Tracking Airplanes From An Autonomous Boat

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Tracking Airplanes From An Autonomous Boat

Airplane tracking systems like FlightRadar24 rely on people running radios that receive the ADS-B signal and forward the data on to them. That doesn’t work so well in the middle of the ocean, though: in spots like the mid-Atlantic, there are no islands to speak of.

So, the service is now experimenting with a new approach: putting an ADS-B radio onto an autonomous boat. The boat is a Wave Glider from Liquid Robotics, an autonomous boat that harvests the power of the waves to run propulsion, guidance, and its payload. In this case, that payload includes an ADS-B receiver and a satellite transmitter that uploads the plane data to the service, where it is added to their mix of data sources. The boat is planned to spend the next six to eight weeks cruising about 200 miles off the coast of Norway, listening to the broadcasts of planes flying overhead and relaying them back to HQ. They will then be plotted on the live map in blue.

If you’re interested in building your own plane-trackers, we’ve got you covered, at least on land.

No, Apple, digital zoom still sucks

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Apple continues to dance a sexy dance for photographers all over the world, launching better cameras with more features and higher quality. But when Phil Schiller, VP of marketing at Apple stands on a stage saying that digital zoom is a good thing, real photographers won’t listen to him. Neither should you. Here is why.

Two lenses. Twice as scrumptious.

Two lenses. Twice as scrumptious. A 28mm equivalent and a 56mm equivalent. Yesss.

The thing that had me jumping up and down on my chair throwing swearwords at my computer was Phil Schiller’s claim that digital zoom was somehow a good thing. It really isn’t. It never has been. It never* will be.

The problem with digital zoom

Y’see, the problem is that your photos are limited to the amount of light your camera is able to gather. When you use digital zoom, you’re no longer using the full imaging sensor; instead, you are using fewer and fewer pixels. You usually still get the same number of pixels, which is accomplished by interpolating a lower number of pixels to cover the full image. You don’t have to be a professional photographer to realize that’s not great.

Even if you don’t need all twelve megapixels for your photo — say, if you’re just uploading them to Facebook, Instagram or Snapchat — there are other problems with using digital zoom. The image stabilization is optimized for full-frame images, so when you start zooming in, you don’t even get the full benefit of the IS. In other words: You’d better have rock-solid hands.

Worst of all — cameras have flaws. There is no way of avoiding that. When you start pixel peeping, those flaws become oh-so-very-painfully obvious.

“But Haje,” you cry in frustration and disappointed rage, “How will I get my subjects bigger in my frame?”

Simple. Zoom with your feet. If you want something to get bigger, walk closer. It’ll do your photography a world of good.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m hella excited about twin cameras. Adding a longer focal-length lens is a brilliant move. It means that you can get up close and personal with your subjects. It’ll make a tremendous difference for smartphone photographers, for sure.

Awesome cameras; stick with the optical zoom ratios

Schiller, I love you, man, but this is just being silly.

Schiller, I love you, man, but now you are just being silly.

Having two whole different camera assemblies rather than an optical zoom feature is smart, too. Moveable parts in a camera this small means that the manufacturing tolerances have to be ridiculously precise. Moving parts are also susceptible to knocks and bumps and mechanics eventually wear out. So yes; two lenses is smart. In fact, I have no doubt that Apple’s iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus will be some of the best cameras available in mobile devices.

But… if you want to make the most of ’em, don’t listen to people spouting marketing bollocks on stage. Shun digital zoom like the bubonic plague and stick to the zooms provided by the cameras. On Apple’s iPhone 7 Plus, that means you should shoot at 1x or 2x zoom, nothing in between and nothing beyond. If you really want to “zoom” your image, you can always crop it later, with much the same effect.

*There is one tiny little super-geeky caveat here: If you are using digital zoom to zoom to somewhere between the two extremes, you could in theory use high-end light-field calculations to get a zoom ratio that is better than the sum of its parts. In that case, the camera could use a cropped version of the wide-angle camera, augment it with data from the other camera and create a composite image that could, in theory, be a happy medium. That’s the route Light’s L16 is going down, after all. There’s no evidence currently that this is the case for Apple’s iPhone 7 Plus, however.

Ireland looks like it’s outpacing Britain in the superfast broadband rollout stakes

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Comment How do Blighty’s future broadband plans compare to its Irish neighbour, which arguably has its sights on a much more ambitious target than BT?

