Category: News

  • The Walking Dead Season Four (Taiwanese Animation Style)

    The season finale of The Walking Dead didn’t go over that well with some fans and critics, but there’s hope that the next season will be better. Everybody’s favorite Taiwanese animators at NMA hope so too and have put together a short live-action trailer that follows the exploits of Glenn Rhee’s unnamed sister.

    Besides the hilariously animated zombies, NMA might be onto something here. A spin-off Web series that explores previously unknown characters in The Walking Dead universe could potentially be a hit. It would also be a good way to keep people interested in the franchise in between seasons since the latest game was pretty much a disaster.

  • The Battle Jamie Dimon Shouldn’t be Fighting

    Jamie Dimon, the perpetually embattled chairman and chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, likes to say, “Do the right thing.” This time, Dimon is doing the wrong thing.

    Dimon’s latest battle is with his own shareholders. Investors in the bank have proposed splitting Dimon’s job and naming someone else chairman. Although the vote wouldn’t be binding, it would be difficult, to say the least, for Dimon to remain as chairman were his own investors to vote against him.

    The bank’s management has been lobbying big shareholders to vote against the proposal (the vote will be tallied at the company’s annual meeting, May 21). There has even been talk that, were Dimon to lose, he would pack his ball and glove and retire. That would be too bad, for Dimon and for JPMorgan.

    Here’s the thing. This is one battle Dimon shouldn’t be fighting. He should resign as chairman — before the vote.

    Some of the institutions angling for a separate chairman say Dimon has made too many mistakes to hold both jobs. As he is the first to admit, Dimon has made mistakes. In particular, he failed to detect, or to prevent, the risks incurred by a rogue trader, the infamous “London Whale,” who cost the company $6 billion.

    Nonetheless, JPMorgan has been racking up record earnings, and Dimon is still a top CEO. Splitting off the chairman’s job should not be seen as sending Dimon to the woodshed; it should be best practice — for every public company.

    Understand that “chairman” and “chief executive are not just different titles — they carry very different responsibilities. The chief executive, of course, is the head of management. He decides who to hire and fire, what businesses the company should be involved in, how much risk to take — all of that.

    The board chairman is about watching the watchers. If Dimon’s bank were owned by a single family, supervision would no problem. But in a public company ownership is spread among millions of disparate shareholders. Day-in, day-out, the senior managers have far more power than the people they work for. The dilemma has been recognized since Berle and Means’s 1932 classic, The Modern Corporation and Private Property. The best solution is a vigorous and independent board, whose job is to represent the public owners. And when Dimon reports to that board, his role should be similar to that of a diligent store manager, or of any hired hand, reporting to his owner on how the business has been going.

    Dimon shouldn’t run the board, because the board is the agent for Dimon’s boss, and its first responsibility is to monitor Dimon. Perhaps it would be different for a company founder who still owns the majority of the stock. But the vast majority of CEOs, Dimon included, have very small percentage investments. Their dual roles are not only inappropriate, they are vestigial hallmarks of the imperial CEO.

    Since the corporate abuses of the early 2000s, the stock exchange and Nasdaq have required listed companies to appoint a “lead director” to make sure the board keeps a lookout. That’s a half-step. JPMorgan has an energetic lead director. However, the chairman has authority — why else would Dimon fight to hang on? (If it’s only about image, the imagery is wrong. Dimon should enter the boardroom as an employee, not as even a ceremonial head). If the exchanges or the Securities and Exchange Commission had any guts, they would simply require that the chairperson be independent.

    Dimon is a perfect example of why. With his well-advertised aversion to risk, he steered JPMorgan around the worst of the mortgage debacle. His bank did not need a bailout (it took TARP money on orders from the Treasury). Nonetheless, JPMorgan suffered more write-offs than Dimon predicted. It stumbled again during the robo-signing debacle. The point is, even good CEOs make mistakes and all of them need watching. Dimon’s mercurial temperament — charming one moment, steaming the next — is another reason he shouldn’t be supervising himself.

    The bank’s directors have hardly been pushovers — last year, they cut Dimon’s pay in half, to $11.5 million. But the directors face some distinct challenges. With Dimon 57, it is high time to be thinking about succession, especially since the bank has suffered a string of executive departures. They also must monitor the London Whale clean-up (it reportedly involves eight different investigations). Finally, there is the ongoing task of evaluating Dimon’s performance. On each of these, the bank’s shareholders will be served best if management submits its advice to a board led by an outsider.

    Apple signaled that the days of the imperial CEO were over when it named Tim Cook to succeed Steve Jobs as CEO but not the chairman. With Apple struggling, that has proved fortunate. Now, Dimon, who takes corporate governance more seriously than most, has a chance to redefine best practice for Wall Street — Lloyd Blankfein at Goldman Sachs take note — and for corporate America. He shouldn’t wait for the shareholders. Jamie, do the right thing.

