May 11, 2015

How Agile Has Changed Test Management
In previous times, test strategies were quite often weighty tomes used to capture everything a test manager knew about testing, their magnum opus. After creation they would be put on display for a bit before being placed carefully on the shelf and forgotten about. Test strategies, even documented ones, are still very relevant in agile teams. They often require very broad and deep knowledge of testing to drive good behaviours, which is the domain of the test manager. The trick is to treat them as living documentation, that live, breathe and grow along with the teams and people who use them. This means keeping them concise, usable, appropriate and written in a format and medium that encourages regular use, extension and amendment as ways of working change.


Know your cyber enemy inside and out
Most information security programs are fully aware of their enemy. Threat actors: hacktivists, organised criminals, nation states and opportunists are well known and documented, so you would think you are well on the way to victory. The problem is many companies and individuals stop there. Their focus resides on the outside, trying to stop the enemy getting in. But what about the inside? Think back to Sun Tzu's teachings “... know thy enemy but not yourself, wallow in defeat every time”. In other words, if you don't look at the threat from the inside then you are fighting a losing battle. ... It's worth noting that the “insider threat” is not necessarily a “rogue administrator” or “Edward Snowden”. It could be a loyal member of staff or contractor who fell fowl to a social engineering exercise and left the company open to attack because they had more access than they needed.


'Never ask a question if you don't know the answer is yes': How to present to the board
"Users have been seduced by the ease and simplicity with which they can download an app and use it to meaningful purpose. We live in an app-centric world, inhabited by people with a short attention span and with their fires stoked by expectations of performance, simplicity, usability, and - most importantly - cost." Behenna says the level of expectation associated to IT has ratcheted up exponentially. And the associated democratisation of technical knowledge has upped the pressure on CIOs to present concisely, consistently, and with absolute clarity to the board. "Apply the well-tested psychologies of usability, customer and user experience, and employ the best of those methodologies. Keep the detail in the hand-out you distribute to the board before the presentation, and use your allotted time wisely and precisely to paint a compelling picture and story," says Behenna.


The 'Internet Of Me' Is Getting Real In Healthcare
Connected technology in the context of healthcare provides the opportunity to gather the data necessary to create such personalized treatments. "It's about the Internet of Me," Karaboutis said, citing partnerships with Google and FitBit designed to help multiple sclerosis patients. "That's where we're going with this industry [in terms of technology]." At Biogen, traditional enterprise IT functions continue to be important, said Karaboutis, but the mandate for the technology organization extends to enabling the scientific and computational work that improves people's lives. "Healthcare is changing," said Karaboutis. "It's no longer about treating symptoms. It's about outcomes." Supporting that goal as a technology organization isn't necessarily straightforward. Karaboutis says the IT group has to understand the study of science and the cultural differences between technology and science.


How the tech industry is redesigning the future workplace
Tech has grown out of the garage. The audacious scale of these spaces is a bid at bettering the odds of the serendipitous encounters - bumps in Silicon Valley vernacular - which helped Building 20's occupants share ideas across specialisms. Shiny new workplaces are springing up from San Francisco to Shoreditch and Shenzhen. It 's not just technology behemoths who have embraced this way of working. The BBC's new Broadcasting House, for example, encourages hot desking, with 460 workstations in its open-plan newsroom alone. But this brave new world of work has critics. For some, open plan spaces suggest managers on the room's sidelines, watching workers huddled in the middle like prey on the African savannah.


4 warning signs that your team is not agile
But agile productivity typically depends upon the quality of the team members. It requires high IQ, high EQ, and high focus. Put someone in with insufficient subject matter expertise, drive, or decision-making authority, and the team will be chasing its tail. Further, agile depends upon the impedance match between the resources and the tasks: if a team member just doesn’t care, or can’t stand to be in the room with another team member, close collaboration simply won’t happen. Since agile is all about flexibility and fast iterations, it would be a joke if you did not assess the members of the agile team as early and often as possible to detect and correct the problem children. Fail-fast on team assignments is a best practice. If, as the Zen masters say, “how you do anything is how you do everything,” it should be possible to detect team membership issues before the first sprint has completed. Ideally, you could do that before the first sprint has started. But how?


IBM Bluemix Welcomes Microsoft's .Net
Bluemix was among the first platforms-as-a-service, or integrated sets of development tools on an online platform. Launched in February 2014 as a publicly available service and available to developers on a trial basis well before that, Bluemix has been the IBM world's rival to Microsoft's Azure with its Visual Studio online tools and Google App Engine with its Python and Java options. Bluemix is currently adding 8,000 developers a week to its total body of active users, Angel Diaz, VP of IBM Cloud architecture and technology, said in an interview with InformationWeek. ... Working with Microsoft, as of May 11 IBM has added to Bluemix a .Net Buildpack or set of tools, along with the .Net runtime, giving developers a wide mix of options: Java, the dynamic, interpreted languages (Ruby, PHP, and Python), and C and C# for the first time, said Diaz.


