Archive for March, 2010

Microsoft, ford will apply hohm software for electric cars

March 31st, 2010

Microsoft and Ford announced a partnership ahead of the New York International Auto Show that will see upcoming Ford electric vehicles leveraging Microsoft’s Hohm software, which monitors utility consumption in homes and makes recommendations on what users can do to save energy. Electric cars have the potential to not only become the more energy-intensive item in drivers’ homes, but also exert pressure on the electrical grid should they become popular. In order to make the process more efficient, Microsoft and Ford intend to use Hohm to provide information to both customers and utilities on the steps they can take to make electric cars less of a drain on utility resources.

Microsoft and Ford will partner on making the automaker’s electric cars more energy efficient, both companies said in a joint March 31 announcement ahead of the New York International Auto Show. Specifically, the Microsoft Hohm platform will be offered as a cloud-based energy-management tool for owners of Ford’s future electric cars, for example informing them of the most optimal time to plug in a vehicle for recharging.

The joint announcement took place in Ford’s area at the New York International Auto Show, slated to run in Manhattan’s voluminous Jacob Javits Center from April 2-11. Ford CEO Alan Mulally came onstage to suggest that the partnership with Microsoft was part of an initiative to make its customers’ interactions with the utility grid “more efficient,” especially considering the potential drain that thousands of new electrical cars could put on the system. Ford plans on using Hohm for electric vehicles starting sometime in 2011.

Mulally said that Ford intended to “electrify our platforms” over the next few years, with five new hybrid vehicles due on the market by 2012. He then unveiled the Lincoln MKZ Hybrid, which will utilize the Microsoft-designed SmartGauge with Eco-Guide to give drivers long-term data on their fuel efficiency. Mulally claimed the vehicle, which will debut later in the year, is 50 percent more efficient than comparably sized luxury vehicles.

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer then appeared on a giant screen, via video link from Redmond, to talk about the partnership. After suggesting that Hohm “allows customers to better understand energy usage” and save an “average of 10 percent” on their utility bills, Ballmer went on to say that the partnership would ultimately benefit two groups: utility companies, which could use data from Hohm to “better understand and manage” the energy demands from electric cars on the grip, and customers, who could use the software to receive information on how, when, and where to best charge their vehicle.

Hohm takes users’ inputs about their energy choices in order to make recommendations about how to adjust energy expenditures in order to save money. Hohm’s analytics for performing its calculations are licensed from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the Department of Energy. An electric vehicle has the potential to become the largest energy-consuming element of a typical household; in that context, were Hohm to recommend habits such as plugging in the car late at night instead of during peak hours, users could save a good deal of money.

Ford is also examining the possibility of a smartphone app that would allow users to remotely view their electric car’s charge status.

Microsoft originally launched Hohm in July 2009, as part of a larger “green IT” initiative that also included the company’s Environmental Sustainability Dashboard for Microsoft Dynamics AX, which had been released that February. Code-named Niagara, after the birthplace of modern electricity and one of Nikola Tesla’s experiment sites, the platform is designed to run on any Web browser, including Internet Explorer, Firefox and Safari. From the beginning, Microsoft made a point of highlighting its partnerships with utility companies to allow their customers’ energy consumption information to be automatically uploaded to Hohm, with four such companies signed on at the outset.

Hohm asks users for their postal code and e-mail address, and then to fill out a home profile with questions such as, “What type of energy does your water heater use?” In return, Hohm offers a home-energy report with energy-savings recommendations (“Lower the temperature setting on your water heater”) alongside an estimated cost breakdown.

Along with Environmental Sustainability Dashboard for Microsoft Dynamics AX, designed to assist executives and IT administrators in monitoring energy costs, Microsoft’s green IT initiatives are directly competitive with Google’s PowerMeter software tool, which measures home energy consumption in near-real time via “smart” metering devices installed by a utility. As part of their own initiative, Google has partnered with power companies in California, Texas, Florida, India, Wisconsin, Missouri, and Kentucky, as well as Canada.

