Archive for March, 2010

Unlock any iPhone 3G/3GS with safest software solution, quick and easy

March 31st, 2010

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Source:http://www.officialwire.com/main.php?action=posted_news&rid=121857&catid=135

Microsoft, Ford Team on Electric Car Software

March 31st, 2010

Microsoft will expand its Hohm consumer energy management software to work with Ford Motor Company electric cars, the two companies announced Wednesday.

With Hohm, future owners of Ford’s electric vehicles will be able to determine when the best times will be to recharge their vehicles at home, executives from the two companies said at a press conference in New York.

As consumers start using electric and hybrid electric vehicles en masse, electric companies will experience surges of power demand in the evenings when people come home from work and plug in their automobiles for recharging, explained Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, via satellite.

“The demand placed on the energy grid will be momentous,” Ballmer said. “Addressing the challenge of how that demand is managed in a smart and affordable way is absolutely going to be critical. And information technology will be an essential part of supporting the energy ecosystem.”

The two companies pledged to work with utilities and municipal power companies so the software can determine when the most affordable times will be for consumers to recharge their vehicles.

According to a survey from Accenture, 42 percent of consumers are considering purchasing electric or hybrid electric vehicles. Ford plans to introduce five electric or hybrid vehicles for the North American and European markets by 2013. Already, Ford and Mercury offer four hybrids and Lincoln will introduce a new hybrid later this year.

Hohm is a Microsoft service that analyzes home electricity usage, suggesting changes for power savings.

Ford already collaborates with Microsoft for its Sync in-car technology, which allows personal electronics such as MP3 players and mobile phones to be controlled by voice recognition. Sync is based on Microsoft’s Windows Embedded Auto platform

Currently, over 2 million Ford vehicles use Sync, said Ford President and CEO Alan Mulally at the press conference.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/article/193030/microsoft_ford_team_on_electric_car_software.html

IBM offers free software for startups through new Global Entrepreneur program

March 31st, 2010

IBM just became the latest company to offer free software and other resources to startups, with the announcement of what it’s calling the IBM Global Entrepreneur initiative.

The program is meant for startups that are less than three years old, and that focus on the industries covered in IBM’s Smarter Planet program, including energy and utilities, health care, telecommunications, and government. Participating companies get free access to IBM software (though if you run the software on web-based infrastructure such as Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud, you’ll still have to pay for that), the opportunity to work with scientists in IBM Research, and to participate in IBM’s SmartCamp workshops.

In some ways, such as the younger-than-three-years requirement, IBM’s new program sounds similar to Microsoft BizSpark. Like BizSpark, the Global Entrepreneur initiative will help IBM connect to companies that might become huge successes a few years down the line, and to tie those companies to IBM technology and services.

IBM is also working with industry associations to help it find startups in countries like the United Kingdom, Israel, and France. In the United States, those partners include SD Forum, TiE Silicon Valley, Mass Tech Leadership Council, TiE Austin, and MassInno.

Source:http://venturebeat.com/2010/03/31/ibm-global-entrepreneur/

Apple Updates iTunes To Version 9.1, Gets Ready For iPad

March 31st, 2010

Apple Inc., the company responsible for bringing the iPhone into the lives of millions, has dished out iTunes 9.1 which is compatible with Apple’s much hyped iPad tablet device that will be up for sale from Saturday in the US.

The new version of Apple’s celebrated music managing software – which can be downloaded here – is designed to allow iPad users to sync their iTunes accounts, including music files, podcasts and videos with the device.

Interestingly, iTunes 9.1 will also support iBooks, allowing users to sync ebooks stored on their hard drives, with the iPad. The Telegraph reports that user interface of the new iTunes software remains the same, apart from the added support for iBooks.

The news site also reported that the company had made changes to the popular Genius music function, which allows users to automatically create playlists of song ‘that sound good together’.

The new Genius update will now allow users to remove, rename and rearrange the music tracks that have been created by the function.

