Archive for the ‘Digital development’ Category

Where is the Microsoft tablet?

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

Steve BallmerLess than a year after deploying the original iPad tablet, Apple will make a second iteration available in stores at the end of this week: the sleeker, internally beefier iPad 2. Meanwhile, Google and its original equipment manufacturer partners will be flooding the tablet market this year with Honeycomb devices using the Android 3.0 operating system And Research In Motion will release the BlackBerry PlayBook in the next month or so and even Palm has been resurrected via Hewlett-Packard’s webOS TouchPad, coming this summer.

Who’s missing?

Most federal employees seem to be waiting for Microsoft to release a tablet to compete with Apple and Google. Feds trust Microsoft and they like the interoperability it can offer across the enterprise. In contrast, Apple is not focused on the business enterprise per se, and Android still represents the Wild West of mobile operating systems, a problem (for now) in risk-averse federal IT departments.

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Five Cloud Security Trends

Thursday, February 24th, 2011

What do CSOs and other IT security experts expect to be top-of-mind cloud security issues in 2011? Here are five things to watch for in the coming year:

cloud-computing

1. Smart phone data slinging. More users will be accessing large amounts of data on the devices of their choice, says Randy Barr, CSO at Qualys Inc. and member of the Cloud Security Alliance (CSA). “This comes with a lot of unaddressed security issues,” Barr says. “We can expect new solutions to address mobile devices, but could see a large data breach to expose the issue of mobile security before we see a solution.” Among the possible scenarios, Barr says, are insecure cloud-based backup and highly confidential data on mobile devices.”There are some interesting inter-dependencies when using multiple cloud services on mobile devices, with possibly different security models and assumptions,” he says. A hacked cloud provider could provide mass access to confidential mobile device data when mobile users are using cloud-based mobile device support, he says. In addition, loss or theft of mobile device could provide root-level access to cloud services and data. Mobile apps are often providing direct and automated access to cloud services and data, he says. If an admin-level person’s mobile device is stolen, this could be a major threat to highly confidential data or even cloud services administered by such a person from an insecure mobile device.

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Apple to Launch Ipad 2 on 2 March

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

Apple supposedly will launch the Ipad 2 on 2 March.

Apple’s projected Ipad 2 launch date comes after blasphemous reports of delays by a Taiwanese brokerage firm that sent Apple shares diving almost three percent. Apple’s COO Tim Cook is expected to take the stage on 2 March and reveal the successor to the Ipad.

ipad-2-update

The impending arrival of Apple’s second shiny mirror had been put into doubt yesterday, with a stockbroker’s note saying that Apple’s partners had encountered production issues that were taking time to resolve. Reuters now says that those comments were “simply not true”.

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5 Ways Mobile Will Transform Commerce

Monday, February 21st, 2011

mobile-commerceGiven everything your smartphone does for you now, from mapping the skies to tracking your rides and delivering your website analytics, isn’t it a bit surprising how difficult it is to buy stuff with it? Mobile commerce — like flying cars or domestic robots — is one of those promises that has long seemed just around the corner; a logical next step, but one that has receded into the future before us, like a financial mirage.

At the risk of getting fooled again, I think that’s about to change. Twitter lights up every time Apple hires an engineer with expertise in near field communication (NFC), the wireless technology that will most likely power wave-and-pay mobile systems, and Eric Schmidt showed off tap-and-pay capability in an Android phone at the Web 2.0 Summit last fall. The fastest growing smartphone platform seems determined to roll out payment capability soon, and BlackBerry and WebOS are not far behind.

So what? How will that change your life if, instead of reaching into your wallet or purse to whip out a credit card, you instead wave or tap your mobile? Here are a few thoughts on how this shift will change the way you shop.

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Nvidia CEO: Future laptops will mirror MacBook Air

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

Nvidia’s CEO added his two cents to an increasingly popular theory on laptop design: that is, the MacBook Air as a template for all future designs.

mac_book_air3

In case you’re wondering where the laptop is headed–circa 2014–Nvidia CEO Jen-Hsun Huang offered what could be considered a highly educated guess in response to a question I posed to him in a phone interview today.

“You’ll have trouble finding one that doesn’t look like the MacBook Air,” he said. “I think the Macbook Air is a good mental image of what a clamshell laptop will look like.”

“They’ll be thin because you won’t need any heat pipes, the fan, and extra batteries to lug around,” according to Huang.

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