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New $279 Kindle Can Finally Roam InternationallyThere's a bit of news coming out of Amazon today. The company is dropping the price of its existing basic Kindle (the smaller form factor one, not the larger $489 Kindle DX) from $299 to $259 and introducing a third Kindle that's the same as the basic one, but that's $279 and can roam internationally. This is a huge boon to both international travelers and people living in countries where the 3G CDMA 1x-EVDO radio technologies found in the original Kindles (basic and DX) don't work. Given the ambiguity in the... Continue reading "New $279 Kindle Can Finally Roam Internationally..." Ode To Gmail's "Conversations" (a.k.a. "Why MS-Entourage Stinks")Back in the day, the people at Microsoft who were responsible for bringing the world Office for the Mac (the Macintosh Business Unit) fancied themselves as outcasts on the company's sprawling Redmond Campus; Outcasts with something to prove. When a new version was on the way, they'd parade into my office talking smack as though they just left the Windows version of Office lying on the canvas after a knock-out blow. They'd proceed to demonstrate how the Mac's underpinnings enabled functionality that the Windows Office guys could only dream of. So, why, after the Mac has come so far, does MS-Entourage suck so bad. Continue reading "Ode To Gmail's "Conversations" (a.k.a. "Why MS-Entourage Stinks") ..." IBM Launches iNotes In The Cloud, More To Come?IBM is wading into online email service, a space where Google, Yahoo and Microsoft already have big presences. Is IBM staging a kamikaze run, giving itself one more place where Lotus Notes will show it's got difficulty competing? Is there a method to this madness? Why does IBM have its head in the clouds? Continue reading "IBM Launches iNotes In The Cloud, More To Come?..." Eolas Scores New Browser Interactivity Patent And Sues....EveryoneEolas Technologies has announced a new patent infringement suit, the defendants of which reads like a Who's Who list of big tech and consumer brands. Eolas is the company that filed a patent infringement suit and ultimately prevailed over Microsoft for the latter's inclusion of plug-in capability into Internet Explorer. In today's lawsuit, Eolas says that Adobe, Amazon, Apple, Google, Sun, eBay and many others (complete list below) are infringing on a patent awarded just this month (that didn't take long!). Continue reading "Eolas Scores New Browser Interactivity Patent And Sues....Everyone..." Will Consumers Pay-Out-Of-Pocket For Online Healthcare?If you suspect your extra-cranky baby has an ear infection on a Saturday afternoon, but his doctor isn't back in the office till Monday, a walk-in clinic--like the kind springing up in places such as retail pharmacy chains--can be a convenient place to get the ear checked. But if it's the middle of the night, what do you do? Continue reading "Will Consumers Pay-Out-Of-Pocket For Online Healthcare?..." More SaaS IT Service Management OptionsAccelOps' latest software release adds new features for network and data center service management, both for premises and SaaS deployments. Continue reading "More SaaS IT Service Management Options ..." Getting A Grip On Health And Wellness Via The WebOpen enrollment season starts soon and unfortunately for many organizations, that'll mean informing employees that they've got higher healthcare co-pays and deductibles starting in January. But for some employers, this year's open enrollment season brings some innovative twists to their benefits offerings, thanks to the web. Continue reading "Getting A Grip On Health And Wellness Via The Web..." Virtual Collaboration Tool Gets New Name, New CustomersQwaq rebrands itself as Teleplace as it continues to preach the gospel of virtual worlds for business collaboration. Continue reading "Virtual Collaboration Tool Gets New Name, New Customers..." Simple API Is Part Of A Rising And Open Tide To The CloudWhat's notable about the open source project announced yesterday, Simple API for cloud computing, are the names that are present, IBM, Microsoft and Rackspace, and the names that are not: Amazon, for one, is not a backer, and let's just stop right there. Continue reading "Simple API Is Part Of A Rising And Open Tide To The Cloud..." Promoting Healthcare Reform Through ITOne could say that when it comes to IT and healthcare, President Obama is taking some of his own medicine. Obama isn't only pushing healthcare