Commenting on the launch of new iTunes 9.1, an article on the popular technology site Mashable mentioned that “By releasing the software early, they can find and remove any final bugs before one of the most important product launches in the company’s history.”

Source:http://www.itproportal.com/portal/news/article/2010/3/31/apple-updates-itunes-version-91-gets-ready-ipad/

Internal Billback of Software Licenses for Business Results

March 31st, 2010

Many of the benefits of internal billback processes are well-understood. Since so many enterprise resources are shared, it is critical to allocate the cost for these resources appropriately. If an organization is to have accurate ROI calculations for projects and initiatives, it is imperative that these kinds of costs are factored in. And of course software is one of the most expensive of these shared resources.

While investment planning is one benefit of billback processes, another benefit is cost savings. If all project leaders are charged for of the shared resources they are consuming, they will almost certainly use these resources more carefully. Encouraging this kind of cost-conscious behavior will visibly reduce the overall IT expenditure.

The problem is how to do billback accurately know that there are so many different complex license models in use. Many people have written about the increasing complexity of enterprise license agreements (for example, see this article). Much of the discussion around these new license models focuses on the challenge of maintaining software license compliance. But a less commonly recognized impact of this complexity is the effect on billback systems.

For example, if a database server is licensed by processor, then how should the use of that system be accurately billed back? Or if a software product is licensed for concurrently, how can billback be structured in a way to encourage frugal use of the software? With some creativity, a comprehensive billback process could be designed where enterprise users a rewarded for using lower cost database servers or using floating licenses during non-peak hours.

Do you have a billback system in your organization? Does it help with your ROI calculations? Do you think it could be structured in a way that actual encourage behavior that reduces overall IT expenditures?

Source:http://blogs.flexerasoftware.com/elo/2010/03/internal-billback-of-software-licenses-for-business-results.html

Google Vietnam Users Spied On

March 31st, 2010

Security engineers at Google Inc. and computer security company McAfee Inc. said malicious software was used to spy on government critics in Vietnam in what analysts suspect is the second major example in recent months of an Asian country trying to quash dissent on the Internet.

A posting on Google’s online security blog Tuesday said the software has targeted “potentially tens of thousands” of people who downloaded software enabling them to type in Vietnamese, and that the software was used by unknown persons to attack blogs criticizing the government’s policies. “Specifically, these attacks have tried to squelch opposition to bauxite mining efforts in Vietnam, an important and emotionally charged issue in the country,” wrote Neel Mehta, a Google engineer.

McAfee went further, saying on its security blog that the software is an example of a politically motivated cyber attack. McAfee Chief Technology Officer George Kurtz wrote on the blog Tuesday that the perpetrators “may have some allegiance to the government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.”

Vietnamese government officials didn’t respond to requests for comment, and it’s unclear who was behind the attacks. A Google spokesman declined to comment beyond the blog post. McAfee couldn’t immediately be reached for further details.

Still, the attacks mirror a recent series of similar incidents in China, leading some analysts to suggest that Vietnam—which has launched its own crackdown on dissidents in recent months—was copying China’s tactics in neutralizing the Internet as a tool for antigovernment activists.

“Vietnam is very keen to learn what China is doing to suppress dissent, and there is a close link between the public security ministries in both countries,” said Carlyle Thayer, a Vietnam expert and professor at the University of New South Wales in Canberra, Australia.

Google in January publicized what it said was a series of attacks on accounts on its Gmail email service belonging to journalists and human rights activists in China, as well as a hacking attack on it and other companies. Combined with growing concerns about censorship, Google last week decided to move its Chinese-language search operations to Hong Kong.

While the Vietnam attacks weren’t as sophisticated as those in China, Google’s Mr. Mehta wrote, they represent another example of how political expression was vulnerable to the deployment of malicious software and other hacking techniques.

Internet use in Vietnam has mushroomed in recent years. Vietnam’s communications ministry says around a quarter of the country’s 86 million people regularly surf the Web. While initially welcoming this rush of online activity, Vietnam’s authorities in recent months have shown their repeated concern about how it can be used to spread criticism of government policies and agitate in favor of democracy and other reforms.

