Monday, October 31, 2016

Google Drive Search Gets a Natural Language Boost, More News

Google is bringing the powerful natural language processing (NLP) technology that underlies its search engine to Google Drive. In a blog post announcing the move  this week, Josh Smith, product manager at Google Drive, described NLP as a fancy way of saying “search like you talk.


Continue reading…
Cloud Computing



Google Drive Search Gets a Natural Language Boost, More News

HP1 Adult Harry Potter Robe ALL 4 HOUSES XX2-XXL Halloween Costume USA (Small, Gryffindor Red)

Harry Potter movie style black robe. Hogwarts student uniform with hood. Loose fit with one button on chest. Inside is fully lined with the house color along with a inner chest pocket for holding magic wand. Harry Potter fans, now be the perfect Hogwarts student with this uniform.


All 4 Houses available: Gryffindor, Slytherin, Ravenclaw, Hufflepuff


Size Options: XXS-2XL; (XXS may fit Kid Large, XS may fit Kid XL, S may fit Kid 2XL)


Robe Measurement (Chest/Length):


XXS: 36″/35″


XS: 38″/37″


Small: 40″/38″


Medium: 42″/39″


Large: 44″/40″


XL: 46″/42″


2XL: 48″/44″


Robe is non-elastic. Up to +/-1″ size variance.


 


Product Features


  • Adult Size Harry Potter Style Black Robe

  • Adult Size Options: XXS-2XL (XXS-S May Fit Kids Size L-2XL)

  • Fully lined inside with Inner Pocket for Wand

  • Ship from USA

  • See Dress Measurement and details below


HP1 Adult Harry Potter Robe ALL 4 HOUSES XX2-XXL Halloween Costume USA (Small, Gryffindor Red)

The Denizens of Minecraft"s "Worst" Server Are At War With YouTube

A war is raging on one of the longest-running servers in Minecraft, 2b2t. Some of the battle is fought with diamond swords and lava buckets, as you might expect, but the rest of it unfolds with racist memes, shocking gore and porn, as well as monstrous contraptions designed to make the server literally unplayable. It’s not just a war for imaginary space: it’s a war for what kind of server 2b2t wants to be.


Read more…



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The Denizens of Minecraft"s "Worst" Server Are At War With YouTube

IDG Contributor Network: IT departments becoming ‘obsolete’

Network World Cloud Computing


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IDG Contributor Network: IT departments becoming ‘obsolete’

IDG Contributor Network: Red Hat expected to rake in $2.4 billion in revenue this year


The king of Linux, Red Hat, continues its growth as a leading Linux vendor that’s betting big on the cloud. Yesterday, the company announced financial results for its second quarter of fiscal year 2017 ended August 31, 2016.


The company generated $ 600 million in revenue for the quarter, a 19 percent year-over-year increase. Red Hat is often credited with creating a business model around Linux and Open Source: a subscription based service and support model.


Subscription revenue for the quarter was $ 531 million, which accounts for 89% of total revenue. It was a 20% year-over-year increase. Based on these numbers we can safely assume that Red Hat will be generating revenues around $ 2.415 billion in this fiscal year. That makes Red Hat the most successful pure open source company to date.


To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here



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IDG Contributor Network: Red Hat expected to rake in $2.4 billion in revenue this year

Early Predator Gets The Worm Baby

In this episode of the science cartoon series “Out There,” one woman’s delightfully wholesome tableau becomes, upon closer examination, a horrific scene of horror. That’s nature for you. Cartoon by Ted Rall and Stephanie McMillan.