Interview and Book Review: BDD In Action
Many BDD practices can be useful for both agile and more prescriptive development processes. For example, writing acceptance criteria in a way that can be turned into executable form (or "executable specifications") can help ensure that the acceptance criteria are unambiguous and of high quality, though the feedback and review cycles may be slower if there is less face-to-face collaboration between the BAs and the other team members during the definition of these requirements. That said, an agile process gives the team more scope to manage uncertainty and to adapt to their evolving understanding of the requirements and the solution they are building, and practices like the 3 amigos and collaboratively defined acceptance criteria are great ways to flush out uncertainty in the requirements.


EMC: Rise of third platform could spell end for businesses unwilling to adapt
EMC’s messaging on this topic echoes the urgent rhetoric suppliers used to spout about cloud computing five or so years ago, when it was commonplace to hear organisations being warned about the business risks of ignoring the shift to off-premise technologies. While many of these early declarations called on users to act immediately, they soon gave way to a softer stance from the supplier community, as real-world tales about the challenges of moving to the cloud started to emerge. As such, proclamations like “adopt cloud or die” gave way to more measured statements that still emphasised the importance of moving away from on-premise technologies, but to an extent and at a pace that was best for the business.


The rapid rise of smartphone health care
While the MyOnlineClinic platform is still in its pilot period, Collins hopes to launch the service generally in several markets around the world, with Asia standing out as a region ripe for such a service. According to Collins, many of the often elderly patients in Australia who have been using the existing telemedicine services in the country via their PCs are reasonably comfortable now with online consultations, but getting them to do the same thing on a smartphone could require a substantial change in behaviour for some people. "Changing Australian behaviour is very difficult," Collins told ZDNet. "But we haven't restricted ourselves to the Australian market. One of our main focuses is international markets. We're deploying in Thailand, for example. In terms of changing behaviour, in Asian countries, it's much easier."



Quote for the day:

"You can't lead anyone else further than you have gone yourself." -- Gene Mauch

May 10, 2015

Emotion and Cognition
Ask people today how they think the mind works and odds are good that they will describe a computer. They will talk about accessing memory or they will talk about processing data. They will talk about sending off a request and computing results. Or they will talk about acting on input to produce a specific output. We think of our brains as having a separate processing unit and separate memory. Data is input, stored in memory, and when processed appropriately correct answers should appear. For example, if we understand the operation called multiplication and are given two different numbers such as 7 and 6 we should return a correct result, 42. The concept of short-term memory and long-term memory is also very similar to the computer model of long-term disk drive storage and short-term cache/RAM memory.


Mobile ads take center stage as smartphone becomes leading search tool
Even the latest generation of larger smartphones, or "phablets," including Apple's iPhone 6 Plus and Samsung's Galaxy Note 4, have a lot less screen space than laptops and external monitors, and clicking through multiple pages can be very annoying, so Google started rolling out new mobile-friendly ad formats. When users search for something on their phones, Google increasingly shows a panel, or carousel, of listings from advertisers at or near the top of mobile search results. Users can swipe across to see more listings, and when they click them advertisers pay Google for the traffic.


Chief data officer: Insight into a crucial role for the exabyte age
Both CIOs and CDOs support business needs, whether in enterprise, commerce, or academia. If using performance metrics to manage IT relies upon accurate data, that means the CIO will depend on the CDO to get it right. "The CDO is responsible for working with the business lines to define business rules and roles around data, in addition to aligning the organizational strategy around data," said Casey. "The CIO is responsible for implementing technology architectures, infrastructures, and policies in support of business and data needs." Inside or outside of the public sector, the CDO can also help other executives and managers by bridging internal silos. "The role is complementary to CIO and CTO by helping organizations capitalize on data," said Speyer. "The CDO will rely on the CIO for IT and infrastructure support.


Can big data solve the amnesia of public outrage in Taiwan?
Big data expert Hsieh Bang-yen lamented the collective amnesia of Taiwanese society in a recent opinion piece for China Times. Major news events that affect people's lives and property become wiped from the public consciousness as soon as the media hype dies down and people find the next thing to get upset about, Hsieh wrote. Hsieh said local media, the government and anyone who desires social progress should harness the emergence of big data to reinforce the influence of scandals and high-profile news stories that otherwise get swallowed in the country's news cycle to force the government to implement reforms. We agree with this suggestion but the problem is how to make the best use of big data in this regard.


