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  • The Samsung Galaxy S 4 Zoom could be a cameraphone with a 16MP sensor

    Samsung_Logo

    I am not sure where the name “cameraphone” comes from, but if it’s a smartphone with a camera, isn’t it still a smartphone? Well SamMobile received some information regarding the Galaxy S4 Zoom, and they are calling it a camera phone, which doesn’t make sense. The bottomline is this is a smartphone that has a 16MP camera, a 4.3-inch qHD (960 x 540) Super AMOLED display, 8GB of storage, microSD slot for extra storage, Bluetooth 4.0 LE, Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, A-GPS and Jelly Bean. No word on the processor or RAM, but don’t expect anything earth shattering.

    It’s codename is SM-C1010, which means it might not be the same device that we reported last week. It’s expected to launch in June or July in both black and white, but I doubt we will see it till the later summer or after IFA 2013. We will certainly let you know more as soon as we find out.

    source: SamMobile

    Come comment on this article: The Samsung Galaxy S 4 Zoom could be a cameraphone with a 16MP sensor

  • Bradkin Joins CVC Credit Partners

    Brandon Bradkin has joined CVC Credit Partners as a partner. Bradkin spent six years at Park Square Capital where he was a partner and member of Investment Committee. CVC Credit Partners is owned by CVC Capital Partners and Resource America. CVC Credit Partners is an investment group focused on sub-investment grade debt capital markets in the US and Europe.

    PRESS RELEASE

    CVC Credit Partners (“CVC Credit”) today announced that Brandon Bradkin joined the firm. Brandon joins as a Partner.
    Brandon spent six years at Park Square Capital where he was a Partner and Member of Investment Committee.
    Before joining Park Square, he was a Managing Director at Dresdner Anschutz Mezzanine Fund.
    Previously, Brandon managed, turned around and sold two distressed portfolio companies. He has also been a Vice President in Investment Banking at Chase in London where he focused on leveraged telecom financings. Brandon began his career as a lawyer at O’Melveny & Myers in Los Angeles after having clerked for Judge John Minor Wisdom. Brandon has a J.D. from Harvard Law School and an A.B. from Harvard College.
    Commenting on this appointment,
    Marc Boughton, Chief Executive said: “I am delighted to be working with Brandon, who is well-known to many at CVC and in the wider market. Brandon brings more than 20 years of business, finance, legal, restructuring, investor and fund management experience which will be invaluable in developing our global franchise to support the markets, sponsors and our investors.”
    Brandon Bradkin said:    “CVC has made a significant commitment to their credit business, with over $8.5 billion of sub-investment grade credit currently under management. CVC is one of the pioneers in alternative assets, and I am excited to be joining its growing credit business.”

    The post Bradkin Joins CVC Credit Partners appeared first on peHUB.

  • Lauryn Hill: Prison Sentence of 3 Months For Missed Taxes

    Last year, Lauryn Hill was charged for not paying taxes on over $1.8 million dollars she earned between 2005 and 2007. Despite the singer’s attempts to come to an arrangement, she was sentenced yesterday for three charges of tax evasion. Though Hill faced up to three years in prison for her crimes, it has now been revealed that she will serve only 3 months.

    According to an Associated Press report on the sentencing, Hill compared the current U.S. economic system to the system of slavery imposed on her ancestors. Hill pleaded guilty to the tax evasion charges. She will spend three months in prison, three months under house arrest, and pay a $60,000 fine.

    Hill became famous as part of hip hop group the Fugees before striking out on her own and finding success with her solo album The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.

    Hill last week confirmed on her Tumblr blog that she had signed a new record deal with Sony. She also vaguely commented on her legal and financial troubles:

    I’ve remained silent, after an extensive healing process. This has been a 10+ year battle, for a long time played out behind closed doors, but now in front of the public eye. This is an old conflict between art and commerce… free minds, and minds that are perhaps overly tethered to structure. This is about inequity, and the resulting disenfranchisement caused by it. I’ve been fighting for existential and economic freedom, which means the freedom to create and live without someone threatening, controlling, and/or manipulating the art and the artist, by tying the purse strings…

    …Only a completely complicated set of traps, manipulations, and inequitable business arrangements could put someone who has accomplished the things that I have, financially in need of anything. I am one artist who finds value in openly discussing the dynamics within this industry that force artists to compromise or distort themselves and what they do, rather than allowing them to make the music that people need. There are volumes that could (and will) be said.