The UK’s state-subsidised broadband deployment scheme ends next year, with the scheme on track to deliver “super fast” coverage to 95 per cent of Great Britain.

Plans for connecting the final five per cent of the UK have involved, so far, vague talk of a Universal Service Obligation of 10Mbps, with operators in Blighty having remained lukewarm about putting themselves forward.

Former digital minister Ed Vaizey has said he believes BT is best placed to meet that target by the end of the decade, without the necessity of a state subsidy.

In contrast, the Irish government’s National Broadband Plan intends to ensure that between 2017 and 2022, every address in Ireland will have at least 30Mbps broadband and be “future proofed” – something that will cost €275m (£235m).

It follows the EU’s Digital Single Market vision, which foresees a baseline speed of 30Mbps accessible for all by 2020 in a 25-year-long contract. The plan covers 750,000 postal addresses and some 1.8m citizens, including 1,522 primary schools, 80,266 farms, 64,440 non-farm businesses and, ultimately, 38 per cent of the working population.

Currently 1.4m homes and businesses, some 60 per cent of premises across Ireland, can access high-speed broadband, according to incumbent telecoms operator Eircom.

Plans for broadband do not automatically translate to fibre connections, however.

The original plan had been to begin procurement by the middle of 2016, bringing broadband to 85 per cent of premises by 2018 and 100 per cent by 2020. It has now been delayed until 2017, with talk now of all homes not having high-speed broadband until 2022.

Ireland’s Department of Communications blamed the delay on a complicated procurement process. After the 25-year contract ends, the government intends to privatise the National Broadband Plan network.

Celtic Tigers and paper plans

So far, Ireland’s recovery from recession has largely been focused around urban areas, and mainly Dublin. Plans to broaden connectivity to include all rural areas could give a significant stimulus to the economy.

According to the Akamai State of the Internet Q4 2015 report, the UK is 17th in the world for fastest average speeds at 13.8Mbps. In contrast, Ireland comes in at 23rd with an average speed of 12.8Mbps. With a relatively ambitious strategy to broaden superfast speeds to the entire population, Ireland stands a chance of surpassing the UK in the global rankings.

Certainly, there has been a distinct lack of any coherent strategy for Blighty in terms of what its fibre future might look like.

BT and the government have consistently argued that the priority to date has been to ensure nearly everyone has superfast speeds, rather than prioritising fibre-to-the-premises (FTTP) and leaving vast swathes of the country disconnected. Both Spain and France have much higher FTTP penetration (the UK currently has just two per cent) but lower average speeds for that very reason.

Given the size of the UK’s economy, to be ranked 17th in the world isn’t exactly an achievement. One has to wonder what the UK’s future rankings will look like as our European neighbours continue to deploy at pace.

It’s no secret that Ireland has been much more successful in attracting multinational companies to its shores because of its low corporation tax of 12.5 per cent.

With superfast speeds soon-to-be available outside of the increasingly expensive base of Dublin, the country might become an even more attractive proposition for overseas businesses. Not to mention the economic boost that will give to rural areas.

To be a truly competitive global economy, it is perhaps time the UK looked a bit closer at its Irish neighbour and adopted its own national broadband plan.

Otherwise we arguably risk accelerating an economic decline. ®

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Laptop pioneer John Ellenby dies

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The PC industry has lost one of its quieter but more influential leaders: John Ellenby, the CEO of Grid Systems, died earlier this month at the age of 75 of yet to be determined causes. His company (particularly late designer William Moggridge) is widely credited with making the first commercially successful clamshell laptop, the Compass. The 1982-era machine was thick, had a tiny screen and was wildly expensive for the time at $8,150. However, it was a hit among companies and governments — it was a relatively slick way of bringing computing (and even basic digital communication) with you at a time when the alternatives were barely-luggable desktops like the Kaypro or Osborne 1.

Ellenby himself was influential beyond that one computer. Before Grid, he also worked at Xerox’s groundbreaking Palo Alto Research Center. He took the Alto, the template for what would become Apple’s Lisa and Mac desktops, and developed a sequel (the Alto II) that was much more commercially viable. He also founded an early tablet company, Agilis, and helped get the ball rolling on both augmented reality and navigation through another firm, GeoVector.

