Blog

  • Kurt Cobain’s Birthday Widely Celebrated In The Twitterverse

    Today is Kurt Cobain’s birthday. The Nirvana frontman was born on this day in 1967, which would would make him 46 years old, had he not committed suicide. He died on April 5, 1994, at the height of his career, and fans have not forgotten the mark he made on music when he was here.

    He has managed to make his way into the Twitter Trends today, and even Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey has tweeted out a quote:

    Here’s what some other Twitter users are sharing:

    Now go read the lyrics to Floyd the Barber and Hairspray Queen.

  • Kim K. Pregnancy Shoot: Pics Posted On Instagram

    Kim Kardashian may be the exact literal opposite of Kate Middleton in every way. The reality star recently posed for DuJour Magazine and wasn’t afraid to show off her “baby bump” in the process, wearing a bikini and throwing in a bit of old-Hollywood glamour in black-and-white shots with a flower in her hair.

    Kardashian, who has been in the headlines quite a bit recently owing to a nasty divorce that just won’t die as well as the baby news (rapper Kanye West is the father), posted some of the pics on Instagram as a teaser for her fans. Have a look below.

    Images: DuJour Magazine/Kim Kardashian/Instagram

    kim k pregnancy shoot

    kim k pregnancy shoot

    kim k pregnancy shoot

  • The Inside Story of Diageo’s Stunning Carbon Achievement

    This is the exclusive, short story of how Diageo North America, with creativity and guts, both in operations and in the senior ranks, achieved the holy grail of carbon emissions reductions. They did it without using carbon offsets — and about 38 years earlier than they had to.

    Here’s what scientists are telling us: the world must cut carbon emissions by at least 80 percent from 1990 levels by 2050 to (we hope) avoid the worst of climate change. This level of change seemed like a pipe dream to many, including me… until I spoke last fall to Roberta Barbieri, the global manager for environmental sustainability for Diageo, the $17 billion spirits company. Imagine my shock, as we talked about setting aggressive goals on carbon emissions, when she casually mentioned that Diageo’s North American division — a group with $5.58 billion in sales and 14 production and manufacturing facilities — had already cut emissions 80 percent.

    The first thing I said was, “Excuse me?!,” followed quickly by, “when can I come and talk to you?”

    It all started in 2008, she told me later, when top Diageo execs had their minds set on doing something big. First, for perspective, they ran the numbers on what it might cost to go entirely carbon free. The back-of-the-envelope calculation was daunting (hundreds of millions of dollars) and included ideas like building bioenergy plants to power some of their largest distilleries — an option that would achieve large reductions, but was in no way cheap. They settled on a still-aggressive goal of 50%, made it public, and, remarkably, crossed their fingers.

    At about this time, Richard Dunne, an environmental exec, entered the picture and took responsibility for meeting the target in North America. He had a strong suspicion that building an expensive bioenergy plant was not the only way to get there. His team implemented a rigorous process of collecting ideas for emissions cuts and estimating the costs. Then they sorted the results on a massive spreadsheet, ranking ideas by net gain on environmental improvement and then by financial investment. By looking at the largest carbon reduction options first, they could group ideas into three big buckets: 1) low/no cost (the no-brainers); 2) some operating expense increase; and 3) more significant capital expenditures (like the bioenergy plant).

    Executives initially thought that only major capital projects would reduce emissions significantly. But Dunne’s process revealed a surprising number of no-brainers. As a result, Diageo North America achieved a 50% carbon reduction by 2012, mainly with a mix of no- and low-cost initiatives. These project range from easy efficiency efforts like lighting retrofits, boiler upgrades, and installing variable speed drives; to larger, but still economical, changes, such as switching fuels (from oil to natural gas) and cutting back from two boilers to one in a small distillery.

    Reaching the 50% reduction in North America years ahead of schedule was a pleasant surprise. But Diageo still needed to go further: the economics on reductions in other regions were not nearly as good, so North America needed to close the gap to help the global organization reach its 50% goal by 2015. But even with the expensive bioenergy plant beckoning as a solution, something even more unusual happened at a Canadian distillery, one of the company’s largest.

    Gene Ruminski, Diageo’s North American sustainability manager, proposed that the Canadian distillery contract with its utility to supply natural gas harvested from a landfill – a net zero carbon solution that would reduce the carbon footprint for North America by another whopping 30%. But there was a big catch: energy costs would go up more than $1 million per year. This expense was more than the single plant could justify.

    But then a senior exec, the president of Global Supply and Procurement, got wind of the idea (important point here: this exec sits on the company’s internal sustainability council). With his global perspective, he realized that even though the landfill gas solution would increase operating costs for this one plant, it was actually a relatively cheap way to deliver a large reduction in emissions. So he gave the go-ahead and some financial leeway to the plant manager who had to take the annual million-plus hit to his bottom line. As it turns out, the plant’s ongoing cost-cutting initiatives had already identified many millions of savings, so Diageo reduced the plant’s target for total cost savings to allow for this massive carbon-reducing project.

    This is an amazing story, with a few important lessons:

    1) Companies still have much more room to cut energy, water, and waste than they realize. Even a well-run company can find enormous savings from easy, low-cost stuff.

    2) Big goals force you to look for big ideas, meaning you can, as Diageo’s Roberta Barbieri says, “do more than just turning off the lights.”

