Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Sky Go app for iPad out now



Sky customers can now watch sports, some movies, news and ESPN on their iPad, iPod Touch or iPhone.
Subscribers to Sky can now download Sky Go from the Apple app store for free.
The Sky Go app lets you watch selected channels with the option to pause and rewind live tv.
An electronic programme guide appears in a corner window to show you what else is on while you continue to view your current show.
The app can be downloaded to the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch and requires iOS 4.2 or later, simply search for Sky Go in the Apple app store.
Two devices can be registered to receive the portable service.
Further information about Sky Go is available at; http://www.sky.com/shop/tv/sky-go/?DCMP=KNC-

Firefox 5 to 'lose' Google toolbar


Google's plans to streamline their business seems to have started with the retirement of the Google toolbar for all Firefox 5 users.

“As we all know, over the past few years, there has been a tremendous amount of innovation in the browser space. For Firefox users, many features that were once offered by Google Toolbar for Firefox are now already built right into the browser. Therefore, while Google Toolbar for Firefox works on versions up to and including Firefox 4 only, it will not be supported on Firefox 5 and future versions,” says a message on the Google Toolbar help blog.
Google have also retired Google Labs and the Google Directory.

EA buys PopCap for $750 million



Electronic Arts announced yesterday that it has acquired PopCap Games in a deal worth $750 million.
PopCap created games such as Zuma Blitz, Plants vs Zombies and the Bejeweled series.
Bejeweled alone has sold over 50 million units.
EA will pay $650 million to PopCap plus $100 million for stock.
“We picked EA because they have recast their culture around making great digital games” said David Roberts, CEO of PopCap, in a statement.

Apple patents new keyboard


Apple has patented a design for a keyless keyboard.

The glass topped design features no moving parts but instead works using acoustic and piezo-electric sensors.

The system compares sounds made by tapping of the screen to a database of signatures determining which key is being used.

The keyboard would still display the traditional Qwerty keys but three sensors within the keyboard would be “sufficiently precise” to triangulate the position of the tap said the patent

PayPal exec: It won't be easy to compete with us

PayPal exec: It won't be easy to compete with us

by Roger Cheng

Companies hopping into the payments business--with particular focus on mobile--will face unexpected challenges as PayPal did in its early days, according to an executive for the digital payments service provider.

PayPal's Laura Chambers demonstrates the tap-and-pay move at the MobileBeat conference earlier this month in San Francisco with VentureBeat editor in chief and moderator Matt Marshall.

(Credit: James Martin/CNET)

"Being in the payments business is harder than saying you're in the payments business," Sam Shrauger, vice president of global product and design for PayPal, said in an interview with CNET today.

While not naming any specific companies, his warning was clearly leveled at players such as Google, which recently unveiled its Google Wallet feature and plans to roll out a payment system in select cities later this summer. Companies that want to deal with payments will have to be ready to deal with customer service, as well as shoulder the risk of financial transactions, Shrauger said.

"Are those problems that they want to solve?" he asked.

Long a facilitator of payments over the Internet and, more recently, through apps found on mobile devices, the company has its sights set on the physical world. Shrauger said the company plans to hold trials with stores by the end of the year, and vowed to be in 20 large retailers by the end of 2012. Spokesman Anuj Nayar said the system would be unlike anything else out there.

Having been in the business for 12 years, PayPal is understandably defensive about the idea of a digital wallet and the notion of having different credit cards, gift cards, and loyalty programs stored in one location accessible by a computer or phone. Google, the wireless carriers, and even the handset manufacturers have only recently began looking to create their own rival mobile-payment systems, and have drawn a lot of attention and buzz.

Most of the industry is focusing on a technology called near-field communications, which allows you to wave a card or phone in front of a checkout reader to quickly pay for drinks at a drugstore or for a ride in a cab. PayPal, however, is taking a slightly different approach.

PayPal is using the Nexus S to test out the NFC payment capability.

