Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Future of Tech: Huge Screens, ARM Servers, Geosocial Everywhere

A new "geosocial" app called Sonar is getting the attention of Steve Peltzman, CIO of the Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York.

The app, which is loaded on his iPhone, combines location information with Twitter and Facebook networks, creating an opportunity for making connections. "It will be able to tell us who is in the museum right now," Peltzman said.

Some might see this capability as potentially creepy, and Peltzman is aware of social media's downside. But he sees a way to make it work, as well as a need to use the kinds of capabilities Sonar and others will offer.

Participating in social media is critical, Peltzman said. "If you want to be a business leader today, you have to be on it," he said.

Peltzman meets regularly with social media developers, investors and authors to get a sense of future trends for social networking.

Frank Gillett, an analyst at Forrester, is also focused on the future and is forecasting some of the changes in hardware over the next five years. Both he and Peltzman made presentations at Forrester's IT Forum here.

"Hardware innovation will continue to rile the tech ecosystems through 2016, forcing software and services strategists to adjust continuously," Gillett said. "We are entering a period of significant turmoil."

Here are some of their predictions:

Data center diversity will increase

The "Wintel" monoculture will see increasing pushback from application-specific servers. Oracle's Sparc-based Exadata Storage Server is one example. "There will be a growing category of application-specific boxes," which may or may not have x86 chips in them, Gillett said.

GPU chips, which are good for highly repetitive parallel compute tasks, will also gain traction. Gillett also expects ARM chips to enter the server market, with tiny, low-power 64-bit processors that, for the right workloads, will be more efficient than x86 systems. One company working on low-power ARM servers is Calxeda.

Big displays become the norm

Users will move to 27-in. and bigger displays and increasingly use two of them, expanding the desktop to the limits of peripheral range. But by 2016, the notion of what is a display will change as well and will include opportunistic display technologies that, for instance, project desktops on walls, Gillett predicted.

There will also be increasing use of natural user interfaces with sensors that can detect movement, interpret facial expressions and get data on the local environment.

Minority Report-type advertising enters the scene

In the 2002 movie Minority Report, as lead actor Tom Cruise walks into a mall, his retinas are scanned to identify him, which leads to a series of personalized ads. Peltzman doesn't believe retina scans will be utilized anytime soon, but he clearly sees the rapid approach of advertising connected to users via geolocation, with more one-to-one ads based on who you that arrive via social media networks.

Peltzman said he can imagine using Sonar to send a message to someone via a social network, such as a discount on museum membership.

Illustration: Christoph NiemanSmartphones won't necessarily rule

The idea that the smartphone will morph into an all-purpose device doesn't ring true with Gillett. He expects to see multiple devices and displays, and big improvements in the PC. He is expecting hybrid PCs that use SSDs to speed the system, but disks as well. This blending of storage with the system will require application changes to take advantage of it, he said.

Social media's relationship to the bottom line comes into focus

MoMA has made social media a key IT direction and has a Web page devoted to all of its networking links, including a Flickr group for people to upload photos they have taken at the museum.

It has more than 750,000 fans on Facebook and 582,000 followers on Twitter.

To help manage its social networking, the museum's IT and marketing departments share an employee who reports to both.

But Peltzman said it isn't easy to show how social networking generates money. Using social media for direct funding efforts can undermine it, he argues.

That also makes it difficult to tell the business exactly how much value is delivered by social media. But he believes that in time, analytical tools will arrive that can show how social media does contribute.

Patrick Thibodeau covers SaaS and enterprise applications, outsourcing, government IT policies, data centers and IT workforce issues for Computerworld. Follow Patrick on Twitter at @DCgov or subscribe to Patrick's RSS feed. His e-mail address is pthibodeau@computerworld.com.