    3) Leadership matters. With a more strategic attitude, you can invest in longer-term value, both tangible and intangible. Flexibility is crucial, as the top exec had to give the plant manager leeway on his savings targets to meet the environmental goal.

    This last point is really critical. Shifting subtly away from an attitude of “maximize profits this quarter at all costs” does not mean you leap right from capitalism to communism; it just means you take into account a broader definition of value to the organization and community. Flexible thinking about value frees you up to find unique solutions. As a clean tech and impact investor Charles Ewald said to me recently, “the gap between ‘capitalism’ and so-called ‘philanthropy’ leaves a lot of room for creativity.”

    I congratulate Diageo for getting creative, finding that chasm, and driving a spirits truck right through it.

  • Appsecute vows one screen for all devops services

    In the current cloud computing landscape, nothing is certain but change. And Appsecute, a company that was banking on providing a single dashboard across multiple platforms as a service (PaaSes), is changing as well. The focus of its new product is to provide devops folks with a single view into the real-time status of all their services as well as a Facebook-like timeline for their projects.

    AppsecuteAnyone who does development work is probably using a half dozen or more services and spends a good part of her day toggling back and forth among various screens. Appsecute itself was using 14 different services, according to CEO and co-founder Mark Cox. That’s a lot of toggling.

    That decentralized information glut is also inefficient in other ways. “Just because a support request comes in doesn’t mean you should interrupt all your developers,” Cox said. Getting the right alerts to the right person and then logging that this person is on the case in a timeline means the rest of the developers keep their heads down on what they were doing.

    The timeline for devops goes to beta now with connectors included for Github code repository and versioning system, Zendesk  and Tender Support customer service software; CircleCI’s continuous integration tool; and AppFog, Cloudfoundry.com, and Heroku PaaSes. Appsecute also promises connectors will come for New Relic, Amazon Web Services, the full Cloud Foundry, Travis CI, Jenkins CI, Team City, Pingdom, PagerDuty, RSS, Twitter, Facebook, SNMP, Nodejitsu, EngineYard, OpenShift, Rackspace, Nagios, Sendgrid, Mailchimp and Cloudability.

    What’s happening in cloud echoes what went on in the earlier distributed computing model. As  companies deployed multiple on-premises applications, they soon came to want a single way to view and (hopefully) manage all that IT. That led to the rise of systems and applications management consoles and other windows into their myriad services.

    So expect more of these products in the cloud realm as well.

    “A number of social stream services have aspects of what we do, particularly the timeline side, [while] other services focus on graphs and metrics. We want to specialize in putting events into the context of the software applications and components that devops care about,” Cox said.

    Indeed, adding a specialized social networking layer to devops tools is not new. Wercker, a  Dutch startup that offers a SaaS-based continuous integration tool  (and which won GigaOM’s Structure Europe Launchpad competition) also touts its Facebook-like timeline as a major plus for devops.

    Providing  the proverbial “single pane of glass” to all important services is an attractive proposition, but it would seem to me that inclusion of AWS into the mix had better come quickly.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • Fifth Beckham Baby: David Says Maybe

    David Beckham and wife Victoria have been speaking publicly recently about the possibility of expanding their brood, and it’s pretty adorable.

    Of course, it’s hard to hate on anything Mr. and Mrs. Posh do, since they have magically discovered how not to alienate people despite being impossibly gorgeous and impossibly rich. The couple’s fan base is eager to hear more about a fifth Beckham child, especially after Victoria was overhead talking about a “Paris baby” during New York Fashion Week and commenting on how she’d love to have another little girl.

    After three boys, the Beckhams finally got a little princess when Harper was born in 2011, and they both reportedly want another.

    “Harper is 7 months now. I can’t even look at her without welling up. After having three boys, you just assume that you’re going to have another boy, but when we got told she was a little girl, it was amazing,” David said last year. He was hinting even then that while they weren’t actively thinking about having another baby, it wasn’t out of the realm of possibility.

    “We might have one more or two more, you never know. We’re not thinking about it yet, but if it happens, great… we’re busy people and we’re enjoying the four kids that we’ve got already and we’re lucky, we’re lucky to have four healthy children.”

  • New From NAP 2013-02-20 10:45:01

    Prepublication Now Available

    In the fall of 2010, the Office of the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Secretary for Science asked for a National Research Council (NRC) committee to investigate the prospects for generating power using inertial confinement fusion (ICF) concepts, acknowledging that a key test of viability for this concept—ignition —could be demonstrated at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in the relatively near term. The committee was asked to provide an unclassified report. However, DOE indicated that to fully assess this topic, the committee’s deliberations would have to be informed by the results of some classified experiments and information, particularly in the area of ICF targets and nonproliferation. Thus, the Panel on the Assessment of Inertial Confinement Fusion Targets (“the panel”) was assembled, composed of experts able to access the needed information. The panel was charged with advising the Committee on the Prospects for Inertial Confinement Fusion Energy Systems on these issues, both by internal discussion and by this unclassified report.

    A Panel on Fusion Target Physics (“the panel”) will serve as a technical resource to the Committee on Inertial Confinement Energy Systems (“the Committee”) and will prepare a report that describes the R&D challenges to providing suitable targets, on the basis of parameters established and provided to the Panel by the Committee. The Panel on Fusion Target Physics will prepare a report that will assess the current performance of fusion targets associated with various ICF concepts in order to understand:
    1. The spectrum output; 2. The illumination geometry; 3. The high-gain geometry; and 4. The robustness of the target design. The panel addressed the potential impacts of the use and development of current concepts for Inertial Fusion Energy on the proliferation of nuclear weapons information and technology, as appropriate. The Panel examined technology options, but does not provide recommendations specific to any currently operating or proposed ICF facility.

