January 05, 2015

Are PC Hard Drives Destined to Die at the Hand of the Cloud? Maybe, Analysts Say
Enterprises don’t like content stored on local devices because of the risk that it could leak outside company walls, and the costs associated with redundant storage placed right next to the worker. Connectivity problems, such as limited Wi-Fi at hotels and other locations, is fading away. And every time a company has bet on local services, such as Apple’s determination to sell MP3s rather than stream music, that company has lost. “The most disruptive technology in the market right now is Chromebooks,” Enderle said. The bottom line? There’s no easy answer to the question of whether local hard drives or SSDs are doomed.


10 things you should do to manage BYOA
BYOD and BYOA are both part of the greater movement of the consumerization of IT. People are used to consumer tools "just working," and that is part of the appeal of the BYOA movement. Many of the apps people bring into the workplace are designed to operate simply, much like their consumer counterparts. This can create problems for IT leaders, especially, as it changes expectations for other corporate software as well. You can manage the expectations by engaging employees and helping them understand the differences in the applications they are bringing in and the software your company relies on to run its core business processes.


D-Link shows off radical 802.11ac routers and Wi-Fi adapters at CES
The flagship DIR-895L/R is based on Broadcom’s BCM47094 chipset and can operate two independent networks on the 5GHz frequency band (with theoretical TCP throughput to 802.11ac clients of 2165Mbps on each), and a third network on the 2.4GHz band with theoretical TCP throughput of 1000Mbps. It will be outfitted with eight high-power antennas, and it supports MU-MIMO (multiple users-multiple input/multiple output) technology so that it can stream high-definition video and audio to multiple clients. The DIR-890L, equipped with six antennas, can also operate two independent 5GHz networks,


Hands-on with Makulu Linux Xfce 7.0: The most beautiful Linux distro I have ever seen
As has been the case in previous Makulu releases, this version includes the WPS Office Suite (aka Kingsoft Office). I don't want to get into a long discussion of the pros and cons of this choice, I will simply say that if you aren't happy with WPS, or you absolutely must have LibreOffice for whatever reason, all you have to do is go to the Software Center (or Synaptic, they are both installed) and install LibreOffice. I just did that, it took less than five minutes to download and install, LibreOffice was automatically added to the Office group in the Whisker menus, and of course is listed in synapse searches.


An example of preparatory refactoring
There are various ways in which refactoring can fit into our programming workflow. One useful notion is that of Preparatory Refactoring. This is where I'm adding a new feature, and I see that the existing code is not structured in such a way that makes adding the feature easy. So first I refactor the code into the structure that makes it easy to add the feature, or as Kent Beck pithily put it "make the change easy, then make the easy change". In a recent Ruby Rogues podcast, Jessica Kerr gave a lovely metaphor for preparatory refactoring.


Held for ransom by the digital ‘mob’
Consumer ransomware is, “a business model that’s going to scale, especially as we get control over more traditional cybercrime business models,” Dai Zovi said. “They’re (cyber criminals) basically entrepreneurs, and they’re going to shift when a new market gives them better returns than an existing market, or their existing market goes away.” Another reason is that, as has been clear for some time, just because a device is “smart,” does not mean it is secure. And embedded devices in the Internet of Things (IoT) are notoriously insecure.


Why doctors are excited about mobile blood pressure monitoring
There are a few reasons. For one, there is quite simply more data being gathered when a cuff worn around one’s arm checks blood pressure at regular intervals throughout a day. But this kind of mobile monitoring also helps catch two types of people who are easily misdiagnosed – those with “white coat” syndrome, who get nervous in doctor’s offices and experience artificially high blood pressure at precisely the time of monitoring (a condition that may affect as many as 30 percent of people thought to be hypertensive), and those who react oppositely, with lower readings either because they take their meds before going to the doctor’s or because they experience more stress in their home environment.


CIOs Need to Snap Out of Complacency
CIOs are spending more time overseeing the nitty-gritty of digital transformation work, such as implementing new systems and re­designing business processes, according to our survey. In some cases, that means a diminished role in big-picture strategic activities such as identifying new commercial opportunities. Specifically, 27 percent of our CIO respondents can be classified as business strategists this year, down from 34 percent last year. And 36 percent of CIOs admit they are fighting turf battles against others in the C-suite--a kind of tumult that can arise in times of big change.


