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Chromium OS for All SBC Crams Chromium Onto a Raspberry Pi

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You can already install Chromium onto just about any computer out there, but that doesn’t include single board computers, like the Raspberry Pi or C.H.I.P. While it’s still early in development, Chromium OS for All SBC seeks to fix that oversight.

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OpenStack Developer Mailing List Digest March 12-18

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Create a VNet-to-VNet VPN in the Azure Management Portal

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Learn how to create two virtual networks (VNets) and link them together using a Virtual Private Network (VPN) in the new Azure Management Portal.

The post Create a VNet-to-VNet VPN in the Azure Management Portal appeared first on Petri.

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What Lies Beneath: The First Transatlantic Communications Cables

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For some reason, communications and power infrastructure fascinates me, especially the long-haul lines that move power and data over huge distances. There’s something about the scale of these projects that really gets to me, whether it’s a high-tension line marching across the countryside or a cell tower on some remote mountain peak. I recently wrote about infrastructure with a field guide that outlines some of the equipment you can spot on utility poles. But the poles and wires all have to end at the shore. Naturally we have to wonder about the history of the utilities you can’t see – …read more

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Understanding ARM Chips for Servers, the Cloud and IoT

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Docker Container Orchestration: What You Need to Know

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IEEE delivers Ethernet-for-cars standard

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802.3bw, aka 100BASE-T1, is optimised for wire weight

The march of Ethernet into motor vehicles continues, with the IEEE launching the first automotive standard for 100 Mbps Ethernet over single twisted pair cables.…

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Whatever happened to Green IT?

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When low energy levels are a good thing

Call it green computing or sustainable IT, ten years ago it was all the rage. The IT press was filled with articles about it. Today, it’s hard to find a headline that mentions it. What happened?…

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Amazon Web Services Turns Ten Years Old

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Mechanic computers used to pwn cars in new model-agnostic attack

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Proof-of-concept gets shiny sharp new teeth.

Nullcon Hacker Craig Smith has designed an attack whereby a car bearing malicious code could infect computers used in mechanics’ workshops. The workshop computers emerge capable of infecting nearly any other vehicle that arrives for service.…

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Oops! Microsoft says its ‘Bitcoin ban’ was a bug, not a feature

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Some twit put the wrong thing on the web and – silly us! – we took it at face value

Yesterday, we reported that Microsoft had stopped accepting Bitcoin in its digital tat bazaars.…

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Skyhook Wireless brings location services to wearables in a petite package

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Table with glass of water, fitness wearable and smartphone on it. Skyhook Wireless has been working on location technology for longer than many of the biggest names in smartphones have been around. Today it launched a new SDK aimed at bringing location to wearables in an extremely small code footprint. The challenge with wearables when it comes to location is that there isn’t a lot of real estate inside them and thus they tend to have underpowered… Read More

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LG builds a DAB+ digital radio radio into a smartmobe

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Not everyone has Spotify, or the download allowance to use it

Here’s an oddity: LG has launched a smartphone with a built-in DAB+ broadcast digital radio.…

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A simple typo stopped a $1 billion bank heist

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Typos happen, and it’s not usually the end of the world. Worst case: you just go back and fix them. A typo has probably never cost you money, and even if it has, […]

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Phonvert has a plan to convert old smartphones into IoT nodes

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pic While many retired smartphones still work and have usable sensors like cameras, accelerometers, touch screens and bluetooth radios, large swaths of them remain unused or, worse yet, end up in landfills. The team at Phonvert created an open source software platform that can convert old smartphones into usable IoT (Internet of Things) nodes. Read More

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WD’s PiDrive gives your Raspberry Pi 314GB of storage

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Sure, you can already add storage to your Raspberry Pi, but it’s usually an exercise in trade-offs: SD cards don’t hold much data, and USB drives (even the portable ones) tend to be too big and power-hungry for a mini PC. WD doesn’t think you should have to compromise, though. It’s shipping a new PiDrive that stuffs 314GB into a slim design that won’t overwhelm the Pi’s power system, but is fast enough to make full use of the USB connection. It even has a special version of BerryBoot (a multi-operating system tool) to help you load your platform of choice and fill that abundant space with apps.

The PiDrive is relatively expensive. Its normal $45.81 (£39.50) price is higher than that of the Raspberry Pi itself, and even a "limited-time" cut to $31.42 (£27.09) may have you thinking carefully before pulling the trigger. If you have a media server or another Raspberry Pi project that simply can’t get by on a few dozen gigs, though, it might be worth shelling out a little extra.