    [Read the full report]

    Topics: Energy and Energy Conservation | Engineering and Technology | Math, Chemistry and Physics

  • Learn To Use Dart With Google Web Toolkit

    Dart, Google’s own programming language for the Web, has a number of fans and proponents that elevate it beyond a simple hobbyist language. Now the company is supporting its users with frequent tutorials on how to get the most out of Dart.

    The newest video on Dart will teach programmers how to use Dart with Google Web Toolkit. Here’s what you can expect:

    In this episode of Dartisans, I’m going to show you a variety of ways to use Dart with Google Web Toolkit. I know that there are a lot of GWT developers out there who would like to give Dart a shot, but they aren’t sure how because they already have a large, successful app that’s written in GWT. I’m going to show you ways to integrate Dart into your existing GWT application without having to rewrite it from scratch.

    To do this, I’ve built a sample application that uses both GWT and Dart. I’ll show you how to setup a development environment so that you can work with both technologies. Then, I’ll show you a variety of ways in which you can get GWT and Dart to interoperate.

  • NASA’s Cassini Probe Finds Accelerated Particles Around Saturn

    NASA this week revealed that a “chance encounter” with solar wind around Saturn has allowed the Cassini probe to detect particles being accelerated to high energy states. The phenomenon is similar to the acceleration of high-energy cosmic rays found coming from supernova remnants just last week.

    The findings, published this week in the journal Nature Physics, show how certain kinds of solar winds can accelerate electrons. NASA in a statement today said that solar wind around Saturn’s magnetic field forms a shockwave that Cassini can use to study the particle acceleration effect.

    “Cassini has essentially given us the capability of studying the nature of a supernova shock in situ in our own solar system, bridging the gap to distant high-energy astrophysical phenomena that are usually only studied remotely,” said Adam Masters, lead researcher on the paper and a researcher at the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science.

    The detection of electron acceleration around Saturn came just as a strong shockwave was detected by Cassini. The researchers are looking for “quasi-parallel” shockwaves, which occur when a magnetic field and the direction of the shock are closely aligned.

    Shockwaves, such as those from a supernova or solar wind, are common in the universe. When they hit magnetic fields with certain orientations, particles from the shockwave can be accelerated to close the speed of light. These interactions, scientists believe, could be the source of much of the cosmic rays seen in the universe.

    (Image courtesy ESA)

  • Boston Globe’s 28,000 digital subscribers: a flop or a foothold?

    It’s been nearly a year and a half since the Boston Globe put a paywall in place and, so far, the results are underwhelming. The Globe, which is one of the last regional papers owned by the New York Times Company, has notched up a total of 28,000 digital-only subscribers — in a metro area of 4 million people.

    At first blush, the number is small but the Globe‘s publisher and a respected newspaper analyst see cause for optimism. Here’s a closer look at what the number represents for the Globe and the rest of the country’s newspapers.

    A new revenue stream

    In October of 2011, the Boston Globe removed its more highbrow content from its general information portal, Boston.com. The paper began charging $3.99 for this content (feature stories, columnists and so on) while continuing to offer bread-and-butter city fare (Red Sox, car crashes, weather, etc) for free on Boston.com.

    The strategy reflected a view that most people don’t want to pay for basic online news but that some might pay for a more high-fiber news product. As of last December, a total of 28,000 people have signed up — including some at a 99 cent promo rate — and this number is not growing fast. To put this in perspective, the New York Times has around 640,000 digital-only subscribers; yes, New York is a bigger city but it’s not 22 times bigger.

    In a phone interview, Boston Globe publisher Christopher Mayer disagreed that 28,000 was a “small” figure and noted that the $3.99 subscription was just one of several digital products the Globe will be selling. Others will include a new tablet offering with a different pricing point.

    “We’re not looking at having one digital product provide an alternative to one print product,” he said, adding that the strategy was based on tapping into the “brand promise” of the Boston Globe.

    According to Ken Doctor, an analyst of newspaper economics, the Globe’s 28,000 figure is actually good compared to other papers. He adds that it provides a new revenue stream while also permitting the Globe to justify significant increases in its home-delivery prices. Half of these home subscribers, who get free access to the website, have signed on, which suggests they may be primed to pay for digital-only in the future.

    Doctor also said the company’s “tremendous penetration” with Boston.com is an under-used asset that can be a discovery vehicle for the Globe. And this may be where the paper is headed. As Poynter reports this week, the company intends to do more to “untangle” the Globe and Boston.com

    A borrowed time strategy

    In the larger picture, the Boston Globe is doing a passable job of playing a weak hand. Unlike the New York Times or the Wall Street Journal, the Globe can’t hope to pull in new digital subscribers from across the country or the world; its potential growth is limited to New England.

    The Globe’s strategy to use its digital products as leverage to squeeze more revenue out of its home delivery service thus makes sense in the short term. But the paper simply won’t be able to maintain its 360 person newsroom much longer unless there is a sudden uptick in people under 30 buying home delivery subscriptions.