White House plans to leave IT in better shape than it found it
Obama complained about the state of government IT almost as soon as he took office, when he was deprived of the use of his BlackBerry. In 2011, he called government IT operations across all agencies "horrible," and that was two years before the Healthcare.gov debacle. One issue faced by government IT is perception. When compared to the private sector, government IT is seen as a step or two behind in technology adoption. It's a fair assessment, Johnson said, "and I think we should be OK with that." The White House operates in a fishbowl, and any IT issues it faces may have a broader impact. Johnson prefers to have the private sector be the early adopter, with users figuring out new technologies, learning from their mistakes and then partnering with government.


Sony hack could be game changer
Despite passing a flurry of small-bore bills in late 2014, Congress has not moved major cybersecurity legislation in years. And the issues raised by the Sony incident — cyber relations with China, United Nations guidelines for how countries handle cyber issues — are not necessarily areas where Congress wields a heavy hand. “I’m not sure there’s such a direct output for Congress on the international side of things,” said Kristen Eichensehr, an international security professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Law and former State Department attorney.



Quote for the day:

"Character is like a tree and reputation like a shadow. The shadow is what we think of it; the tree is the real thing." -- Abraham Lincoln


January 04, 2015

Big data needs a product like Microsoft Access
Such a product, call it “Big Access”, would connect to cloud data sources, spreadsheets, enterprise data sources, log files, and perhaps certain machine data beyond those log files. Big Access would also provide functionality for data quality, data blending, and data shaping. It would provide basic data visualization capabilities, though it would leave the fancy stuff to tools that already cover the visualization space. Big Access would also provide predictive analytics functionality. The amount of explicit effort required to build a predictive model on existing data in Big Access would actually be quite small.


Soon Your Tech Will Talk to You Through Your Skin
It’s not hard to see why designers are looking for a new conduit. Our eyes and ears, the dominant modes for the digital world, are full to bursting. Devices bombard us with text alerts and audio bleeps. Your skin, on the other hand, is an “underused channel,” says Raymond Kiefer, a safety expert who helped design GM’s vibrating seats. “This is a way to cut through the visual and auditory clutter.” There’s a danger here, of course. Vibrations cut through the white noise of today’s alert-o-sphere.


Top 10 Data Center Predictions for 2015
In 2014, mission critical innovation drove new standards in PUE reduction, water use and digital service efficiency. Pressing data center operator concerns include security, operational expense management and Internet of Things (IOT) growth. Everyone seems to be balancing big data, cloud and SDN initiatives. And with shadow IT coming to light, you have more internal influencers with input on your data center operations. So what does this mean for 2015? I forecast a year of incremental adaptation vs. radical change as industry buzz gives way to genuine innovation and proven methodologies. As much as some things will change, others will frustratingly stay the same.


5 Mobile Design Trends That Can Teach Us Something
There are so many apps within the App Store and there are so many more on Google Play. It’s hard to tell what the up and coming design trends are but it’s significantly easier to pick five current trends and analyze them. Let’s see how color, innovative ideas and simplicity of current apps can teach us a thing or two about mobile app design. ,,, It’s interesting to see that some apps out there are trying to promote a sophisticated and elegant vibe through design. It’s not something common on websites either, but it’s significantly less common among mobile apps.


Microsoft's karmic gaffe is 'opening up the conversation'
"There are biases about everything," said Larson-Green on December 5 in a 40-minute-long interview. Those biases affect women, but also minorities and even individuals with more introverted personalities. "Are there ways to bring out the best in people? That's been a really great conversation we've had internally." Larson-Green isn't the only woman in the leadership ranks at Microsoft. Amy Hood, a 12-year Microsoft veteran, was named CFO in May 2013. Women also head business development and human resources.


Hiring Cultural Creatives
Cultural creatives, many of whom are millennials, are employees who go beyond just producing to actually innovate new ideas. They are independent, seek achievement, thrive on ambiguity and risk taking, and look for new opportunities at every turn. Cultural creativeshave a desire to do work that matters and matches their values, contribute to a shared vision, and express their personal beliefs at the office. Many business gurus, from Creative Class author Richard Florida to Bill Gates, have extolled the importance of this new group of passionate workers to propel the 21st century economy forward.


