May 8 2009

Oracle Won’t Abandon SPARC, Says Ellison

fm6 writes “When the Oracle acquisition of Sun Microsystems was announced, it was widely assumed that Oracle was interested only in Sun’s software technology, and would sell or discontinue all its hardware businesses. Larry Ellison, in an interview (PDF) just posted on the Oracle web site, says that’s not what’s going to happen. In particular, SPARC isn’t going anywhere: ‘Once we own Sun we’re going to increase the investment in SPARC. We think designing our own chips is very, very important. Even Apple is designing its own chips these days.'”

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May 7 2009

Unclean Military Hard Drives Sold On eBay

An anonymous reader writes “Highly sensitive details of a US military missile air defense system were found on a second-hand hard drive bought on eBay. The test launch procedures were found on a hard disk for the THAAD (Terminal High Altitude Area Defense) ground to air missile defense system, used to shoot down Scud missiles in Iraq. The disk also contained security policies, blueprints of facilities and personal information on employees including social security numbers, belonging to technology company Lockheed Martin — who designed and built the system. First part of story. Scary that they did not wipe it to Department of Defense standards which I believe is wiping the whole disk and then writing 1010 all over it.”

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May 7 2009

Unclean Military Hard Drives Sold on eBay

An anonymous reader writes “Highly sensitive details of a US military missile air defense system were found on a second-hand hard drive bought on eBay. The test launch procedures were found on a hard disk for the THAAD (Terminal High Altitude Area Defense) ground to air missile defense system, used to shoot down Scud missiles in Iraq. The disk also contained security policies, blueprints of facilities and personal information on employees including social security numbers, belonging to technology company Lockheed Martin — who designed and built the system. First part of story. scary that they did not wipe it to Department of Defense standards which I believe is wiping the whole disk and then writing 1010 all over it.”

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May 7 2009

Do We Really Need a National Climate Service?

coondoggie writes “I suppose its natural for Washington to try and wrap issues up in a tidy legislative package for bureaucratic purposes (or perhaps other things more nefarious). But one has to wonder if we really need another government-lead group, especially when it comes to the climate and all the sometimes controversial information that entails. But that’s what’s under way. Today the House Science and Technology Committee’s Subcommittee on Energy and Environment held a hearing on the need for a National Climate Service, that could meet the increased demand for climate information, the committee said. The NCS would provide a single point of contact of information climate forecasts and support for planning and management decisions by federal agencies; state, local, and tribal governments; and the private sector.”

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May 6 2009

Virgin Media UK Pilots 200Mbps Broadband Speeds

MJackson writes “UK cable operator Virgin Media has announced the first real-world customer pilots of up to 200Mbps broadband services using DOCSIS3 technology from Cisco, which could make it one of the fastest Internet Service Providers (ISPs) in the world. Following successful lab trials, the 6 month long pilot started last week in Ashford, Kent (England), and will ultimately employ 100 customers in the testing process. The pilot will, among other things, test future online consumer applications, including High Definition Internet TV (HD IPTV) and the ability to deliver applications and support for home IT needs through its network. By comparison J:Com in Japan supplies broadband at up to 160Mbps and Cablevision in the US supplies broadband at up to 101Mbps. Like Virgin Media, both companies use DOCSIS3 technology for broadband over cable networks.”

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May 6 2009

Proposed Peer-To-Peer Law Sparks Animosity

coondoggie writes “The Federal Trade Commission and Distributed Computing Industry Association locked horns over a proposed law that would govern how peer-to-peer networking technology would be used and regulated. Before the Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade, and Consumer Protection, the Federal Trade Commission expressed its doubts about companies protecting sensitive consumer information (PDF) or sensitive data over P2P internet file-sharing networks. It doesn’t help the P2P cause that the technology continues to pop up in bad practices. Recently a company that monitors peer-to-peer networks said it found classified information about the systems used onboard the president’s helicopter in a shared folder on a computer in Iran, after a file containing the data was accidentally leaked on a peer-to-peer network last summer. Meanwhile the DCIA said any laws would likely be ineffective and stifle the business opportunities P2P can generate.” An article on CNet points out that the wording of the bill would make it apply to just about everything related to communications on the internet.

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May 5 2009

CA Vs. MA In Battle Over Non-Compete Clause

Lucas123 writes “A case was filed with superior courts in California and Massachusetts involving a former EMC top executive who is trying work for HP. The case is throwing into relief Massachusetts’s and California’s differing approaches to non-compete clauses in employment contracts. California courts have argued that non-competes hamper a person’s ability to traverse the marketplace freely for work, while Massachusetts courts say the agreements actually afford freedom to develop technology without the fear of IP theft.”

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May 5 2009

Wolfram Alpha vs. Google — Results Vary

wjousts writes “Technology Review has an article comparing various search results from Wolfram Alpha and Google. Results vary. For example, searching ‘Microsoft Apple’ in Alpha returns data comparing both companies stock prices, whereas Google top results are news stories mentioning both companies. However, when searching for ’10 pounds kilograms,’ Alpha rather unhelpfully assumes you want to multiply 10 pounds by 1 kilogram, whereas Google directs you to sites for metric conversions. Change the query to ’10 pounds in kilograms’ and both give you the result you’d expect (i.e. 4.536 kg).”

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May 4 2009

AMD Spin-Off Global Foundries Unveils NY Fab Plans

AMD and the Advanced Technology Investment Company of Abu Dhabi spinoff Global Foundries, a semiconductor manufacturing company, releases its plans for a cutting-edge fab in upstate NY. The new facility will be a 300mm wafer manufacturing plant designed for 32/22nm process technologies. Jobs, anyone?


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May 4 2009

Sapphire Crystal:Store 250 DVDs on One Coin-Sized Surface

Sapphire crystals may be the next material to transform the electronics industry, thanks to nanotechnology researchers who have announced a new way of storing data that would fit the contents of 250 DVDs on a coin-sized surface.


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