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Source: http://feeds.pcworld.com/click.phdo?i=a87463b3c7631e90e096fd4ce86a3635

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Deal of the Day ? Dell Vostro 3450 14? Core i5 Sandy Bridge Laptop for $599

Today?s LogicBUY deal is the customizable Dell Vostro 3450 14? laptop with the Intel 2011 Core i5 (Sandy Bridge) for $599.� Features: weighs 5.02 pounds, 1.2-1.31 inches thick, up to 6GB DDR3 memory, 1GB Radeon HD 6630 discrete graphics, 2 USB 3.0 ports, HDMI, eSATA, 8-in-1 card reader, DVD+/-RW drive or optional Blu-ray, LED-backlit anti-glare [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2011/05/27/deal-of-the-day-%e2%80%93-dell-vostro-3450-14%e2%80%9d-core-i5-sandy-bridge-laptop-for-599/

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Certeon Touts WAN Optimization For Cloud Computing

The company's aCelera Cloud aims to boost performance and reduce bandwidth needs for cloud apps, and supports cloud platforms such as VMware vSphere, Microsoft Hyper-V, Citrix Xen, Linux KVM, and Amazon EC2.

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Source: http://feeds.informationweek.com/click.phdo?i=0d17a53187a31d8082a6162c5a84030e

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Monday, May 30, 2011

ASUS Eee Pad MeMO to come with glassesless 3D IPS display (update: video!)

Remember how we speculated that the final Eee Pad MeMO may come with a 3D display, courtesy of its teaser? Turns out we were right after all, as ASUS' Jonney Shih has just confirmed a glassesless 3D, 1280 x 800 IPS display for this 7-inch Honeycomb slate, which is now dubbed Eee Pad MeMO 3D. We're also told that the accompanying MeMIC Bluetooth headset will be thrown into the box, though we're still waiting on dates and prices. Until then check out the gallery below and hear our first second third impressions in the video after the break.

Continue reading ASUS Eee Pad MeMO to come with glassesless 3D IPS display (update: video!)

ASUS Eee Pad MeMO to come with glassesless 3D IPS display (update: video!) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 May 2011 05:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/MhNx7Jc6mxQ/

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Seven Cool Apps at SXSW

The best apps at Austin's South by Southwest show are the ones that have obvious utility outside Nerdville. Here are seven we liked.

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Source: http://feeds.pcworld.com/click.phdo?i=f991cde336eeedc1aa02f4d5a793688f

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NVIDIA refreshes notebook graphics with GeForce GTX 560M, attracts ASUS, MSI, Toshiba and Alienware

If you've enjoyed NVIDIA's fine tradition of merely bumping along its GPUs time and again and affixing a new badge, you'll like the GeForce GTX 560M -- it's much like last year's GTX 460M, but with more bang for the buck than ever. ASUS, MSI, Alienware, Toshiba and Clevo have all committed to new notebooks bearing the graphics processor in light of the potent performance NVIDIA claims it will bring: Namely, those same 192 CUDA cores (now clocked at 1550MHz) and up to 3GB of GDDR5 memory (now clocked at 1250MHz, with a 192-bit bus) should enable the latest games to run at playable framerates on a 1080p screen with maximum detail -- save antialiasing. Of course, that assumes you've also got a recent quad-core Sandy Bridge processor and gobs upon gobs of RAM, but NVIDIA also says that with the built-in Optimus switchable graphics, those same potent laptops should be able to manage five hours of battery life while idling.

If you're looking for some inexpensive discrete graphics, however, NVIDIA's also got a refresh there, as the new GeForce GT 520MX bumps up all the clock speeds of the GT 520M. When can you expect a mobile GPU to knock the GTX 485M off its silicon throne, though? Glad you asked: a chart shows a "Next-gen GTX" coming late this year. Meanwhile, see what NVIDIA says the GTX 560M's capable of in the gallery below and a video after the break.

Continue reading NVIDIA refreshes notebook graphics with GeForce GTX 560M, attracts ASUS, MSI, Toshiba and Alienware

NVIDIA refreshes notebook graphics with GeForce GTX 560M, attracts ASUS, MSI, Toshiba and Alienware originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 29 May 2011 20:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/29/nvidia-refreshes-mobile-graphics-with-geforce-gtx-560m-attr/

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Sunday, May 29, 2011

PlayStation announces official wireless cans for PS3, stereo frags coming September

Perhaps Sony deemed the Ultimate Weapon too powerful (or too expensive) for PlayStation 3 owners, but these new wireless cans ought to keep your ears warm, at the very least. The new official PS3 Wireless Stereo Headset features 7.1 virtual surround sound, a retractable, mutable microphone, and standard embedded volume controls. These proprietary sound-muffs connect via USB dongle, and push headset related status updates (that's your battery status) directly to your TV screen; if you're into that sort of thing. Sony-approved hearing will set you back $100 starting this September.

