber project first started in February 2010, when Google announced that the company planned to build an ultra-high speed internet network in a select US city that was willing to partner with them.

According to Google, the response was overwhelming. The company received invitations from almost 1,100 US communities and close to 200,000 individuals, all expressing their desire for faster internet service. Some cities even tried doing stunts hoping to attract the Google Fiber project, with one city mayor even jumping into a frozen river and posting the request on YouTube.

Ultimately, the Midwest community of Kansas City was chosen as the Google Fiber launch site in spring 2011. According to Wandres, Kansas City was chosen because of its business-friendly infrastructure, community involvement, and supportive officials.

 


 


Low cost Android handsets may come with Swype 

 

Swype is also in talks with operating system developers for integrating Swype keyboards in their OSes.

Swype keyboard, which is known for its innovative text predicting feature, and is quite popular on Android may soon be available on low cost Android smartphones manufactured by Indian players.

Notably, its makers, Nuance Communications, had announced the launch of a newer version of the keyboard, with support for Hinglish language - a mixture of Hindi and English, yesterday.

Zach Hooper, director of product management, Nuance Communications, said to The Mobile Indian, "We are in talks with Indian handset manufactures to make available our Swype keyboard in low cost Android smartphones manufactured by them."

He didn't share the timeline when it will be implemented or the names of Indian handset players with whom Nuance is in talks but said, "by this endeavor we plan to reach the masses and offer an interesting and easy keyboard input interface for entering text in their mobiles."

Interestingly, Micromax's first Android smartphone - A60 had Swype keyboard support and after that the mobile maker has launched a couple more Android smartphones but they don't support Swype.

 

 


TECHNOLOGY

 

 "Technology without hatred can be a blessing. Technology with hatred is always a disaster."

 

 

Oracle Exalogic 2.0 Focuses On Elastic Cloud, Automation


 

Oracle CEO Larry Ellison has described the company's Exalogic Elastic Cloud appliance as "one great big honkin' cloud," but until now it has lacked crucial virtualization capabilities to split out the platform's storage and compute capacity in an elastic and automated way. On Wednesday, Oracle announced a second generation of Exalogic software that truly merits the "Elastic Cloud" moniker.

Exalogic is one of Oracle's so-called engineered systems combining hardware and software "engineered to work better together," but until now it has been more of an infrastructure appliance combining compute, storage, operating system, infiniband networking, and system management software. The benefit was being able to plug it in and quickly get to deploying applications on a high-performance, fault-tolerant platform.

Exalogic previously included a degree of virtualization capabilities, but with Exalogic Elastic Cloud Software 2.0, Oracle has added server-level virtualization capabilities that will make it much easier to spin up and spin down capacity at will.

"We now have virtual network-, storage-, and server-level capabilities through which we can create enterprise application environments in an automated way," Mike Palmeter, senior director of product management for Oracle Exalogic, told InformationWeek.

More to the point for Oracle customers, the Exalogic upgrade is built specifically to run optimized deployments of Oracle business applications, such as ERP and CRM systems and supply-chain management and other Oracle vertical industry applications.

With the new level of virtualization, Exalogic's infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) layer can be used to spin up virtual capacity without having to know anything about the physical server, storage, or network capacity inside Exalogic. The IaaS layer also lets administrators automate detailed software, network, and storage configuration steps involved in deploying applications. Thus, you can take the entire software stack that used to be installed on physical servers and quickly spin up (or down) instances on Exalogic virtual servers. 

 


Famous Scientist

 

 

Ludwig Aschoff


Karl Albert Ludwig Aschoff (January 10, 1866 – June 24, 1942) was a German physician and pathologist. He is considered to be one of the most influential pathologists of the early 20th century and is regarded as the most important German pathologist after Rudolf Virchow.

Aschoff was born in Berlin, Prussia. He studied medicine at the University of Bonn, University of Strasbourg, and the University of Würzburg. After his habilitation 1894, Ludwig Aschoff was appointed professor for pathology at the University of Göttingen in 1901.
 

Aschoff transferred to the University of Marburg in 1903 to head the department for pathological anatomy. In 1906, he accepted a position as ordinarius at the University of Freiburg, where he remained until his death.

Aschoff was interested in the pathology and pathophysiology of the heart. He discovered nodules in the myocardium present during rheumatic fever, the so-called Aschoff bodies. Aschoff's reputation attracted students from all over the world, among them Sunao Tawara.
 

Together they discovered and described the atrioventricular node (AV node, Aschoff-Tawara node). Numerous travels abroad, to England, Canada, Japan, and the U.S. led to many research connections, whereas the trips to Japan proved to be especially productive. Aschoff's popularity in Japanese medicine had its roots in his work with Tawara and a journey through Japan in 1924. In the early 20th century, 23 of 26 Japanese pathological institutes were headed by students of Aschoff.

Among his pathological studies was also the issue of racial differences. "Pathology of constitution" invented by him became a special branch of research of National Socialist doctors under the name of "military pathology". Franz Buechner is reported to be Aschoff's most prominent pupil.

His grave is preserved in the Protestant Friedhof I der Jerusalems- und Neuen Kirchengemeinde (Cemetery No. I of the congregations of Jerusalem's Church and New Church) in Berlin-Kreuzberg, south of Hallesches Tor.