You could argue that some of Ellenby’s creations were premature. Laptops didn’t really hit the mainstream until roughly a decade later through systems like Apple’s PowerBook and IBM’s ThinkPad, and it would be well over two decades before his other companies’ fields really swung into high gear. With that said, there’s no denying that he was forward thinking and had a knack for translating ambitious ideas to devices you could buy. He’ll be missed.

Source: New York Times

How to remove email address from Windows 10 login screen

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High-end music player has a Raspberry Pi running Raspbian inside

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Bryston has launched a high-end, compact “BDP-π” digital music player built on a Raspberry Pi running Raspbian, plus a HifiBerry “Digi+” audio HAT add-on. Bryston’s new Raspberry Pi-based BDP-π digital music player costs a hefty $1,295. Yet that’s less than half the cost of the highly acclaimed Bryston BDP-2 player, while offering many of these […]

Improvements to CloudWatch Logs & Dashboards

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Amazon CloudWatch helps you to see, diagnose, react to, and resolve issues that arise in your AWS infrastructure and in the applications that you run on AWS. Today, I would like to talk about several usability and functionality improvements to CloudWatch Logs (Store and Monitor OS & Application Log Files with Amazon CloudWatch) and to CloudWatch Dashboards (CloudWatch Dashboards – Create & Use Customized Metrics Views).

Usability Improvements to CloudWatch Logs
CloudWatch Logs is a highly available, scalable, durable, and secure service to manage your operating system and application log files. It allows you to ingest, store, filter, search, and archive the logs, reducing your operational burden and allowing you to focus on your application and your business.

In order to help you to stay efficient and productive even as the number and size of your logs grows, we have made several usability improvements to the CloudWatch Logs Console:

  • Improved formatting for log data.
  • Simplified access to lengthy log files.
  • Easier searching within a log group.
  • Simplified collaboration around log files.
  • Better searching within a specific time frame.

Prior to today’s launch we also made some improvements to the CloudWatch Dashboards:

  • Full screen mode.
  • Dark theme.
  • Control over range of the Y axis on charts.
  • Simplified renaming of charts.
  • Persistent storage of chart settings.

CloudWatch Logs Console in Action
Let’s take a look at each of these improvements!

Open up the CloudWatch Logs Console, click on a Log Group, and then on a Log Stream within the group. Find the View options menu on the right:

Click on Expand all in order to see the log messages in expanded, multi-line form like this:

You can also Switch to text view in order to see the logs in their unadorned, plain-text form:

We have also improved the display of log data across all streams within a log group. Once you select a Log Group and click Search Events you can see the log data from all streams with that log group. For example, I can easily identify the Billed Duration for multiple invocations of a single Lambda function:

Even better, we have replaced the original paginated view with an infinite scroll bar. You can now scroll to your heart’s content through log files of any length:

You can now refine your search to a specific time frame or to a custom date range with a single click, like this:

If you are working as part of a team, you can now share the URL of your log analysis session. The URL includes the search parameters and filters, and includes a fragment that looks like this:

group=<log_group_name>_log;stream=<log_stream_name>;filter=<filter_parameter>;start=PT<time_frame>

These improvements to the CloudWatch Logs Console are available now and you can start using them today. To learn more, read Getting Started with CloudWatch Logs.

Recent Improvements to the CloudWatch Dashboards
You may have already noticed the improvements that we recently made to the CloudWatch Dashboards. First, there’s a new full screen mode for Dashboards, accessible by clicking on Enter full screen in the Actions menu:

Once you are in full screen mode, you can click on Dark to switch to the new, night-owl-friendly dark theme:

Here’s a simple Redis dashboard in full screen mode using the dark theme:

Sometimes you want to have more control over how a chart is displayed on your dashboard. As an example, outliers in your data may make your chart less readable, and you may want to keep the dashboard focused on a specific Y axis range. Here’s a chart where that’s the case; the outlier masks the trend that happened after the big spike:

To edit the Y axis, click on the tool selector and select Edit:

Choose Graph Options and then edit the values for the Y axis until you are satisfied with the appearance of the chart, then click on Update widget:

Here’s what the chart looks like after that:

Many of our customers wanted to be able to rename a chart without leaving the dashboard. You can now do that with a click (hover your mouse near the name and then click on the pencil):

Finally, CloudWatch now remembers the time range, timezone preference, refresh interval, and auto-refresh setting for each chart!