  • EMC Unveils ViPR Software-Defined Storage Platform

    EMC World kicked off Monday with a big announcement about the EMC ViPR Software-Defined Storage Platform. EMC ViPR is built for cloud environments and service providers, and designed to serve as the foundation for a modern storage architecture for future application deployments. It provides the ability to both manage storage infrastructure (Control Plane) and the data residing within that infrastructure (Data Plane). The EMC World conversation can be followed on Twitter hashtag #EMCWorld

    Control Plane

    The EMC ViPR Controller can deliver improvements in automation by abstracting common storage management functions like provisioning or migration. This allows different storage arrays to be managed as a single pooled resource in exactly the same way. ViPR delivers a single point-and-click approach. It can leverage existing storage infrastructures for traditional workloads, and also provision new ViPR Object Data Services (with access via Amazon S3 or Hadoop APIs) for next-generation workloads. ViPR provides a self-service portal so application owners can browse the storage service catalog and provision service resources best suited for their needs.

    “Building the web-scale data center is critical for service providers and large enterprises,” said Amitabh Srivastava, President, Advanced Software Division, EMC. ”The rise of the Software-Defined Data Center is a groundbreaking step toward delivering the management and performance capabilities needed to protect and leverage data. Only by separating the data center from its underlying hardware can IT truly deliver resources as customizable, on-demand services. This is a game-changer for storage.”

    Data Plane

    For traditional workloads that utilize file and block, EMC ViPR steps out of the way and lets the underlying array fulfill the role of Data Plane, or the data stored within the storage infrastructure. However new workloads are emerging, often operating on vast quantities of data (Big Data) and servicing tens of thousands or millions of users. EMC estimates these workloads will grow approximately 700 percent by 2016 — an order of magnitude more than traditional storage. With storage infrastructure evolving to object storage and access methods changing to new protocols such as HDFS (Hadoop Distributed File System), EMC ViPR provides Object Data Services.

    The ViPR Object Data Services will provide Amazon S3 and OpenStack Swift compatible REST APIs and HDFS access methods — existing software applications written to these APIs should run seamlessly. ViPR Object Data Services will support existing EMC Atmos, EMC VNX and EMC Isilon arrays as a persistence layer in addition to third party arrays and commodity hardware.

    “EMC’s new ViPR offering is key to how the storage industry and enterprises will evolve to a software-defined data center,” said Gary Budzinski, Executive Vice President and General Manager, Global Infrastructure Services at CSC. “By moving to an Infrastructure-as-a-Service model and virtualizing storage, network and compute environments, CSC has the ability to bring new business value to our clients including faster time to market, reduced complexity and increased innovation.”

    EMC staff offer videos and commentary on the ViPR announcement:

    • EMC TV interviewed EMC Advanced Software Division Vice President Christopher Ratcliffe to discuss the company’s entry into the software defined storage market and its approach to storage virtualization.  
    • EMC’s President of the Advanced Software Division Amitabh Srivastava discusses the ViPR software platform, and how the company is giving its customers the ultimate in choice and flexibility.
    • Chuck Hollis, VP  and Global Marketing CTO at EMC posted an entry on his blog, putting the announcement in context and showing that storage virtualization has been around a long time, but the EMC ViPR platform is a very strong candidate for ‘software-defined storage’.
  • News story: Queen Elizabeth II and her 12 Prime Ministers

    On her 21st birthday in 1947 Princess Elizabeth broadcast from Cape Town in South Africa:

    I declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to your service and the service of our great Imperial country to which we all belong … God help me to make good my vow and God bless all of you who are willing to share it.

    The Queen’s relationship with her 12 Prime Ministers (8 Conservative and 4 Labour) over the past 60 years demonstrates how she has fulfilled that vow, writes historian DR Thorpe.

    Read Queen Elizabeth II and her 12 Prime Ministers in full.

    Read more about the 2013 Queen’s Speech.