providers to adopt IT; Obama is skillfully using technology to promote his healthcare reform plans. Continue reading "Promoting Healthcare Reform Through IT ..." BlackHat Bombshell #2: iPhones And Other "GSM" Phones Open To SMS HackWith one bombshell already having been dropped at the BlackHat Conference (that most implementations of SSL are configured to give up everything including logins, credit cards, etc.), researchers dropped another one today when they demonstrated how the SMS infrastructures of GSM-flavored operators such as AT&T and T-Mobile are hackable to the point that cell phones can be hacked and their users can be tricked into divulging confidential information. Continue reading "BlackHat Bombshell #2: iPhones And Other "GSM" Phones Open To SMS Hack..." Black Hat Researcher Rains On Cloud Computing's Parade With Talk Of VulnerabilitiesiSEC Partners partner (and Black Hat researcher) Alex Stamos says there's really no such thing as cloud computing. According to him, it's just a trendy name to take your money. Regardless of what you want to call it though, the vulnerabilities inherent to it are very real. That was Stamos' message in a briefing he gave this morning at the Black Hat conference in Las Vegas. Among the highlights of my podcast interview with him; Salesforce gets a gold star and Windows-based virtual machines are architecturally more secure than Linux-based ones. Continue reading "Black Hat Researcher Rains On Cloud Computing's Parade With Talk Of Vulnerabilities..." Black Hat Researcher Cracks Algorithm For Creating Social Security NumbersThough it's not the bombshell that was dropped by Moxie Marlinspike, another researcher is here at BlackHat briefing attendees on how he cracked the Social Security Administration's code for creating social security numbers and how governments and organizations must respond now that SSNs are not secure in their commonly used contexts as passwords and identifiers (includes podcast interview). Continue reading "Black Hat Researcher Cracks Algorithm For Creating Social Security Numbers..." Bombshell From Black Hat: Almost All Implementations Of SSL Are Configured To Give Up EverythingNo edition of the Black Hat conference would be complete without a few security bombshells; The ones where attendees learn that a huge swath of their digital security -- previously thought to be totally secure -- is little more than a house of cards that, thanks to some Black Hat researcher, just came tumbling down. Here in Las Vegas, Moxie Marlinspike is one of those researchers and he's here demonstrating how SSL is that house of cards. Think your implementation of SSL is secure? Think again. It's time to go back to square one. (includes podcast interview) Continue reading "Bombshell From Black Hat: Almost All Implementations Of SSL Are Configured To Give Up Everything..." Black Hat Podcast: Popularity of Social Nets Puts Spotlight On Dangers Of Cross-Site Request ForgeriesToday is the first day of the infamous Black Hat Briefings taking place at the Black Hat Conference in Las Vegas and most of what the attendees will hear today is being presented publicly for the first time by the various researchers in the building. Today, for example, is the day that many researchers reveal their discoveries and exploits but in some cases, they hold back on the tools or details needed to replicate their research until the impacted vendors and organizations have an opportunity to address the vulnerabilities. Case in point: a team of researchers used NewsWeek.com as an example of a site that's vulnerable to dynamic cross site request forgeries. Continue reading "Black Hat Podcast: Popularity of Social Nets Puts Spotlight On Dangers Of Cross-Site Request Forgeries..." Unsheathing The Double-Edged Sword Of Black Hat 2009 In Vegas"What I'm about to teach you could land you in jail and destroy your life and family if you choose to use it for nefarious purposes." These words and others like them have been repeated many times in the nearly 50 security classes being given during the training portion of Black Hat, now onto its fourth day in Las Vegas. The "classrooms" here at Caesar's Palace are filled with everyone from self-proclaimed hackers (their badges say so) to digital forensics specialists from the US government's most secretive agencies (their badges say nothing). There's even a male registered nurse/CISSP here (hmmmm). Continue reading "Unsheathing The Double-Edged Sword Of Black Hat 2009 In Vegas..." Matt Mullenweg And