Amazon CloudWatch Partner Ecosystem
I’d like to wrap things up by sharing some of the great work that our partners are doing. The following partners are building value-added solutions on top of CloudWatch:

  • Datadog provides integrations to key items in your infrastructure, and gives you the ability to collaborate with your team directly when dealing with incidents.
  • Librato provides integrations across elements of your infrastructure, and supports composite metrics and mathematical transformations to time series data.
  • SignalFx helps provide you with instant visibility into your metrics, and focuses on data analytics and on delivering alerts on service-wide patterns.
  • Splunk offers a platform for operational intelligence that enables you to collect machine data and find insights.
  • Sumo Logic is a machine data analytics service for log management and time series metrics that helps you build, run and secure your applications.

If you are a partner and offer something that belongs on this list, let me know and I’ll update it ASAP!

Jeff;

 

 

How IoTivity plus AllJoyn could form a “best-of-breed” IoT framework

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IoTivity and AllJoyn have much in common, including a IP multicast discovery scheme that lets devices find and communicate with each other without requiring cloud services. At the Embedded Linux Conference in April, Open Connectivity Foundation (OCF) Executive Director Mike Richmond concluded his keynote on the potential for interoperability between the OCF’s IoTivity IoT framework […]

Samsung’s million-IOPS, 6.4TB, 64Gb/s SSD is … well, quite something

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Samsung’s million-IOPS, 6.4TB, 64Gb/s SSD is … well, quite something

Five full drive writes a day for five years? This is serious

Samsung_PM1725a

Samsung PM1725a AIC drive

VMworld Samsung is showing off a monster million IOPS SSD that can pump out read data at 6.4 gigabytes/sec and store up to 6.4TB.

NVMe PCIe is the fastest SSD interface, blasting SAS and SATA out of the park and the early promise of Fusion-io is now being realised with 3D NAND PCIe flash drives.

The PM1725a comes in both 2.5-inch dual-port NVMe 1.2 and PCIe HHHL NVMe formats, the 2.5-inch product being dual-ported and sporting a gen 3 4-lane PCIe interface (32Gbit/s).

The half height, half length (HHHL) add-in-card version has an 8-lane gen 3 PCIe interface and its data delivery – 64Gbit/s – soars.

Both drives are made using Sammy’s third-generation V-NAND with 48 layers of TLC (3bits/cell) flash. The read/write latency is 90/20 µs, with Sammy telling us the QoS (quality of service, 99 per cent) latencies are 95μs reads/60μs writes. Endurance is five full drive writes a day for five years, making these drives a great fit for high-performance enterprise data centre server use – if, we suppose, you can afford them.

Samsung_PM1725a

Samsung PM1725a

Performance data:

  • 2.5-inch (dual-port)
    • Random read/write IOPS – to 800,000/160,000
    • Sequential read/write bandwidth – to 3.3/2.9 GB/sec
  • HHHL PCIe AIC (Add-in Card)
    • Random read/write IOPS – to 1,050,000/160,000
    • Sequential read/write bandwidth – to 6.4/2.9 GB/sec

NVMe is at the 1.2 level. A Samsung EPIC controller is used and capacitor-based power fail protection is provided. The drives have a two million hours MTBF rating.

This is Sammy’s third generation V-NAND with 48-layers and a 256Gbit die. We understand fourth generation, 64-layer V-NAND with a 512Gbit die is coming and it’s easy to think of a capacity doubling next year.

Servers fitted with these PM1725a suckers will simply fly and, for performance data servers, disk and disk-based SATA and SAS interfaces are now dinosaur tech. ®

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Windows in a Google Cloud Platform world: this week on Google Cloud Platform

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Posted by Alex Barrett, Editor, Google Cloud Platform Blog

Google has a long and storied history running Linux, but Google Cloud Platform’s goal is to support a broad range of languages and tools. This week saw us significantly expand our support for the Microsoft ecosystem, with new support for ASP.NET, SQL Server, Powershell and the like.

If you have apps developed in .NET, Microsoft’s application development framework, you’ll be happy to learn that you can run them efficiently on GCP, with support for several flavors of Windows Server, an ASP.NET image in Cloud Launcher, pre-loaded SQL Server images on Google Compute Engine, and a variety of Google APIs available for the .NET platform. And thanks to a new integration with Microsoft Visual Studio, the popular integrated development environment, developers in the Microsoft ecosystem can easily access that functionality from the comfort of their IDE.