  • Apple’s cash hoard: Focus turns to innovation

    Apple Acquisition Targets
    Apple’s cash hoard is legendary. It has more than $141 billion in cash and marketable securities, the largest of any technology company in the world. While a good chunk of that cash will benefit shareholders thanks to dividends and buybacks, Apple’s board may want to seriously think about acquiring some companies, both public and non-public, in order to keep the innovation engine humming.

    Continue reading…

  • BlueStacks hits 10 million downloads in one year

    BlueStacks_Logo_Vertical

    BlueStacks, the software that lets you run Android apps on a desktop computer, is celebrating just over a year of availability in beta status with news of hitting the 10 million download mark. Rosen Sharma, CEO of BlueStacks, indicated in a recent interview that the team had made predictions on where they would be in one year and “no one said 10 million.” No one was even close as the most optimistic was just in the few hundred thousand range.

    BlueStacks’ senior VP for marketing notes that downloads do not necessarily equal users running the software on a regular basis. However, the number is described as being “spooky high,” which is a good sign that there is interest out there on the part of users trying to access Android apps on non-Android hardware.

    One issue the BlueStacks team is working on is trying to update the version of Android the app player uses with a Jelly Bean compatible version in the works. This effort is no doubt helped by the partnerships BlueStacks continues to work on, like the recently announced effort with Lenovo to install BlueStacks on Windows 8 PCs.

    source: AllThingsD

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  • Tough luck Apple, non-big-brand tablets account for one-third of shipments

    Apple’s supremacy as tablet market leader may be even shorter lived than previous analyst forecasts suggest. Already, Android topples iOS share, and there is simple catalyst: White-box slates accounted for one-third of shipments last year — a level NPD DisplaySearch predicts will continue in 2013 and beyond.

    Android is the big beneficiary of the trend. In third quarter 2012, shipments exceeded iOS models, according to IDC. During first quarter this year, green-robot slates took 56.5 percent market share. At this pace, contrary to analyst predictions just a year ago, Android does to iOS in tablets what it did in smartphones — take early leadership away from Apple.

    In October 2009, I explained why “Apple cannot win the smartphone wars” and more than two years later why “iPad cannot win the tablet wars“. The factors are similar in both markets. One company against a world of others — Apple/iOS versus dozens of Android manufacturers — simply isn’t sustainable, repeating the Mac’s early rise and eventual decline before DOS/Windows PCs in the 1980s and 1990s; more recently, smartphones.

    Why Platforms Succeed

    Typically, successful platforms share five common traits:

    • There are good development tools and APIs for easily creating applications
    • There is at least one killer application people really want
    • There is breadth of useful applications
    • Third parties make lots of money
    • There is a robust ecosystem

    However, in my 2011 “iPad cannot win” analysis, which I strongly encourage you read, I replaced the traditional second point with another: “There is a killer user experience that people want to enjoy”. I can’t overstate the importance of UX to modern platforms and how it displaces PC-era concepts about killer applications.

    For tablets, there is no one killer application, or even thousands. But there is killer UX, which Apple got right in 2007, delivering a far superior smartphone experience than every other competitor. But Google and its manufacturing partners easily copied Apple’s UX approach, first on smartphones and then tablets. Today, iOS is a tired-looking user interface compared to stock Android or OEM replacements, such as HTC Sense or Samsung TouchWiz UI. Apple’s challenge, during next month’s developer conference, is to bring with iOS 7 modern UI and UX.

    User Experience is Everything

    The UX concept is crucial to understanding the current tablet market. By the traditional view, platforms succeed only if there are applications that people want. But developers only create them if there is demand, which usually requires applications first. But there’s no financial demand to develop apps, without platform adoption — thus the chicken-egg scenario: Which comes first, apps or sales volume?

    Tablets capitalize on platform success smartphones established, while offering great, immersive user experience. Apps, and the ecosystems for handsets, carry forward. Money matters more in this scenario — where partners make the most — and there extenuates dramatic dynamics that applied to the Mac and DOS/Windows PCs in the late 1980s and through the following decade.

    Apple pays developers about $1 billion a month, but volume shifts in Android’s favor and competing OEMs take control of specialized, even localized, ecosystems — like creating their own app stores. Apple’s controlled, contained iOS platform restricts who makes money where, while Android openness allows third parties to innovate and create distinct profit streams. That $1 billion today means little tomorrow.

    IBM PC clones and white boxes drove DOS/Windows success decades ago. Something similar plays out today, in a category with striking similarities. Tablets are much closer to traditional PCs than are smartphones, and DisplaySearch sees slate shipments exceeding laptops this year — 256.5 million units to 203.3 million.