Deciding When to Replace ERP Is Complicated
Replacing the ERP system may not be the most cost-effective solution to business issues. To gauge that aspect, an important first step is determining whether the process or data issues identified by users are the result of a poorly executed implementation. Midsize companies in particular don’t always get the most competent consultants to set up their software, especially if the consultant (or the individual running the project) is not familiar with the peculiarities of the company’s industry or its specific operating requirements. Checking in with user group members in a similar business is an easy way to confirm if the issue is systemic or simply a poor job of setting up the software.


If 2014 Was The Year Of The Data Breach, Brace For More
Data breaches dominated headlines in 2014, and they appear poised to usher in 2015 as well. While the cybersecurity plights of certain high-profile retailers, financial institutions, and one prominent movie studio became common knowledge and headline fodder, these companies were far from the year’s only victims. In fact, a recent study found that more than 40% of companies experienced a data breach of some sort in the past year – four out of ten companies that maintain your credit card numbers, social security numbers, health information, and other personal information. That number is staggering, and shows no signs of retreat.


'New Year will be crucial to Korea's cloud market'
This is because cloud computing can help business innovation by allowing companies to react to rapidly-changing business conditions and to quickly adopt new IT infrastructure without significant up-front costs. Consequently, Korean enterprises started to recognize cloud computing as a "business enabler" and "speed-to-market" facilitator for its ability to drive business agility. Also, there have been a series of outages in datacenters used by crucial infrastructures, caused by disasters, and they triggered a failure of IT functions at businesses. This made many companies consider equipping themselves with highly automated disaster recovery strategies, leveraging the benefits of cloud computing.


Q&A with John Sonmez on His Book on Soft Skills
Another major challenge is self-motivation. When you are sitting in an office it is easy to get into work-mode, but at home with a full refrigerator, XBox, television and other distractions, it can be easy to goof-off instead of working. A remote worker has to develop a good schedule and a very strict habit of self-discipline to avoid all the distractions from working at home. A few others are things like: communication--which can be more difficult when not done in person. Guilt--even when you get more work done, you might feel like you are not getting enough done, since no one can actually see you working.



Quote for the day:

"Try not to become a person of success, but rather try to become a person of value." -- Albert Einstein


January 03, 2015

Mainframe Futures: Reading the Tea Leaves
The question about the role of the mainframe then devolves to the underlying motivations of mainframe users - will they stay or will they migrate to nominally lower-cost platforms? I think the answer is kind of a blended analysis against a rapidly changing technology and workload background. While many workload have indeed migrated, primarily to RISC Unix and to a lesser extent to x86 Linux, much of the mainframe workload is still anchored to the mainframe by two underlying issues - software and overall scaleability and reliability.


How will the future of IoT impact data centers?
What complicates the whole issue is that data usage is often near-real-time. For example, when you shop, your location in the store can be detected. The time for personalized advertising is just one or two seconds. Most IoT data is "digested" on entry to the data center (e.g., face recognition turned into store location). The raw data is kept for a while, depending on what it is, so it will be streamed off to a disk farm. The output of digestion is a new, more valuable data stream. This, along with other streams, is sent to powerful analytics engines using big data techniques to generate inferences.


India lifts block on Vimeo; Pastebin, Internet Archive, others still banned
(...) Many of these wbsites [SIC] does not require any authentication for pasting any material on them. Other upload articles, Videos or photos or to download the contents which helps to hide the identities. These websites were being used frequently for pasting, communicating such content by just changing page name even blocking the earlier one. (...) Contact has also been made with some of the websites. These websites have undertaken not to allow pasting of such propaganda information on their website and also work with the Govt. to remove such material as per the compliance with the laws of land.


Problem Solving for Software Engineers
It may seem obvious that in order to be able to solve a problem we have to first understand it. Nothing is farther from reality in the IT business. It is not uncommon in my profession to see entire applications and architectures flowed and crippled by initial misunderstandings of a problem or requirement. While spending time to deeply understand what we have to build may not sound like the most ‘agile’ thing to do, the price to pay for a faulty start could be quite high. We usually start learning about the problem when analyzing software requirements that explain how things should work from the user’s perspective.


