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Sunday, December 19, 2010

3-D Without the Glasses



A new type of display from Microsoft produces multiple images and tracks the viewers' eyes.



Today's 3-D movies are far more spectacular than the first ones screened more than 50 years ago, but watching them--both at the movie theater and at home--still means donning a pair of dorky, oversized glasses. Now a new type of lens developed by researchers in Microsoft's Applied Sciences Group could help make glasses-free 3-D displays more practical.
The new lens, which is thinner at the bottom than at the top, steers light to a viewer's eyes by switching light-emitting diodes along its bottom edge on and off. Combined with a backlight, this makes it possible to show different images to different viewers, or to create a stereoscopic (3-D) effect by presenting different images to a person's left and right eye. "What's so special about this lens is that it allows us to control where the light goes," saysSteven Bathiche, director of Microsoft's Applied Sciences Group.
3-D technology has seen a renaissance recently. Thanks to the success of movies likeCoralineUp, and Avatar, Hollywood is spending more money than ever to give audiences a stereoscopic experience. And electronics manufacturers are racing to replicate the 3-D theater experience in the home. The market for 3-D-capable televisions is expected to growfrom 2.5 million sets shipped in 2010 to 27 million in 2013, according to the research firmDisplaySearch. However, the glasses required to watch 3-D video is a turnoff for many would-be early adopters.
At the Society for Information Display International Symposium in Seattle last month, companies showed off 3-D displays that don't require glasses. These sets often use lenticular lenses, which are integrated into the display and project different images in two fixed directions. But a viewer needs to stand in designated zones to experience a 3-D effect; otherwise the screen becomes an out-of-focus blur.
Microsoft's prototype display can deliver 3-D video to two viewers at the same time (one video for each individual eye), regardless of where they are positioned. It can also shows ordinary 2-D video to up to four people simultaneously (one video for each person). The 3-D display uses a camera to track viewers so that it knows where to steer light toward them. The lens is also thin, which means it could be incorporated into a standard liquid crystal display, says Bathiche.
The idea of tracking viewers to make the glasses-free 3-D easier has been around for decades. One of the big challenges, explainsKen Perlin, professor of computer science at New York University, is that the computers used for eye-tracking were too expensive and too slow to make such a system practical. As computers have become faster and cheaper, viewer-tracking systems have gotten up to speed; other components, particularly those needed to target viewers, have remained bulky and impractical to manufacture on a large scale.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

IBM Acquires Cloud Computing Integration Company Cast Iron Systems


IBM has acquired cloud computing startup Cast Iron Systems to “broaden the delivery of cloud computing services for clients.” Cast Iron Systems provides a SaaS cloud integration software. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
Cast Iron Systems’ software-as-a-service provides cloud computing integration appliances for large and midsize companies, including Allianz, NEC, Peet’s Coffee & Tea, Dow Jones, Schumacher Group, ShoreTel, Sports Authority, Time Warner, Westmont University and others. The company has capitalized on the growing trend of companies running key business applications through software as a service models and cloud deployments.
Clearly, the acquisition represents IBM’s strong push to the cloud, with IBM expecting the global cloud computing market to grow to $126 billion by 2012.Cast Iron’s offerings will help IBM customers integrate their cloud-based applications and on-premise systems and advance IBM’s capabilities for a hybrid cloud model.
This year, IBM bought up health care data management firm Initiate and Intelliden. Last year, IBM acquired six companies, including Guardium, RedPill Solutions, SPSS, Ounce Labs, Exeros and Outblaze.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Google Android on Apple iPhone



Android ported on iPhone
A hacker who goes by the name of David Wang has just done something to prove that platforms of competing smartfone companies can indeed be compromised. 
David posted a video on the 'Linux on the iPhone' blog demonstrating how Google Android can be booted onto a first-generation iPhone. He suggested that Android could be ported to all versions of Apple’s smartphones, a move that seemed greeted positively by many of the blog’s supporters.
In his blog, David also said, "At some point this summer, Apple will release the iPhone OS 4, which will include features such as multitasking and an 'iAd' mobile applicationadvertising platform. Lack of multitasking has been one of the traditional complaints lodged against the iPhone, and used as a selling point for smartphones running the multitasking-capable Google Android."

CSS announces suite of cloud tools




CSS Corp, a provider of IT operations optimization, announced a suite of tools and services to help enterprises, independent software vendors (ISV) and services providers to levearage public, public and hybrid cloud infrastructure.