    Apple’s Rivals are Many

    White box accounting for one-third of shipments already rivals Apple. The distinction is enormous, and bodes badly for the fruit-logo company in the most-important growth markets, like China. During first quarter, IDC puts iPad market share at 39.6 percent, with Samsung a distant second at 17.9 percent. That makes Apple the indisputable OEM leader. However, assuming white boxes account for one third of shares, iPad’s lead is more tenuous, particularly considering the tablet’s share fell from 58.1 percent a year earlier.

    The whom and where matters here — white box manufacturers, largely shipping to and from China. They now lead the Android horde Apple cannot defeat. The one against the many is not a long-term winning strategy, particularly as PC spending shifts to tablets.

    Google and its partners merely need to get the user experience to be good enough for more people to buy and for a broad ecosystem to thrive — one where lots of third parties make loads of money. In many ways Android UX is superior, something Apple could change with iOS 7. But the fruit-logo company can’t easily solve the volume disparity, something non-big-brand manufacturers widen for Android.

    Photo Credit: ollyy/Shutterstock

  • Reddit Makes This Old Man’s Day By Restoring His Old Navy Photo

    Reddit is good for a lot of things, mostly because it’s simply made of up a huge group of people. When a community pulls together it can be capable of some pretty incredible things, and in the reddit age, sometimes that is something that wouldn’t have been possible in years past.

    One reddit user wanted to give his grandpa a gift by having an old Navy photo restored for him. He turned to the reddit community, and a bunch of people took a shot at it, with some working off the others’ work. Eventually, the community came up with a great restoration job, and the user recorded video of the moment when he explained the process and showed his grandpa the finished product.

    “I didn’t realize I was so good looking…That’s fantastic!” says the grandpa before thanking the reddit community.”

    After just a day, the video already has over 70,000 views.

    Here’s the reddit thread for the story.

  • 5 Key Steps to a Smooth Cloud Transition

    Alan McMahon works for Dell in enterprise solution design, across a range for products from servers, storage to virtualization, and is based in Ireland.

    alan-mcmahon-tnALAN McMAHON
    Dell

    In today’s Virtual Era, the role of IT has changed due to the speed at which technology is evolving, and it requires the same evolution of our IT teams. In order for the teams to support, and carry out the goals of their organizations, they need the infrastructure to grow while becoming more agile and efficient. However, there are some challenges that come with these changes. Many companies, especially smaller ones that are just getting started, lack the resources with which they can use to make these changes. Additionally, it can be difficult to manage the outdated hardware and software which is used.

    It’s important that we begin working towards streamlining processes and making better use of the cloud in order to gain an edge over our competition, while fulfilling our company’s objectives. There are five imperatives that we must follow in order to accomplish a smooth transition to the cloud. Each of these will help to transform IT as we know it and will help to reduce the costs and complexity. On their own, they each aid in self-funding and reduce costs and overhead expenses. Together, these five imperatives help IT become more agile, efficient and allow the IT team to use their time, energy and financial resources to focus on other areas of innovation and growth for the company. Let’s take a look at the five imperatives:

    Leverage the Power of Virtualization

    The first thing that should be done is to virtualize data in order to boost efficiency. By removing touch points, silos and servers, costs are dramatically reduced. This task can prove challenging for companies who have an inflexible system that won’t allow for full integration at the present. But since technology is ever-changing, more and more resources are becoming available which will help you be able to unify everything seamlessly.

    Manage Your Data

    Today, data is being created at unprecedented levels, and it’s difficult to manage due to it being relatively unorganized and inefficiently stored. We need to have it organized so that we can find what we want, when we want it, with little effort. Our data needs to be able to be moved around easily and transferred to the device on which we want it, at the moment we want it. While it may seem reasonable to just add more storage devices to organize and handle the vast volume of data, the better choice is to virtualize it so that it can be everywhere, all the time. Virtual storage that is optimized and automated is the answer. Our data needs to be protected, able to be recovered and archived so that it can be integrated with our organization’s existing infrastructure.

    Enable Mobility

    Many of us do our work virtually, working from home, around town or even while travelling the world. We may have team members that we seldom see face-to-face, if we’ve ever met them at all. It’s essential to be able to have access to data and applications from anywhere there’s a wi-fi connection, at any hour of the day. Our teams also work with a variety of devices, such as tablets and smart phones, so it’s important that they have safe connections that allow employees access to the information which they need to get their work done.

    Consumerize IT

    As our workforce becomes more tech-savvy, IT needs to be made accessible to everyone in order to enable our employees to work remotely with their own devices of choice. There’s a vast array of devices, operating systems, hardware and software that our team members are comfortable using, so the IT organizations need to put systems in place to ensure that our data is monitored, protected, secure and backed-up, while still remaining accessible to everyone in the company.