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Early Predator Gets The Worm Baby

Experiment proves future drones may not need batteries


On a single charge, the average consumer drone only nets about eight to 10 minutes of flight time. The solution is obvious: stuff a bigger battery into it. Problem is, the solution adds weight, which decreases flight time. It’s the ultimate catch-22. Dr. Samer Aldhaher of the Imperial College London thinks he has the answer, kinda. Aldhaher created a prototype of a lightweight, battery-less drone that hovers in place and sucks power from a transmitter below. The drone is only capable of hovering and making small side-to-side movements, but the prototype proves the utility of wireless power technology. As drones take to the skies in record numbers, a handful…

This story continues at The Next Web



Uncategorized



Experiment proves future drones may not need batteries

Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Tokyo Game Show debriefings, new indie games, and the new Destiny expansion highlight this week’s gaming podcast from WIRED. The post Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia appeared first on WIRED.
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Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

New Cisco professional services aimed at hybrid clouds

Cisco pointed to the latter finding as justification for its latest offering for companies with private cloud computing environments that connect to public …


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New Cisco professional services aimed at hybrid clouds

Why Siri, Alexa And Cortana Will Destroy SEO

The big shift for publishers and information providers will be the that the market will no longer only need unstructured information but also structured information and semantics graphs built out of them.



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Why Siri, Alexa And Cortana Will Destroy SEO

Rio’s Belmond Copacabana Palace comes alive with stunning visuals by...

Spectacular projection mappings that took place each evening in August on the façade of the Belmond Copacabana Palace luxury hotel, located on Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil


(PRWeb September 23, 2016)


Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2016/09/prweb13710970.htm



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Rio’s Belmond Copacabana Palace comes alive with stunning visuals by...

Privacy group shoots legal arrow at Privacy Shield

Privacy Shield, the legal agreement allowing businesses to export Europeans’ personal information to the U.S., is under fire.


An Irish privacy advocacy group has challenged the adoption of the decision in the EU’s second-highest court, Reuters reported Thursday, citing sources familiar with the case.


Privacy Shield took effect in July, replacing the Safe Harbor framework, which had itself fallen victim to a legal challenge in October 2015. The new agreement supports transatlantic commerce worth $ 260 billion, U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker has said, and has consequences for many companies offering cloud services to consumers.


To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here


Computerworld Cloud Computing


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Privacy group shoots legal arrow at Privacy Shield

CenturyLink will acquire Level 3 Communications in $34B deal

CenturyLink plans to acquire internet backbone company Level 3 Communications in a $ 34 billion cash and stock deal that aims to consolidate the networks and customers of the two companies.


The combined company, operating in more than 60 countries, will be able to offer CenturyLink’s larger enterprise customers the benefits of a larger global presence, and will also be positioned to further invest in the reach and speed of its broadband infrastructure for small businesses and consumers, the companies said.


CenturyLink is currently focused on global communications, hosting, cloud, and IT services, offering both network and data systems management with more than 55 data centers in North America, Europe, and Asia. It provides broadband, voice, video, data, and managed services over a 250,000-mile U.S. fiber network and a 300,000-mile international transport network.


To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here


InfoWorld Cloud Computing



CenturyLink will acquire Level 3 Communications in $34B deal

CoreSite Reveals Microsoft Azure Cloud Connectivity in NY

Notably, Microsoft Azure is an enterprise-grade cloud computing platform from Microsoft (MSFT – Analyst Report) offering analytics, computing, …



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CoreSite Reveals Microsoft Azure Cloud Connectivity in NY

Understanding the three key ways cloud can drive competitive advantage

The fact of the matter is thus: if you want to stay ahead of the pack, you’ll need to get your head into and around the cloud. However, the reasons and …



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Understanding the three key ways cloud can drive competitive advantage

Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Tokyo Game Show debriefings, new indie games, and the new Destiny expansion highlight this week’s gaming podcast from WIRED. The post Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia appeared first on WIRED.
Uncategorized



Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Escaping the Problems of Legacy IT In Banking

The good news is that cloud computing can be of huge assistance in addressing these issues. In fact, we would go so far as to say that it is essential …



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Escaping the Problems of Legacy IT In Banking

CoreSite Reveals Microsoft Azure Cloud Connectivity in NY

Notably, Microsoft Azure is an enterprise-grade cloud computing platform from Microsoft (MSFT – Analyst Report) offering analytics, computing, …



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CoreSite Reveals Microsoft Azure Cloud Connectivity in NY

Pluto"s Liquid Water Ocean Might Be Insanely Deep

In recent months, there’s been growing evidence that Pluto is hiding a liquid water ocean beneath its frozen surface. New models by researchers at Brown University support this hypothesis, and take it one mind-boggling step further: Pluto’s ocean may be more than 100 kilometers (62 miles) deep.