  • Next iPad mini’s Retina displays may enter mass production next month

    iPad Mini 2 Retina Display
    Reviewers loved the iPad mini and every indication suggests the smaller Apple slate is selling to consumers quite well. The one item that seems to be on everyone’s wish list, however, is a Retina display. Coming from Apple devices like the full-size iPad and the iPhone 5, the iPad mini’s pixel-starved screen can be painful to use at times, but that will change later this year when Apple launches the second-generation iPad mini with an updated Retina display. According to CNET, NPD DisplaySearch analyst Richard Shim says LG Display will begin mass production of the new iPad mini’s 2,048 x 1,536-pixel Retina display in either June or July ahead of a release this fall. Buying the new iPad mini this fall might be a bad idea though, since Shim believes an upgraded third-generation model will launch just a few months later in Q1 2014.

  • Whoops! Windows 8 do-over on the way

    A Microsoft executive signaled that the company is rethinking parts of Windows 8 in response to the difficulties customers have had adapting to the operating system, launched last fall.

    Microsoft VP Tami Reller told the Financial Times that “key aspects of the software will be changed when Microsoft updates the OS this year.  She referred to “difficulties” many users have had with the software. “The learning curve is definitely real,” she told the FT.

    The story set off a flurry of comments and speculation as to what the changes will be and comparisons to Coca-Cola’s “New Coke-Classic Coke” fiasco.

    As GigaOM’s Tom Krazit wrote in February, Windows 8 was one of the company’s most important launches in years — it represented a huge attempt by the company to make its OS relevant on tablets where Apple’s iPad was eating Microsoft’s lunch.  That move was represented by its “radically overhauled Metro user interface”  borrowed from the latest Windows Phone. It’s a touch friendly look and feel that was, and still is, alien to many Windows desktop users.

    A huge re-do now will no doubt turn up the heat on Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, who has been the subject of considerable negative press over the past few years. But it’s really unclear just what changes will be made. Many folks will immediately assume that Microsoft will nuke the Metro interface in favor of classic windows to get the installed base over the hump. Far more likely is it will offer a choice of interfaces.

    facebook-windows-phoneHere’s the thing: When it comes to radical change that consumers may demand, Microsoft is damned if it does, damned if it doesn’t. The cool Metro interface won good reviews on the smart phone but was seen as way too much of a change for Windows-savvy workers who’ve been on the platform for ten or 20 years.

    For that huge installed base, change is not a good thing. It’ll be interesting to see how Microsoft navigates this tricky course. For it’s part, Microsoft suggests that Windows 8 sales aren’t hurting. On Tuesday, Reller noted on the Windows blog that 100 million licenses have been sold, which is on par with the copmany’s prior Windows 7 launch.

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  • Motorola abused patent position EU says

    The European Union’s Competition Commission has ruled that Motorola Mobility (owned by Google) abused its position in the German mobile market by filing a patent injunction against Apple.

    Motorola won an injunction related to Apple products using data transmission technology in February 2012. The fruit-logo company offered to pay a licence fee for the patents but the companies failed to agree on a price. A number of Apple products, including iPad and severall iPhone models, were taken off sale in Germany during the dispute.

    The Commission argued that Motorola enjoined the injunction despite Apple’s willingness to enter into an agreement. Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia says:

    The protection of intellectual property is a cornerstone of innovation and growth. But so is competition. I think that companies should spend their time innovating and competing on the merits of the products they offer — not misusing their intellectual property rights to hold up competitors to the detriment of innovation and consumer choice.

    You can read the EU’s preliminary review online.  Motorola will have the opportunity to defend itself ahead of a final decision.

    Photo Credit: Lisa S./Shutterstock

  • STARZ Play, MOVIEPLEX Play, and ENCORE Play now in the Play Store

    STARZ_Google_Play

    STARZ fans can rejoice because STARZ Play, ENCORE Play, and MOVIEPLEX Play has been released in the Play Store. Each app allows users to stream featured STARZ programming, movies, and original series to their Android device. All three apps have a very similar interface, and are essentially the same app, only released individually for each STARZ programming package. Play, pause, and rewind controls are implemented, and users can start and pick up their programming where they left off on either their tablet, phone, or computer.

    These apps are free along with a Starz subscription for Cox, AT&T U-verse, Directv, and Verizon subscribers. Comcast users can instead use the XFINITY TV Player app to access their STARZ content.

    You can download the apps from the links after the break.

