Mar 12 2009

OCZ’s Apex 120GB Solid State Drive, Competition For Intel

What makes the OCZ Apes Series different from OCZ’s previous SSD offerings, however, is the Apex series’ use of what OCZ calls an “internal RAID 0 configuration” Instead of relying on a single drive controller, the OCZ Apex series is equipped with two controllers and the dual storage arrays are linked internally in a pseudo-RAID 0 setup.

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Mar 12 2009

Microsoft Executive Tapped For Top DHS Cyber Post

krebsatwpost writes “The Department of Homeland Security has named Microsoft’s “chief trustworthy infrastructure strategist” Phil Reitinger to be its top cyber security official. Many in the security industry praised him as a smart pick, but said he will need to confront a culture of political infighting and leadership failures at DHS. From the story: ‘Reitinger comes to the position with cyber experience in both the public and private sectors. Prior to joining Microsoft in 2003, he was executive director of the Defense Department’s Computer Forensics Lab. Before that, he was deputy chief of the Justice Department’s Computer Crimes and Intellectual Property section, where he worked under Scott Charney, who is currently corporate vice president for trustworthy computing at Microsoft.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 12 2009

Analyst: ARM to surpass Atom in 55% of netbooks by 2012

Analyst Robert Castellano from The Information Network believes future netbooks based on the upcoming ARM Cortex-A9 architecture and running Linux could create a market for netbooks at price points Intel and Microsoft simply won’t be able to match.

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Mar 11 2009

Linux, MS and Sun to discuss the future of operating systems

At the Hotel Kabuki in San Francisco on April 8-10, 2009, a meeting of the great OS minds will take place. There, sponsored by Intel, will be assembled together the Linux Foundation, Sun Microsystems and Microsoft representatives. But apparently, NO SIGN of APPLE!

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Mar 10 2009

Copyright and Patent Laws Hurt the Economy

Norsefire writes “Two economists at Washington University in St. Louis are claiming that copyright and patent laws are ‘killing innovation’ and ‘hurting [the] economy.’ Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine state they would like to see copyright law abolished completely as there are other protections available to the creators of ‘intellectual property’ (a term they describe as ‘propaganda,’ and of recent origin). They are calling on Congress to grant patents only where an invention has social value, where the patent would not stifle innovation, and where the absence of a patent would damage cost-effectiveness.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 10 2009

NVIDIA announces investment effort for GPU-based

NVIDIA is known primarily for their PC graphics cards, but they’ve been in the news recently both for the expansion of their CUDA and PhysX initiatives as well as (allegedly) developing a CPU to challenge Intel and AMD.

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Mar 10 2009

Stimulus Avoids Serious Solutions For Health IT

ivaldes3 writes in to note his post up on Linux Medical News, pointing out the severe shortcomings of the Health IT provisions of the just-passed stimulus bill. “The government has authorized enough money to purchase EMR freedom for the nation. Instead the government appears set to double down on proprietary lock-down. The government currently appears poised to purchase serfdom instead of freedom and performance for patients, practitioners and the nation. An intellectual and financial servitude to proprietary EMR companies for little or no gain. A truly bad bargain.”

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Mar 9 2009

Intel Envisions Shape-Shifting Smartphones

An anonymous reader writes “It’s not sci-fi, but rather advanced robotics research which is leading Intel to envision shape-shifting smartphones. ‘Imagine what you would do with this material,’ says Jason Campbell, a senior researcher at Intel’s Pittsburgh Lab who’s working in collaboration with Carnegie Mellon University. ‘If you want to carry the device, you’d make it as small as possible by making it pack itself as densely as possible. When you go to surf the Web, you’re going to make it big.’ The material being studied is transparent silicon-dioxide hemispheres, which can roll around each other under electrical control to create different shapes. The lab has built 6-inch long actuators, which it’s working to reduce to 1-mm tube-sized prototypes. When will we see a shape-shifting phone? ‘In terms of me being able to buy it, that’s a difficult forecasting problem, because I have to guess about manufacturing costs,’ Campbell said. ‘I won’t do that. But we hope the science will be proved out in three to five years.'”

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Mar 7 2009

Review: The 17-in. MacBook Pro Rocks

The already well-equipped base model (although I’m loath to call anything this gorgeous and well-built a “base model”) starts with a 2.66-GHz Core 2 Duo processor from Intel, 4GB of RAM, a 320GB hard drive, two Nvidia graphics processors and a simply stunning high-resolution, 1920-by-1200-pixel screen.

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Mar 7 2009

US Cybersecurity Chief Beckstrom Resigns

nodialtone writes with a Reuters report that Rod Beckstrom, director of the National Cybersecurity Center (NCSC), has tendered his resignation, citing clashes between the NCSC and the NSA with regard to who handles the nation’s online security efforts. In his resignation letter (PDF), he made the point that “The intelligence culture is very different than a network operations or security culture,” and said he wasn’t willing to “subjugate the NCSC underneath the NSA.” He also complained of budget roadblocks which kept the NCSC from receiving more than five weeks of funding in the past year. Wired has a related story from late February which discusses comments from Admiral Dennis Blair, director of National Intelligence, who thinks cyber security should be the NSA’s job to begin with.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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