Source:http://www.eweek.com/c/a/IT-Infrastructure/Microsoft-Ford-Will-Apply-Hohm-Software-For-Electric-Cars-882736/

Antenna software receives frost & sullivan product leadership of the year award

March 31st, 2010

Antenna Software, delivering real business mobility to the world’s most demanding enterprises, today announced it has been selected by Frost & Sullivan as the recipient of its 2010 North American Product Leadership of the Year Award in Mobile Enterprise Applications Platforms. Antenna was recognized for its strategic industry partnerships, low implementation costs and overall excellence in delivering user-focused mobile applications and a best-of-breed mobility platform to its Global 2000 customer base.

Leveraging sophisticated and global research tools, Frost & Sullivan evaluated the top three vendors for this award and rated Antenna highest in each of the categories that were measured. The company’s state-of-the-art Antenna Mobility Platform (AMP), which allows enterprises to build, deploy and manage mobile business applications on multiple devices, sets Antenna apart. This platform also provides pre-packaged applications that meet the needs of mobile employees in a variety of roles and industries. Mobile applications powered by Antenna’s platform are developed with end users in mind, underpinning the notion that applications only make a difference — to people and the business — if they get used.

“Our renowned research approach enables us to determine how best-in-class companies worldwide manage growth, innovation and leadership in their respective markets,” said Jeanine Sterling, senior industry analyst, Frost & Sullivan. “This award recognizes Antenna Software’s ongoing commitment to providing customers with a comprehensive mobile enterprise applications platform solution to help meet their distinct business needs.”

Source:http://iphone.sys-con.com/node/1340052

Custom software development company, amadeus consulting becomes microsoft surface partner

March 31st, 2010

Amadeus Consulting, a Microsoft Gold Partner, recently enhanced its offerings by becoming a Microsoft Surface Partner, which enables them to create custom touch-based software applications for the Microsoft Surface.

Amadeus Consulting, a custom software development company, announced today that it has been selected as a Microsoft® Surface® Partner. This certifies competency and capability for developing custom applications for the Microsoft Surface.

Microsoft Surface is a revolutionary multi-touch computer that responds to natural hand gestures and real-world objects, helping people interact with digital content in a simple and intuitive way. Surface
recognizes multiple simultaneous users and accepts up to 52 different inputs at once, making it ideal for social, retail, and business environments.

Amadeus Consulting acquired a developer edition of Surface soon after it was released and has been developing applications for it ever since.
Surface’s unique and engaging Natural User Interface (NUI) creates a whole new opportunity for applications. Surface recognizes gestures and objects and does not depend on traditional input devices such as a stylus, mouse or keyboard.

“NUI the future of user interfaces,” said Joseph Klida, Vice President at Amadeus Consulting. “It is a more natural way to interact with technology. But it is still an emerging technology and not many companies are offering multi-touch development and custom applications for Microsoft Surface, and that is something we are uniquely qualified to do.”

In fact, Surface is still so new that it is still featured in Disneyland’s Futureland exhibit in California. Even so, companies are positioning themselves to take advantage of the unique capabilities that Surface offers, especially when equipped with custom software applications.
The unique capabilities span a broad range of customer uses, including point-of-sale engagement, mobile ecommerce, customer information and guidance and user check-in that can be used in any industry: retail, financial services, healthcare or IT. The custom application capability is endless and can add to the portfolio of your software needs.

Amadeus Consulting hopes to help companies adapt existing technologies and consumer engagement strategies to take advantage of new technologies and options. So far only a small handful of companies have deployed Surface, including a few real estate companies, AT&T Wireless stores, and Harrah’s-owned bars and resorts. But they are seeing big results and interest has been rising steadily among other organizations.

“We have seen inquiries grow ever since we started offering development for Surface,” said Klida. “People are starting to see the potential for Surface, and building ideas for how it could be used to enhance their business. We’re here to help those ideas become a reality.”

Amadeus Consulting is an experienced .NET developer, and has a long history developing applications for clients using Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) and Microsoft XNA, which are the two technologies used to develop custom applications for Surface.

Amadeus Consulting also has a long history of developing for Microsoft products and is a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner, and has achieved partner status in many other technologies, including Silverlight, Mobility, Data Management, and Custom Development.