(Credit: Sprint Nextel)

PayPal isn't going to mandate the use of any specific technology. While Shrauger wouldn't go into detail about PayPal's own plans, he said the company would be more inclusive of different technologies and payment types. Google's plans, for instance, only allow for MasterCard users who happen to have Sprint Nextel's Nexus S, the only smartphone with an NFC chip.

"Relying on a single technology makes it very difficult for the consumer," he said, noting that people pay for things in different ways depending on the situation. He also criticized the focus that the industry and the media have had on NFC, noting that it is one method of payment.

"When you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail," Shrauger said. "We view it differently."

Still, PayPal isn't shying away from NFC technology. The company showed off its own ability to tap phones to transfer money--using the Nexus S.

Beyond simple transactions, Shrauger talked up the opportunity and the need to provide additional services and value to consumers. It's a similar pitch made by executives at Google, or at ISIS, the joint venture between three national wireless carriers. They talk about the opportunity to provide consumers with discounts and promotions, allowing retailers to draw loyal customers.

PayPal will look at using the payment system to deliver daily deals similar to Google Offers and Groupon.

PayPal was in the headlines for different reasons earlier today. The hacktivist group Anonymous lashed out at PayPal and called for a boycott of the service, partly in condemnation of the FBI's recent arrest of those charged in connection with hack attacks by the group. PayPal had been previously criticized by Anonymous forcutting off the ability of the whistle-blowing site WikiLeaks to receive funds through the service.

Shrauger declined to comment on the development. A spokeswoman said the company hasn't seen any fallout from the boycott attempt.



Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-20084366-94/paypal-exec-it-wont-be-easy-to-compete-with-us/#ixzz1TN8tqKtf

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Security Management Solution

McAfee Enhances Comprehensive Security Management Solution


McAfee has announced automated and real-time security and risk analytics enhancements to its security management solution for enterprise security.



The McAfee security management solution provides integration of McAfee ePolicy Orchestrator platform, McAfee Risk Advisor, and McAfee endpoint products.

“Security and risk management now has C-level visibility within the business, and internal and external stakeholders are holding IT departments accountable for managing risk,” said Stuart McClure, General Manager - Risk and Compliance, McAfee. “An effective security management program is not possible with manual or reactive methods. McAfee security management allows users to identify, manage, and automatically report on their security and risk profile.”


With the McAfee ePolicy Orchestrator, the solution provides alignment and visibility of critical security and risk events across the IT environment, supporting both on-premise and SaaS security information via McAfee endpoint solutions. McAfee Risk Advisor, integrated in the solution, offers organizations to analyze the impact on their risk and security profile due to changes in their business environment.

IT Travelers Go Contest In India

BOFT And TAITRA Launch IT Travelers Go Contest In India


The Bureau of Foreign Trade, Taiwan (BOFT) and the Taiwan External Trade Development Council (TAITRA) have launched a three nation contest called IT Travelers Go, in India, Indonesia and Vietnam. In India the program kicked off in Mumbai from July 5, 2011 and will continue till November 22, 2011.



The organisations have invited applications for the contest and interested contestants can register themselves at www.ittravelersgo.com.

Contestants will be able to participate in a 21-day all-expense paid trip. Four talented, IT savvy netizens from each country, will travel to top Asian cities like Jakarta, New Delhi, Ha Noi, and finally reach Taipei. Contestants would be judged based on their creativity to use gizmos and their social media skills.


Fourteen Taiwan ICT brands which include names like Transcend, Acer, Adata, Asus, BenQ, D-Link, Innergie, Mio, MSI, Optoma, PQI, Silicon Power, Thermaltake and ZyXEL would partcipate in the program. The brands would sponsor the IT Travelers Kit of 17 ICT gadgets. The final selected 12 winners will be equipped with these IT gadgets worth $2,500. The winning team also stands to win a cash prize up to $20,000

10 technologies that will change the world in the next 10 years

10 technologies that will change the world in the next 10 years

3D printers, sensor networks, virtual humans, and other technologies under development now will drastically change our world in the decade to come



As computational power rises exponentially, not linearly, so does the rate of change -- and that means the next 10 years should pack in far more technological change than the last 10.