  









 

Apple pitches gadget security to hacker crowd  

 

 

LAS VEGAS: Apple pitched security measures in its mobile gadgets on Thursday during its first presentation at a premier gathering of hackers and those intent on thwarting cyber attacks.

The unprecedented talk by Apple head of software platform security Dallas De Atley at the 15th annual Black Hat conference in Las Vegas came as hackers increasingly target smartphones at the heart of Internet Age lifestyles.

"We are really excited to be here," De Atley said before launching into his presentation at a packed Caesars Palace ballroom.

"When we were developing the iPhone we realized there were aspects that make it different from computers," he continued.

"Security is architecture; you have to build it in from the very beginning. It is not something you can sprinkle over your code when it is done."

De Atley spent an hour providing insights into encryption, software keys and other security features built into the iOS operating system for iPhones, iPads and iPod touch devices.

Hacking attacks on mobile devices, especially Apple gadgets or those powered by Google-backed Android software, were hot topics at Black Hat, where developers voiced doubt that device makers are devoted to security.

Unlike other speakers at the weeklong gathering, De Atley did not field questions from the audience. Instead, he brushed aside queries as he was ushered quickly out a side door after his talk.

His brusque departure underscored a complaint by developers, and those who craft security for Apple gadgets, that they are often left guessing answers to questions when dealing with the revered gadget maker.

"IOS is pretty secret," said Accuvent Labs principal research consultant Charlie Miller, who is credited with the first remote hacker exploit of an iPhone.

"How do they test their software before they ship it?" he continued, rattling off a litany of questions he'd like Apple to answer. "How do they determine an application is malicious and how many times has it happened?"





Microsoft begins start-up accelerator programme

 

BANGALORE: Microsoft has begun a powerful mentorship programme for technology startups across four locations - India, US, Israel and China.

The programme brings together senior technical people from Microsoft, influential business leaders, domain experts, venture capitalists and angel investors to handhold select startups through an intense four-month long period.

In India, the company has identified 11 startups to go through the first such programme. S Somasegar, corporate vice president for the developer division in Microsoft, who was in Bangalore for the launch, said the four locations chosen were the current hotspots for entrepreneurship and startups in technology. "Our plan is to have two-three groups in a year going through this programme," he said.

The programme is similar to those done by TechStars and Y Combinator in the US. However , unlike these two, which typically pick a 6% stake in the startup for the facilities they offer, Microsoft will not take a stake, nor will it have any rights to the IPs that the startups may create. But it will likely gain from the startups' use and promotion of its tools. Microsoft looks to be particularly keen to promote its Azure cloud platform, given that the programme is named 'Microsoft Accelerator for Windows Azure'.

The cloud is hugely beneficial to startups because it substantially reduces initial costs and provides easy global reach to customers.

TechStars has a 13-week programme, and Wikipedia says that of the 114 companies that have graduated from this programme since it was started in 2007, 98 are active and profitable, 8 have been acquired, and 8 have failed, a 92% rate of success. In contrast, the success rate for most technology start-ups is estimated at 10%. Only 1% of applicants to the TechStars programme is accepted for mentorship. 


 



Tips to make your browser secure

MUNICH: Web browsers are the key to the internet. Without them the internet is an impenetrable black box.

Browsers may be among the most commonly used applications, but they also offer the greatest number of attack options for dangerous content on the net.To keep viruses, worms and other malware away from your computer when surfing,it's crucial to configure your browser for security.

The firewall on a DSL router is a good first step for protecting the computer during surfing, says Marco Rinne from the computer portal chip.de. But that doesn't hold true if your browser is out of date: “Internet Explorer 6 and 7 or Firefox 2 no longer satisfy current security standards,” he says. For optimal protection, he therefore urgesusers to keep theirbrowsers updated.

There are numeroussecurity tools already present in Firefox and Internet Explorer. The pop-up blocker,for example, prevents more than justannoying ads. It alsothrottles other windows that can be used to sneak malicious software onto PCs. Phishing filters protect personal dataagainst theft.

Firefox offers additional configurationoptions underthe Settings item in the Security tab of the Options dialog box: thisincludes the ability to block risky or forgedwebsites.It's also a good idea to prohibit websites from installing add-ons on their own. Similar settings are possible under Internet Explorer in the Security tab of the Internet Options dialog box, accessible from the Tools menu.

Computer owners should also activate all options for warning against attacks, advises Markus Linnemann, managing director of the Institute for Internet Security (ifis) at the Polytechnic University of Gelsenkirchen in Germany. This applies in particular to warnings about suspicious content to be displayed using ActiveX, Flash, or JavaScript.

Yet the warning mechanism on most browsers alone isn't usually enough, Linnemann says. Those who wish to be especially careful can, for example, use the Firefox add-on 'No Script,' which blocks all active content of a website by default and allows the user to decide which should be permitted. The problem is that most users are unable to determine   which content represents a threat to their computer, Rinne msays. 







Frogs can't swallow with their eyes open

Cartoon of Technology



Want Facebook phone? Zuck says no!

 

First, we saw the so called 'Facebook phones' from HTC turned out to be normal phones - read HTC Chacha and HTC Salsa. Then the INQ Facebook phone turned up with just a little extra integration to the social network. Now the hopes for a Facebook phone have been dashed all over again.


 

“Good actions give strength to ourselves and inspire good actions in others. "