Archive for June, 2011

WELD-IT software estimates fabrication costs

June 20th, 2011

A novel software tool could enable small and medium-sized enterprises in the welding sector to compete on the international stage.

Welding engineers play a vital role in any manufacturing environment, providing support to design teams by selecting and costing welding and associated processes such as manipulation.

However, because many small to medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) across Europe cannot afford the luxury of in-house welding engineers, they have to rely on internal ’estimators’, who may not have the required welding expertise, or outsource the role to third parties.

But now, thanks to European Union funding, a software-based welding tool is currently under development that could change all this. Called WELD-IT, the system will offer smaller welding and fabrication companies a means to reliably and automatically select and cost welding operations used to construct steel assemblies.

The software is being developed by a consortium of companies led by the MFKK Invention and Research Centre in Budapest, Hungary. Joining them in the project are welding experts from TWI, based in Cambridge, UK, and Slovakia-based First Welding Company, who will work alongside developers at Bulgarian software company Nemetschek, design and CAD experts at Infotron in Turkey and materials handling and welding specialists at Sudotim in Romania and GI-Flex in Hungary.

Using software developed at MFKK, the WELD-IT program under development since November last year will first read CAD drawings to identify where weld data are to be found. Once that has been achieved, the characteristics of the specific welds will be compared against a database of existing welding data to find a suitable match.

According to Paul Jones, who is managing TWI’s contribution to the project, the development of the database is crucial to the success of the project. ’A key aspect of the work is to build up a library of welding jobs and their associated costs so that the software can provide an estimate of the welding and fabrication cost, based on options selected by the software itself and/or entered by the user,’ he said.

As such, Jones added that the database will need to be updated with at least 500 examples of welding instances before the software package is rolled out to an SME user group in August 2011. That group will then put it through its paces by entering data into it and validating the results that are obtained. To create the database, the engineers at TWI are working with a core of 10 companies in the UK, while the other consortium members are working with similar numbers in their respective countries. Jones explained that the system will capture the most relevant parameters involved in costing a welding process. It will also contain data relating to heat treatment, manipulation and handling, all of which add to the cost of manufacturing steel assemblies.

Once fully developed, the WELD-IT software will also be capable of generating preliminary welding procedure specifications documents that describe how welds should be performed in a real production environment based on the welds that it identifies in the CAD drawing.

When it is launched in November next year, the WELD-IT software package will take the form of a traditional software product that can be licensed by manufacturers.

The consortium members decided on this approach rather than distributing the software as an online application after consultation with potential customers who expressed concern about disseminating proprietary or confidential information that they might enter into the software from their own databases.

Once it does reach the market, however, Jones is confident that it will play a vital role enabling SMEs in the welding industry to be more competitive with larger players in the sector, both in Europe and abroad.

Source:http://www.theengineer.co.uk/production-engineering/in-depth/weld-it-software-estimates-fabrication-costs/1009082.article

Microsoft says WebGL is the Byron of software

June 20th, 2011

Software giant Microsoft has ruled that the Khronos Group’s WebGL graphics technology “too dangerous” to support.

The fact that rivals Google’s Chrome and Mozilla’s Firefox are shipping with support for WebGL has nothing to do with Microsoft’s statement.

Neither has the fact that Google calls WebGL “the most powerful way to add 3D graphics to web pages” and encourages developers to “experiment with graphics programming.”

Of course Microsoft is not against the software because the big cheeses at the Mozzarella Foundation claim that it is ideal for “interactive 3D games, vivid graphics and new visual experiences for the Web”.

Vole makes the claims on the official bog of the Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC) and signed by MSRC Engineering. It was posted by swiat, which is short for Secure Windows Initiative Attack Team, the group that is responsible for the security architecture of Windows and other Microsoft products, that the ruling follows two reports from Context Information Security.

These state that there are serious design flaws and security problems in WebGL making it a doddle to steal user data through a web browser.

Microsoft said that its analysis concluded Microsoft products supporting WebGL would have a tough time passing Microsoft’s Security Development Lifecycle requirements.