Disruptive technology is, by its very nature, unpredictable, but it is still possible to look at the work being done by R&D labs around the world and see clues as to what the future holds. That's the full-time job of Dave Evans, Cisco's chief futurist and chief technologist for the Cisco Internet Business Solutions Group (IBSG).

[ Also check out 12 tech revolutions that fizzled. | Keep up on the day's tech news headlines with InfoWorld's Today's Headlines: Wrap Up newsletter. ]

At Cisco Live, Evans outlined what he believed to be the top 10 trends that will change the world in 10 years. Here is his list, with commentary augmented by yours truly based on interviews in the past year with numerous other industry analysts and visionaries.

No. 1: The Internet of things
We have passed the threshold where more things are connected to the Internet than people. The transition to IPv6 also supports seemingly limitless connectivity. Cisco IBSG predicts the number of Internet-connected things will reach 50 billion by 2020, which equates to more than six devices for every person on Earth. Many of us in the developed world already have three or more full-time devices connected to the Internet when factoring in PCs, smartphones, tablets, television devices and the like. Next up are sensor networks, using low-power sensors that "collect, transmit, analyze, and distribute data on a massive scale," says Evans.

Such sensors, based on standards like Zigbee, 6LoWPAN and Z-wave, are currently being used in both predictable and surprising ways. Zigbee is being embedded in smart appliances and smart meters. 6LoWPAN (over IPv6) is used by Vint Cerf for his wine cellar climate-monitoring system. Z-Wave is the basis for Verizon's smart home automation service. But more creative uses are emerging, too. Sparked, a Dutch startup, implants sensors in the ears of cattle to monitor cows' health and whereabouts. Sensors are being embedded in shoes, medicine like asthma inhalers, and medical exploratory surgery devices. There's even a tree in Sweden wired with sensors that tweets its mood and thoughts, with a bit of translation help from an interpretive engine developed by Ericsson (@connectedtree or #ectree).

No. 2: Not just big data, but a zettaflood
bout 5 exabytes of unique information were created in 2008. That's 1 billion DVDs. Fast forward three years and we are creating 1.2 zettabytes, with one zettabyte equal to 1,024 exabytes. "This is the same as every person on Earth tweeting for 100 years, or 125 million years of your favorite one-hour TV show," says Evans. Our love of high-definition video accounts for much of the increase. By Cisco's count, 91 percent of Internet data in 2015 will be video

Monday, July 25, 2011

New SSDs for old computers

SanDisk releases new SSDs for old computers

Company pitches that replacing an existing hard drive with an SSD is more cost effective than purchasing a new computer

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SanDisk has introduced a new line of SSDs (solid-state drives) that it's marketing directly to retail consumers versus computer system manufacturers.

SanDisk is pitching its new Ultra SSD line as a product that can be used to replace hard drives in older systems and thereby increase the performance, durability and lifespan of existing laptops and desktops.

[ Discover the key technologies to speed archival storage and get quick data recovery in InfoWorld's Archiving Deep Dive PDF special report. ]

There is nothing that differentiates the new SSD line from a product marketed to equipment manufacturers other than it's being packaged for retail sales.

The Ultra SSD line, which uses the SATA 2.0 specification I/O interface, sports a sequential read rate of up to 280MB/sec and a sequential write rate of up to 270MB/sec.

SanDisk claims the SSD, which is based on MLC (multi-level cell) NAND flash memory, has a MTBF (mean time between failure) rate of up to one million hours.

Most SSD industry experts do not believe MTBF is an accurate way to determine a products longevity as it relates to a the failure rates based on a representative group of shipped products and not the testing of individual drives.

That said, today's MLC-based SSDs have special firmware that helps extend the longevity of the product for up to 10,000 erase-write cycles, meaning a drive can be written to as many as 10,000 times.

Kent Perry, director of product marketing for SanDisk, pointed out that replacing an existing hard drive with an SSD is more cost effective than purchasing a new computer.

The new Ultra SSD line comes in drive 60GB, 120GB, and 240GB capacities and retails for $129.99, $219.99, and $449.99, respectively.