But it’s not just about Google broadening its horizons. Microsoft, too, is taking its offerings outside of its traditional confines. This week, Microsoft open-sourced Powershell, the command-line shell and scripting language for .NET, so that developers can use it to automate and administer Linux apps and environments, not just Windows ones.

And Kubernetes, Google’s open-source container management system, is also finding its way over to Microsoft’s Azure public cloud, thanks to its ability to provide a lingua franca for hosting and managing container-based environments. Check out this blog post about provisioning Azure Kubernetes infrastructure to see just how far things have come.

Veeam Announces Availability Platform for the Hybrid Cloud, Office 365 Backup Tools

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Veeam hero

Veeam hero In the world of disaster recovery, you are either prepared or offline. As we have recently seen with Delta, downtime can cost companies millions and impact consumer loyalty too. This week, Veeam announced their vision for the future along with a several new products that will help keep corporate data safe and secure.

Announced during a 90-minute keynote, the company is preparing for the release of its hybrid cloud platform that will enable businesses of all sizes with a means of availability for virtual, physical and cloud based workloads. The company has three pillars for achieving these capabilities:

  • Enterprise Continuity: Recovery Service Level Objectives (SLOs) of less than 15 minutes for ALL applications and data; automated Disaster Recovery (DR) orchestration
  • Workload Mobility: Availability for workloads across any cloud or location, to maximize IT investments and increase flexibility
  • Compliance and Visibility: Proactive monitoring, reporting, testing and documentation to ensure business and regulatory requirements are met

The company is also preparing to release new agents for Windows, Linux and a new console called the Availability Console. The new console will make it easier to manage remote and distributed office environments and it is built upcoming Veeam’s Cloud Connect platform.

One feature that I know will be high on the interest list for Petri readers is the new capabilities of backing up Office 365. As this platform becomes increasingly widespread in the corporate world, ensuring a backup process is in place to recover from an outage is critical to the productivity of every company.

Veeam unveiled new capabilities to backup Office 365 that allow users to securely backup this data to their local environment. These tools make sure that if an outage occurs, admins have secure access to their email data and also the ability to recover individual mailbox items. Additionally, the backup solution makes it easy for hybrid environments to migrate mailbox data between Office 365 and on-premises Exchange.

With availability of your data being among the top issues that can bring a company to a screeching halt because of an outage, it’s impossible to be over-prepared for a recovery scenario. For IT Pros and anyone else who works with, or manages a data center, it’s worth checking out everything Veeam announced this week.

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Microsoft Targets VMware Customers with ‘Free’ Windows Server License

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Server Hero Network Cable Port

Server Hero Network Cable Port

Earlier this year, Microsoft announced an offer where users who move from Oracle Database software to SQL Server, that they would receive a ‘free’ license to for the platform. Today, the company is targeting VMware customers with a similar offer with those who migrate to Hyper-V will receive a free Windows Server Datacenter license.

Later this year when Microsoft releases Windows Server 2016, it will come with a significant number of new features and as you can imagine, they want all their current customers to upgrade. Up-selling to current users is much easier than new customers which is why Microsoft is targeting VMware users with this offer.

Starting September 1 through June 30, 2017, if you switch from VMware to Hyper-V, Microsoft will give you a free Windows Server Datacenter licenses when buying Windows Server Datacenter + Software Assurance. As you can see, the license isn’t truly free, as you have to sign up for Software Assurance but with this deal, you are essentially only paying for the Assurance package which has several other benefits than just a Windows server license.

If you are interested in this offer, there are a few steps that you need to follow that you can find at the bottom of the announcement post, here.

Even though Microsoft will lose a bit of revenue by offering this license for free, the agenda is clear. The company wants to entice new users to its platforms and they know once you build an environment around a software platform, it is a significant task to switch. The goal with this offer (and the Oracle one as well), is to get users into the Microsoft ecosystem by hanging the ‘free license’ offer out there to see who will bite as this will become a long-term selling opportunity that may not have existed otherwise.

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Why are SD-WANs taking off? Because they are secure, affordable and easy to use

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This vendor-written tech primer has been edited by Network World to eliminate product promotion, but readers should note it will likely favor the submitter’s approach.

Software-defined Wide Area Networking is red hot.  It is safe to assume that, going forward, every multi-location business will rely on SD-WAN for a cost-effective, high-quality, unified network solution.

In fact, IDC recently released a report predicting SD-WAN revenue will reach $6 billion in 2020. Why?  Because SD-WANs are secure, affordable and easy-to-use. Those three magic words are enough to turn any CEO’s head, and the benefits go well beyond that. SD-WANs address a confluence of issues that multi-location businesses are facing right now.