It thinks that WebGL will likely become an ongoing source of hard-to-fix vulnerabilities and in its current form, it can’t endorse WebGL’s security.
Basically the problem is that WebGL tells the world how the person’s hardware works in a way Vole considers more permissive than a French bordello for the morally challenged.

Vole said that Graphics drivers can’t be depended on to uphold security guarantees, and there’s no workable security servicing model for video card drivers.

Microsoft thinks that WebGL enables denial-of-service scenarios that would make it “possible for any web site to freeze or reboot systems at will.”
Khronos Group has been downplaying security concerns, although it did point out that browser vendors are still working toward passing a WebGL conformance suite.

Some of the problems that Vole is banging on about are allegedly due to a bug in Firefox, and has been fixed in Firefox 5.

Google spokesperson said the company doesn’t see WebGL as a significant threat to its users.

There are a lot of frightening things in the world, such as bears, great white sharks and Justin Bieber, so what is a security flaw, he didn’t say.

He did say that parts of the WebGL stack, including the GPU process, “run in separate processes and are sandboxed in Chrome to help prevent various kinds of attacks.”

Source:http://www.techeye.net/software/microsoft-says-webgl-is-the-byron-of-software

Microsoft releases a Windows Kinect SDK

June 17th, 2011

GAMING SOFTWARE DEVELOPER Microsoft has released a Windows software development kit (SDK) for its Kinect motion sensor gaming controller.
Microsoft has enjoyed considerable success with its innovative Kinect motion detector for the Xbox 360. However, by the firm’s own admission, some of the most creative uses for Kinect have come from PC developers who had to hack the Kinect in order to get access to its data streams. Now Microsoft has released a Windows SDK that will give developers access to the raw data streams collected by the Kinect’s sensors.
The Windows Kinect SDK provides developers with data from the depth sensor, colour camera sensor and the microphone array, and will allow them to work with the high speed skeletal tracking system. Microsoft also released a wedge of documentation to get developers going.
Microsoft held a 24 hour coding marathon where 50 developers were asked to see what they could manage to conjure up, and the results were pretty impressive.
Kinect has been a rare beacon of light for Microsoft in the past year. The firm claims to have sold more than 10 million Kinect controllers and it’s not hard to see why. The technology is compelling and offers the ability to create gesture driven interfaces, something that many firms including AMD, ARM and Intel have said will become the focus of operating system development in the coming years.
At present the SDK works only on Windows 7, however it’s likely that a bunch of smart Linux developers will find a way of porting it over to that operating system before too long.

Source:http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/2079809/microsoft-releases-windows-kinect-sdk

U.S. warns of problems in Chinese SCADA software

June 17th, 2011

Two vulnerabilities found in industrial control system software made in China but used worldwide could be remotely exploited by attackers, according to a warning issued Thursday by the U.S. Industrial Control Systems Cyber Emergency Response Team (ICS-CERT).

The vulnerabilities were found in two products from Sunway ForceControl Technology, a Beijing-based company that develops SCADA (supervisory control and data acquisition) software for a wide variety of industries, including defense, petrochemical, energy, water and manufacturing, the agency said.

Sunway’s products are mostly used in China but also in Europe, the Americas, Asia and Africa, according to the agency’s advisory.

The problems could cause a denial of service issue or remote code exploitation in Sunway’s ForceControl 6.1 WebServer and its pNetPower AngelServer products. Both issues were found by Dillon Beresford, who works for the security testing company NSS Labs.

Sunway issued patches for the vulnerabilities on May 20 and thanked Beresford for his research in an advisory. ICS-CERT said there are no known exploits for the vulnerabilities, but computer security experts generally recommend patching software as soon as possible.

ICS-CERT added that its unlikely someone could create consistent exploit code for the two vulnerabilities, and that an attacker would need to have “intermediate” skills to exploit the problems.