U.S. consumers can order the drive now from online retailers such as Newegg.com, where prices are significantly lower than the suggested retail.

Om Nanotech Launches 6GB And 10GB Pendrives

Om Nanotech Launches 6GB And 10GB Pendrives


CRN Network, July 11, 2011, 1600 hrs

Om Nanotech has launched its 6GB and 10 GB pendrives with its flagship brand Zipmem.


The drives are high speed USB 2.0 interface compliant and are supported by operating systems including Vista, XP, Win 2000, 98SE, Linux 2.4.


The CE and FCC certified USB drives come with a maximum and minimum data read transfer rate of 18.5 Mbps and 6.5 Mbps respectively. They can be customized with advanced features like multi-partition. For example a four partition can contain one Read-only Partition designated for auto run feature, two read-write partitions and one hidden partition. The private zone is password protected.


“With our manufacturing plants present in India, we can make modifications in our products on the basis of consumer specific demands and requirements. This innovation is based on extensive market study and research and we hope to satisfy the requirements of our valued customers through these USB drives,”said Atul Khosla, Director, Om Nanotech.


The 6 GB USB is priced at Rs 400 while the 10 GB USB is available for Rs 600 with LS Industries and comes with three-year warranty

Adobe software breaks down on Mac OS X Lion

Adobe software breaks down on Mac OS X Lion

Apple's newest OS surfaces compatibility issues with popular Adobe apps like Acrobat, Dreamweaver, Flash Builder, and Photoshop

More than a dozen Adobe products are not working properly on Mac OS X Lion, Apple's new desktop operating system, continuing Adobe's struggles to make its software compatible with Apple products.

The issues -- listed by Adobe on its website -- aren't as cut and dried as the problem with Flash on iOS, which is that Apple blocks use of Flash on iPhones and iPads.

[ Discover what's new in business applications with InfoWorld's Technology: Applications newsletter. | Get the latest insight on the tech news that matters from InfoWorld's Tech Watch blog. ]

IN PICTURES: Easiest upgrade ever? How to upgrade your Mac to OS X Lion

But Adobe says many of its products are missing functionality under Lion, which was released earlier this week. In addition to the fact that Lion drops support for older PowerPC applications, the Adobe issues may be enough for some users to delay upgrading.

Software often has to be rewritten to continue working properly on new versions of operating systems, or to take advantage of an OS's new features. But Adobe and Apple have a contentious history, with Apple refusing to support Adobe's widespread Flash technology on mobile devices due to concerns about battery life, security, and performance.

Adobe doesn't suggest any deliberate attempt by Apple to cripple Adobe products on Lion, but Adobe Senior Product Manager Jody Rodgers blogs, "The cat is out of the bag! Mac OS X 10.7 aka Lion is roaming the streets and you brave Mac IT admins have been deemed Lion Tamers by the public at large. Or at least by me. I've managed a few OS compatibility assessments in my past and it is no easy task to gather up all the necessary info from the software publishers that are used in your environment, run/coordinate testing, etc."

Known issues in Lion affect Adobe software such as Acrobat, Adobe Drive, Contribute, Dreamweaver, Fireworks, Flash Builder, Flash Catalyst, Flash Player, Lightroom, LiveCycle, Photoshop and Premiere Pro.

Adobe initially said, "Flash Player may cause higher CPU activity when playing a YouTube video [on Lion.] Possibly related to disabled hardware acceleration," but later retracted this issue, saying, "Lion provides the same support for Flash hardware video acceleration as Mac OS X Snow Leopard."

Still, other Flash problems remain. For example, some users may find the "Flash Player settings dialog does not respond to mouse clicks," and "custom native mouse cursors are not animating properly on Mac 10.7."

IT Workers with Heart

IT Workers with Heart

More and more companies are offering paid time off to employees who want to volunteer, either on company-sponsored initiatives or at a charity or agency of their own choosing.


Computerworld — You might think Steve Kranson, who works at Comerica Bank in Auburn Hills, Mich., is your average IT manager. But he's also been known to log hours dressed up like the Easter Bunny, to the delight of local kids.