    The Globe — and other papers like it across the country — must hit on a digital growth strategy soon if they are going to survive. One option may be partnering with premium international brands like the New York Times. For now, a young person in Boston who can only afford one digital subscription is likely, I suspect, to find more value in the Times over the Globe — but a bundled option that included Globe content could prove attractive. Mayer said the company has yet to explore such bundles.

    Meanwhile, the Globe is also experimenting with partnerships with MIT media researchers and iPads in classrooms.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • 10 Considerations in Building a Global Data Center Strategy

    It would be imprudent to oversimplify all the tangible and intangible elements that need to be fully understood and evaluated when creating a global data center initiative. Yet here are ten considerations to evaluate when building your global data center strategy. This is the forth article in a series on Creating Data Center Strategies with Global Scale.

    1) Site Selection and Risk Factors – Knowing Where to Build
    Once you have selected a general geographic area, it takes a very experienced team to fully evaluate the suit-ability of a foreign location to build a new data center. Identifying risk factors, both the obvious ones, such as known seismic or flood zones, or the less obvious ones, such as adjacencies to “invisible” but potential hazards, such as airports and their related flight paths, must be an essential part of the final decision.

    2) Geopolitical Ownership Considerations
    Beyond the basic factors related to physical and logistical resources, the political stability of the country and region should be considered. In some cases the nationality or type of organization of the owner or tenant may make it a target for local political factions.

    Insurance costs and even the ability to get coverage may be impacted by building a data center in potential lucrative and growing markets, but which may have a higher risk profile, than a nearby country that has viable communications bandwidth into the target market.

    However, be aware that in some volatile or politically restrictive countries, internet traffic is filtered, blocked and or monitored.

    3) Global Risk Issues
    Given the recent and more frequent catastrophic weather related events affecting even highly developed areas, we all need to review and perhaps re-evaluate our basic assumptions. While there is still some contention about how much Global Warming impacts the world, it is no longer a matter of “if”. Planning based on 100 Year Flood Zones may no longer be considered ultra conservative. The evaluation of any potential data center or other critical infrastructure site is not a cut and dried exercise. Geographic diversity for replicated or back-up sites is no longer an option, it is a necessity.

    4) Extended Operation and Autonomy During a Crisis
    Regarding availability and continuous operation, how much fuel should be stored locally (i.e. 24 hours, 3 days a week)? During a small localized utility failure 24 hours of fuel may be previously considered adequate, but given more recent events 3-7 days offers a better safety margin. During an extended widespread crisis, the relied upon expectations of daily refueling may prove to be difficult, if not impossible to achieve (case in point, Hurricane Katrina, and “Super Storm” Sandy). In some cases, so much of the general infrastructure was dam¬aged that even fuel availability and delivery to back-up generators became a severe problem (both for data centers, and their employees, limiting their ability to get to work). In the end, you will typically pay more for the co-lo with the greatest levels of redundancy, resources and better SLAs, but would be imprudent to assume that nothing will ever happen to impact the operation of your own data center because you are in a “safe” area. Storing more fuel may be a small overall price to pay for the extended autonomy and could be the difference between being operational or shut down during a major crisis.

    Also understand that these same problems would potentially impact your communications providers, so investigate their capabilities for extended operations during a crisis. It is useless if your data center is operational, but your have no viable communications network during a major event.

    5) Availability and Cost of Power and Water
    Of course picking a site location that is physically secure and has reliable access to power, water and communications is an important first step. Since energy is the most significant operating cost of a data center, focus your attention on the cost of power and its long term impact. Energy costs are highly location dependent and are based on local or purchased power generation costs (related to fuel types or sustainable sources such as, hydro, wind or solar), as well as any state and local taxes (or tax incentives). In the United States rates vary but are generally low compared to some foreign markets. Internationally energy costs are higher and can vary widely. It is important to check local rates and look for utility and energy incentives. Some countries are offering tax and other incentives to build data centers. Another factor is location and long term overall market demand for constrained resources such as power and water, which can ultimately limit the data center capacity.

    If the site is relatively remote and needs to be newly developed, be sure to factor in the cost of bring¬ing in new high voltage utility services, which can be expensive and require long lead times to have planned, approved and constructed.

    Site selection can also directly impact the facility’s energy efficiency. The relative energy efficiency of the data center facility infrastructure is measured as “Power Usage Effectiveness” “PUE”), as well as the IT equipment use of power vs its computing performance. One of the largest uses of energy is cooling and is location dependent, since it is related to the ambient temperature and humidity conditions. With the rising acceptance of the use of outside air for “free cooling”, picking a location with a moderate climate can offer the opportunity to save a significant amount of energy cost over the long term, as well a lower initial capital investment by the reduced need for mechanical based cooling systems. For more details see part 3 of this series.

  • BlackBerry Z10 sales estimate slashed by 83% due to slow launch, upcoming competition

    BlackBerry Z10 Sales Estimates
    Some industry watchers had high hopes for BlackBerry’s (BBRY) first next-generation smartphone in its debut quarter, but it looks like they may have gotten ahead of themselves. Now, the Street is revising its estimates in light of a slower than expected rollout and what appears to be a softer launch than many had hoped for.

    Continue reading…

  • Deluxe growth as Chinese buy posh

    By Stephen Eisenhammer

    Luxury brands are set to grow further in 2013, as the sector continues to dodge the fallout from stalling European and U.S. economies by appealing to consumers in emerging markets such as Brazil, China and the Middle East.