PlayStation announces official wireless cans for PS3, stereo frags coming September originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 28 May 2011 05:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/28/playstation-announces-official-wireless-cans-for-ps3-stereo-fra/

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NASA asteroid mission could explain how life began (and how ours might end)

There's a slight chance that the Earth could get hit by an asteroid in about 170 years, but don't you worry -- NASA's all over it. This week, the agency announced a new mouthful of a mission known as Origins-Spectral Interpretation-Resource Identification-Security-Regolith Explorer, or OSIRIS-REx, for short. The $800 million initiative, part of NASA's New Frontiers Program, will send a spacecraft to link up with 1999 RQ36 -- a nearby asteroid that's likely rich in carbon and other organic molecules that could explain how life forms originated. After about four years of space travel, the craft should get close enough to map the asteroid's surface, before using its robotic arm to extract at least two ounces of material and return it to Earth by 2023. Scientists will also pay close attention to something known as the Yarkovsky effect, which determines how an asteroid's path changes as it absorbs and emits energy from the sun. OSIRIS-REx will attempt to measure this affect for the first time, perhaps allowing NASA to predict the trajectories of potentially hazardous asteroids -- including the RQ36. The 1,900-foot wide rock is expected to approach Earth by the year 2182 and, according to recent estimates, there's a one in a thousand chance that it could actually strike our planet. Now if you excuse us, we have to go prepare a bunker for our great-great-grandchildren. Head past the break for a video and full press release.

Continue reading NASA asteroid mission could explain how life began (and how ours might end)

NASA asteroid mission could explain how life began (and how ours might end) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 May 2011 10:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/27/nasa-asteroid-mission-could-explain-how-life-began-and-how-ours/

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Cool Android tablet apps to watch for

Dek: 
These apps are optimized for the larger screens of tablets and have either just hit the Android Market, or will be released this summer
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Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/mobile-technology/cool-android-tablet-apps-watch-282?source=rss_infoworld_top_stories_

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Saturday, May 28, 2011

Google pinpoints shutdown dates for Wave, Translate APIs (amongst others)

'Tis a sad day in the world of Google... at least for developers who use any of a handful of ill-fated APIs. As the search giant's API list has grown in recent months, it's making the decision to cull a few in the effort of "spring cleaning." In fact, a grand total of seven new APIs were launched during Google I/O alone, but it looks as if the end is nigh for the Blog Search API, Books Data API, Image Search API, News Search API, Patent Search API, Safe Browsing API (v1 only), Translate API, Transliterate API, Video Search API and Virtual Keyboard API. Of those, Wave is most unsurprising, but Translate likely hurts the most -- particularly for jetsetters who relied on those baked-in services to wrap their heads around various tongues. According to Goog, the Translate API has been officially deprecated "due to the substantial economic burden caused by extensive abuse." A pretty ominous phrase, to be sure, and further proof that a few rotten apples can ruin things for the whole of us. Hit the links below to get a glimpse of the full damage -- we're warning you, it ain't pretty.

Google pinpoints shutdown dates for Wave, Translate APIs (amongst others) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 28 May 2011 17:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/28/google-pinpoints-shutdown-dates-for-wave-translate-apis-amongs/

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Windows Phone 7 Numbers That Actually Matter

"The Windows Phone 7 Numbers That Matter," is the title of Brandon Watson's March 30 posting on The Windows Phone Developer Blog.

What numbers matter to Microsoft? Windows Phone Developer Tools have been downloaded some 1.5 million times. The Windows Phone developer community boasts 36,000 members. The Windows Phone 7 ecosystem contains around 11,500 applications.