    Transition To the Cloud

    In order to leverage our resources, work more efficiently, reduce costs and streamline management, we need to make the move to the cloud. A remote server and nas storage make this possible. Each company has its unique needs and will go about their transition differently. However, getting into the cloud paves the way for a more advanced, efficient working environment.

    As we make move forward into this Virtual Era, and transition to a more mobile work environment, we must keep these five things in mind. Not only will it help with the transition, but it will ensure our data is secure, yet available to the people that need it.

    Industry Perspectives is a content channel at Data Center Knowledge highlighting thought leadership in the data center arena. See our guidelines and submission process for information on participating. View previously published Industry Perspectives in our Knowledge Library.

  • HTC slowly improving financially, releases unaudited April revenue

    HTC_One_Back_HTC_Logo_TA

    HTC has announced their unaudited revenue for April 2013. While they did improve from March, bringing in $660 million, up from $540, this April was still quite a dip from April of last year, where HTC had $1.2 billion in revenue. Still, though, it’s easy to see that the HTC One is pulling its weight for HTC, and now that it’s launched in the US (which didn’t happen until late April) I think we can expect revenue to jump up quite a bit next month. HTC’s projected Q2 2013 revenue is $2.73 billion.

    source: HTC

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  • Nintendo Offers Smartphone App Porting Tool, But Should Be Porting Its Content To Phones Instead

    AWKWARD-MARIO

    Nintendo is trying to get people to buy the new Wii U, but it just isn’t working, according to recent sales numbers. Now, the Japanese gaming giant is hoping that helping developers port their smartphone content to the home gaming console with conversion software will help entice buyers, according to the Japan Times.

    Smartphone apps on a home console isn’t a novel idea: Sony began encouraging devs to bring their mobile phone hits to the PlayStation network a while ago, and continues to add mobile-first titles to the ranks of the Vita’s portable library. But there’s nothing really indicating that’s making a major difference in terms of attracting customers. After all, why would people seek out those titles on consoles, portable or otherwise, when they’ve already got myriad devices to play them on natively, including the iPhone, Android smartphones and the iPad?

    Nintendo looking for ports of smartphone titles is a quick and dirty way to build out a larger software library, and for developers, a way to at least explore a new delivery vector to reach customers they may not already be reaching. But it will probably be a limited audience, made more so by the fact that anyone who’s already a fan of the title on mobile would probably be disinclined to pay for it all over again.

    Porting is also a strategy that hasn’t really seemed to have been successful for anyone so far. BlackBerry has encouraged developers to port their Android apps over to BB10 using its own super-simple tool, which by all accounts takes only a few minutes to do its magic. But even still, it’s finding it hard to get developers on board, and that’s going from one mobile platform to another. Incentivizing conversions for mobile devs to bring their titles to a home console will likely be tricker still.

    It’s been brought up before, but it bears repeating: Nintendo would probably stand to gain a lot more by reversing the situation, and porting its own blockbuster titles to other platforms, the way that Sony has flirted with doing, and the way that other publishers like Square Enix and Capcom have fully embraced. Admittedly, neither of those are hardware makers like Nintendo, but arguably that makes things more imperative for the Mario creator, which is having a really rough go of its hardware efforts, with lots of money sunk into a brand new console just at the beginning of what has been a 10-year release cycle in the past.

    I wouldn’t mind having something like Dots on my Wii U, if I had or cared about one, but it’s not going to convince me to go buy that console. On the other hand, I’d love Super Mario World on the iPhone (a legit version, not via emulator) and would pay dearly for the pleasure. You’ve got the funnel all wrong, Nintendo, and it isn’t going to bring the people back.

  • In Case You Forgot: The Full McBain Film Is Buried In “Simpsons” Episodes

    This isn’t new news, but it is awesome.

    In case you forgot, the entire Mcbain movie is hidden in little clips over several episodes of “The Simpsons”. The writers of the show love putting in Easter eggs wherever they can, so it wasn’t really a surprise to find out they’d actually written and animated the whole story for their version of a Schwarzenegger-like action hero and carefully chopped it up, placing the excerpts in order throughout the years.

    If you missed it the first time, check it out.

  • Sony finally puts up Xperia Z for sale on US site

    Sony_Xperia_Z_Talk_Android_

    Sony has finally given US customers the chance to get their hands on the unlocked version of the dustproof and waterproof Xperia Z through Sony’s web store. It’ll run you $629.99, but that’s about average for an unlocked phone. Unfortunately, though, there’s no LTE on board like the Xperia ZL, but you will be able to use the phone on AT&T and T-Mobile’s HSPA+ networks. If you have to hold out for LTE, you may want to wait for T-Mobile’s rumored LTE version. If you’re ready to open your wallet, hit the link below.

    source: Sony Store

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  • Baseball Is A Much Darker Sport When Darth Vader Is Involved

    The Star Wars YouTube channel has uploaded a series of videos featuring Darth Vader, some stormtroopers and scout troopers getting ready for a baseball game, and even playing (against each other).