Read more…



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Pluto"s Liquid Water Ocean Might Be Insanely Deep

Privacy group shoots legal arrow at Privacy Shield

Privacy Shield, the legal agreement allowing businesses to export Europeans’ personal information to the U.S., is under fire.


An Irish privacy advocacy group has challenged the adoption of the decision in the EU’s second-highest court, Reuters reported Thursday, citing sources familiar with the case.


Privacy Shield took effect in July, replacing the Safe Harbor framework, which had itself fallen victim to a legal challenge in October 2015. The new agreement supports transatlantic commerce worth $ 260 billion, U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker has said, and has consequences for many companies offering cloud services to consumers.


To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here


Computerworld Cloud Computing

Related Posts:


Privacy group shoots legal arrow at Privacy Shield

Microsoft Ignite: A Brief Look at a Big Conference

Microsoft Ignite: A Brief Look at a Big Conference


In terms of tech parties, it doesn’t really get much bigger than Microsoft Ignite.  Sure, there’s Oracle’s OpenWorld, which just drew some 60,000 attendees to San Francisco. And Salesforce’s Dreamforce, which attracted more than 150,000 to San Francisco last year, is on the way.


Continue reading…
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Microsoft Ignite: A Brief Look at a Big Conference

Why Investors Should Support The Tesla SolarCity Merger

Tesla and SolarCity is a great, and necessary, idea for building the next platform for autos and sustainable electricity. Investors should vote to support this deal.



Cloud Computing



Why Investors Should Support The Tesla SolarCity Merger

Direct Link facilitates secure and scalable hybrid clouds

Many organizations use cloud computing services to reduce information technology (IT) costs and take advantage of new business opportunities.



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Direct Link facilitates secure and scalable hybrid clouds

asciicast:86851

OS_*} phoenix-prune:/opt/openstack # export OS_USERNAME=”cpsa” phoenix-prune:/opt/openstack # export OS_PASSWORD=$ (python …



Cloud Computing



asciicast:86851

Sunday, October 30, 2016

monasca-agent 1.3.0

OpenStack metrics. The agent can perform checks on OpenStack processes. * The Agent can automatically detect and setup checks on certain …
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monasca-agent 1.3.0

Robert Plant And Alison Krauss Win Grammy Album Of The Year

Raising Sand, from Led Zeppelin vet and bluegrass superstar, wins five Grammys on Sunday night.
By James Montgomery with MTV News staff


