Network admin eats humble pie

This story took place in 1994. After being the de facto network administrator in my previous job, I now had the official title with a new job.

I was taking care of a small prepress group, which had a file server running Novell NetWare 3.11. There were about 20 users; about two-thirds used Macintoshes running System 7, and the rest used PCs running DOS/Windows 3.1. I had never touched a Mac before, so supporting them was new to me.

Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/it-jobs/network-admin-eats-humble-pie-180308?source=rss_infoworld_top_stories_

AMAZON.COM AMERICA MOVIL AMKOR TECHNOLOGY AMPHENOL ANIXTER INTERNATIONAL

Box.net befriends Android, will offer Sony Ericsson Xperia phones 50GB of free cloud storage (update: LG phones too)

How much cloud storage space do you need? 2GB? 5GB? Pah! Box.net scoffs at your puny storage needs, and plan to offer a substantial 50GB of free storage (again) for anyone packing a Sony Ericsson Android phone. While the plans have leaked ahead of schedule, the fine details haven't been hammered out just yet; the official blog tells us that the company's "working to provide this offer very soon to all Xperia customers." When the offer does go live, logging in to (or creating) a Box.net account on any Xperia handset will open the floodgates to 50 gigs of intangible internet storage fo' life. If this keeps up, it shouldn't be long till we're looking at gratis terabytes and are freed of our not-exactly-crippling USB stick addiction, right?

Update: Sony Ericsson's not the only one getting gratis cloud storage -- LG owners can snag 50GB for life, too. PR's after the break.

Continue reading Box.net befriends Android, will offer Sony Ericsson Xperia phones 50GB of free cloud storage (update: LG phones too)

Box.net befriends Android, will offer Sony Ericsson Xperia phones 50GB of free cloud storage (update: LG phones too) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 10:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Next Web  |  sourceSony Ericsson (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/30/box-net-befriends-android-will-offer-sony-ericsson-xperia-phone/

FORMFACTOR FISERV FIRST SOLAR FINISAR FEI COMPANY

Harvard-designed 'soft robot' shows you how low it can go (video)

It's the stuff of slow-moving robopocalyptic nightmares: a 'soft robot' designed by a team of Harvard scientists that draws inspiration from invertebrates like worms and starfish. The wired 'bot is made from a flexible elastomer material that allows it to squeeze into spaces that are inaccessible for more traditional robots. Inside are chambers that inflate and deflate, allowing the thing to undulate forward. Definitely check out the robot in action after the break.

Continue reading Harvard-designed 'soft robot' shows you how low it can go (video)

Harvard-designed 'soft robot' shows you how low it can go (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 00:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink BBC  |  sourcePNAS (registration required)  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/30/harvard-designed-soft-robot-shows-you-how-low-it-can-go-video/

TOTAL SYSTEM SERVICES TNS TIBCO SOFTWARE TIBCO SOFTWARE THQ

Microsoft, Yahoo, AOL Partner on Advertising

In a bid to counter some of the Internet's larger ad giants--most notably Google and Facebook--Microsoft has joined in an advertising partnership with AOL and Yahoo.

However, Microsoft isn't framing the agreement as a response to its competitors in that arena. "Other players in the industry are welcome to join us," Rik van der Kooi, corporate vice president of Microsoft Advertising Business Group, told Reuters Nov. 8. "This is not in response to anybody in particular."

Under the terms of the agreement, each of the three companies can sell premium display ads belonging to the other two. That will allow the trifecta to more efficiently unload premium advertising inventory, although their competition over advertiser spending and other segments will continue apace.

Facebook and Google continue to battle for their own significant shares of the online advertising pie. Although Microsoft's product portfolio gives it diverse streams of revenue (in contrast to Google, for example, which depends on advertising for an overwhelming percentage of its bottom line), its recent emphasis on Web and cloud services makes advertising a more prominent concern. Greater ad revenues would also allow Microsoft to absorb some of the massive losses its online division accrues on a quarterly basis.

Microsoft is already in partnership with Facebook. A number of the latter's features, including the "Like" button, feed social data into Bing, Microsoft's search engine. That wouldn't stop Microsoft from making a more aggressive play for the same advertising-dollar pool that feeds Facebook, of course, and nor would that stop AOL or Yahoo, which presumably view Facebook as more of an existential threat.

Follow me on Twitter


Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/MicrosoftWatch/~3/UwPbUyxmrDY/microsoft_yahoo_aol_partner_on_advertising.html

INTEL INSIGHT ENTERPRISES INGRAM MICRO INFORMATICA INFOCUS

Microsoft's Bing Adds Airport Maps

Microsoft's Bing search engine now offers detailed airport maps for searchers.