Amy Crow, who spends most of her working hours as an IT project manager at Texas Health Resources , has been spotted stepping away from her computer to work on gardening and landscaping projects at nursing homes, organize donated linens and other household items for local disaster relief agencies and sing holiday songs at elementary schools in the neighborhood.

And Paychex Inc. employees Dan Canzano, vice president of IT operations and support, and Tammy Hall, director of enterprise service management, have spent some of their worktime polishing their poker-playing skills and raking in some big bucks for charity.

In all three cases, these IT professionals performed these activities with the blessing of their employers, who often allow workers to take paid time off to donate their skills, talents and time to charities and other nonprofit organizations.

I just interviewed two people under 30. They both asked about personal days for volunteering. Younger folks are asking about community involvement. Marcia Riley, vice president of talent management and human resources, ESI International

Employers also benefit from these arrangements. In fact, they are increasingly more than happy to subsidize employees' volunteer efforts outside the workplace, because they've noticed an undeniable link between employee volunteerism and improved collaboration and productivity on the job.

"Outside volunteer activities afford workers an opportunity to view their co-workers through a different lens," says David Ballai, CIO at Reed Technology in Horsham, Pa.

"You see them assisting in the community and interacting in a different environment. When they come back to work, they have a more holistic view of their peers and can appreciate how they view the world," he says. "It's great for team-building."

Moreover, volunteerism can enhance a company's image in the communities where its employees and customers live. And offering time off -- either paid for unpaid -- for charity work can also help organizations attract younger, more community-minded and tech-savvy employees, experts say.

"I just interviewed two people under 30. They both asked about personal days for volunteering. Younger folks are asking about community involvement," says Marcia Riley, vice president of talent management and human resources at ESI International, an Arlington, Va.-based training and consulting firm. "I was not asked that question 20 years ago. Younger folks are demanding this benefit, and good employers are responding."

Apple laptop microcontroller chips are shipped with default passwords

Apple MacBook batteries found vulnerable to malware

Researcher says Apple laptop microcontroller chips are shipped with default passwords that, once discovered, can be used as a hiding spot for malware

MacBook users are being warned their Apple laptop batteries are vulnerable to being hacked.

After studying the batteries in several MacBooks, MacBook Pros, and MacBook Airs, security researcher Charlie Miller found that Apple laptop microcontroller chips are shipped with default passwords that, once discovered, can be used as a hiding spot for malware as well as a conduit for disabling the battery and even blowing it up.

[ Also on InfoWorld: Apple Mac sales back above 10 percent -- after 20 years. | Keep up on the day's tech news headlines with InfoWorld's Today's Headlines: Wrap Up newsletter. ]

"These batteries just aren't designed with the idea that people will mess with them," Miller told Forbes. "What I'm showing is that it's possible to use them to do something really bad."

Using passwords associated with a 2009 Apple software update, Miller was able to permanently disable several batteries, manipulate readings sent to the operating system and charger, and completely rewrite the chip's firmware.

He said a culprit could install malware on the chip to infect the rest of the computer and steal data, control its functions, or cause it to crash. And even though the batteries he studied have safeguards against explosions, he thinks it would be possible to remotely cause them to explode on command.

What complicates the issue is that Apple notebook batteries are built-in instead of removable.

"That change began in 2009 with the 17-inch MacBook Pro, and trickled down to the other models, resulting in considerable battery life gains at the expense of easy replacement. This means if a battery were to somehow be compromised, it's a trickier fix. At the same time, it means potential attackers need to gain control of that system before they can do anything, short of taking apart the machine," writes Josh Lowensohn for Cnet.

Here are some tips to avoid problems.

-- Only accept installs or updates that you've researched or scanned with security software.

-- Never trust spam email.

-- Be very wary of pop-up windows that suggest an update.

-- Stay away from illegal file-sharing services.

According to The Huffington Post, Miller said most users should not be overly concerned about a hacker taking over their laptop battery. And Apple Insider reports that Miller believes Mac OS X security is better than ever before in spite of his findings.