<P>”I’m bewildered,” <a href=”/music/artist/plant_robert/artist.jhtml”>Robert Plant</a> said onstage as he accepted the <MTVNLINK type=”news” id=”1604580″>Grammy Album of the Year award</MTVNLINK> with <a href=”/music/artist/krauss_alison/artist.jhtml”>Alison Krauss</a> on Sunday night. “In the old days we would have called this selling out, but it’s a good way to spend a Sunday.” </P><P> </P><P>He was probably one of the few who were surprised, because <i>Raising Sand,</i> which won five trophies at Sunday night’s show, is in many ways the perfect <a href=”http://www.mtv.com/news/grammys/”>Grammy</a> album. It features two respected veterans, a critically lauded producer, some sandpaper-and-velvet vocals and a baker’s dozen of time-tested standards.</p><div style=”margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px; float: left;”><embed src=”http://media.mtvnservices.com/mgid:uma:video:mtv.com:338316″ width=”256″ height=”223″ type=”application/x-shockwave-flash” flashVars=”configParams=instance%3Dnews%26vid%3D338316″ allowFullScreen=”true” allowScriptAccess=”always” base=”.”></embed></div><p> </P><P> </P><P>You’re probably familiar with Robert Plant from his <a href=”/music/artist/led_zeppelin/artist.jhtml”>Led Zeppelin</a> days, and you might be aware of producer T-Bone Burnett’s work on the “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” soundtrack (it won the Grammy for Album of the Year in 2002). And if you don’t know who Alison Krauss is, she possesses a haunting set of pipes and is one of the meanest fiddle players in the world. Oh, and she’s won 21 Grammys, more than any other female artist and the seventh-most in history. </P><P> </P><P>Really, she’s the key to <i>Sand</i>’s success, and not just because of her voice (or her fiddle playing). She and Plant first met in 2004, at a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame tribute to legendary bluesman Leadbelly, and the former Zeppelin man was amazed by her knowledge of American Roots music &#8212; so much so that they began kicking around the idea of recording an album together. Three years later, <i>Sand</i> was released. </P><P> </P><P>And while Plant possesses the more famous voice, the album’s finest moments radiate from Krauss. Whether she’s getting bluesy on Little Milton’s “Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson” or entwining with Plant’s husky voice on songs like “Please Read the Letter” and Roly Salley’s winsome “Killing the Blues,” she more than carries her end of the bargain. </P><P> </P><P>And perhaps that’s also due to producer Burnett, who handpicked the 13 songs the duo cover on <i>Sand.</i> His arrangements are sparse &#8212; giving the two voices ample room to breathe &#8212; yet dense, warm and crackling at the same time. It’s a testament to his work that he’s often given just as much billing as Plant and Krauss on the project … and it’s certainly justified. </P><P> </P><P>To date, <i>Sand</i> has sold more than 1 million copies, heaped tons of acclaim and actually earned a Grammy last year &#8212; “Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved On)” took home the award for Best Pop Collaboration With Vocals. </P><P> </P><P>One expert was surprised not by the album’s success, but by the fact that it’s actually quite a good album. </P><P> </P><P>”At first, the album seemed like a vanity project. … Two names, clearly a one-off record, didn’t have to be any good, you know?” <i>New York Times</i> music critic Jon Caramanica said. “Led Zeppelin fans would buy it because of Robert Plant, Alison Krauss would get a check. But it actually turned out to be a really thoughtful, really <i>good</i> record. So when you combine all that with the fact that the Grammys love to lionize one of their own, I could really see it taking home some awards.” </P><P></p>


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Source:
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1604582/plant-krauss-win-album-of-the-year-grammy.jhtml


Gisele Bündchen Giuliana DePandi Giulianna Ramirez Grace Park Gretha Cavazzoni Gwen Stefani



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Robert Plant And Alison Krauss Win Grammy Album Of The Year

Experiment proves future drones may not need batteries


On a single charge, the average consumer drone only nets about eight to 10 minutes of flight time. The solution is obvious: stuff a bigger battery into it. Problem is, the solution adds weight, which decreases flight time. It’s the ultimate catch-22. Dr. Samer Aldhaher of the Imperial College London thinks he has the answer, kinda. Aldhaher created a prototype of a lightweight, battery-less drone that hovers in place and sucks power from a transmitter below. The drone is only capable of hovering and making small side-to-side movements, but the prototype proves the utility of wireless power technology. As drones take to the skies in record numbers, a handful…


This story continues at The Next Web



Uncategorized



Experiment proves future drones may not need batteries

Google Drive Search Gets a Natural Language Boost, More News

Google is bringing the powerful natural language processing (NLP) technology that underlies its search engine to Google Drive. In a blog post announcing the move  this week, Josh Smith, product manager at Google Drive, described NLP as a fancy way of saying “search like you talk.


Continue reading…
All articles



Google Drive Search Gets a Natural Language Boost, More News

New Two-Lensed Camera Shows What It"s Like to Ride on the Back of Whale

Researchers from Stanford’s Hopkins Marine Station have developed a two-lensed camera that sticks to the backs of filter-feeding whales with suction cups. The new device has been used to capture unprecedented footage of whales in action, and it’s offering new insights into the feeding and swimming behaviors of these aquatic beasts.