    As one of the videos’ descriptions says, Vader was stepping up to the plate for a Pacific League Baseball game in honor of Star Wars Day (May 4).

    Anyway, here’s the series of videos.

  • Tebow Fans’ Plea Hits White House Petition Site

    The White House’s online petition website has been used to promote both serious and silly ideas since its debut. Petitions to build a death star or make an R. Kelly song the national anthem don’t seriously deserve the president’s time, but others, such as the anti-CISPA petition, reflect the policy views of many Americans.

    Now, NFL fans have used the website to petition the President of the United States to get Tim Tebow a job.

    According to an Orlando Sentinel report, Jacksonville Jaguars fans want Tebow to be their quarterback badly enough to bother President Obama with their cause. A petition was filed on the website to encourage the president to “call Jacksonville Jaguars GM David Caldwell and tell him to stop ignoring Jaguars fans and sign Tim Tebow.” The petition, which claimed Tebow’s presence would increase Jaguar ticket sales, has since been taken down.

    Tebow was released from his job with the New York Jets in April. Since that time, Tebow, now a free agent, hasn’t garnered intrest from any other NFL teams, including the Miami Dolphins.

    Tebow gained notoriety with the Denver Broncos in 2011 before being traded to the Jets in 2012. He has also gained a fan following for his outspoken Christian religious beliefs.

  • Bill Gates: Apple’s ‘frustrating’ iPad should be more like Microsoft’s Surface

    Bill Gates iPad Criticism
    The iPad may have the highest customer satisfaction ratings of any tablet in the world, but Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates thinks that many of its users are “frustrated” because it doesn’t come with a physical keyboard and it lacks access to Microsoft Office. Business Insider reports that Gates, while being interviewed on CNBC on Monday, said that a lot of iPad users “are frustrated, they can’t type, they can’t create documents, they don’t have Office there.” As an alternative, Gates plugged Microsoft’s own Surface tablet that features the “portability of the tablet but the richness of the PC” and that not coincidentally has a physical keyboard accessory and access to Office. Of course, given how weak the Surface’s early sales have been compared to the iPad, it’s tough to argue that any frustration with Apple’s tablet is prompting consumers to flee to Windows-based tablets.

  • 17-Year Cicadas: Expect “Shovel-Loads” To Swarm

    Cicadas don’t bother some, but for many, the deafening buzzing that comes with their arrival can be a headache. Those people should prepare themselves, because scientists say that after 17 years of hibernation in the soil, a huge swarm of them is about to emerge.

    The bugs don’t pose a threat to humans–or much of anything, really–and actually promote substantial growth in trees once they die. Their carcasses have been found to stimulate the production of seeds and nitrogen in certain trees and plants, acting as a sort of biological Miracle-Gro. However, a large amount of cicadas appearing all at once may prove to be more than an annoyance to some on the East Coast. In fact, this year could be one of the worst we’ve seen in a long time as far as outbreaks go.

    “There are some pretty convincing reports coming out,” John Cooley, an expert on cicadas at the University of Connecticut, said. “It’s fair to say it’s starting, but it’s still in the very early stages. It certainly isn’t going all crazy. … When it really happens, it’s not going to be like this. It’s going to be shovel loads of cicadas.”

    Entomologists have been tracking the critters as they emerge this spring, and it’s been rather slow going. But Cooley says this is just the calm before the storm. The East Coast is expected to receive the buzzing guests by the billions.

    The bugs get their name because of a sort of hibernation cycle they undergo; for 17 years, they burrow underground and feed on plant roots. When it’s time to come out, the males spread out to find mates and the females eventually lay their eggs. The adult cicadas die off within a few weeks, leaving their legacy in the babies soon to hatch.

    Though many states have experienced a rather cold spring so far, scientists say it won’t be long before the soil is warm enough for the bugs to begin their life above-ground.

    “Within a week or so, it ought to really be going,” Cooley said. “Spring can’t hold off forever.”

    Image: Magicicada.org

  • Why a good education benefits us all — even if you’re long past being a student

    PencilsTimothy Bartik says that investing in early childhood education is not just good for the children involved — but for communities as a whole. In today’s talk, he offers a detailed look at how preschool education boosts local economies in colossal ways.

    Timothy Bartik: The economic case for preschoolTimothy Bartik: The economic case for preschool“Early childhood education can bring more and better jobs to a state and can thereby promote higher per-capita earnings for the state’s residents,” says Bartik in this talk, given ay TEDxMiamiUniversity in Ohio. “When legislatures and others think about economic development, what they first of all think about are business tax incentives. Early childhood programs can do the exact same thing.”