    The industry is set to grow 6-8 percent this year according to the Zurich-based asset management fund Swiss & Global, with 90 percent of that growth coming from consumers in emerging economies.

    The global industry, which is estimated by luxury consultants Bain & Company to be worth more than $34 billion, has been a counter-intuitive success story of the past years of economic crisis and government austerity measures.

    Swiss & Global said it expected luxury brand purchases in emerging economies, which already accounts for half of all sales, to increase further, driven by rising demand in China.

    “Chinese luxury consumption, which nearly constitutes 30 percent of the market, is expected to continue to grow on average at a double-digit pace in the coming years,” the fund said in a note.

    Swiss & Global, which has holdings in Prada, Estee Lauder, and Pernod Ricard, said consumption of luxury brands will also rise in Brazil, Russia and the Middle East.

    “Investing in luxury goods offers investors exposure to the rapid growth of consumption in emerging markets via well-managed western companies with strong balance sheets and financials. One third of the companies we invest in have a net cash position and the average operating margin is 18 percent,” it said.

    “Cash-rich firms could prompt an increase in mergers and acquisitions in 2013, though good brands remain expensive, whilst the best are usually not for sale.”

  • Taylor Swift Sued For Keeping Millions After Canceled Event

    Taylor Swift has always seemed like an untouchable princess in the world of celebrities; she may have a long list of boyfriends and songs about said boyfriends, but in the end it doesn’t matter because she’s Taylor Swift. She has long, Venus-like hair and probably never does anything as gauche as perspire or belch. That’s why, when news made it’s way around the web that she was being sued, her collective fan base perked their ears up like a confused Scooby-Doo.

    Swift is indeed being sued by Florida-based FIRE USA, Inc., a ticket company which claims she accepted $2.5 million in advance of a concert in Canada that was eventually canceled and then never rescheduled a performance. Their claims came only after they were on the receiving end of another lawsuit by Evo Merchant Services, a credit card company looking to cover the losses they suffered after thousands of ticket holders demanded refunds.

    Reps for Swift say she didn’t make a deal with the ticket company, however, and that she hasn’t seen the lawsuit yet. It might be a while before this one is resolved.

    Of course, there are some–including One Direction fans–who appear to be unsympathetic…

  • Equipping the Nation’s Future Innovators

    In his State of the Union address last week, President Obama issued a call to better equip American graduates for the demands of a high-tech economy. Specifically, he called on the nation’s high schools to forge new partnerships with colleges and employers, and create classes that focus on science, technology, engineering, and math—the “STEM” subjects – calling them  “the skills today’s employers are looking for to fill the jobs that are there right now and will be there in the future.”

    Indeed, students with STEM skills are a driving force that keeps America competitive, creative, and innovative. As just one example—the most common educational background of CEO’s in the S&P 500 companies is not finance or business… but engineering. Whether it’s by unearthing new discoveries, inventing new technologies, or starting innovative companies—STEM-educated students are well-poised to make an enormous positive impact when they enter the workforce.

    Earlier this month, at a White House ceremony where some of the nation’s top scientists and innovators were awarded the National Medal of Science and National Medal of Technology and Innovation, President Obama spoke about this tremendous potential of STEM-educated Americans to make a difference. He marveled at the honorees’ great range of extraordinary accomplishments, including new discoveries about the depths of space and our oceans, the invention of batteries that today help power everything from cell phones to cars, and the development of the LASIK eye surgery technique and other medical innovations that have improved countless lives.  

    read more

  • Teen Girls Beat 13-Year-Old, Post Video to Facebook

    There’s a life tip that exists, and it’s more important than any you’ll hear today. Forget an apple a day or beer before liquor. This one is tailored to the modern age.

    Kids: If you beat the crap out of someone, don’t post a video of it to Facebook.

    CBS News reports that the video shows 14-year-old GlennaLynn Marie Santos and 15-year-old Keanna Beaver hitting 13-year-old Jaden Sanders in the face. According to police, Sanders didn’t fight back and simply tried to protect herself/get away.

    Sanders reportedly suffered bruises and a black eye.

    The two teens took the video with a cellphone and then posted it to Facebook just 27 minutes after the incident occurred.

    Strangely, the two teens willingly turned themselves in to police after contacting a KIRO 7 reporter on Facebook.

    “We’re willing to do the time…We’re turning ourselves in because we know it wasn’t right,” said the young girls.

    The two girls claim the the attack was a retaliation, but police aren’t buying it. Of course, they have the video evidence to support that feeling.

    You can check out a portion of the video inside the local news broadcast below:

    Last year, in a much more brutal but similar incident, three men were charged with first-degree murder after they beat a 62-year-old disabled man to death and then posted the video to Facebook.

  • It turns out a lot of companies like building their own storage gear

    First, cloud storage startup Backblaze pioneered the concept of open source storage hardware. Then, it showed how to pack 135 terabytes into a 4U case (which Backblaze calls a “pod”) for less than $8,000. As it turns out, a lot of people really like what the company is doing: Backblaze rolled out the specifications of its third-generation storage pods on Wednesday against the backdrop of hundreds of companies building and actually selling the designs.

    And just who has built storage systems using the Backblaze specifications? Netflix is probably the most-famous adopter — it uses storage pods as part of its content-delivery network infrastructure — but others include Vanderbilt University, Crispin Porter + Bogusky, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Popular online photography service Shutterfly stores petabytes worth of users’ old photos on BackBlaze’s storage pod architecture.