Source:http://www.pr-inside.com/custom-software-development-company-amadeus-r1808394.htm

Deduplication backup software

March 31st, 2010

As we begin our dive into deduplication backup software, we will start with the guys that started it all:

Avamar. Since the early part of this decade, Avamar, originally a standalone company, and later as part of EMC, has been working to convince people that delivering deduplication in the backup software and starting the process at the client, is the way to go.

It seems like over the past few years they have been gaining steam, driven mostly by a clear articulation of where their source-side technology plays best, especially since one of those areas seems to be the VMware use case.

Architecturally speaking, this is essentially an enterprise back-up software application that is designed to send data to a custom back-end disk target. The software installs as an agent on the servers that are going to be protected and then sends backup data to a grid of interconnected server and storage nodes. There are several forms of delivery for this grid, but the predominant delivery package is a disk back-up appliance called an Avamar Data Store.

The client software, unlike other solutions, does all of the deduplication processing and communicates with the server grid to assure cross-client deduplication. The benefit to this is that only the changed segments are sent across the network to the disk target.

With source-side deduplication, the bulk of time is spent on identifying and minimizing what to back-up, compared to target-side dedupe, where the bulk of time is spent transferring all the data across the wire. Source-side dedupe means very minimal use of LAN/WAN network bandwidth, shorter backup transfer windows and of course, savings in backup storage at the potential expense of source processor utilization.

Processor utilization at the client has historically been a perceived as a concern with source-side deduplication technology, and was an issue when we first looked at the technology almost seven years ago. Of course, in seven years we have seen massive advances in server processing power, as well as improvement in overall efficiency of deduplication backup software.

As a result, what a customer should typically see today is a modest spike in CPU utilization at the client, but for a shorter amount of time, when compared to traditional backup software.

The short-duration impact of deduplication processing for most servers should be manageable, and where there is a concern, the amount of CPU resources used can be adjusted to customer specified limits. While this may lengthen the backups a bit, it allows you to maintain a service level on the host being backed up. This is especially important in VMware environments, where there is sensitivity to CPU consumption for backup, and where vMotion and other measures are often triggered by excessive CPU usage.

Once redundant, sub-file segment of data has been identified and eliminated (within and across clients). Only unique, new data is sent across the wire to be backed up. In unstructured data environments, Avamar claims that they can reduce data by over 99 percent. The backup data is received and written to disk at the Avamar Data Store.

In the Avamar Data Store, data is striped across the storage in the grid, and the processing load for the backup is distributed across the grid as well. Each node in the grid stores its data in a RAID 5 data protection scheme and then RAIN protection (Redundant Array of Independent Nodes, a grid-like RAID) is applied across the nodes.

RAIN provides persistence to any individual node failure, and also allows you to scale the grid without excessive downtime. In addition to RAID and RAIN, Avamar also offers data recovery verification.

Data is validated twice daily to make sure that whatever has been backed up is always in a recoverable state. Since Avamar does not rely on a full plus incremental recovery scheme, all recoveries from Avamar are one-step recoveries from logical full backups.

This means that pulling the last full backup from the weekend and layering nightly incrementals is not required.

Source:http://www.networkcomputing.com/deduplication/deduplication-backup-software—avamar.php

Computer software co. cmo sells redwood city 3BD

March 31st, 2010

Lisa Joy Rosner and Sheldon Berg sold a three-bedroom, two-bath home at 2439 Brewster Ave. in Redwood City to Bradley Hamel and Wendy Lair for $895,000 on March 11.

The 1,560-square-foot house was built in 1939 in the Roosevelt neighborhood.

Rosner is chief marketing officer at NetBase, a computer software company in Mountain View. She has more than 18 years of experience launching, rebranding and driving revenue for companies in Silicon Valley.

Prior to that, she held executive positions in marketing at MyBuys, BroadVision Inc. and at DecisionPoint Applications. She also held senior marketing roles at Brio Technology, SGI and at Oracle.

She received her bachelor’s degree in English literature from the University of Maryland. She also attended Bar-Ilan University in Israel.

According to BlockShopper.com, there have been 691 home sales in Redwood City during the past 12 months, with a median sale price of $672,000.