SCADA software has come under increasing attention from security researchers, as the software has often not undergone rigorous security audits despite its use to manage critical infrastructure or manufacturing processes. SCADA systems are increasingly connected to the Internet, which has opened up the possibility of hackers remotely breaking into the systems.

Last year, researchers discovered a highly sophisticated worm called Stuxnet that was later found to target Siemens’ WinCC industrial control software. Stuxnet is widely believed to have been created with the intention of disrupting Iran’s uranium enrichment program.

Source:http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9217722/U.S._warns_of_problems_in_Chinese_SCADA_software

BMC Software and Unisys Join Forces to Deliver Advanced Cloud Solutions

June 16th, 2011

Today BMC Software, Inc. (NASDAQ:BMC) and Unisys Corporation (NYSE:UIS) announced a joint initiative to deliver and manage advanced cloud solutions that make clients’ IT organizations more responsive and efficient in delivering business services.

“The Unisys and BMC solution gives clients a way not only to plan and implement, but also to manage, new cloud solutions that integrate with existing, mission-critical IT infrastructure”
Drawing on their complementary strengths, the two global technology leaders are basing the joint solutions on BMC’s second-generation Cloud Lifecycle Management (CLM) offering combined with Unisys’ comprehensive cloud advisory, implementation and management services portfolio.

The BMC and Unisys initiative will address strategy, planning, design, implementation and operational management of cloud computing solutions to make it possible for customers to realize both immediate and long-term business value through a disciplined approach to cloud computing.

“As cloud computing matures, companies are increasingly finding that it pays to invest in cloud solutions that are agile and innovative yet complete and disciplined,” said Kia Behnia, BMC’s chief technology officer. “The BMC and Unisys offering provides access to a market leading cloud management solution coupled with innovative strategic advisory, planning and management services. Such a combination will provide tangible returns for our customers.”

“The Unisys and BMC solution gives clients a way not only to plan and implement, but also to manage, new cloud solutions that integrate with existing, mission-critical IT infrastructure,” said Fred Dillman, chief technology officer, Unisys. “We apply a pragmatic approach that reduces complexity and enables clients to lower costs while continuing to realize value from their long-term IT investments.”

La Caixa, Spain’s largest savings bank and third largest finance company, transformed its data center, embraced cloud computing and streamlined its IT services through the combined BMC and Unisys offering it has implemented.

“By transforming our data center and embracing cloud computing, we are using IT to better serve our customers,” said Carlos Campaña, La Caixa’s Deputy General Manager for Architecture and Infrastructure.

Unlike offerings from other IT vendors, BMC’s cloud management portfolio specifically addresses the practical requirements of taking cloud computing from a pilot technology to a core, business-critical IT service. This includes managing the broad combination of hardware and virtualization technologies that customers already own as well as providing choice for future technology requirements. BMC’s cloud management portfolio is part of BMC’s Dynamic Business Service Management (BSM) platform, which provides IT organizations with a unified management capability across physical, virtual, and hybrid environments, thereby reducing their costs.

BMC’s second-generation Cloud Lifecycle Management (CLM) solution provides support for deploying business-ready cloud environments from service request to service retirement. It accelerates provisioning, optimizes ongoing operations, and rapidly meets the needs of the business. Serving as the intelligent engine within the cloud, BMC’s newly introduced, policy-based Service Governor included with CLM enables customers to leverage automation and policy to expertly place, configure, and manage cloud services. BMC offers this capability today, enabling dramatic increases in the efficiency of provisioning and managing production and pre-production clouds regardless of whether they are private, public, or hybrid in nature.

The joint solution benefits from the Unisys Hybrid Enterprise approach, a services framework for integrating cloud solutions with mission-critical data-center infrastructure. This approach enables joint clients to get the most from the BMC cloud solutions and avoid “cloud in a corner” computing environments that are not well integrated with the organization’s existing systems, processes and business models.