    To hear exactly how it works, listen to this talk. His fresh perspective moves the topic of improving schools away from the altruistic “wouldn’t it be nice if…” level. In fact, it forces us to ask not “How can I get a good education for my kids?” but “How can I get a good education for everyone else’s kids?” It’s a shift in thinking — one that reframes the discussion about education reform.

    The TEDx program, with its global reach, is privileged to have a unique perspective on education. Below, watch five TEDx Talks (and one bonus TED Talk) that explore some of the social, economic and political implications of guaranteeing good schools.

    The impact desegregation had on schools: Rucker Johnson at TEDxMiamiUniversity
    As schools were desegregated in the 1950s and 1960s, opponents feared that embracing students from low-performing, all-black schools would lower standards and unfairly disrupt white students’ performances. It’s been 60 years — were they right? No. As Rucker Johnson shows with his extensive research, desegregation had virtually no effect on white students, but propelled minority students to unprecedented levels of success.

    No more easy answers: Adrián Paenza at TEDxJoven@RiodelaPlata
    All too often, school lessons set concrete problems with clean answers. Which, suggests Adrián Paenza, can limit students’ creative problem-solving abilities. But perhaps more importantly, it can engender arrogance — setting classist expectations for the answers everyone ought to know. With humor and a few touching stories, he looks at some of the effects that unequal educational opportunities have on society. (In Spanish with English subtitles.)

    Don’t mistake a dialect for a disorder: Sade Wilson at TEDxEMU
    African American Vernacular English is a common dialect in the US. It’s not bad English, yet kids who grow up speaking it at home are too often misdiagnosed with speech and learning disabilities by teachers who either don’t recognize the dialect or give tests in their own dialect of English. At TEDxEMU, speech pathologist Sade Wilson sheds light on the issue and makes six recommendations to improve how teachers work with students who speak a dialect.

    Where’s the R&D for better schools? Jim Shelton at TEDxMidAtlantic
    If education is an essential social good, shouldn’t we make a bigger effort to figure out what’s worth investing in and what’s not? Governments invest in education, and governments invest in research, but according to Jim Shelton, many countries don’t invest much in education research. In this talk from TEDxMidAtlantic, he calls for expanding public investment into the research and development of new education practices and platforms.

    A girl who demanded school: Kakenya Ntaiya at TEDxMidAtlantic
    Kakenya Ntaiya made an unusual deal with her father in order to go to high school – something unheard-of for girls in her Maasai village. After continuing on to college in the US., Ntaiya returned to her village and set up a school for girls. In this talk, she shows how the school is changing the local culture by creating an alternative path for girls uninterested in marriage in their early teens.

    Teaching design for change: Emily Pilloton at TEDGlobal 2010
    And now for a TED Talk with a similar theme: Bertie County was known for being the poorest region of North Carolina. In this talk, Emily Pilloton suggests that teaching design in school may be key to lifting the entire area. By giving students the tools to dream up and fabricate real projects for the community good, Bertie County got bus shelters and a farmer’s market – while students got paying summer jobs.

  • Cloud News: Amazon Offers AWS Certification

    News from the cloud computing sector includes developments from Pengiun Computing, Software AG and Amazon:

    Amazon launches AWS certification program. Amazon (AMZN) announced the launch of the new AWS Certification Program with the first of several exams that will made available in 2013. The new AWS Certification Program helps to fill this need to recognize IT professionals that possess the skills and technical knowledge necessary for building and maintaining applications and services on the AWS Cloud. To earn an AWS Certification, individuals must demonstrate their proficiency in a particular area by passing an AWS Certification Exam. Individuals looking to prepare for an exam can attend courses through AWS Training to help gain proficiency with AWS services. “AWS Certified Solutions Architect – Associate Level” is the first exam available, which tests skills for technical professionals and solutions architects involved in the design and development of applications on AWS. “With cloud computing being quickly adopted by organizations of all sizes around the world, in-depth training programs as well as certifications for individuals who have demonstrated competence with AWS are increasingly important,” said Adam Selipsky, Vice President, Amazon Web Services. “The AWS Certification Program helps organizations identify that the employees, partners and consultants they depend on for their AWS solutions are well-versed in the best practices of building cloud applications on AWS and have the skills to help them be successful.”

    Penguin Computing Icebreaker Cloud CS storage. Penguin Computing announced the immediate availability of the Icebreaker CS storage platform for large scale-out cloud storage deployments. The Icebreaker CS is a fully integrated and pre-configured appliance that incorporates Scality’s RING Organic Storage software. It will be available directly from Penguin as well as through Scality. Based on its Icebreaker 4860 storage server the Penguin Computing Icebreaker CS offers 240TB of raw data in a 4U form factor. It is powered by an Intel Xeon E5-2600 processor and configured with 128GB of RAM. Organizations with multiple sites can achieve even higher levels of availability with Scality RING’s geo-redundancy features. “Performance, availability and scalability requirements of large scale cloud businesses cannot be met with traditional IT approaches to storage, that typically excel in one of these areas and fall short in another,” said Charles Wuischpard, CEO Penguin Computing. “To meet the demands of our customers that require storage solutions at the petabyte scale we based our large scale storage appliance Icebreaker CS on software from Scality. With its distributed no-shared architecture and its sophisticated Advanced Resilience Configuration, Scality RING offers excellent storage scalability and great availability without compromising performance.”