    QRCode

    Play Store Download Link – STARZ

    QRCode

    Play Store Download Link – MOVIEPLEX

    QRCode

    Play Store Download Link – ENCORE

    Come comment on this article: STARZ Play, MOVIEPLEX Play, and ENCORE Play now in the Play Store

  • RunKeeper For Pebble Arrives, Bringing Run, Walk And Bike Ride Progress Tracking To The Smart Watch

    Running_2013

    So far, the Pebble smart watch has done little besides offer up watch faces for users to tinker with, but the apps are starting to come in, and today marks the much-anticipated debut of early marquee partner RunKeeper. RunKeeper was an early player in the smartphone-based activity tracker market, and continues to be an industry leader. It was a natural partnership for both Pebble and RunKeeper, and now consumers get to see what the two can do together.

    The new Pebble RunKeeper integration works with both Android and iOS apps, and provides the same functionality for both. RunKeeper CEO Jason Jacobs says that his company is very interested in the wearable tech market, and he believes that the key to cracking open a much broader audience for fitness and health tracking tech could be gadgets like the Pebble, which make it even easier to access and use information gathered by tools like RunKeeper.

    “What’s really exciting for me is that what people were expecting was that it just makes it easier to have a RunKeeper controller on your wrist,” he said, describing the experience of the Pebble integration’s early beta testers. “But what they’re finding is not only can it do that, but it’s actually more powerful than an app because it’s starting to change the way they’re interacting with the data, it’s more seamless to their experience, it’s not disrupting their flow.”

    Jacobs says RunKeeper’s thesis as a company is that that’s exactly what needs to happen in order to help this kind of activity tracker technology find wider purchase among a mainstream audience. “The data needs to be more actionable, and it needs to be proactively given to you so that you don’t need to hunt and look for it,” he said. The Pebble is a good way to achieve that, since it can surface any data that a smartphone, either Android or iPhone, can gather on its wrist-mounted display.


    On the Pebble, RunKeeper will display pace, speed, and distance travelled and offer workout start and stop features. It can work with runs, and also bike rides and walks, and does everything most will need to get a lot more out of their smartphone supported workouts right away. It offers RunKeeper a way to compete with wearables like the Nike+ GPS sport watch, all the while allowing them to focus on the tech they do best, leaving hardware to more specialized partners.

    “The software is really hard, and we think it’s a really big opportunity, and we want to be the best at the software piece,” Jacobs explained. “Part of that is pushing the phone’s capabilities so that you don’t need hardware, but part of that is also playing nice with all the best of breed hardware that comes out. In terms of being that best of breed hardware ourselves, it’s not in our roadmap or aspirations. It is in our road or aspirations to be a good neighbour.”

    This version of RunKeeper for Pebble is just a start, Jacobs says, noting that during the development process they realized they could add in much more, like setting pace on the smart watch, setting distance targets and more. RunKeeper also worked closely with Pebble to get this particular integration developed, and says we’ll see similar UI elements used as other fitness tracking apps come on board. Future work could go into helping RunKeeper differentiate its experience further as the development ecosystem for Pebble progresses.

    Jacobs leads me to believe that RunKeeper will be opportunistic about partnerships with hardware companies and other software efforts operating in the same general space, and this Pebble partnership is just one part of a larger strategy to try to find the key to cracking the mainstream market with a product that, while successful, has had more niche appeal up until now. The Pebble is also arguably a niche product, but taken together, it’s possible two things aimed at a very specific audience could combine in just the right way to attract a much broader following.

  • Inktank gears up Ceph storage with support for Red Hat Linux

    One thing we learned at last month’s OpenStack Summit was that the open-source cloud crowd really, really likes Ceph storage.  Ceph is an open-source distributed object store and file system that is clearly gaining traction in OpenStack shops. Now Inktank, a company that launched last year to offer services and support for Ceph, is now offering a new version that supports Red Hat 6.3 Linux and has pledged continued support for future versions of Red Hat Enterprise Linux.

    That the new release of Ceph, dubbed Cuttlefish, focuses on Red Hat is interesting since Red Hat bought Gluster for its scale-out storage capabilities in 2011 and declared Gluster to be “OpenStack Ready” last month.