FBI seeks 'ethical' hackers to be 'cyber special agents'
"The FBI seeks highly talented, technically trained individuals who are motivated by the FBI's mission to protect our nation and the American people from the rapidly evolving cyber threat," Robert Anderson Jr., executive assistant director for the bureau's criminal, cyber, response and services branch, said in a statement Monday In its job post, which is open until Jan. 20, the agency said it has "many vacancies" for cyber special agents. Such agents, the FBI said, should have the skills to "conduct multi-faceted investigations of high-tech crimes, including cyber-based terrorism, computer intrusions, online exploitation and major cyber fraud schemes."


Get a good start with mob programming
”The basic concept of mob programming is simple: the entire team works as a team together on one task at the time. That is: one team – one (active) keyboard – one screen (projector of course). It’s just like doing full-team pair programming.” Read more about mob programming in his blog post or watch thisYouTube video of a real mob programming day compressed into a couple minutes.


How Big Data Will Transform Our Economy And Our Lives In 2015
But thinking ahead about wide-ranging technology and market trends is a useful exercise for those of us engaged in the business of partnering with entrepreneurs and executives that are building the next great company. Moreover, let’s face it: gazing into the crystal ball is a time-honored, end-of-year parlor game. And it’s fun. ... The global scale of the Internet, the ubiquity of mobile devices, the ever-declining costs of cloud computing and storage, and an increasingly networked physical word create an explosion of data unlike anything we’ve seen before.


Social Media Marketing Reaches Inflection Point
New analysis from the firm’s Analyzing Customers' Social Voices research found that the most important trend in social media analytics is cross-channel integration. Organizations are starting to integrate social media analytics with speech, text and Web analytics to cover all customer touch points. Disruptive technologies such as social media provide an opportunity to reshape organizations, change business models and transform industries, according to Deloitte’s 5th Annual Tech Trends Report. Over the years the focus of social business has shifted from measuring volume to monitoring sentiment, Deloitte said.


The future of storage: 2015 and beyond
The major problem facing any radically different storage technology is the extremely competitive market for existing techniques. This is, in one sense, like a commodity market -- vast and operating at very low margins. This makes it hard for any new idea to scale up quickly enough to claw back research, development and manufacturing costs in a reasonable timeframe. Yet the existing storage market is also quite unlike a commodity market in that it demands and gets continuous technological development through competition in two dimensions -- between drive manufacturers, and between solid-state and rotating media.


Message Structure Library
Generally, a message has a checksum field which is located in last byte(s) of message. It is an error-detecting code commonly used in digital networks and storage devices to detect accidental changes to raw data. Blocks of data entering these systems get a short check value attached, based on the remainder of a polynomial division of their contents; on retrieval the calculation is repeated, and corrective action can be taken against presumed data corruption if the check values do not match. And here's the class diagram of the message structure library:



Quote for the day:


"Leaders are more powerful role models when they learn than when they teach" -- Rosabeth Moss Kantor

January 02, 2015

Relating the IoT to Enterprise Business Strategy
According to Porter and Hepplemann, the key element of “smart, connected products” is they take advantage of ubiquitous wireless connectivity to unleash an era where competition is increasingly about the size of the business problem solved. Porter and Hepplemann claim that as smart, connected products take hold, the idea of industries being defined by physical products or services alone will cease to have meaning. What sense does it make to talk about a “tractor industry” when tractors represent just a piece of an integrated system of products, services, software, and data designed to help farmers increase their crop yield?


Zero Day Weekly: ISC hacked, SS7 mobile security, Windows privilege escalation
This week the Internet Systems Consortium site was hacked, a Lizard Squad member was caught (and released), a privilege escalation bug was revealed in Windows, SS7 research nuked mobile privacy beliefs, The Interview became an Android malware vector, post-breach perceptions of Sony and Staples were analyzed, and more.


Wearables Carve New Path To Health In 2015
"The wearables market is starting to see technology that produces richer and more precise user data than ever before. The problem we're seeing is that most fitness trackers are offering a flat world of data, without much insight beyond what an accelerometer can capture," Kenzen CEO Sonia Sousa told InformationWeek. "This is why wearable fatigue is so high. After about six months, you stop caring because the number of steps doesn't really change." Use of health-oriented wearables will almost triple between 2014 and 2018, according to Juniper Research.