    Gleb Budman

    Gleb Budman

    Their uses are as diverse as their organizations are. There’s Netflix’s CDN and Shutterstock’s consumer cloud storage, while many are using pods as giant NAS devices that everyone can access. “Its more data than they ever thought could be possible for their company,” Backblaze Founder and CEO Gleb Budman told me. ”They just RAID them and they go.”

    Oh, and he added, “I know of at least one individual person who built one of these for himself for his house.” It stores his media collection and helped his marriage. It appears some wives don’t appreciate sprawling hard-drive farms sucking up energy and taking up all the garage space.

    Disrupting the storage industry 1 terabyte at a time

    That the Backblaze design has caught on so broadly shouldn’t be surprising, Budman said. For years, storage vendors have been protecting their margins by loading even customers’ “write once, read very rarely” systems with enterprise-class features that often weren’t necessary. If you wanted an enterprise-class storage system, “you bought a NetApp,” he joked, and if you wanted just to house some non-critical data, “you bought a NetApp.”

    So, in the world of high-volume storage, we’ve come to a place similar to the PC market decades ago when it was cheaper to just buy the parts and build your own than it was to buy a pre-assembled computer. “Dell basically killed the homegrown computer market because they really, really focused on optimizing costs,” Budman explained. “No one did that for storage equipment. [Storage vendors] said, ‘Hey, we’re selling a million-dollar design, why would we change that?’”

    blog-backblaze-datacenter-pods

    Backblaze’s data center full of storage pods.

    Thanks in part to Backblaze, though, this system is changing. Ceaseless demands for parts led Protocase, the Canadian sheet-metal fabricator that makes Backblaze’s pod enclosures, to create a whole business — the aptly named 45 Drives — around selling pod parts or even wholly pre-assembled pods (second-generation ones start at $5,395 without the 45 hard drives they hold). Where it used to struggle to get business outside of Canada, Budman said, Protocase has sold Backblaze units to places as far away as China, Russia and Brazil.

    Global electronics fabricator and supply-chain specialist Sanmina sells a modified version of the Backblaze pod design, as do a handful of value-added resellers and components companies around the world.

    Interestingly, one place you won’t see Backblaze designs is in the other famous open source hardware effort — the Facebook-led Open Compute Project. Budman said he’s had conversations with the organization and some of its leaders and there has been interest in getting Backblaze involved, but that “for the most part what they want is help making their Open Compute system work.” He said he’d love to do it in theory, but there’s only so much time for a small company like Backblaze to spend on missions aside from improving its business.

    Version 3.0: Now with 180TB and a lower cost

    As for those third-generation storage pod designs, Open Compute Project, 45 Drives, guys with huge digital media collections and anyone else interested in building their own gear should have a lot to be excited about. Total capacity has been boosted to 180TB thanks to the prevalence of 4TB hard drives, and Backblaze has certified a few more types of hard drives because of the harsh lessons it learned about reliance on a single model during the hard drive shortage in 2010. The company has also replaced a bunch of the components it uses, everything from motherboards to memory to SATA cables.

    pod-assembly-top-removed

    Budman explains all the changes and the rationale behind them in a blog post published on Wednesday morning, but the general theme is improved reliability and ease of management at a lower cost. All told, the new designs cost $1,942.59 — $37.41 less than the second-generation ones. Because of that recent shortage, though, hard drives still cost a little more than they did a few years ago.

    Whatever comes of its efforts to be transparent about storage system design, Budman hopes the it at least has a lasting effect on the availability of affordable storage. Organizations, he said, should “no longer have to make the decision between an expensive piece of equipment and not storing data.”

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • Trump Threatens Suit Over “Dump Trump” Petition

    “Trump threatens” seems to be a headline we’re seeing a lot of these days. Whether it’s a threat to sue Bill Maher over a joke or a threat to drop a bombshell about President Obama, the tycoon hasn’t been afraid to speak out about his opinions…or promise to do something about them.

    The latest story in the Trump saga is that he’s threatening to sue a man who began a petition back in December to get Macy’s to drop the millionaire from their ads. Trump’s lawyers sent a letter to the petition’s creator, Angelo Carusone, demanding that he drop it or face a lawsuit to the tune of $25 million.

    “While you claim to be merely exercising or right to free speech, your egregious, premeditated and illegal conduct far exceeds anything protected by the Constitution. Rather than simply engage in lawful protest, you have apparently made it your mission to interfere with and intentionally disrupt Mr. Trump’s longstanding and well-established business relationship with Macy’s as well as his contractual dealings with other third parties through mob-like bullying and coercion,” the letter reportedly states.

    But Carusone isn’t buying it, especially as he began the petition months ago and Trump seemed not to be fazed by it. When asked about the petition November, Trump said, “The fact is that there’s a large group of people who like Donald Trump and what Donald Trump says. I have no regrets.”

    Carusone replied to Trump’s letter with one of his own, saying, Your letter repeatedly asserts, without any factual basis, that Carusone has exaggerated the extent to which members of the public have endorsed his boycott effort; you also contend, again without being specific, that Carusone casts Trump in a false light. There is a well-established First Amendment right to advocate a boycott over policy-related objections … I have no reason to believe that there is a tort of exaggerating the public support for a political campaign. If there were such a tort, I imagine that most candidates for public office, no doubt including your client, would be liable at one point or another.”