Unisys Advisory and CloudBuild Services are core elements both of that framework and of the joint solution. The Advisory Services provide strategic and financial guidance to help clients inventory and assess application workloads and prioritize those which are best suited to a cloud delivery model. The CloudBuild Services provide a rigorous methodology for the planning, design and implementation of cloud environments spanning eight core work streams that impact a cloud data center solution.

The joint solution also draws on Unisys Converged Remote Infrastructure Management Suite of solutions. This suite provides integrated, “single pane” management of clients’ multi-vendor infrastructures – the “day two” management capability missing from many competing cloud solutions.

Source:http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20110616005516/en/BMC-Software-Unisys-Join-Forces-Deliver-Advanced

India’s $35 tablet launching this month

June 16th, 2011

After hitting the roadblock for over six months, the Indian government backed ambitious low-cost tablet project is finally set to take off.

According to latest media reports, the low-cost $35 tablet codenamed ‘Sakshat’ is expected to launch by the end of this month.

The country’s answer to the $100 laptops developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology will be powered by Linux OS and is made by HCL Technologies.

As for the specs, the 7-inch touchscreen tablet will come with inbuilt keyboard, video conferencing facility, multimedia content, Wi-Fi, USB port, 32GB hard drive and 2GB RAM. The tablet will support Open Office, SciLab and Internet browsing.

According to reports, government has decided that 10,000 Sakshat tablets will be delivered to IIT Rajasthan in late June. Also, over the next four months more than 90,000 tablet units will be ready for launch and will come at a price of Rs 2,200.

Reports claim that the government later plans to further subsidise the cost by 50 per cent which means the device may cost somewhere around Rs 1,100.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/personal-tech/gadgets-special/Indias-35-tablet-launching-this-month/articleshow/8876610.cms

HP Sues Oracle Over Software Development For Itanium Processors

June 16th, 2011

Amid the simmering cold war between friends-turned-foes, technology giant Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ: News ) has Wednesday sued Oracle Corp. (ORCL: News ) over the enterprise software giant’s decision that it would no longer develop software that runs on Intel Corp.’s (INTC: News ) Itanium microprocessors.

Redwood City, California-based Oracle has been a close partner of HP and bundled enterprise software along with the large computing systems that HP sold to corporations. However, they became fierce rivals after Oracle’s acquisition of Sun Microsystems last year as well as its hiring of HP’s ousted CEO Mark Hurd. SunMicro makes chips that compete with Itanium and servers that compete with HP.

In the lawsuit filed in a California Superior Court in Santa Clara county, HP alleged that Oracle has breached an agreement to support the Itanium microprocessor, and accuses it of engaging in unfair competition by trying to force HP’s Itanium customers to shift to hardware supplied by Oracle.

The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages and an injunction preventing Oracle from making misleading statements in the future.

Meanwhile, Oracle has responded to the filing of the lawsuit, denying HP’s claims on breach of an agreement. Oracle said that HP explicitly asked it to guarantee continued support for Itanium while framing the agreement, but was refused by Oracle and the support guarantee clause was deleted in the final signed agreement in September 2010.

Oracle believes HP asked particularly for the inclusion of the long-term support commitment clause for Itanium because it knew all about Intel’s plans to discontinue Itanium. However, Oracle said it did not learn about Intel’s plans until March 2011, and that HP was taking advantage of its ignorance.

Oracle stated in March that HP is also well aware that Intel’s future direction is focused on X86 and that plans to replace Itanium with X86 are already in place, and charged HP of knowingly withholding the information from HP-Oracle joint Itanium customers.

HP also misled customers by issuing numerous public statements to deceive their customers and shareholders into believing that these plans to end-of-life Itanium do not exist. However, Intel’s plans on Itanium will be revealed in court now that HP has filed the utterly malicious and meritless lawsuit, Oracle said.

Meanwhile, Oracle had confirmed in March, when this controversy was created by HP, that it will continue to support its current customers on existing oracle products running on Itanium microprocessors. However, Oracle added then that new versions of Oracle software will not run on Itanium.

Source:http://www.rttnews.com/Content/TopStories.aspx?Node=B1&Id=1647336

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