The CSS suite of Cloud management tools include:
CSS CloudSmart: CloudSmart is an ANT-based automated deployment tool to automate complex enterprise application deployment process on the cloud. ANT tasks and run book automation for deployment on Amazon Web Services (AWS) Eclastic Compute Cloud EC2 are part of the feature set.


CSS Cloud Buddy Enterprise: Cloud Buddy Enterprise is a tool that helps organizations take advantage of the capabilities of AWS Simple Storage Service (S3) storage.


Also Read: Storage-as-a-service: Cloud Storage 
It features an Enterprise Administrator console that manages access privileges/storage limits at the group and user levels. Cloud Buddy Enterprise has multi-mode access such as web, WebDAV, web services and Native Client for Windows to the AWS S3 storage.
It also has an integrated indexing engine, to index all the ?les that get stored on the AWS S3.


CSS CloudBuddy Analytics: Cloud Buddy Analytics is an Open Source web based tool to generate reports about S3 Bucket access. It has an intuitive interface for a rich user experience.
Cloud Buddy Analytics takes care of enabling logging, fetching logs and generating reports and can be con?gured for Multiple S3 Accounts, and could be made available on the network as a multi-user tool.


CSS also announced availability of its cloud enablement services, which include:
· Cloud design, orchestration, automation and testing services
·Cloud monitoring and management services
· Cloud support services
“Nick Sharma, CEO of CSS Corp. “Our cloud computing suite of tools and services are helping our customers truly benefit from the private, public and hybrid infrastructure.”

Wireless services: The race is not about speed but reach



Bridging the last mile broadband connectivity gap seems to be the latest craze among Indian telcos. No one, not especially the giants of the the likes which include Bharti, Vodafone, Reliance Communications (RCom) and Tatas, wants to be left behind. They want to try their hands on every technology they can afford to.

Gone are the days of dial-up connections, where one used to get an Internet connectivity speed of up-to 56 Kbps, that too over a wireline. Today one talks of megabits over kilobits, and that too over wireless connection, for data, voice and text.

Also Read: WiMAX: The wireless Broadband

Be it LTE (Long Term Evolution), WiMAX (Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access), 3G (Third Generation)or WiFi (Wireless Fidelity), the wireless future of India shines bright.

On one hand, where the second generation of communication technology, 2G/2.5G, is set to give way for the third generation (3G). On the other, 4G technologies, such as LTE (the surprise factor of the BWA spectrum) and WiMAX, have also booked themselves a berth in India's race for wireless networks. Not to be left behind is WiFi, one of the longest serving wireless technologies in India today.

Theoretically, WiFi (IEEE 802.11g) can transmit up to 54 megabits per second (Mbps), whereas, WiMAX ((IEEE 802.16e) can provide a speed of up to 70 megabits per second. Coming to LTE, it will be more and and 3G will speed of up to 3 Mbps.

Considering the advanced versions of these technologies, Wireless N ((IEEE 802.11n) of WiFi, which will be rolled out this year, is said to give a speed of 300 Mbps, whereas, WiMAX 2.0, (IEEE 802.16m) will provide a throughput of over 350+ Mbps. Now coming to LTE (Rel 10 and Advanced) they are said to give much more speed than its predecessor.

So, among these technology siblings, who will win the race?

Sudarshan Boosupalli, country head, Ruckus Wireless, notes: “All technologies will co-exist. Today, the question is not about speed, but who will reach the market first and how affordable will their technology be for masses.”

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Registration open for Google developer conference



The Google I/O 2010 would be held in San Francisco on May 19-20, 2010
Google on Tuesday announced that the registration is open for its developer conference, Google I/O 2010 to be held  in San Francisco on May 19-20, 2010.
Google I/O features 80 sessions, more than 3,000 developers, and over 100 demonstrations from developers showcasing their technologies. Talk shop with engineers building the next generation of web, mobile, and enterprise applications.
According to their blog, The event will be focused on building the next generation of applications in the cloud and will feature the latest on Google products and technologies like Android, Google Chrome, App Engine, Google Web Toolkit, Google APIs and more.
It also said that they are bringing back the Developer Sandbox, where developers from more than 100 companies will be on hand to demo their apps, answer questions and exchange ideas.
To register log in to code.google.com/io.