  • Despite rumored of declining demand, Apple’s iPhone 5 is the No.1 smartphone in the world

    iPhone 5 Sales Q4 2012
    An unexpected decline in demand for Apple’s (AAPL) latest iPhone model was one of many rumors floated by analysts in the fourth quarter as big hedge funds dumped Apple shares for billions in profit. Apple’s stock plummeted 30% during the sell-off, but speculation surrounding iPhone 5 sales was way off base according to a new report. Market research firm Strategy Analytics on Wednesday issued a report suggesting Apple’s iPhone 5 overtook the Samsung (005930) Galaxy S III by a wide margin in the fourth quarter to become the best-selling smartphone in the world.

    Continue reading…

  • HP Strengthens BladeSystem Converged Infrastructure

    hp-BladeSystem_c7000

    HP this week announced significant enhancements to its BladeSystem c-Class portfolio. (Photo: HP)

    At the 2013 HP Global Partner conference in Las Vegas this week, HP announced several new innovations in converged infrastructure.  The event conversation can be followed on Twitter hashtag #HPGPC.

    HP BladeSystem c7000

    HP announced significant enhancements to its BladeSystem c-Class portfolio, with three new components, including the BladeSystem c7000 Platinum enclosure, a new HP ProLiant WS460c Generation 8 Server blade and major enhancements to its HP Virtual Connect product family. The new HP BladeSystem c7000 Platinum enclosure improves efficiencies, simplifies management and optimizes power while remaining compatible with previous generations of HP blade servers and interconnects. It features the new SX1018 HP Ethernet switch, with 40Gb downlinks to each blade server. It includes HP SmartMemory, a Three Rank (3R) 24GB Registered DIMM, which enables a 25 percent increase in speed over previous generations. The c7000 also features location and power discovery tools to allow customers to track server locations remotely from a central console.

    HP Virtual Connect 4.0 was introduced, as a network management tool to simplify connectivity, enable troubleshooting and boost network reliability. It extends comprehensive integration with existing enterprise networking environments. It features real-time network flow monitoring, and enhanced quality of service (QoS). A new HP ProLiant WS460c Gen8 workstation server blade can support virtualized client solutions with high-density 3-D graphics and eight GPUs per blade. Enabling four times more users per workstation, the WS460c can reduce costs by up to 60 percent per user compared to previous generations.

    “Adopting a virtualized platform can be a daunting task as many organizations lack the scalable infrastructure required to grow their businesses,” said Chuck Smith, vice president and general manager, Blades to Cloud Business Unit, Industry Standard Servers and  Software, HP. “The additions to the HP BladeSystem portfolio provides built in flexibility to accommodate future technology innovations. HP has elevated our blade offerings and allows customers to prepare their current infrastructure for virtualization while providing our channel partners with new revenue opportunities.”

    HP StoreVirtual Storage Systems

    HP announced new StoreVirtual systems based on ProLiant Gen8 technology and LeftHand OS 10. The new systems include reliability and availability enhancements optimized for virtualization projects.  Anew channel-only midrange storage solution was also announced, that combines HP 3PAR StoreServ Storage and HP StoreOnce Backup functionality to deliver primary block-and-file storage with information protection in a single system.

    New StoreVirtual 4530 and 4730 storage systems feature 10 times greater memory, four times larger cache and 10 gigabit iSCSI native connectivity on all models. With 3TB drives the new systems deliver 50 percent more density than its predecessor. HP StoreVirtual Storage features all-inclusive software licensing, expansive enterprise class storage features and low deployment cost.

    Unified wired and wireless BYOD solution

    HP announced new unified wired and wireless solutions that deliver a simple, scalable and secure network supporting bring-yourown-device (BYOD) initiatives while creating incremental. The offerings also enable partners to leverage the HP FlexNetwork architecture to better support their clients’ BYOD essentials with new device on-boarding and provisioning functionalities through a single management application and automated security with software-defined networks (SDN) technology, while being supported by mobility connectivity services.

    “Organizations are struggling to deploy BYOD solutions within a complex, legacy infrastructure that spans two separate networks and management applications,” said Bethany Mayer, senior vice president and general manager, Networking, HP. “HP’s complete unified BYOD solution is the first to solve this issue and—combined with HP’s comprehensive training, programs and services—will create new, profitable opportunities for partners.”

    To double network scalability over legacy infrastructure, the new OpenFlow-enabled HP 2920 Switch Series speeds data transfer by up to 45 percent, while increasing performance by up to 100 percent. Additionally, the new HP 830 Unified/WLAN Switch eliminates the need to purchase up to 50 percent of traditional network access devices, including separate switches and controllers, while supporting up to 1,000 wireless devices.

  • Use Doctrine to Pierce the Fog of Business

    The “fog of war” describes the uncertainty faced by soldiers in the field of battle. In today’s markets, business leaders face a similar challenge: how to pierce through the “the fog of business.”

    The traditional tools of management — strategy and planning — are no longer sufficient. Strategy and planning are like high beams on a car; they just bounce off the fog. Strategy doesn’t give employees enough guidance to know how to take action, and plans are too rigid to adapt to changing circumstances. In rapidly changing environments, you need fog lights to get closer to the ground.

    Business leaders recognize the importance of pushing decision-making down the organization and out to the front line. But delegation can lead to invisibility, inconsistency and even chaos. When driving, fog lights work best when there are lines on the road to follow. Similarly, leaders must create mechanisms that keep everyone aligned to the mission and coordinated in the field.