Source:http://sf.blockshopper.com/news/story/2500063923-Computer_software_co_CMO_sells_Redwood_City_3BD

Polarion software’s powerful application lifecycle management and requirements management enables iec 62304 and fda 21 cfr part 11 regulatory compliance for medical device companies

March 31st, 2010

Polarion Software, a leader in application lifecycle management and requirements management and a disruptive force in the software marketplace, announced today the availability of its MedPack plug-in, providing a turn-key lifecycle management solution for compliance to critical regulations governing the medical device industry including FDA 21 CFR Part 11 and IEC 62304.

Software reliability within computer controlled medical devices, such as pacemaker presents a significant risk for medical device manufacturers, who must prove compliance to regulations established to protect against personal injury, and most critically — loss of human life. FDA and IEC regulations demand that a company put in place and prove through an auditing process a rigorous lifecycle and requirements management process that ensures device quality and mitigates risk. Failure of an internal audit can result in steep financial penalties for a manufacturer, and potentially, a shut-down of manufacturing operations.

Today, it is virtually impossible for medical device manufacturers to verify software quality and process integrity post-development without a comprehensive application lifecycle management (ALM) and requirements management (RM) solution. Polarion’s MedPack plug-in enhances an already proven turn-key ALM and RM solution for medical device manufacturers with an automated and cost-effective pathway to regulatory compliance. Polarion’s MedPack plug-in includes:

* Key ALM functions necessary for regulatory compliance including requirements management, test case management, change and defect management, project control, risk management and risk analysis, traceability analysis, document management
* Medical device project templates for fast implementation
* Configurable user roles for managers, developers, auditors
* Centralized standards library
* Pre-configured workflows and processes providing immutable audit trails and enabling adherence to FDA 21 CFR Part 11

“The Polarion MedPack plug-in marries Polarion’s combined years of consulting experience with dozens of medical device customers, to bring to market a turn-key solution developed specifically to address regulatory compliance in this demanding and quality-obsessed industry,” Sven Wittorf, MedPack Project Manager.

Polarion ALM with MedPack has gained broad adoption across the medical device industry, including such companies as Frensius, GE Healthcare and Phonak AG, making it a ‘must-have’ for companies manufacturing or managing life-critical medical products, devices and processes. Further information on the MedPack plug-in is available from Polarion Software’s web site at http://www.polarion.com/products/medical/index_de.php.

“Polarion provides a complete infrastructure to support embedded software development for medical devices and for related regulatory compliance. Polarion’s solution includes all the critical components including configuration management, traceability, process support, documentation and checklists and provides these elements pre-configured and fully integrated,” said Professor Dr. Christian Johner, Institute for Information Technologies in Healthcare.

Source:http://www.marketwire.com/press-release/Polarion-Softwares-Powerful-Application-Lifecycle-Management-Requirements-Management-1140952.htm

Microsoft will offer free software training

March 31st, 2010

Technology giant Microsoft Corp. will offer free software training and certification to 26,000 Massachusetts residents through a partnership with the state Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development, the Patrick administration announced today.

Microsoft will offer 13,000 vouchers for online courses on its Window Vista operating system and popular Microsoft Office software suite; 5,000 vouchers for course for information technology professionals and developers; 5,000 vouchers for Office 2007 certification exams; and 3,000 vouchers for Office 2003 certification exams. The vouchers become available today, on a first-come, first served basis at the state’s 37 One Stop Career Centers.

“This public private partnership is exactly the kind of innovative program we need to help our workforce advance,” Governor Deval Patrick said in a statement. “Massachusetts residents will benefit from the opportunity to strengthen their computer skills as we continue to lead the way in businesses that rely heavily on technology.”

The Massachusetts training program is part of a broader effort by Microsoft to improve the technology skills of least 2 million people across the country. Microsoft has already provided 1 million training vouchers in 14 other states. Massachusetts is the first New England state to participate in the program.

“At Microsoft,” said Gail Thomas Flynn, the company’s vice president of state and local government, “we believe that this type of public-private partnership is playing an integral role in building the economy of states and localities across the country, making available the technology training that can expand employment and opportunity for many.”

Source:http://www.boston.com/business/ticker/2010/03/microsoft_will_1.html

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