Dries Buytaert Probably Separated At BirthWhen it comes to open sourced content management platforms and their creators, there's no question about the celebrity status that WordPress and its young founder Matt Mullenweg have ascended to. If offered an opportunity to interview Mullenweg about some news, I'd undoubtedly jump on it. But when I was offered the chance to do the same with Dries Buytaert, my initial response was "Dries who?" Once I realized "Dries, the creator of Drupal," I didn't hesitate (podcast below). Continue reading "Matt Mullenweg And Dries Buytaert Probably Separated At Birth..." Is Your Cloud App Ready For 100,000 Users?Ninety percent of companies don't put their Web applications or sites through performance tests, according to Tom Lounibos, CEO of cloud testing specialist Soasta. Which companies have taken that extra step? Soasta is introducing a certification program to sort out the testers from the non-testers. Continue reading "Is Your Cloud App Ready For 100,000 Users?..." On Giving Away Microsoft OfficeThere are a few ways to see Microsoft's plans for a free web-based version of Office. One, it's self-competition; two, it's competition with open source software; three, it's competition with other web services. Which one matters most? Continue reading "On Giving Away Microsoft Office..." GoogleOS: It's WebOS, ActuallyIt's finally happened. Google's dived headfirst into the desktop operating system game, just like people speculated they would. And from the sound of it, it's an OS where the main user-interface metaphor is the web. Pass the aspirin. Continue reading "GoogleOS: It's WebOS, Actually..." 64-Bit Firefox: What's Your Hurry?After installing 64-bit Windows on one of my test machines, I scurried around to see what 64-bit desktop applications are available in the open source world. Firefox is one of them, but not officially -- at least, not yet. The reasons for this are not what you might think. Continue reading "64-Bit Firefox: What's Your Hurry?..." Benioff Offers Cloud Riposte: It's Not Just FashionMarc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce.com, finally got a little revenge. He wasn't in the least spiteful. Rather, he was only guilty of repeating something his former boss, Larry Ellison, said about software-as-a-service and cloud computing. An audience of cloud cognoscenti at Structure 09 loved the performance. Continue reading "Benioff Offers Cloud Riposte: It's Not Just Fashion ..." Life With A Bleeding-Edge BrowserFirefox 3.5 went to public release-candidate status earlier this week. But while the whole 3.5 branch was still under wraps, I was sticking my neck out and running the bleeding-edge nightly builds of the browser -- and was surprised at how un-beta it was. Continue reading "Life With A Bleeding-Edge Browser..." Why Businesses And Individuals Aren't Racing To Go Green (And What To Do About It)As one of the head counselors of Energy Camp (Tom Raftery of Greenmonk fame is the other; blog, Twitter), I pay pretty close attention to anything colored green; green organizations, green initiatives, green events, green vendor programs, green news, etc. It was only after the last Energy Camp at Interop in Las Vegas that it dawned on me why the overall green movement gets only pockets of traction, and what we should do about it. Hopefully, someone in Obama's administration is listening. Continue reading "Why Businesses And Individuals Aren't Racing To Go Green (And What To Do About It)..." Google's Video Tag ControversyLove it or hate it, YouTube has become the de facto video presentation portal for, well, everyone. Now comes some worried discussion about what format YouTube may support when HTML 5 and its <video> tag make their debut. Continue reading "Google's Video Tag Controversy..." USAir Suffers Collosal Failure During Multiple CRM "Moments of Truth"Jan Carlzon, former CEO of Scandanavian Airlines (SAS) and author of the bible on customer satisfaction (Moments of Truth) would be rolling his eyes right about now if he could have heard the telephone conversation I just had with a US Air. I've just learned that despite holding a US Air-issued Dividend Miles card (pictured below) in my hand (the one to which I've been applying my last 15+ years of US Air travel), I am a figment in US Air's imagination. Neither I nor any miles I've traveled with the air carrier exist. Continue reading "USAir Suffers Collosal Failure During Multiple CRM "Moments of Truth"..." Mozilla Prism Beta ReleasedMozilla's