"The new airport maps give you everything you need to navigate your way through your travels," read a Sept. 29 posting on the Bing Community blog. "Airport maps include information on parking garages, ticket counter information, terminals and gates, baggage claims, currency exchange and more." That 'more' includes a directory of eateries and airlines.

Via the desktop version of Bing, users can access this map by typing the name of the airport into Bing Maps and then zooming into the building itself, or searching for their flight status on Bing and then clicking on the map icon visible alongside the airport listing.

Bing is kicking off this service with 42 airports in the United States, with plans to add more over time.

Microsoft has been exceptionally aggressive in adding features to its search engine over the past few months, in its bid to better compete with Google. Many of these features focus on very specific subject verticals, such as shopping or entertainment or, yes, airport maps. By doing so, Microsoft hopes to provide a clearer alternative to Google, which continues to dominate the market for traditional keyword-based search.

While Bing lags Google for in terms of broader market numbers, it remains a pillar of Microsoft's increasingly cloud-centric corporate strategy. Because of that, Microsoft continues to add new features to the engine: on Sept. 23, for example, it announced the launch of Bing Deals, a Website that aggregates more than 200,000 deals from the likes of Groupon, LivingSocial, Nordstrom and Target.

Follow me on Twitter


Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/MicrosoftWatch/~3/2diyzcgzGxI/microsofts_bing_adds_airport_maps.html

NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR NATIONAL INSTRUMENTS MOTOROLA MOODY’S MISCROSOFT OFFICE

Microsoft's Ballmer Swipes at Google

We can learn at least one thing from Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's talk at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco: When it comes to smartphone competition, Microsoft sees Android as a bigger threat than Apple.

I'm basing that solely on the vitriol that Ballmer leveled at Android (and Google in general) while leaving Apple relatively unscathed. Indeed, he offered faint praise for the iPhone, grouping it along with Windows Phone as a device that feels "good in your hand." His most damning criticism was that the iPhone offers "seas of icons," versus Windows Phone's goal of placing "information front and center."

But he launched an attack on Android. First he said, "You don't need to be a computer scientist to use a Windows Phone," as if you somehow need a Ph.D to use an Android-based device. Then he added, "It is very hard to be excited, for me, about the Android phones," which, well, is exactly what you'd expect the CEO of Microsoft to say under such circumstances.

It makes sense that Ballmer would reserve the bulk of his fire for Android, considering that both Microsoft and Google are following roughly the same strategy in smartphones: Persuade hardware manufacturers to load your software onto as many devices as possible, in a bid to saturate the market. But Android's a dominating platform while Windows Phone, roughly a year after its release, is still struggling for adoption.

At the same time, though, maybe Ballmer should curb some of that ire: The more Android devices sold, the more Microsoft gets paid, thanks to a series of patent-licensing agreements with Android manufacturers.

That Android strategy (Microsoft's alternative for Android manufacturers who refuse to enter into a licensing agreement: an intellectual property lawsuit) is just one piece of Microsoft's larger competitive thrust against Google. During his talk, Ballmer also insisted that, with the release of Office 365 and other cloud-productivity platforms, Microsoft was making more progress against Google in the cloud. "Our ramp rate of sold seats, it's got a nice trajectory," he said, "We've got a highly functional product that's highly available."

He also painted Microsoft as gaining search-engine traction with users despite Google's dominance of the search space. Bing's progress was good "not just for share but for having enough data to continue to improve the product," he said, according to a video of the talk posted on YouTube, "to make search more than just 10 blue links." He sidestepped a moderator question about whether Microsoft would create its own social platform along the lines of Google Plus, suggesting instead that "we're adding what we would call connectivity to our products."

In other words, don't expect this battle to end any time soon.

Follow me on Twitter


Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/MicrosoftWatch/~3/S9P1LdE8se0/microsofts_ballmer_swipes_at_google.html

THQ TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TERADATA TELETECH HOLDINGS TECHNITROL

Big data strains small-business bandwidth

Sooner or later, small businesses encounter many of the same challenges big businesses face -- and it's happening now, big time, with rampant data growth. You'd think the burden of the data explosion would fall primarily on storage infrastructure. In fact, for many small businesses, WAN bandwidth is proving to be the biggest bottleneck.

Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/data-explosion/big-data-strains-small-business-bandwidth-179853?source=rss_infoworld_top_stories_

RF MICRO DEVICES RED HAT RADISYS RACKABLE SYSTEMS QUEST SOFTWARE