    The consensus at OpenStack Summit was that Ceph has advanced faster than the Swift storage module that came out of Rackspace and which handles object storage only. But the promised appeal of OpenStack is that users can swap in and out compliant plug-ins as needed for different functionality.

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  • Lace up your sneakers, Pebble watch owners, you’ve got RunKeeper!

    Popular exercise tracking app RunKeeper made its Pebble smart watch debut on Tuesday, becoming one of the first third-party apps to arrive on the wearable device.

    The app works in conjunction with an iPhone or Android device that’s wirelessly connected to the Pebble. Instead of looking at the phone when running, Pebble owners can glance at their wrist for data such as pace and mileage.

    The Pebble watch is somewhat unique for two reasons. First, it uses e-paper technology, which doesn’t use much power to display data on the watch face. Second, it was one of the most successful Kickstarter projects to get funded, raising more than $10.2 billion through nearly 69,000 individual backers. RunKeeper was announced as one of the first software partners last year and with Pebble’s SDK maturing, more are sure to follow.

    RunKeeper AndroidThe RunKeeper folks show no signs of slowing their pace. Last week, RunKeeper joined up with the Jawbone UP device via that company’s software platform. And in an email conversation I had on Monday with Jason Jacobs, CEO and founder of the company, he told me to expect RunKeeper to appear on other wearable devices in the future. “Pebble is the first, but won’t be the only. I would expect us to work with other wearables as well in the coming months, on your wrist or elsewhere.”

    The idea behind a connected watch app for exercise tracking is a smart one. And I say that as someone who has tracked more than 2,000 miles in the past two years while running with a phone in my hand.

    I’d much rather have the phone in my pocket or on an armband for running efficiency. (Ideally, I’d love to leave the phone at home.) The problem with both of those scenarios is that I can’t easily see my real-time running data. Having a second screen for the app on my wrist is far more effective. For that reason, I gravitated towards a Motorola MotoACTV smart watch in 2012. Now if I could just get it to integrate with RunKeeper!

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  • How the Internet of Things Changes Everything

    Currently in the business world we are witnessing something like the epic collision of two galaxies — a rapid convergence of two very unlike systems that will cause the elements of both to realign. It’s all thanks to the Internet of Things.

    If you are not familiar with the term, the Internet of Things refers to a dramatic development in the internet’s function: the fact that, even more than among people, it now enables communication among physical objects. By 2015, according to my own firm’s projections, not only will 75 percent of the world’s population have access to the internet. So will some six billion devices. The fact that there will be a global system of interconnected computer networks, sensors, actuators, and devices all using the internet protocol holds so much potential to change our lives that it is often referred to as the internet’s next generation.

    For managers, this development creates challenges both long term and urgent. They need to envision the valuable new offerings that become possible when the physical world is merged with the virtual world and potentially every physical object can be both intelligent and networked. And, starting now, they must create the organizations and web-based business models that can turn these ideas into reality.

    As consumers, we have all had a glimpse of how the relationship between buyer and seller changes when devices are connected to the internet. Nobody these days carries a Sony Walkman and cassettes; instead we carry Apple iPods — and our major access point for music has become the online iTunes Store, also by Apple. The company sells the devices and the music, profiting handsomely from both. In the same way, industrial product buyers are seeing their relationship to equipment manufacturers changed by smart, connected things. In the field of mechanical and plant engineering, consider the advent of predictive maintenance. When a machine is fitted with sensors, it can know what condition it is in and, whenever necessary, initiate its own maintenance.

    Clearly, when things are networked, that has an impact on how actual value is produced. In many cases, it is no longer the industrially manufactured product that is the focus, but rather the web-based service that users access through that device. So, for example, we see the Daimler Group investing in mobility services such as car2go, myTaxi, and moovel; GE using what it prefers to call the “Industrial Internet” for mechanical and plant engineering services; LG paving the way to “smart homes” with IP-enabled televisions and home appliances and related services.

    A study undertaken by researchers from the Institute of Technology Management at the University of St. Gallen in Switzerland (Service Business Development: Strategies for Value Creation in Manufacturing Firms) concludes that these services are most definitely lucrative for traditional manufacturers. Considering the example of a papermaking machine, they note that the sale of the machine itself generates a margin of around one to three percent, while selling a related service yields five to ten times as much. The ratio is much the same for the sale of rail cars versus related mobility and maintenance services.