Prism entered public beta testing on Friday, a milestone marking the software's readiness for general use and the convergence of local computing with the cloud. Continue reading "Mozilla Prism Beta Released..." First Look & Podcast: Google Apps To Support BlackBerry Enterprise ServerIt's the week of May 4th and if you're down at RIM's annual user conference in Orlando, you might be wondering what some Google-folk are doing there circulating amongst all those BlackBerry-lovers. Answer: They're giving enterprises yet another reason to swap Google Apps' cloud-based email, calendaring, and contact management for their on-premises installations of Microsoft Exchange or Lotus Notes. I've been testing the new technology and have a podcast interview with Google's Raju Gulabani. Continue reading "First Look & Podcast: Google Apps To Support BlackBerry Enterprise Server..." Google's Got Goats!When not organizing all the world's information and making it universally accessible, Google can often be found not doing evil, in keeping with its unofficial motto. Continue reading "Google's Got Goats!..." Symantec Acquires Startup 50 CompanyMi5 Networks, which makes a Web security appliance, will be integrated into Symantec's product line later this year. Continue reading "Symantec Acquires Startup 50 Company..." ReviewCam: Apture Takes Hyperlinking To A New Context And Depth For Any CMSAt Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco, I had a chance to catch up with Apture CEO and founder Tristan Harris to "shoot" a ReviewCam movie of Apture's innovative cloud-based hyperlinking service that seems to automagically work with any content management system. What's special about Apture is how frictionlessly it adds new levels of context and depth when hyperlinking something (e.g.: text) in ways that the native CMS (egg: WordPress) could never do and it does this (a) by adding only a bit of Javascript to your templates and (b) without even having to go into your CMS's content authoring console. For end users of your content, the results are just as slick. Continue reading "ReviewCam: Apture Takes Hyperlinking To A New Context And Depth For Any CMS..." ReviewCam: At Web 2.0 Expo, Kosmix Demos Its Mashup For Researching TopicsI've been at Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco all day "shooting" ReviewCams of sites and services that claim to fit into the Web 2.0 category. One such demo that I captured on video (see below) is essentially a search site that's designed for especially for people who are researching topics and who would prefer to have their search results organized in a way that's conducive to learning about some subject matter rather than just wading through pages of search results. Kosmix.com may be worth a try if you want to get smart about something in a hurry (instead of looking for a needle in a haystack). Continue reading "ReviewCam: At Web 2.0 Expo, Kosmix Demos Its Mashup For Researching Topics..." Is Java On Deck For Google App Engine?While working on the post that I just published about whether data that's stored in the cloud is really safe or not (answer: your mileage will vary), I came across a post from Michael Arrington that speculates on whether Google's forthcoming super secret announcement on April 7th is that Google's App Engine platform-as-a-service will support the Java programming language. Last week, during a cloud computing panel in NYC that I moderated (in front of an audience of Java developers), I asked Google App Engine product manager that exact question. Continue reading "Is Java On Deck For Google App Engine?..." Podcast: Is Your Data Really Safe In the Cloud?Earlier this week, over on InformationWeek's sister site that's dedicated to Cloud Computing -- Plug into the Cloud -- George Crump asked a question that I thought I knew the answer to: Is data in the cloud risky? Crump points to a "recent report that the FTC is considering a request to shut down Google Apps." But after I got done laughing at such a waste of taxpayer money, I turned back to the seriousness of the question at hand. Continue reading "Podcast: Is Your Data Really Safe In the Cloud?..." Can You Measure The ROI of Enterprise Social Networking?Probably not. But ROI is only one way to measure value. Here's an informal business case from EMC on the benefits. Continue reading "Can You Measure The ROI of Enterprise Social Networking?..." Podcast: New Rev Of SUSE Linux First To Officially Support .NET, SilverlightWith no change to its business