“The regime has discovered there is a whole flank they can be outmaneuvered on so they have come in hard. Their policy is to seize the initiative in the cyber domain and crush all opposition,” Mr. Thayer said.

Last year, government officials instructed Internet service providers to block access to the social-network site Facebook, according to people familiar with the situation, and that Web site remains difficult to access in Vietnam.

Other sites that officials consider a threat to national security are also blocked. Separately, the government has jailed around a dozen human rights activists in recent months in a coordinated crackdown on dissidents, analysts and diplomats say.

Vietnam’s plans to develop a bauxite mine in the country’s environmentally sensitive Central Highlands region has proved to be a magnet for dissent, both online and otherwise.

Police last year detained several bloggers for criticizing the government’s plans to develop the mine in conjunction with Chalco, a unit of China’s state-run Aluminum Corp. of China. Critics are concerned about environmental damage resulting from surface mining for bauxite, an ore used in making aluminum.

They are also worried about an influx of Chinese workers and growing Chinese influence in Vietnam. The two countries fought a border war in 1979 and continue to wrangle over control of islands in the South China Sea.

In December, an activist Web site called bauxitevietnaminfo.com was hacked, and McAfee said the attacks began around the same time. Mr. Kurtz said somebody broke into a Web site run by a California-based organization called the Vietnamese Professionals Society that was founded to promote better awareness of social and political issues in Vietnam. The hacker switched a Vietnamese-language keyboard program that can be downloaded from the site with a malware program.

Google’s Mr. Mehta said computers attempting to download the keyboard software were infected with the malware. “These infected machines have been used both to spy on their owners” as well as render inaccessible blogs and Web sites containing antigovernment content, he wrote. The group couldn’t be reached Wednesday.

Some of the country’s largest trading partners already have expressed their concern about Vietnam’s increasingly conservative tendencies as it struggles to deal with rising inflation and a widening trade deficit. Vietnam’s finance ministry is currently considering proposals to introduce price controls on foreign and private companies selling goods such as gasoline, milk and building materials to help cap rising costs. U.S. Ambassador Michael Michalak in December told a donor conference that the Internet curbs were hindering the expansion of commerce in the country.

“This isn’t about teenagers chatting online,” Mr. Michalak said at the time. “It’s a question of people’s rights to communicate with one another and to do business.”

Source:http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304252704575155114116763100.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_MIDDLENexttoWhatsNewsThird

Internal Billback of Software Licenses for Business Results

March 31st, 2010

Many of the benefits of internal billback processes are well-understood. Since so many enterprise resources are shared, it is critical to allocate the cost for these resources appropriately. If an organization is to have accurate ROI calculations for projects and initiatives, it is imperative that these kinds of costs are factored in. And of course software is one of the most expensive of these shared resources.

While investment planning is one benefit of billback processes, another benefit is cost savings. If all project leaders are charged for of the shared resources they are consuming, they will almost certainly use these resources more carefully. Encouraging this kind of cost-conscious behavior will visibly reduce the overall IT expenditure.

The problem is how to do billback accurately know that there are so many different complex license models in use. Many people have written about the increasing complexity of enterprise license agreements (for example, see this article). Much of the discussion around these new license models focuses on the challenge of maintaining software license compliance. But a less commonly recognized impact of this complexity is the effect on billback systems.

For example, if a database server is licensed by processor, then how should the use of that system be accurately billed back? Or if a software product is licensed for concurrently, how can billback be structured in a way to encourage frugal use of the software? With some creativity, a comprehensive billback process could be designed where enterprise users a rewarded for using lower cost database servers or using floating licenses during non-peak hours.

Do you have a billback system in your organization? Does it help with your ROI calculations? Do you think it could be structured in a way that actual encourage behavior that reduces overall IT expenditures?

Source:http://blogs.flexerasoftware.com/elo/2010/03/internal-billback-of-software-licenses-for-business-results.html

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