Via: Western Digital (PR Newswire)

Source: WD PiDrive (US), (UK)

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Google adds support for Microsoft Office, Facebook at Work, Slack and others to its single sign-on solution

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unnamed Google doesn’t just offer its own web-based productivity apps, but it also offers a service for business users who want to use Google as an identity provider for accessing other online services using the widely used SAML standard. Today, Google is adding a few new options to this program, which now includes a number of Google competitors. Among the 14 new pre-configured options are the… Read More

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Zubie makes your car part of the Internet of Things

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Zubie connected car device It seems like I talk about connected cars and V2X and autonomous vehicles like it’s my job. Probably because it is. But like a lot of people, I do not yet own a car that’s connected in any way. There are a lot of new companies that want to rectify this situation for us by using the OBD-II port to bring Wi-Fi and connected apps to the cars we already drive. If you’re wondering… Read More

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Google joins Facebook’s effort to reinvent the data center

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Facebook and Google aren’t the best of friends, but they’re willing to make exceptions for the right causes: Google has joined Facebook’s Open Compute Project in a bid to improve data centers everywhere. It’s starting off by contributing a new server rack spec that both improves power handling and lets project members’ racks slip into Google computing farms. The move isn’t entirely surprising, even though it involves an arch-rival. Google is no stranger to building its own hardware — it’s just offering some of that know-how to the tech industry in hopes of getting some upgrades in return.

It’s not the only company making moves, either. Microsoft is contributing SONiC, or Software for Open Networking in the Cloud. The code should help companies build switches and other networking gear using open source, widely compatible technology. While you probably won’t see a lot of these collaborations first-hand, you might just notice the difference if your favorite cloud services run that much faster or supply you with more storage.

Source: Google Cloud Platform Blog, Microsoft Azure Blog

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OpenStack Developer Mailing List Digest March 5-11

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Bill Gates, Ever The Company Man, Does A Reddit AMA, Claims “Bing Is The Better Product At This Point” – Brad Dickinson
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Bill Gates, Ever The Company Man, Does A Reddit AMA, Claims “Bing Is The Better Product At This Point”

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Bill Gates, co-founder of Microsoft and now co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, has held his very first AMA on Reddit.

He’s surprisingly good at it, answering over 30 questions and verifying his identity in a number of cute ways (photo at left, video below).

For the record, Gates’ preferred computer is the Microsoft Surface Pro, which he just got a week ago. He also believes that Windows 8 is better than Windows 7: “higher is better.”

“I am using a Perceptive Pixel display right now — huge Windows 8 touch whiteboard,” he wrote. “These will come down in price over time and be pervasive.”

Shockingly, the Microsoft founder also believes that Bing is “the better product at this point, seriously.”

Concerning the future, Gates believes that “robots, pervasive screens, speech interaction will all change the way we look at ‘computers’. Once seeing, hearing, and reading (including handwriting) work very well you will interact in new ways,” he wrote.

As can be expected, a Redditor questioned him about his relationship with Steve Jobs, and he had this to say:

He and I respected each other. Our biggest joint project was the Mac where Microsoft had more people on the project than Apple did as we wrote a lot of applications. I saw Steve regularly over the years including spending an afternoon with him a few months before he tragically passed away.

The software genius mentioned that he doesn’t code as much as he’d like to. “I write some C, C# and some Basic,” he wrote. “I am surprised new languages have not made more progress in simplifying programming. It would be great if most high school kids were exposed to programming.”

Surprisingly, the product Gates was most excited about at Microsoft, but which never made it to release, was WinFS. In essence, WinFS is a smart cloud storage system (a relational database) that would organize files automatically based on various attributes inferred by the system. WinFS was originally meant to ship with Vista, but according to Gates, it was “ahead of its time.”

Gates was also quizzed on his thoughts regarding an open Internet:

Q: What are your thoughts on the push against the open and free Internet that we have been seeing in the recent past and present (such as sopa, etc)?

There are two things this could reference. One is the free/pay for software mix. The Internet has benefited from having lots of free stuff and lots of commercial software. It has been interesting see people inventing hybrid models. Even stuff that is pretty commercial often has free versions for some audiences. Even the most open stuff often have services people choose to pay for.

The second thing is the anonymous versus identified tension. This is another one where both will probably thrive since you want anonymity for some things and full identity for others. I am surprised how little progress has been made in the identity space but it will improve.

He said that the cheapest things give him pleasure now that he’s insanely wealthy. His fave things include cheeseburgers, helping kids, and taking Open Course Ware courses.

You can catch the whole thing right here.

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