model or pricing (subscription-based support starting at $349 per server), Novell launched version 11 of it Linux distribution known as SUSE Enterprise Linux. For the first time, according to Novell officials, support is now available for running applications that were originally designed for Microsoft's .NET or Silverlight platforms. But, given how IT shops are starting to pinch pennies by moving to the cloud, must Novell change course? Continue reading "Podcast: New Rev Of SUSE Linux First To Officially Support .NET, Silverlight..." ReviewCam Of Sun's Innovative Drag, Drop, & Deploy Virtual Datacenter DesignerWhile at Sun's CommunityOne East Developer Conference where Sun announced a pretty compelling entry into the cloud computing market (called the Sun Cloud, see the details and listen to the podcast), I caught up with Sun Cloud Computing CTO Lew Tucker who sat down with me to demo a GUI-based virtual datacenter deployment tool (all in a Web browser). Perhaps Sun should call it 4D; Drag, Drop, Deploy, and (voila!) Datacenter (in Sun's Cloud that is). I caught the entire thing on tape as one of our video ReviewCams (below). Continue reading "ReviewCam Of Sun's Innovative Drag, Drop, & Deploy Virtual Datacenter Designer..." Podcast: Sun's Cloud To RESTfully Give Developers Access To Virtual Data CentersThe Web is brewing with analysis of the news that IBM is in talks to buy Sun. Most of it covers the sensibility of IBM buying into Sun's existing businesses and customers. But, should IBM acquire Sun, it will also get a portfolio of cloud offerings that are being announced later today at Sun's CommunityOne East Developer Conference in New York. Given the traction that cloud computing is getting and how IBM isn't viewed as a cloud player (by a long shot), an acquisition of Sun would instantly put IBM in the game against the likes of Amazon and Google with a new offering that actually packs quite a punch. Continue reading "Podcast: Sun's Cloud To RESTfully Give Developers Access To Virtual Data Centers..." Interop Insider #4 (MP3): Arista Networks Positions Itself As "The" 10-Gb Networker Of The CloudsAlthough she dodged the question at the end of my podcast interview (below), Arista Networks CEO Jayshree Ullal can't help but think that history is going to repeat itself. Following Cisco's acquisition of Crescendo Networks in the '90s (where she worked), Ullal ended up working for Cisco for 15 years. Notwithstanding its newly announced Intel-based blade servers, Cisco usually prefers to buy than build. If everything Ullal says about Arista's 10 Gigabit Ethernet switches and "the cloud's" appetite for them is true, she'll probably end up at Cisco again (by way of acquisition). Continue reading "Interop Insider #4 (MP3): Arista Networks Positions Itself As "The" 10-Gb Networker Of The Clouds..." Podcast: Sun Looks To Start Privacy And Governance Alliance For Cloud Computing IndustryStealing a page from the playbook it used to launch the Liberty Alliance (and undermine Microsoft's Passport service in the process), Sun Microsystems' newly appointed cloud computing chief governance officer, Michele Dennedy, tells me in this podcast how she now has her sights set on forming a similar industry consortium for governance and privacy in the area of cloud computing. Additionally, Dennedy's appointment is one of many ducks that Sun is getting in a row as it gears up to make some allegedly blockbuster cloud computing announcements in New York City on March 18. Continue reading "Podcast: Sun Looks To Start Privacy And Governance Alliance For Cloud Computing Industry..." Interop Insider #3 (MP3): ScienceLogic's David Takes On Goliaths BMC, CA, IBM, And HPBased out of Reston, Va., ScienceLogic CEO David Link is no Silicon Valley insider. He might as well be, though, because the technology that ScienceLogic has cooked up in the form of it's 7-in-1 EM7 data center management appliance is the sort of solution that usually requires a patchwork of solutions from the management titans normally associated with such functionality: BMC, CA, IBM, and HP. Continue reading "Interop Insider #3 (MP3): ScienceLogic's David Takes On Goliaths BMC, CA, IBM, And HP..." The Bill To Blur Google EarthThe satellite imagery in Google Earth and Google Maps is the equivalent of yelling fire in a crowded movie theater, which is to say that it's not protected by the First Amendment right to free speech. Continue reading "The Bill To Blur Google Earth..." Drawing A Line On Web Application