    For “Old Economy” companies, the mere prospect of remaking traditional products into smart and connected ones is daunting. (My own company, for example, the Bosch Group, produces over half a million things each day across more than 1,500 product categories.) But embedding them into a services-based business model is much more fundamentally challenging. The new models have major impacts on processes at the corporate center such as product management and production and sales planning. And given the dynamism of the net, the innovations will have to come more quickly. In short order at Bosch we have founded Bosch Software Innovations as a new software and systems unit; launched an electromobility service in Singapore; introduced cloud-based security products; an IP-enabled Bosch security camera , and provided customers with an iPhone app for remote access to heating systems. (We also demonstrated ideas about the near-future of networked living at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.)

    In many and diverse sectors of the global economy, new web-based business models being hatched for the Internet of Things are bringing together market players who previously had no business dealings with each other. Through partnerships and acquisitions, Old Economy and New Economy (software based) companies are combining complementary strengths so they can move quickly into vast spaces of “blue ocean.” In real time they are having to sort out how they will coordinate their business development efforts with customers and interfaces with other stakeholders.

    What we have, then, is a competitive arena full of Old and New Economy companies, all jostling for position and attempting to shape the future. Long-standing producers in traditional industrial fields — whether they make coffee machines, cars, air conditioners, home gym equipment, or shoes — are suddenly not only competing with companies of their own breed; they are also confronting players the likes of which they have never faced before.

    Most know that their strategy going forward will have to balance two imperatives. They have to protect the turf they already own — today’s product business — while pursuing growth through service offerings that leverage the fact that the product is in place to offer a richer overall value proposition to customers. (What no traditional manufacturer should conclude is that the Internet of Things is a threat that must be fought off in order to preserve the value of the manufactured product and safeguard the capital tied up in production facilities.) Given the reality of limited resources, this lands many traditional product companies at a crossroads. Every new investment they make can go either to strengthening their product-centric facilities, supply chains, human resources, and brands, or to stretching them into the new territory of higher-margin services. The wisest course, most find, is to make investments in both directions, looking to achieve that magic balance that maximizes margins.

    As a result, not only in the marketplace but also within firms, completely contrasting business practices, corporate structures, and cultures are crashing into each other. And indeed, for the Internet of Things to fully emerge, they must collide.

    As the New Economy and Old Economy galaxies clash, people tend to anticipate that one will destroy the other — and many would observe that the greater momentum is on the New Economy side. Certainly, many differences will need to be overcome before the Old Economy and the New Economy fit together. (Controlled systems on the one hand are opposed by open communities on the other. One keeps a vigilant eye on scant resources, whereas the other in essence gives its services away for free.) But most likely, the two galaxies will morph — as the Milky Way and Andromeda are expected to do: a new system with new dynamics will be created. In the dance around new centers of gravity, new solar systems of partnership will be formed. The question for you is: in this new cyber-physical galaxy, will your company become a new sun, a planet, a minor moon — or be reduced to stardust?

  • Smaller equals scale for Riverbed’s new mini application-delivery software

    The computing services available through Amazon Web Services and Windows Azure enable customers to pay for as much compute and storage resources as they use. But what about functions like load balancing across servers, content compression and data encryption?

    Some of these functions can run on specialized hardware, on gear sometimes called an application delivery controller (ADC). Riverbed Technology has managed to take its virtual version of an ADC — courtesy of the 2011 acquisition of Zeus — and miniaturize the software so a bunch of copies of the application can run on a single machine. Customers will be able to get their hands on Riverbed’s Stingray Services Controller in the third quarter.

    The mini-ADC instances can be easily added or subtracted to best match the needs of different applications, making it easier for customers to scale their ADC use to the jobs at hand. It’s different from the usual way of making network administrators guess how much throughput they will need for the ADC and then having to stick with it longer than is necessary. That’s one reason why Riverbed is calling the new version of the software ADC as a service. The other reason is that users will be able to deploy and manage ADCs on their own, enabling self-service.

    The miniaturization also means different workloads can run on different ADCs, putting an end to what Kavitha Mariappan, director of Riverbed’s Stingray product line (pictured), called “the noisy-neighbor problem” — basically decreased performance.