Why the Software Defined Data Center is the Future
“[IO’s] approach to the data centre has been to build a physical data centre layer that is modular in its approach. Our modules can be componentised, delivered in separate pieces, at the right size to meet changing needs. Also it is configured and managed by stacking a software layer on top of the components so that you create a smart data centre – a data centre that has a path to connect to the application layer and react in a dynamic fashion. The application layer is changing, and the physical data centre can change the way it behaves to support that.”


Why Involving CFOs in Innovation Is No Longer Optional
CFOs can bring to the innovation discussion finance’s expertise and depth in data and analysis pertaining to core business metrics, especially when an innovation initiative is occurring in core business functions. In cases where an organization is considering more breakthrough or disruptive types of innovation, CFOs and finance should be at the table and thinking more broadly about the risks the company might be taking on and how those risks might impact, or relate to, other elements of risk. In addition, any time an organization assesses strategy and how innovation could contribute to the overall corporate growth agenda, the CFO should have a prominent voice in the discussion.


eBook: Securing Tomorrow – The Road To Business Resiliency
EMC’s new Business Resiliency eBook outlines why firms need to rethink their ability to consistently and systemically anticipate significant interruptions and failures while fulfilling all business commitments and requirements. Isn’t it time to prepare your business to withstand both the expected and unexpected? Read the blogs (Left column) by security experts or jump to an eBook chapter (Right column) to learn more.


Why you don't need a SAN any more
Scale-Out File Server is the logical endpoint of Windows Server 2012 R2's software-defined storage. It's fast, flexible, and cheaper than the SAN alternatives. It might not be for every network, but it's also something you can build up to, as you start to use Storage Spaces and then add clustering to your network. The end result is a storage fabric, much like that used by Azure -- and ready for your own private cloud. While it's not suitable for all workloads in this version (especially not SharePoint and other document-centric services), Scale-Out File Server is ideal for hosting virtual machine images and virtual hard disks, for handling databases and for hosting web content.


Preparing for the data center of the future
The data center of 2020 will look vastly different from today's data center in a variety of ways. As application silos are broken down and resource tiers consolidated, the result will be data centers that consist of three hardware tiers -- for processing, memory and storage. Applications will dynamically allocate resources from each of the tiers, providing the required elasticity to respond to changing demands. With the advent of cheaper memory, more federal agencies will adopt in-memory computing technology to reduce application response times. That approach has the added benefit of transferring the load from transactional databases, which can further reduce licensing and operating costs.


SQL Stored Procedure Performance improvement
In this article we will focus on basic things which are useful to increase performance of the stored procedure for fetching or retrieving data. We will try to understand what kind of precautions we should take while creating a stored procedure for fetching or retrieving data. ... Stored Procedure for fetching or retrieving data from database may take long time to execute. Following are some points which will help to improve performance of such type of stored procedures


ScALeD – Scaled Agile and Lean Development
ScALeD – Scaled Agile and Lean Development – is not another scaling framework. We see ScALeD primarily as a practitioner driven movement to help organizations to find a sound and balanced approach to agile transition and scaling questions. Inspired by Lean and agile values, driven by principles and completed through various practices and frameworks. Our main mission is to create awareness about what agility can mean for an organization. The core of ScALeD is a set of 13 principles, structured into 5 pillars. The pillars or outline of ScALeD resemble the main lean values:



Quote for the day:

"Always do right. This will gratify some people and astonish the rest.” -- Mark Twain

January 01, 2015

Template Method Design Pattern in .Net
Template method design pattern falls under the category of Behavioral Design Pattern. In this pattern, a template method defines a skeleton of an algorithm in terms of abstract operations. The template method can contain one or more steps. But these steps will have to be in abstract form only. That
Template method design pattern falls under the category of Behavioral Design Pattern. In this pattern, a template method defines a skeleton of an algorithm in terms of abstract operations. The template method can contain one or more steps. But these steps will have to be in abstract form only. That said, we cannot change the order of steps, and most importantly we cannot override the template method itself.


How Could Big Data Change Oncology?
The huge range in the origin and progression of each form of cancer requires a level of decision-making that might never be reducible to algorithms. ... A false negative is equally harmful, offering the illusion of good health that might cause a patient to pass the point at which treatment could have been life-saving. Unless and until the tools for analyzing cancer and the metabolic pathways it exploits are much more refined—a process that could take decades—there will be a need for the judgment of humans in the interpretation of big data. In no other area of medicine is this so clear as in oncology.