SecurityWeb application security is of particular importance because so much of our digital life is spent interacting with Web applications. Lori MacVittie, technical marketing manager with F5 and former Network Computing senior technology editor, has spent years kicking the question of where application security belongs -- in the network or the application -- back and forth. But I want to draw a line in the sand: Don't depend on Web application firewalls to fix your software problems. Continue reading "Drawing A Line On Web Application Security..." Oracle To Buy Virtual Iron? It Has A Good Reason ToThere's been a persistent rumor circulating that Virtual Iron is about to be acquired, fueled in part by a recent Jefferies & Co. research report that said Oracle was interested in the virtualization startup. Why would Oracle, with its own Oracle VM, want a third-tier player in the virtualization market? Continue reading "Oracle To Buy Virtual Iron? It Has A Good Reason To..." TechWeb And InformationWeek Launch ReviewCams: Video Reviews Of Web Services & SoftwareIf you haven't seen it yet, I encourage you to check out our first ever ReviewCam. Using video, the goal of our ReviewCams is to put you up close and personal with an editor's-eye-view of Web services or software. Continue reading "TechWeb And InformationWeek Launch ReviewCams: Video Reviews Of Web Services & Software..." ReviewCam: Socialcast Privatizes The Power Of Twitter, Del.icio.us, And FriendFeed For EnterprisesIn this, our first ever "ReviewCam", Socialcast CEO founder Tim Young demos his company's namesake service while we're "rolling tape" on the demo. For $1 per user per month Socialcast offers its customers a private service that includes Twitter-style microblogging, Del.icio.us-style social bookmarking, and FriendFeed-style lifestreaming. But for brownie points, Socialcast also integrates with the actual Twitter, Del.icio.us, and other social networks like YouTube, Digg, Facebook, and Google Reader. Continue reading "ReviewCam: Socialcast Privatizes The Power Of Twitter, Del.icio.us, And FriendFeed For Enterprises..." Google Solicits Planet-Saving VideosGoogle wants you to use energy to save energy. In its latest scheme to save the planet, Google is asking anyone with a video camera to make and upload a video that illustrates the benefits of energy-efficient computing. Continue reading "Google Solicits Planet-Saving Videos..." Interop Insider #2 (MP3): Cisco Offers Email Security In The CloudIn this, my second installment of Interop Insider, Cisco e-mail security group product manager Nick Edwards explains the company's newest foray into the cloud -- that of reproducing the e-mail security functionality found in the company's IronPort appliances as a cloud-based service offering. With Interop in Las Vegas just around the corner, I'll be publishing an entire series of Interop Insiders (each with a write-up and podcast interview) to give you an idea of what can be found at the show. Continue reading "Interop Insider #2 (MP3): Cisco Offers Email Security In The Cloud..." The Top 10 Reasons To Outsource Your Enterprise Email To Gmail NowLast week, I wrote about how the recent Gmail outage actually draws attention to why Gmail is more worthy of enterprises than it has ever been. That opinion stands in contrast to a story my colleague Antone Gonsalves recently published (see "Google Takes Credibility Hit With Gmail Outage"). My response: If you are currently insourcing your e-mail and, at the very least, not considering that system's replacement with Gmail, I want some of what you're smoking. Continue reading "The Top 10 Reasons To Outsource Your Enterprise Email To Gmail Now..." Loath To Improve Itself, Could Twitter Be Disintermediated By A Protocol?John Herren, known by some for inventing TagCloud.com, is a talented developer who has spotted opportunity at the intersection of Twitter and what he calls "Web hooks." In a blog he posted earlier today, he offers some real-world examples of how easy it is to trap Twitter's e-mail notifications for events that can trigger any business process. The same could go for any site (eBay, Facebook, etc.). If there is such a thing as Web 3.0, he may have scratched its surface. Bigger picture: Could social networks like Twitter end-up disintermediated by open protocols? Continue reading "Loath To Improve Itself, Could Twitter Be Disintermediated By A Protocol?..." Go on to the weblog archives... |
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