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  • Senate Votes In Favor Of Online Sales Tax Bill, Controversial Legislation Heads To House

    The Marketplace Fairness Act – a piece of legislation that will force online businesses to collect state sales tax regardless of their physical location – was set to go before the Senate for a final vote last night. It was expected to pass, and the Senate did not disappoint.

    The Hill reports that the Senate approved the Marketplace Fairness Act by a wide margin (69-27) with plenty of bi-partisan support. The passage was met with applause from retail organizations, including the National Retail Federation. The organization’s president and CEO Matthew Shay said that passage in the Senate is a “significant step for sales tax fairness.”

    Now the bill must go before the House where it is expected to meet far more resistance from representatives opposed to any new tax legislation. Anti-taxation groups and small online businesses will also be doubling their efforts in the House to ensure that the bill doesn’t pass, or that it at least contains some protective measures to ensure small businesses aren’t hurt by it.

    Despite these challenges, the NRF says it’s not worried. In a statement, Shay said that he’s looking forward to working with the House to ensure the bill’s passage:

    “This bill and its companion in the House will level the playing field for all retailers – both online and off – while safeguarding states’ rights. And the bill does it all without raising taxes, new government mandates or adding to the deficit. NRF and our broad cross-section of members will work closely with our bipartisan sponsors in the House, Reps. Womack and Speier, and Chairman Goodlatte to ensure that efairness is debated honestly and on its merits. When brought to a vote, we believe the House will pass the bill and it will be signed into law.”

    The NRF might have its way as well considering that the Marketplace Fairness Act has the support of the President, and more importantly, the support of many prominent Republican governors around the country. Their support may go a long way in convincing those currently opposed to the bill that it might not be such a bad idea after all.

    Either way, the debate over online sales tax is going to get a lot more interesting in the coming months. The House is noisier than the Senate, and there’s going to be a lot of political grandstanding on both sides of the issue. You might as well break out the popcorn now.

  • Reggae Great Dies: Cedric Brooks Was 70

    Reggae Great Cedric Brooks has died of heart failure, his family said. He was 70 years old.

    Brooks, who was born in Kingston, Jamaica, was a flute and sax player who fostered a love of music from an early age. Playing clarinet at the Alpha Boys School led to Brooks picking up other instruments, and by the time he was in his 20′s, he was playing onstage with bands like The Vagabonds and the Granville Williams Band. In the ’60s he found commercial success after partnering up with trumpeter David Madden, and by the 1970′s he was working as a studio musician and releasing his own singles.

    Brooks worked with several influential musicians of the day and eventually teamed up with drummer Count Ossie for many projects before heading out on his own again. He would later settle in the ska band the Skatalites.

    Brooks suffered a heart attack in 2010 that left him almost incapacitated; he also lived with diabetes and high blood pressure. His sister, Paulette Keise, said he passed away on Friday at New York Hospital Queens.

  • Sponsored post: The Cable Show 2013: Broadband Takes Center Stage

    From YouTube streams to multiplayer video games to rapid-fire music downloads, the explosion of multimedia content and experiences on the Internet today is possible because of broadband. Today 93% of U.S. homes have access to cable broadband, and a majority of homes with broadband get it from a local cable company.

    Those are just two reasons why The Cable Show 2013, June 10-12 in Washington, DC, is a focal point for what’s happening in today’s media and communications environment. Hosted by the National Cable and Telecommunications Association, the 3-day event offers insights and exposure to the technologies, strategies, developments and people involved in broadband media and telecommunications. It’s a live forum that offers everyone from app developers to infrastructure specialists current intelligence that can help bring new and innovative ideas to the marketplace.

    With executives from the Internet, content and technology sectors joining cable industry leaders in presentations, discussions, press events and demonstrations, The Cable Show reaches beyond the boundaries of a single industry to represent a broad perspective about what’s happening in the broadband economy. And with an exhibit floor featuring top companies and brands in television, technology and digital media, The Cable Show offers opportunities for a close-up view of what’s new, what matter s and what’s next in broadband.

    Registration’s happening now for a show that’s going to make headlines and make waves. Sign up today at www.thecableshow.com.