    Doctrine is the military’s mechanism for managing the fog of war, pushing decision-making closer to the ground while providing the lines to guide decision-making and action. Doctrine creates the common framework of understanding inside of which individuals can make rapid decisions that are right for their circumstances. We believe doctrine offers a powerful model for executives looking to pierce the fog of business and find new ways of exerting influence without centralized control.

    NATO defines doctrine as “Fundamental principles by which the military forces guide their actions in support of objectives. It is authoritative but requires judgment in application.” If strategy defines objectives, and plans prescribe behavior, then doctrine guides decisions.

    Consider one example from U.S. Special Operations teams trying to get the most use out of their helicopters, assets with high demand and limited supply. One approach would be to centralize all of these decisions, but that would be too slow. Another would be to have a computer automate the process, but there would be no way to feed enough data into the system in real time. So Special Operations went with a third option … let the human network figure it out and create solutions.

    This network became the fog lights, pushing decision-making closer to the ground. But how to ensure the human network made the right decisions? What were the lines to paint on the road?

    Military leadership created a common doctrine to frame the organization’s understanding of how helicopters would and wouldn’t be employed, their range, their maximum load capacity, their refueling requirements, etc. With these principles and shared understanding, the network could quickly coordinate across silos and create collaborative solutions.

    One of the most powerful qualities of doctrine is its scalability. Like a Russian matryoshka doll, doctrine can be nested inside other doctrine. For example, the doctrine related to helicopters is nested inside doctrine related to the military’s network-centric approach to warfighting. This higher-level doctrine has four core tenets:

    A robustly networked force improves information sharing;
    Information sharing enhances the quality of information and shared situational awareness;
    Shared situational awareness enables collaboration and self-synchronization, and enhances sustainability and speed of command; and
    These, in turn, dramatically increase mission effectiveness.

    One can see how the distributed approach to managing helicopters flowed from this higher level doctrine, especially in how to achieve self-synchronization. Doctrine provided the many units spread around the battlefield with a shared framework in which they could operate. Units were free to move and take action within that framework. In turn, results were fed back to leaders, who evolved the doctrine to improve performance, enabling a true learning organization.

    The media company TED would seem to have little in common with Special Forces units in Iraq. But in fact, TED’s approach to scalable growth echoes the same doctrine-based approach.

    Founded in 1984 by Richard Saul Wurman, TED became famous for its exclusive conferences and compelling talks. The world discovered TED when Chris Anderson posted videos of the talks online. But how to give more people the experience of TED events, not just the content? The solution was TEDx, which launched in 2008 to extend the TED mission of “ideas worth spreading.” In only a few years, TEDx has grown to 1,300 events in 134 countries with only a handful of employees.

    What most people don’t know is that TED has no direct control over TEDx events. Instead, TED authorizes and empowers local organizers to create TED-like events in their own communities. How does TED ensure consistency instead of chaos? With what amounts to doctrine.

    On its web site, TED publishes clear guidelines for organizers on how to run a TEDx event:

    1. RULES, e.g. “Your event must maintain the spirit of TED itself: multidisciplinary, focused on the power of ideas to change attitudes, lives and ultimately, the world.”
    2. RESPONSIBILITIES, e.g. “Early on, you’ll need to decide who your event is for: Work colleagues? Friends? Kids? This decision will help guide all the decisions that follow.”
    3. RESOURCES: Best practices from the community on designing, promoting, and sponsoring TEDx events

    These guidelines are consistent with the definition of doctrine: “Fundamental principles by which [TEDx organizers] guide their actions in support of objectives.” These principles are “authoritative but require judgment in application.” As another sign of the doctrine-based approach, TED recently had a problem with some of the TEDx events. Rather than step in to micromanage, they clarified and reinforced the doctrine.

    How can you apply doctrine to your company?

    1. See where you might already have some elements of doctrine. Do you have principles that guide decision-making throughout the organization? Sometimes these are informal precepts that are passed along as part of the culture. Other times they get codified, as Reed Hastings did for Netflix.

    2. Identify areas conducive to doctrine-based approaches. It might be where the front line is calling for more authority, but where you are afraid to give up control. Or where centralized operations can’t keep up with the amount of information or the variety of local conditions (as in the case of the helicopters.)

    3. Involve your broader team in creating the doctrine. When the military rewrote its doctrine on counter-insurgency, it brought together a cross-functional team of soldiers, civilians, experts and leaders while gathering feedback from hundreds of front-line personnel. When IBM rewrote its values, it engaged 50,000 employees around the world.

    4. When developing doctrine, focus on principles not policies. Don’t be too specific in telling people what to do, but also not so broad that it doesn’t help them make the right decision. What information do you need from them, and what information do they need from you, in order to create rapid, independent, and effective action?

    One way to put these steps into practice is to convene a “Constitutional Convention.”

    After all, a constitution is essentially doctrine for democracy, providing the enduring principles by which to govern a nation. The Agile software movement started with such a gathering.

    Ultimately, good doctrine becomes embedded in the culture. Touring a command post in Baghdad, a general came across this sign: “In the absence of guidance or orders, determine what they should have been and execute aggressively.” Good doctrine provides the empowerment, autonomy, and direction to make this not only possible, but effective. For business leaders operating in fast-moving and uncertain environments, doctrine dispels the fog of business.