Read more…



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New Two-Lensed Camera Shows What It"s Like to Ride on the Back of Whale

Cantina Talk: Rejoice! Another Star Wars Standalone Movie Will Land in 2020

Cantina Talk: Rejoice! Another Star Wars Standalone Movie Will Land in 2020

Disney CEO Bob Iger didn’t reveal what the movie would be about, but he says a third Star Wars anthology flick is in the works for 2020. The post Cantina Talk: Rejoice! Another Star Wars Standalone Movie Will Land in 2020 appeared first on WIRED.
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Cantina Talk: Rejoice! Another Star Wars Standalone Movie Will Land in 2020

To solve IoT security, look at the big picture, ARM says

The recent DDoS attacks launched from IoT devices demonstrate that the internet of things spans all parts of IT and that most companies deploying it still need a lot of help.


That’s the message from ARM, the chip design company behind nearly every smartphone and a big chunk of IoT, at its annual TechCon event this week in Silicon Valley.


Small, low-power devices like sensors and security cameras are the most visible part of IoT, and they’re right in ARM’s wheelhouse as the dominant force in low-power chips. But on Wednesday, the company highlighted a cloud-based SaaS offering rather than chips or edge devices themselves. IoT depends on back-end capabilities as much as edge devices, and the company wants to play a role in all of it.


To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here


Network World Cloud Computing



To solve IoT security, look at the big picture, ARM says

Leskaier Harry Potter Deluxe Magic Robes Cosplay Costume Suit

Product Description:


Leskaier Costume Company has designed quality costume and fun clothing for decades. Trusted to be the leader of cosplay, halloween, and general decor items.
Leskaier does not sacrifice quality for price. Expect the highest in costume design and material .
From the Manufacturer Leskaier Costume Company take seriously the mission to make dressing up fun.
Mascots, rental quality costumes, masks, wigs, accessories, shoes, and every significant licensed costume you want to wear can be found under the Leskaier’s brand. Still family owned, still family focused.
Leskaier brings you fun for every season, Halloween, Christmas, Mardi Gras, Easter


Product Features


  • Fabric:Polyester

  • Costume kit has everything you need to become Harry Potter, Includes a hood robe, necktie and glasses

  • Four school badge embroidery gowns, Including Slytherin, Hufflepuff, Ravenclaw and Gryffindor. Both men and women can wear.

  • Shipping Time:12-15 business days by standard shipping way

  • Note!! Please kindly send us message once you don’t know the sizes.Provide us height,weight,bust,waist and hip sizes.Thank you!


Leskaier Harry Potter Deluxe Magic Robes Cosplay Costume Suit

IDG Contributor Network: Red Hat expected to rake in $2.4 billion in revenue this year


The king of Linux, Red Hat, continues its growth as a leading Linux vendor that’s betting big on the cloud. Yesterday, the company announced financial results for its second quarter of fiscal year 2017 ended August 31, 2016.


The company generated $ 600 million in revenue for the quarter, a 19 percent year-over-year increase. Red Hat is often credited with creating a business model around Linux and Open Source: a subscription based service and support model.


Subscription revenue for the quarter was $ 531 million, which accounts for 89% of total revenue. It was a 20% year-over-year increase. Based on these numbers we can safely assume that Red Hat will be generating revenues around $ 2.415 billion in this fiscal year. That makes Red Hat the most successful pure open source company to date.


To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here



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IDG Contributor Network: Red Hat expected to rake in $2.4 billion in revenue this year

Meet America’s Gun Super-Owners and Other Characters of the Week

Meet America’s Gun Super-Owners and Other Characters of the Week

We’re proud to bring NextDraft—the most righteous, most essential newsletter on the web—to WIRED.com. The post Meet America’s Gun Super-Owners and Other Characters of the Week appeared first on WIRED.
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Meet America’s Gun Super-Owners and Other Characters of the Week

Escaping the Problems of Legacy IT In Banking

The good news is that cloud computing can be of huge assistance in addressing these issues. In fact, we would go so far as to say that it is essential …



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Escaping the Problems of Legacy IT In Banking

How Google, Apple and Microsoft just saved the PC

The long-neglected PC got a massive injection of innovation this week with major announcements from Google, Apple and Microsoft.


Each company introduced advancements that users didn’t ask for, didn’t think they wanted and are already complaining about.


Why? Because we love new technology in theory but hate it in practice.


Technology change is expensive, transition is messy and people are creatures of habit.