    Software AG acquires LongJump. Software AG announced the acquisition of the Cloud Platform vendor LongJump. LongJump’s technology is fully complementary to Software AG’s ARIS, Terracotta and webMethods, product suites extending the company’s business value both within existing enterprise customers and to SMEs. Software AG will also continue to develop and extend LongJump’s Platform-as-a-Service products for fast and flexible cloud based development and deployment of situational and case management applications. “The digital enterprise is all about real-time business insights driving fast decisions and faster reactions,” said Wolfram Jost, CTO at Software AG. “With this latest acquisition we have taken a major step in optimizing both the business knowledge and IT skills needed to develop flexible, business process driven, situational applications and deploy them rapidly wherever they are needed.”

  • People Scared Of Google Glass Call On White House To Ban The Technology

    Google Glass has some people spooked. They think that Glass turns everybody into a surveillance cyborg that constantly violates their privacy. Fittingly, a group called Stop the Cyborgs has been outspoken on the privacy implications of Glass, but now some are calling for a blanket ban.

    In a We The People petition submitted on Friday, a man from Seattle, Washington is requesting that the government “Ban Google Glass from use in the USA until clear limitations are placed to prevent indecent public surveillance.” As the title suggets, the three people who have signed it thus far are scared of the privacy implications:

    Google Glass is a new twist on technology which hasn’t had clearly stated limits on the locations in US communities where it can and cannot be used. In order to protect our communities we need limitations to prevent indecent public surveillance of our friends, children, and families.

    It is hard to prevent it because the hardware gives no notification that it is recording an individual at any given time.

    I think most can agree that hardware like Glass shouldn’t be allowed in certain places. It’s totally reasonable to ban its use at bars, strip clubs and other places that respect client confidentiality. That being said, the last sentence is totally false as Glass does notify people that it’s recording. The only thing is that it those notifications can be turned off if the hardware is rooted, but doing so will be beyond the capabilities of the average user when it launches sometime in the next year.

    Besides, most people won’t be indiscriminately monitoring you with Google Glass. They’ll be too busy taking selfies in the shower.

    [h/t: TechDirt]

  • What You Need To Know About The Liberator 3D-Printed Pistol

    liberator_1

    Now that we have confirmation that the Liberator 3D-printed pistol can be fired without destroying the body, let’s address what this means for 3D printed weapons and, presumably, homemade weapons in general.

    Does the pistol work? Yes, it can be fired at least once without damage to the body of the gun or the person at the trigger. Andy Greenberg at Forbes has seen the gun fire multiple times and the video above shows one shot.

    Is it a real pistol? No. This is more of a zip gun than a pistol. Zip guns were improvised firearms made of tubes, rubber bands, and nails. Kids fool-hardy enough to shoot one (this cohort included my own father who showed me how to make them) were promised a second of hair-raising and potentially deadly excitement when they made zip guns out of pipe and rubber. To fire one, you fitted the cartridge into the pipe and pulled back on the nail attached to the rubber band. If it hit the charger properly the bullet would fire. A similar thing is happening here: a spring-loaded nail is hitting a cartridge.

    The barrel of the gun is threaded but I wouldn’t expect this weapon to be very accurate. Think of this gun as a controlled explosion generator. It uses a very small .380 caliber bullet which is deadly, to be sure, but quite small.

    Could I print one? Yes. You can easily download the 3D-printable files from DEFCAD.org (here is a private mirror) and if you have a 3D printer you can easily print any of these parts.

    The creators built this gun using the Stratasys Dimension SST 3D printer, a high-resolution printer that works similarly to the Makerbot but offers a far finer and more durable print. This printer has a layer thickness of .25mm, however, which the Makerbot can easily match.

    Would I print and fire this using on my Replicator? No. I’m far too risk averse. I asked multiple 3D home printer manufactures and none would comment specifically on firearms, so there is no implicit or explicit promise of safety.

    Will someone try to print it on home equipment? Yes.