Based on those numbers, a back-of-the-envelope calculation suggests one application published for approximately every 3.13 developers who signed onto AppHub. It also suggests that, out of the total Windows Phone Developer Tools downloads, less than 1 percent translated into a published application.

Is that bad?

"The numbers are not bad, actually," Al Hilwa, an analyst with IDC, wrote in an e-mail to me. "I think developers gravitate towards offerings inside their ecosystems first, but if they feel that such ecosystems are dysfunctional they might jump ship."

Microsoft already maintains a robust .NET/Windows and Microsoft tools ecosystem, he added, "so they are leveraging it well but have also created incentives to bring others from the outside, primarily ISVs who have developed Web, Apple or Android apps or games."

Hilwa's earlier research note to media suggested that Microsoft has surpassed certain application milestones "faster than Android did in its day, albeit it is easier to bring apps to a second- or third-mobile platform than the first time around." Android apparently took 11 months to reach the 10,000-application milestone, something that took Windows Phone 7 around six months.

IDC also released a mildly controversial note earlier this week, suggesting that Windows Phone 7 would overtake both Research In Motion's BlackBerry franchise and Apple's iOS by 2015, largely thanks to its partnership with Nokia. Personally, I had reservations with that report's opacity; without knowing the inputs or data that went into IDC's predictive analysis, it's difficult to take at face value the firm's rather precise predictions of, say, Windows Phone holding 20.9 percent of the market four years from now. Nor does IDC's report acknowledge the obvious uncertainties in making such predictions.

All that aside, at least one research firm seems to back Microsoft's claim that the Windows Phone 7 application ecosystem is a healthy one. Of course, by titling that blog posting, "The Windows Phone 7 Numbers That Matter," Watson implicitly acknowledged the giant elephant in the room: consumer sales figures.

Of which we know nothing. Microsoft executives claim Windows Phone 7 sales are roughly in line with that of other first-generation smartphone platforms, and they've confirmed that some 2 million units have been sold by manufacturers to retailers, but we still have no idea about gross total consumer activations.

That in itself is telling: companies aren't exactly shy to share when their products are selling in record numbers. Adrian Kingsley-Hughes over at ZDnet marched right out this morning and called a spade a spade, offering up a comment by Vince Vizzaccaro, executive vice president of marketing and strategic alliances at NetApplications.com: "We are tracking Windows Phone 7, but it hasn't gained enough market share yet to show up in our reports."

You can see for yourself how NetApplications' chart for operating-system market share lacks a Windows Phone presence. On the other hand, I wrote last month about how analytics firm Flurry had seen a marked rise in the number of Windows Phone 7 application starts, following rumors (and then confirmed news) of the Nokia partnership. So maybe third-party developers are indeed embracing the platform on the expectation that it'll pay future dividends?

I don't know; I don't know what I'm doing for dinner, much less four years from now. I do know that the Windows Phone team is a very dedicated group of people, and they've produced a platform solid enough in its philosophy and mechanics to warrant a look from anyone in the market for a smartphone. But it's felt lately like the platform is pushing against some substantial headwinds: not only robust competition from Apple iPhone and Google Android, but also things like this whole software-update snafu. "Shaky" is the term I want to use, in describing my feelings about Windows Phone 7's prospects.

But hey! On a more positive note, at least in the United States, two Windows Phone 7 devices--the Dell Venue Pro and HTC HD7--are currently in the delivery stage for the "NoDo" update, which includes cut-and-paste functionality. (The other three remain in the "Testing" stage, which is apparently controlled by the carriers.)


Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/MicrosoftWatch/~3/ZCSdrnfLLpw/windows_phone_7_numbers_that_actually_matter.html

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Writing Kit Text Editor Is a Mobile Research Room for iPad

Writing Kit is yet another text editor for the iPad. It manages to combine a rather powerful set of features, and yet it remains very simple to use, with an uncluttered interface.
First, Writing Kit is a Markdown editor. Markdown is a syntax invented by John Gruber which allows humans to write HTML markup. You write [...]

Source: http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/05/get-writing-text-editor-is-a-mobile-research-room-for-ipad/

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