We demand innovation, but resist it when it actually appears in our favorite product lines. That’s why only tech giants like Google, Apple and Microsoft can force the necessary change users want, but don’t know they want.


This was a huge week for forced innovation in PCs thanks to wildly divergent new products from Google, Apple and Microsoft.


To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here


Computerworld Cloud Computing


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How Google, Apple and Microsoft just saved the PC

Apple"s Echo rival could make Siri the master of your home

Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f221602%2fappleecho

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Amazon is sitting pretty on top of the smart home with its Alexa voice-controlled Echo devices, and Google will close in later this year with its own Home assistant device. But what about Apple?


While iOS 10’s much-needed Home app for controlling all your HomeKit-compatible smart home devices is a step in the right direction, the company may need an Echo rival of its own.



Apple is reportedly working on an Echo-like smart home device according to Bloomberg


This report corroborates a earlier one from The Information earlier this year that Apple was developing its own Echo-like product based around Siri.  Read more…


More about Voice Assistant, Smart Home, Siri, Apple, and Google Home




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Apple"s Echo rival could make Siri the master of your home

Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Tokyo Game Show debriefings, new indie games, and the new Destiny expansion highlight this week’s gaming podcast from WIRED. The post Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia appeared first on WIRED.
Uncategorized



Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Automating OpenStack Validation for Cloud Foundry

Cloud Foundry Automating OpenStack Validation for Cloud Foundry. Speed, simplicity and control to develop and deploy applications faster and …



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Automating OpenStack Validation for Cloud Foundry

Microsoft Ignite: A Brief Look at a Big Conference

Microsoft Ignite: A Brief Look at a Big Conference


In terms of tech parties, it doesn’t really get much bigger than Microsoft Ignite.  Sure, there’s Oracle’s OpenWorld, which just drew some 60,000 attendees to San Francisco. And Salesforce’s Dreamforce, which attracted more than 150,000 to San Francisco last year, is on the way.


Continue reading…
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Microsoft Ignite: A Brief Look at a Big Conference

Experiment proves future drones may not need batteries


On a single charge, the average consumer drone only nets about eight to 10 minutes of flight time. The solution is obvious: stuff a bigger battery into it. Problem is, the solution adds weight, which decreases flight time. It’s the ultimate catch-22. Dr. Samer Aldhaher of the Imperial College London thinks he has the answer, kinda. Aldhaher created a prototype of a lightweight, battery-less drone that hovers in place and sucks power from a transmitter below. The drone is only capable of hovering and making small side-to-side movements, but the prototype proves the utility of wireless power technology. As drones take to the skies in record numbers, a handful…

This story continues at The Next Web



Uncategorized



Experiment proves future drones may not need batteries

New Cisco professional services aimed at hybrid clouds

Cisco pointed to the latter finding as justification for its latest offering for companies with private cloud computing environments that connect to public …



RSS-1



New Cisco professional services aimed at hybrid clouds

To solve IoT security, look at the big picture, ARM says

The recent DDoS attacks launched from IoT devices demonstrate that the internet of things spans all parts of IT and that most companies deploying it still need a lot of help.


That’s the message from ARM, the chip design company behind nearly every smartphone and a big chunk of IoT, at its annual TechCon event this week in Silicon Valley.


Small, low-power devices like sensors and security cameras are the most visible part of IoT, and they’re right in ARM’s wheelhouse as the dominant force in low-power chips. But on Wednesday, the company highlighted a cloud-based SaaS product rather than chips or edge devices themselves. IoT depends on back-end capabilities as much as edge devices, and the company wants to play a role in all of it.


To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here


Computerworld Cloud Computing


Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts

To solve IoT security, look at the big picture, ARM says

What you should know, and do, about the Yahoo breach


Yahoo’s announcement that state-sponsored hackers have stolen the details of at least 500 million accounts shocks both through scale — it’s the largest data breach ever — and the potential security implications for users.


That’s because Yahoo, unlike MySpace, LinkedIn and other online services that suffered large breaches in recent years, is an email provider; and email accounts are central to users’ online lives. Not only are email addresses used for private communications, but they serve as recovery points and log-in credentials for accounts on many other websites.