    Is this legal? Yes, but I’m no lawyer. It is a legal, homemade firearm and those have been made in basement workshops for most of this century. In most cases, a Federal Firearms License is mandatory to begin making or manufacturing weapons. For example, anyone building this gun would be a “Manufacturer of Destructive Devices, Ammunition for Destructive Devices or Armor Piercing Ammunition.” Anyone can apply for this license, thereby making the manufacture of this thing legal. For decades, however, the need to license was a minor barrier to entry into what would be a non-trivial process. The tools and materials necessary to build a real gun in your basement were expensive and it made economic sense to legally safeguard your home workshop. The manufacture of a 3D-printed weapon, however, is trivial, and can be built by anyone with an investment of $8,000 or so for a Stratasys printer or, for the less risk-averse, a home 3D printer that costs about $2,000.

    It is also designed to comply with the Undetectable Firearms Act of 1988 because it contains a small block of steel. From the print instructions:

    How to legally assemble the DD Liberator:
    -Print (ONLY) the frame sideways (the shortest dimension is the Z axis). USC18 922(p)(2)(A)*: “For the purposes of this subsection (The Undetectable Firearms Act of 1988) – the term ‘firearm’ does not include the frame or receiver of any such weapon;”
    Thus, you can legally print ONLY the frame entirely in plastic, even without 3.7 ounces of steel.-Once the frame is finished, epoxy a 1.19×1.19×0.99″ block of steel in the 1.2×1.2×1.0″ hole in front of the trigger guard. Add the bottom cover over the metal if you don’t want it to show.-Once the epoxy has tried, the steel is no longer removable, and is an integral part of the frame. Now your gun has ~6 ounces of steel and is thus considered a ‘detectable’ firearm. So now you can print all the other parts.

    It is, in short, legal to make a gun and this is a gun.

    Can this be stopped? No.

    What’s next? The cynic would say we will soon see the first murder with a 3D-printed gun. The cynic will also say that this will cast 3D printing in an entirely new, more sinister light and could affect the home printing industry dramatically. The cynic would also expect a great deal of messy legislature to come out of this that will, depending on which side of the gun debate you fall on, “get these off the streets” or “infringe on our rights.”

    A cynic would also say that the entire Defense Distributed agenda is an example of trolling that will eventually do more harm than good. The cynic would also say that a harsh government crackdown would also be equally silly.

    A nuanced approach is absolutely necessary.

    The non-cynical would find this to be more a proof of concept than a real manufactured weapon and say that it was bound to happen eventually. 3D printing has made manufacturing trivial. This is a logical evolution of an entrenched industry and a centuries-old product. Gunsmithing is not a new hobby. However, it just got much easier.

  • Iceland: Where Mixed Modular Design Meets Free Cooling

    ast-thor-modular-room

    The Avania Thor data center in Iceland features the use of both container-style data center modules (at the left, in the rear) and “modular rooms” assembled from pre-built components. Both products are supplied by AST Modular.

    The diversity of modular data center design can be seen in a single large room in Reykjavik, Iceland. That’s where the Advania Thor Datacenter has added new capacity using a “modular room” assembled from pre-built components, which sits alongside a pair of stacked container-style modules.

    Both phases of the design were created by AST Modular, and use the Barcelona company’s “natural free cooling” (NFC) technology, which harnesses Icelandic fresh air to cool servers for customers like Opera Software, the mobile browser pioneer.

    The first phase of the project was completed in 2009 as proof of concept,and comprised of one 40-foot containerized data center with 17 racks at a power density of 14 kilowatts per rack, plus a modular room with 50 racks at 7 kilowatts.  The second phase, which is currently being finalized, features one 105 square meter modular room plus a separate cooling room hosting 8 of AST’s cooling modules providing indirect free cooling.

    Air-to-Air Heat Exchanger

    This approach use an air-to-air heat exchanger that takes advantage of the cool climate without introducing outside air into the servers – an important consideration in a land where volcanic ash is a concern. By avoiding the need for chillers or refrigeration, Advania is able to achieve a Power Usage Efficiency (PUE) of 1.16, according to AST.

    “The latest expansion clearly shows that our prefabricated data center options – either containerized or modular – help customers achieve a Capex differed growth and generate savings,” said Davide Ortisi, Marketing Director at AST Modular. “On the other hand our Indirect Free Cooling NFC will minimize Advania’s Opex and guarantee security since Iceland can be an environment with high concentration of volcanic ashes and external contaminants.”

    The approach taken by Advania reflects one of the benefits that’s been advanced for modular designs -the ability to expand incrementally. AST says the additional data center space has been built with “minimal” electrical and mechanical upgrades and finalized in less than 2 months upon shipment of components from Barcelona to Iceland.

    “We have seen a tremendous increase in datacenter space demand in the last 12 months” said Ægir Rafn Magnússon, Sales Director at Advania Data Centres. “Iceland is a very competitive country for data centers. The huge availability of green and affordable geothermal power combined with low outdoor temperatures and highly skilled IT professionals allow us to go to market with a first in class service at a very low price.”

    Here’s a look at a time-lapse video showing the construction of an AST modular room at the Advania facility.