Here are the top five reasons businesses need to consider an SD-WAN solution:

1.  Bandwidth. As more businesses move towards public and private cloud models, bandwidth needs are increasing. SD-WANs allow businesses to support their cloud deployments across multiple locations without being gouged for the required bandwidth. The additional bandwidth also allows network managers to say “Yes” to more applications that are competing for access to the WAN.

2.  Price flexibility. Businesses can deploy high bandwidth access at a fraction of the cost of legacy circuits and count on the Service Levels they’re used to on traditional networks. In most cases, multiple higher bandwidth links can be deployed at a cost savings.

3.  Disaster recovery. Using the savings, multiple unique circuits can be installed and SD-WAN technology offers true disaster recovery solutions over varied diverse infrastructure (copper, coax, wireless, fiber, etc.).

4.  Secure networks. At the base level, an SD-WAN is a point to point communication environment where VPN tunnels are built to transport payloads from a centralized orchestration platform.  Those VPNs are encrypted and can overlay private networking and IP address schemes adding additional security to the WAN over public internet access circuits.

5.  Analytics and Management. SD-WANs are managed via a central orchestrator that enables quick and easy management across thousands of devices.  This orchestrator can be accessed via APIs for northbound integration with other management, reporting, provisioning and network aware applications.  The Layer 7 application awareness gathers amazing amounts of data providing real-time and historical reporting at your fingertips, giving priority across the network to any application is a point and click process. Gone are the days of struggling with NetFlow and other massive and time consuming traffic monitors.

How businesses are deploying SD-WAN

More and more organizations are transitioning to a Hybrid WAN environment on their way to a full SD-WAN deployment. IDC predicts that this shift towards Hybrid WAN will see a significant boost in the next 12-18 months. By shifting to a Hybrid WAN environment, organizations can deploy SD-WAN technology at troubled or test locations and have them integrate into the existing WAN. Once they feel confident and comfortable with the technology they can roll it out to the rest of their location as contracts and staff allow. This strategy actually speeds up adoption by avoiding a deployment learning-curve across the organization.

Once the technology has been deployed, it’s easy to extend the SD-WAN to cloud providers and grant secure traffic offload as well as end-to-end Quality of Experience for those cloud applications (think AWS, O365, Azure etc.). The software defined nature of the technology makes the connection easy, offering organizations some unexpected benefits, including the ability to audit a cloud provider’s bandwidth usage invoice, managing remote access to cloud applications and allowing the CISO to sign off on moving an application to the cloud (as a result of the managed private network service extended to the cloud provider via SD-WAN).

There is also a fit for SD-WAN at those locations where big bandwidth is needed and T1s are not in the budget. Multiple low cost links can be aggregated for combined bandwidth and service levels can be achieved using the technology.

Where SD-WAN is headed

All of these business concerns and added benefits are driving SD-WAN deployments forward, but it’s important to look at the big picture. There is a significant leap coming as SD-WAN, SDN, NFV and vCPE all move quickly towards a unified management and deployment scheme.  SD-WAN is the beginning of the movement as there are the most obvious gains available (bandwidth, price, business continuity, security and application layer management).

This shift will mean virtual network micro-segments being deployed in data centers today will be easily extended to office LAN environments and remote users providing application specific networks. Firewall and security schemes for applications will be supported by a unique network segment per application. As hyper-convergence continues, these virtual networks and applications can all live in the same infrastructure.

SD-WAN is a game changing technology in the network services world and is the first step towards fully unified cloud, WAN, LAN and remote access solutions.

4Duino combines Arduino, WiFi, and a 2.4-inch touchscreen

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4D Systems launched a $79 “4Duino-24” Arduino compatible board, with a 2.4-inch resistive touchscreen and an ESP8266 WiFi module. One reason you might choose a Linux SBC like a Raspberry Pi over an Arduino is that it’s easier to control an LCD display for simple IoT GUIs and other HMI applications. Now the 4Duino-24 board […]

Turbonomic Announces HPE OneView Integration to Tie Real-Time Application Demand to Infrastructure Supply Autonomically

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Turbonomic , the Autonomic Performance Platform, today announced it is joining the Hewlett Packard Enterprise Composable Ecosystem partner program to Read more at VMblog.com.