Google opens Docs for all files, over cloud



Google Docs will support files up to 250 MB in size, which is larger than the attachment limit on most email applications
Google in its Google Doc Blog announced that it will roll out the ability to upload all file types to the cloud through Google Docs.
Moreover, Google Docs will support files up to 250 MB in size, which is larger than the attachment limit on most email applications. Apart from this, Google Docs also offers 1 GB of free storage for files which need not be converted to one of the Google Docs formats (i.e. Google documents, spreadsheets, and presentations), and for more space, Google offers additional storage for $0.25 per GB per year.
Google Doc would now on support backing up large graphics files, RAW photos, ZIP archives etc.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Your desktop, your way


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IT: Cloudy days ahead



While the hype is yet to subside and there are a number of questions yet to be answered, it is slowly becoming mainstream

In the information technology industry there has never been a dearth for buzzwords.
While the decade that just went past us began with Y2K, it was quickly followed by SOA, BPM, RIA, Web 2.0, Enterprise 2.0 – the list goes on. But the end of the decade heralded a new buzzword that has since been much talked about, written about, sliced and diced in all possible ways – yes, I am talking about "cloud computing".

Cloud Storage: No more a security nightmare

While the hype is yet to subside and there are a number of questions yet to be answered, it is slowly becoming mainstream. All indications so far suggest that cloud computing is here to stay and is going to have an impact on all aspects of IT.
While there are many definitions of cloud computing, the one that I think makes most holistic sense is the one given in Wikipedia: "it is a paradigm shift whereby details are abstracted from the users who no longer need knowledge of, expertise in, or control over the technology infrastructure "in the cloud" that supports them".
In the first wave of outsourcing enterprises outsourced non critical IT tasks such as application maintenance and in the second wave business processes that are of not any competitive advantage (example, payroll processing) were outsourced.
Cloud computing could bring in a third wave, where non-critical data and computing will be outsourced. While this is not entirely new (Salesforce and Google has been there for many years now), the impact is going to be more widespread.
Cloud computing platforms now offer the CIOs a much wider avenue to look at enterprise applications and data. This will force future IT strategies to include cloud computing and decide what needs to stay within the enterprise's data center and what can be migrated to the cloud.
Cloud computing does not necessarily mean access is always over the Internet. Therefore infrastructure may need to be relooked at in the form of 'private clouds' that could host multi-tenant applications and data stores.
Advances in cloud computing also provide an opportunity for product vendors to look at web as a primary (and increasingly the sole) channel for delivering the functionality and services. Products delivered over the cloud are automatically deployed and therefore delivery becomes a non-issue.
The maturing of web 2.0 technologies and RIA has made the browser to give as powerful a user experience as a traditional smart client does. More and more ISVs are adopting this route. For certain other products, such as middleware softwares, cloud computing paradigm offers fresh challenges.
These softwares now need to manage integration of enterprise and cloud based application. As cloud computing becomes more prevalent, there will be business processes that will span across the enterprise as well as cloud and middleware softwares will have to evolve to support this paradigm shift.
Application development is another area that will be impacted by cloud computing. Developers will have to start learning and experimenting with cloud based technologies such as Microsoft Azure. Development and deployment on the cloud tends to be a lot easier where you bypass the entire hardware/software approvals and procurement process.

Conventional IDEs are evolving to support this new paradigm. Software engineering processes will have to be revisited to account for cloud based application development. In the cloud, basic software development lifecycle activities such as configuration management, build and release management, performance testing, etc. have a whole new dimension.

In the pre-cloud days, developers used to worry about interoperability between multiple technology stacks and platforms. With cloud in the picture, interoperability and integration will have to be looked at from a new perspective.
Cloud computing will also have an impact on IT service providers with newer opportunities in the cloud space. In the early days of cloud adoption opportunities might be related proof of concept development, prototype development and may be even platform evaluations. But as the platforms mature, there will be opportunities for migration of traditional custom enterprise applications, data and storage to the cloud.
There will be integration and business process management opportunities that will involve applications running in an enterprise's data center and public cloud based applications.
While cloud computing could bring about a vast array of innovations and will have a widespread impact across the information technology landscape there are several concerns surrounding cloud computing that will have to be allayed before we see full-fledged mainstream adoption. The most important ones are around security and reliability.
How secure is the data that is stored on the cloud? How is the user privacy maintained? How are SLAs defined and met? Recent outages of public cloud infrastructures including Google and Amazon does not build confidence in the new paradigm. There are other concerns such as lack of standards for interoperability, and potential vendor lock-in.
But even with some of these concerns, the advantages that cloud computing offers outweigh them. This is a computing paradigm that offers great promise and one cannot choose to ignore. So better prepare for the cloudy days ahead!
The author is head of Collabera Labs.