To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here



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What you should know, and do, about the Yahoo breach

Oracle to Adopt Allout Approach toward Cloud Computing Business


World’s largest business software company to aggressively shift its business paradigm about cloud computing services from fad to futuristic.


oracle-cloudGreatResponder.com Oracle corporation gave very clear cues during OpenWorld Conference organized by the company in San Franscisco. Many executive level participants of the company and its partners along with the CEO of Oracle Corporation have clearly advocated the aggressive approach toward cloud computing.


It is very important to note that, a few years back, the company coined a term ‘fad’ about the cloud computing buzz, but now it is falling in love with the cloud computing solutions. The company is aggressively focusing on the artificial intelligence and super fast speed cloud based services fully optimized for the oracle software platforms.


In a direct onslaught on Amazon web services, the CTO of Oracle corporation Larry Ellison said that AWS was over 20 years behind the Oracle cloud platform in terms of many features and optimized performance.


In his official statement, Larry Ellison said, “Amazon Web Services are simply not optimized for the Oracle Database. I’ll go further than that: Amazon Web Services aren’t optimized for their own databases either, as you will see.” While talking about comparative analysis of the innovative approach and service optimization of both Oracle and AWS, he said, “Amazon services will not get better, but they will get worse”. He further said, “Oracle cloud is 24 times faster for analytic workload, 8 times faster for OLTP workload, 105 times faster for oracle database than the Amazon web service platform.”


While talking about the artificial intelligence in the cloud, Diane Bryant from the Intel Corporation, which is the partner in the Oracle’s pursuit towards artificial intelligence platforms in the cloud, said in her statement, “Cloud computing is a fundamentally more efficient way to deliver all kinds of machine-learning services. It’s now cost-feasible to store and compute massive amounts of data, which is allowing for many of the advances we’re currently seeing in artificial intelligence.” She further said, “Data is the game-changer. It is the differentiator for business. AI is all around us, not just in science fiction, and it is transforming the way businesses operate”.


It is very imperative to note that Oracle has recorded huge growth in the cloud revenue earlier this month, which is a very encouraging sign for the company to aggressively focus on this powerful domain of business in the future.



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Oracle to Adopt Allout Approach toward Cloud Computing Business

WIRED Pilot Program: Easy

WIRED Pilot Program: Easy

Joe Swanberg’s new anthology series is funny, sexy, and unexpectedly touching. The post WIRED Pilot Program: Easy appeared first on WIRED.
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WIRED Pilot Program: Easy

Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Tokyo Game Show debriefings, new indie games, and the new Destiny expansion highlight this week’s gaming podcast from WIRED. The post Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia appeared first on WIRED.
Uncategorized



Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Saturday, October 29, 2016

How Google, Apple and Microsoft just saved the PC

The long-neglected PC got a massive injection of innovation this week with major announcements from Google, Apple and Microsoft.


Each company introduced advancements that users didn’t ask for, didn’t think they wanted and are already complaining about.


Why? Because we love new technology in theory but hate it in practice.


Technology change is expensive, transition is messy and people are creatures of habit.


We demand innovation, but resist it when it actually appears in our favorite product lines. That’s why only tech giants like Google, Apple and Microsoft can force the necessary change users want, but don’t know they want.


To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here


CIO Cloud Computing



How Google, Apple and Microsoft just saved the PC

Experiment proves future drones may not need batteries


On a single charge, the average consumer drone only nets about eight to 10 minutes of flight time. The solution is obvious: stuff a bigger battery into it. Problem is, the solution adds weight, which decreases flight time. It’s the ultimate catch-22. Dr. Samer Aldhaher of the Imperial College London thinks he has the answer, kinda. Aldhaher created a prototype of a lightweight, battery-less drone that hovers in place and sucks power from a transmitter below. The drone is only capable of hovering and making small side-to-side movements, but the prototype proves the utility of wireless power technology. As drones take to the skies in record numbers, a handful…


This story continues at The Next Web



All articles



Experiment proves future drones may not need batteries