4Duino combines Arduino, WiFi, and a 2.4-inch touchscreen

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4D Systems launched a $79 “4Duino-24” Arduino compatible board, with a 2.4-inch resistive touchscreen and an ESP8266 WiFi module. One reason you might choose a Linux SBC like a Raspberry Pi over an Arduino is that it’s easier to control an LCD display for simple IoT GUIs and other HMI applications. Now the 4Duino-24 board […]

Happy 25th birthday, Linux

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Linux will turn 25 years old on August 25, the day Linus Torvalds sent out his fateful message asking for help with a new operating system. “I’m doing a (free) operating system (just a hobby, won’t be big and professional like gnu) for 386(486) AT clones. This has been brewing since april, and is starting to get ready. I’d like any feedback on things people like/dislike in minix, as my OS resembles it somewhat (same physical layout of the file-system (due to practical reasons) among other things),” he wrote in the comp.os.minix message board and the rest, as they say, is history.

What’s particularly interesting about Torvalds’ note is that it was followed not by snark or derision but with general interest. While can chalk that up to Torvalds actually having a product ready to show potential users, we are also reminded that the Internet in 1991 was a far different place than it is today.

The
Linux Foundation has just released a detailed report on the OS with highlights from the past 25 years. They write that 13,500 developers from 1,300 companies have contributed to the Kernel since the entire project went up on Git in 2005. The most interesting bit of data?

“During the period between the 3.19 and 4.7 releases, the kernel community was merging changes at an average rate of 7.8 patches per hour; that is a slight increase from the 7.71 patches per hour seen in the previous version of this report, and a continuation of the longterm trend toward higher patch volumes.” That means the Linux kernel is almost constantly being patched and updated all by a volunteer army of programmers dedicated to seeing the glue of the Internet succeed.

You can read the
entire report here.

Linux now runs most of the websites you visit and runs on everything from gas pumps to smartwatches. The OS teaches kids to program thanks to the Raspberry Pi and it helped the French police save millions of Euros. Heck, even
Microsoft is releasing code for Linux. If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.

For a bit more insight into the history of the OS and I’d recommend
Rebel Code and
Just For Fun. These books, released around the time Linux was coming into prominence, tell the fascinating story of Torvalds and his not “big and professional” side project.

Boomerang uses AI to help you write emails people will read

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Why don’t you get a response to every email you write? It’s possible your recipient is busy. Maybe it didn’t reach them. Or maybe, just maybe, you didn’t write a quality email in the first place.

Boomerang’s Respondable widget that you can download right into your browser to be used within Gmail. Its aim? To help you craft better emails that improve your response rates. Using machine learning algorithms that improve based on how you pen your various emails to different recipients, it uses that intelligence to assist you when it comes to how you write your messages.

When you activate Boomerang, you get a new bar inserted into the window you use to compose messages that will change in real-time depending on what you write. Clicking on it brings up a new menu that offers suggestions based on the text in the window. Subject length, word count, question count, and reading level are available for free users, with positivity, politeness, and subjectivity measurements available for anyone who springs for the Advanced Features options.

I put Boomerang Respondable to the test and it did a decent job of measuring the message I sent to a willing Engadget guinea pig. I kept it short to a few paragraphs, asked one question, and kept my subject line to a reasonable length. With a few tweaks I was able to swing the "response" meter to "likely," which was in the green zone. I didn’t reach "Very likely," which is a cool teal that I feel a little disappointed I didn’t try enough to reach.

Respondable is an interesting tool that could absolutely help you compose better emails, but I also wonder how well these algorithms actually work. I’m going to be utilizing it to see if I start to get responses in a more dependable manner.

If you’re interested in trying out the free version, you can get it for both Gmail and Outlook.

Source: Boomerang

Opera’s free unlimited VPN service is coming to Android

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Opera previously launched an unlimited VPN service for iOS earlier this year as a result of its 2015 acquisition of SurfEasy, and now it’s doing the same for Android users.

Opera VPN will let you appear as if you’re in a different country such as the US, Canada, Singapore, Germany and the Netherlands in addition to allowing you to block ad trackers. You can effectively bypass content restricted by location with the VPN, and without a data limit you can use it as much as you want.

If you’re not well-versed in VPNs, the app automatically handles setting Android VPN settings for you and will also check the security and integrity of your current Wi-Fi connection. This feature may slow down your internet speed while you’re using it, as TechCrunch attests, but not so much that it’s too problematic to use while surfing.