        

  • Open Data for Agriculture: News tools available online

    Last week the World Bank hosted a conference on Open Data for Agriculture. The goal was to “brainstorm about how Open Data can be harnessed to help meet the challenge of sustainably feeding nine billion people by 2050.” It seems like that might be of interest to farmers and food advocates in Minnesota for a couple of reasons. First, Minnesota may have a role to play as food producer. Second, a range of tools have been developed that could be as useful in Minnesota as they are in Kenya. Third, this is an example of an industry that’s going digital – farmers without access to broadband and technology will be falling behind their international counterparts!

    Here are some of the programs that were highlighted…

    • MFarm has built a mobile application that allows farmers to receive accurate, real-time crop-price information from five major markets in Kenya, via daily text message, six days per week. The service helps farmers to make informed decisions on what to plant when, how to price produce, and where to sell to the largest profit.  MFarm is currently refining their service and will soon begin integrating USAID data into their product to help deliver more accurate price information to users.

    • INSEAD has introduced Toto Agriculture, a smartphone interface fueled by USAID data that provides village-specific agricultural data. Users can use this free application to access localized information on soil, pests, climate, and planting tips in over 100 languages.

    • iPlant: A community driven collaborative of researchers, educators, and students working to enrich all plant sciences through the development of the cyberinfrastructure essential for modern biology. The collaborative can sequence the genome of an individual cow in 3 hours, taking the time of sequencing from months down to hours.

     

    There was also a huge push and unveiling of open datasets…

    At last week’s conference, USDA, USAID, and a number of other entities—both domestic and international—unleashed a host of new datasets, tools, and platforms—with more to come in the weeks and months ahead. For our part, the U.S. Government:

    • Launched The Food, Agriculture, and Rural “data community” on Data.gov, which offers more than 300 datasets (and growing!) that relate to the social, economic, and environmental aspects of agriculture. For example, the new community offers Quick Stats—a comprehensive tool for accessing agricultural data profiles by subject area or commodity, such as crops and plants, or livestock. Over the next few months, USDA will make these data available in a robust Application Programming Interface (API) to enable easier sharing of data by third party applications and services.

    • The Millennium Challenge Corporation released an open evaluation data catalog that contains household survey metadata from food security programs in Armenia, El Salvador, Ghana, and the Philippines, and more data is coming soon.

    • Launched USAID.gov/Developer, a page that curates APIs and datasets specifically for developers looking to scrub in and work with open global development data. APIs include the U.S. Overseas Loans and Grants, or Greenbook, which encompasses all international aid funding allocations.  This data will help developers and researchers more dynamically parse these data, that goes all the way back to the Marshall Plan.

  • Telx CEO Eric Shepcaro Passes Away

    Eric Shepcaro, the CEO of Telx Group

    Eric Shepcaro, the CEO of Telx Group.

    Eric Shepcaro, the Chief Executive Officer of Telx, passed away Saturday after an illness. Shepcaro led the company through a period of tremendous growth, during which it became a national provider of interconnection and colocation services, with operations in major Internet gateways in markets around the U.S. He was a familiar speaker at industry events in the telecom and data center sectors.

    Shepcaro joined Telx as CEO shortly after the company was acquired by GI Partners in late 2006, and continued as CEO after Telx was acquired by ABRY Partners and Berkshire Partners in 2011. Prior to joining Telx, Shepcaro worked for AT&T, where he served as senior vice president of Business Development and Emerging Services and chaired AT&T’s Emerging Technology Customer Board. He has also held executive positions at Netelligence Technologies, Digital Island and Sprint.

    Shepcaro had recently taken time off from his duties, during which the day-to-day management of Telx was overseen by an executive team led by President and CFO Chris Downie and board member John Kelly.

    Eric was always generous with his time and eager to discuss Telx and the data center industry. He will be missed. 

  • Nokia and Verizon confirm Lumia 928 ahead of official debut

    Nokia Verizon Lumia 928 Confirmed
    Nokia on Tuesday confirmed the existence of the upcoming Lumia 928 smartphone in an image published on the company’s website. The teaser image doesn’t reveal much, although it suggests the handset will have an upgraded rear camera. Engadget also spotted a magazine advertisement that confirms the Lumia 928 will arrive on Verizon’s 4G LTE network with a PureView camera and Carl Zeiss lens for stellar low light performance. Nokia is scheduled to hold a press conference on May 14th in London where it is expected to announce the Lumia 928, among other things. A second image follows below.

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