Friday, January 8, 2010

New controller-free video gaming sys from MS



Also announces a number of new games for the Xbox

Microsoft has announced Project Natal, a new controller-free video gaming system, which reads a players body movements with cameras and mimics them with avatars on screen, will be available for purchase by the holiday season this year.
The announcement came at the opening of the Consumer Electronics Show (CES)here.
 
Microsoft has demonstrated the system at another trade show last year, but had not set a release date until Wednesday. It is still unclear how much the system will cost, although Microsoft says Natal add-ons will work with its existing Xbox 360 gaming console.

Robbie Bach, Microsoft's president for entertainment and devices, announced a number of new games for the Xbox, including a new edition of the popular game Halo, which is due out in the spring.
"What Star Wars is to film and what Harry Potter is to fantasy books, Halo is to the gaming industry," he said.

MySpace announces developer challenge



 MySpace announces a developer contest to find new developers to write compelling applications on the MySpace social networking platform
The social networking site MySpace has announced developer challenge for developer community to find new developers to write applications on MySpace.
In a blog post by Amy Walgenbach, a spokesperson for MySpace said, competition is aimed at encouraging further innovation from the developer community. We believe the best onsite and offsite integrations with MySpace are not here yet and the MySpace Developer Challenge intends to find them. We also want to reward innovative developers big and small and recognize them as much as we can.
The contest enable developers to create new MySpace application, integrating our Real-Time Stream API, Open Search API, Photo Upload API, or by integrating MySpace on the iPhone.
Elaborating on time-frame, criteria and rules for MySpave Developer contest Walgenbach said, The challenge also features monetary and promotional prizes, to be given out to those developers whose submissions are picked by our panel of judges.
The categories for MySpace Developer Challenge includes, Most innovative use of the Real-Time Stream API, Best new MySpace app, Most innovative use of the Open Search API,  Most innovative MySpace Integration on Mobile and Most innovative use of Photos.
Submissions for the Challenge will be accepted January 4 through Feb 24, 2010 and winners will be announced at the Games Developer Conference in San Francisco in March 2010 added Walgenbach.

Dell's slate runs on Android



The company announced the arrival of this new gadget at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas

Dell Inc showed off a small slate computer that it could bring to market this year, exploring yet another type of device designed for computing on the go.
So-called slate and tablet PCs are a hot topic at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week, ahead of a highly anticipated device from Apple Inc that is widely expected to be unveiled in late January.
Dell's slate has a 5-inch screen and runs on Google Inc's Android mobile operating system. Dell declined to provide other details, or say definitively if the new gadget, which looks like a large smartphone, would hit the market.
On Wednesday. Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer displayed a Hewlett-Packard Co slate that which was considerably larger than Dell's.
Michael Tatelman, Dell's vice president of consumer sales and marketing, said the company is testing a number of different screen sizes as it pushes further into the mobile market.
Dell recently released its first smartphone, the Mini 3, which is on sale in China and Brazil, and will be available in the U.S. on AT&T Inc's network.

FB.Me ' The shortest link to Facebook



Largest social network uses .ME to provide easy access for users on the go

In a world where every character counts, .ME is helping Facebook save its more than 350 million users valuable digits, with the launch just weeks ago of new URL shortener, FB.Me.
Millions of Facebook users post status updates, share photos and comment on friends' posts using mobile SMS products on a regular basis. FB.Me provides a simple and secure solution for increasing the amount of content users can view in those constrained environments.
"We could not be more pleased with Facebook's choice of dot-ME as the domain extension for its URL shortener," says Predrag Lesic, chief executive officer of the .ME Registry.
"For the social media site's vast community of users, the benefit of using this shortened URL is immediately clear and the increased awareness of dot-ME as a domain extension will be astronomical. It is a win-win," he added.
"Its hard to believe dot-ME launched only a year and a half ago," adds Lesic. "In that short amount of time, our ccTLD has become an integral part of Internet identities for so many online businesses, bloggers and personal Web sites worldwide. Clearly, they see the intrinsic value of the extension's personalized branding and ability to instantly create a 'call to action' using minimal characters and maximum impact."