If you’re interested in trying out the app, you can pick it up via the Google Play Store now.

Via: TechCrunch

Tracing the physical infrastructure supporting the internet

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Whether or not New Yorkers are paying attention, their digital connectivity can sometimes rely on the finer points of a mess of paint on the street.
Some of the markings are orange, others yellow or red. Arrows, lines and letters combine to create a cryptic language of symbols and codes.
“It’s kind of scrawly and intense,” said the artist and writer Ingrid Burrington. “Living in New York, you’re trained not to look down, so it’s funny how rich and dense these markings can get…"

Ingrid Burrington is the author of a new handbook to the physical infrastructure of the internet in New York, Networks of New York: An Illustrated Field Guide to Urban Internet Infrastructure.

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Veeam Unveils Game-Changing Veeam Availability Platform for the Hybrid Cloud

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Veeam Software, the innovative provider of solutions that delivers Availability for the Always-On Enterprise , today announced the next generation of Read more at VMblog.com.

Nvidia’s NVLink 2.0 will first appear in Power9 servers next year

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Graphics processors with Nvidia’s NVLink throughput technology have just started coming out, but a successor to the groundbreaking interconnect is already on its way.

IBM’s upcoming Power9 chip will include NVLink 2.0 technology, and servers using the chip will be available next year.

Nvidia hasn’t yet announced when GPUs with NVLink 2.0 would come out, but they could be available around the same time as the new Power9 servers come out.

IBM is projecting Power9 servers to be out by the middle of next year, but the company hasn’t nailed down a specific date.

A presentation on Nvidia’s website says NVLink 2.0 will be in GPUs code-named Volta, which also will come out next year.

Each NVLink 2.0 lane in the Power9 chip will communicate at 25Gbps (bits per second), seven to 10 times the speed of PCI-Express 3.0, according to IBM. Power9 will have multiple communication lanes for NVLink 2.0, and they could provide massive throughput when combined.

Recent Nvidia GPUs like the Tesla P100 are based on the company’s Pascal architecture and use NVLink 1.0. The Volta GPU architecture will succeed Pascal, also used in GPUs like the GeForce GTX 1080.

With a tremendous bandwidth improvement in over its predecessor, the NVLink 2.0 technology will be important for applications driven by GPUs, like cognitive computing.

Nvidia is a key member of OpenPower Foundation, an IBM-backed organization that is trying to proliferate Power hardware and software.

For now, the NVLink 2.0 I/O is designed for Nvidia GPUs, and no other component works with the interconnect. IBM’s Power chip also offers the PCI-Express 4.0 connector and a CAPI (coherent accelerator processor interface) interface for other chips, storage, and memory.

Gene-modified soil bacteria promise eco-friendly computing

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You normally need non-renewable elements or minerals to create nanowires. However, the US Navy’s Office of Naval Research may have a better solution: the life living in the dirt under your feet. Its sponsored researchers have crafted nanowires from genetically modified Geobacter, a bacteria you find in soil just about everywhere on Earth. The team altered the bacteria so that it would replace amino acids with tryptophan, which is a much better electrical conductor (2,000 times) at the nanoscopic scale. String enough of those bacteria together and you suddenly have wiring that’s virtually invisible to the human eye. They wires are tougher and smaller, too, so they stand a better chance of surviving inside electronics.

If and when scientists refine the technology, it could help shrink computing power beyond its current limits. It would also help produce extremely sensitive bomb and pollution detectors, or help produce alternative fuels like butanol. And importantly, you could produce these nanowires using natural resources like plant waste and solar energy. You could produce computing devices that are eco-friendly right down to the materials in their processors.

Via: Defense One

Source: ONR

Did a Solar-Powered Autonomous Boat Just Cross the Pacific Ocean?

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seacharger1Damon McMillan built a robotic boat. Not just any robotic boat. This one is sailing across the world’s oceans. And it’s just simple and elegant enough to work.

Read more on MAKE

The post Did a Solar-Powered Autonomous Boat Just Cross the Pacific Ocean? appeared first on Make: DIY Projects and Ideas for Makers.

Warberry Pi Is a Dead-Simple Pen Testing Toolkit for the Raspberry Pi

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To add another tool to your network testing kit, Warberry Pi is a self-contained set of scripts that run automatically when you plug your Raspberry Pi into an ethernet port.

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