100+ Top Agile Blogs
It seems that I got a pretty long list therefore I am passing it to you. The list is ordered based on Alexa.com raking with the exception of the top three blogs where I could not isolate personal blogs from msdn.com and blogspot.de therefore the top three are not accurate. If you find any errors, or if you have more blogs to add to this list just contact me :) If you find more blogs that you think that could be added to this list just leave a comment. I hope you appreciate this list.


Big Data Knows When You're Going to Quit Your Job Before You Do
Computer predictions aren’t just about making office life a little more pleasant. Airbnb uses a variation of these algorithms to predict which renters and guests would be the best fit. The room-rental site says the technology has improved matches by 4 percent. Airbnb is currently developing a system to look at the photos of homes uploaded to the site and figure out how “attractive” they are to customers. “We are trying to promote listings with more attractive images,” says Maxim Charkov, the search lead at Airbnb. Eventually, Airbnb may offer a digital interior designer that predicts ways to enhance listings and spruce up homes to increase bookings.


IT pro's revitalization guide 2015
For seasoned and new IT leaders alike, the new year is a good excuse to pause and take stock of your professional and personal progress in our always interesting, always chaotic industry. Take a few moments to read through all the best of Computerworld's management and career articles, or click a link below to skip directly to your chosen topic.


We Need No Less Than Pervasive Leadership
We need leader-full organizations in order to thrive in the present and in the future. Pervasive Leadership combines aspects of servant leadership, chaordic leadership, and personal leadership operationalized through facilitative leadership tools and techniques. It assumes that “leader” does not presume follower in the traditional sense, and that true followers cannot be forced to follow. It also recognizes everyone in the organization has leadership potential and responsibility. In other words, we need leaders who are competent to and capable of using the tools ofauthentic power. This means that they must do as they say is best, the most difficult thing to do under difficult circumstances. Their work as a leader is first and foremost work on themselves.


Chief analytics officer: The ultimate big data job?
"When you start thinking about how to organize your analytics better and how to get more bang for the buck, you'd better be thinking about hiring a chief analytics officer," says Bill Franks, CAO at data-services firm Teradata. "You can't take analytics where you want to without someone who's accountable for those strategic decisions." There's plenty of upside in adopting a more strategic approach to big data. In a recent study by management consultancy EY, for example, 69% of companies said customer experience was vital to their growth strategies, but just 12% said they take full advantage of analytics to extract customer insights and deliver better customer service.


Samsung brings curved screen from TV to PC
The Ativ One 7 Curved is a good example of Samsung's engineering chops, but the product has some flaws. It does not have a touchscreen, which is common in all-in-one desktops from Lenovo, Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Asus, Acer and other PC makers. Samsung's PC division doesn't yet have touch technology for curved screens, Ng said. Creating the all-in-one was a challenge as the electronics needed to be behind the curved display. All-in-one PCs have processor, memory, storage and other components behind the display. Samsung installed a slightly curved motherboard at the back of the display. Samsung's PC division worked with the TV business unit to make the all-in-one, Ng said.


Hadoop Isn't for Everyone
Well get ready for your desires for the in-house capacity and staff of experts to go unfulfilled long term.Data scientists are a rare breed and the bulk of Hadoop experts in the market are being snapped up quick by companies building and offering MapReduce services like HortonWorks, CloudEra and GoGrid. And unless you have IPO stock to offer or are an attractive acquisition candidate, you will likely find it hard to win this rare breed of employee - let alone hold onto the ones you have already. The financial and skills shortage realities around big data will drive much of your desire for better customer insight and creation of predictive applications to leverage pre-built big data services that reside in the cloud.


Is Open Source Collaboration the Key to Better Communication?
Communication has been pushed to new heights with advancing smartphone capabilities and cloud-based applications and services, but are these technologies making communication better? One of the benefits of modern communication systems is the reduced friction of team and business collaboration. To fully realize the promise of these modern technologies, they must fit into daily workflows. They cannot be disruptive and must be complementary to how employees want to work.



Quote for the day:

"The value of a company is the sum of the problems you solve." -- Daniel Ek