Enterprise-architectures for the real world
Remember Stafford Beer’s warning about POSIWID – that ‘the purpose of the system is [expressed in] what it does’. If, in designing a system, we fail to understand and work with what’sactually going on, we’ll end up with whatever system happens to emerge from the real real-world context – which, as in that example above, is often pretty much an unmanaged mess. For some (most?) people in our discipline, their ‘enterprise’-architectures may never stray much beyond the nice safe bounds of a data-centre or suchlike – which is fair enough for them, I guess. But for those of us whose enterprises necessarily extend beyond such comfortable constraints, we need architectures that can work with such enterprises as they really are – which can be, uh, quite a bit different than everyday IT-architectures…


The Relationship of Architectures - Part 2
The Enterprise Architecture encompasses the stages of transforming the design structure of the enterprise into detailed executable components. Input to this stage is the result of applying the management disciplines and formatting them in a manner useful to the enterprise architect. This is the ‘construction’ and ‘Execution’ part of bringing an enterprise structure into existence. If there is a specific solution that is used such as a type of technology or software package then the solution architecture idea is used. This approach is typically used when the solution is an IT solution. The enterprise architecture is driven by the use of development, engineering, project management, other disciplines, and tools that lead to a business specific solution.


Information Governance Tips with the Business User in Mind
Unstructured data typically includes Word documents, PowerPoint presentations, PDFs, media text files, emails, audio files and images. ... Further complicating the issue is that this data is often created and saved over a multitude of repositories like ECM systems, shared drives, desktops, cloud environments, etc. According to Rob Hamilton, vice president and digital market leader, Recall, corralling unstructured data is possible, but it cannot occur if IG decision-makers create policies that drastically impact business user workflow. If policies make their job significantly more difficult, they'll find workarounds for managing data that may put the organization at risk. The following suggestions can shrink the amount of unstructured data, help maintain compliance and gain buy-in from those most impacted by IG policies.


Deploying Microservices to AWS at Gilt: Introducing ION-Roller
As the old environment is still available during the rollout and the software is still running, we can safely rollback to the older version of the software at any point. Unused old instances are removed after a configurable period of time. Due to this delay, we can still rollback for a period of time after the rollout has completed. Our goal is to continuously monitor the health of the endpoint, and automatically revert to the old version if issues are detected; we will use Amazon’s CloudWatch alarms to signal that a rollback should be performed. ... ION-Roller supports the concept of canary releases via configuration of the traffic migration process. After a new version is deployed to the initial set of instances, the process stops, allowing for release testing against production traffic. Rollout will continue after a configurable period of time.


Enterprise Architecture: The Key to Unlocking the Value of Convergence
As the number of connected devices and “things” grows, the amount of data produced will increase too. From 2012-2020, the amount of data created is projected to double every 2 years. All this data creates complexity, especially when it comes to transforming that data into valuable information for decision makers. This complexity, along with new business models and strategies, is driving IT transformation. EA can help simplify things and manage the data so that organizations can capture the potential business value of IoE and digitization. Enterprise architects also need to look at business transitions that are occurring. Trends such as globalization, new opportunities for growth and productivity, and increased security and regulatory compliance are all things to consider.


Goldcorp vice president: ‘Simplify your IT strategy’
“Simplifying IT leads to improved performance at the operational level while at the same time reducing costs and risk” – Luis Canepari, vice president of IT at Goldcorp. Gartner’s definition of IT strategy is clear: “IT strategy is about how IT will help the enterprise win … and is an integral part of the business strategy.” Simple. Concise. Meaningful. With technology innovation occurring at a rapid pace, it can be difficult to decide on which vendors and platform architectures will lead to success. Thus, creating a clear and thoughtful IT strategy as the foundation on which to build is essential. ... Team dynamics are important as well explained Canepari, “having a mix of long-serving Goldcorp leaders and new faces allows for new ideas with minimal disruption.”



Quote for the day:

"Forgiveness does not change the past, but it does enlarge the future." -- Paul Boese

May 09, 2015

Can Bitcoin Kill Central Banks?
Central banks are currently the dominant structure nations use to manage their economies. They have monopoly power and are not going to give up that power without a fight. While Bitcoin and other digital currencies have generated significant interest, their adoption rates are miniscule and government support for them is virtually nonexistent. Until and unless governments recognize Bitcoin as legitimate currency, it has little hope of killing off central banks any time soon. That noted, central banks across the globe are watching and studying Bitcoin. Based on the fact that metal coins are expensive to manufacture (often costing more than their face value), it is more likely than not that central banks will one day issue digital currencies of their own.


A Better Way to Build Brain-Inspired Chips
Brain-inspired—or “neuromorphic”- chips have been made before, and IBM is trying to commercialize them. They generally use the same silicon transistors and digital circuits that make up ordinary computer processors. But those digital components are not suited to mimicking synapses, says Dmitri Strukov, an assistant professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, who led work on the new memristor chip. Many transistors and digital circuits are needed to represent a single synapse. By contrast, each of the 100 or so synapses on the UCSB chip is represented using only a single memristor. “A [biological] synapse is an analog memory device, and there is really no good way of implementing that in a compact, energy-efficient way with conventional technology,” says Strukov. “Memristors by themselves are an analog memory device; it’s a perfect match.”


Threat Spotlight: Rombertik – Gazing Past the Smoke, Mirrors, and Trapdoors
The process by which Rombertik compromises the target system is a fairly complex with anti-analysis checks in place to prevent static and dynamic analysis. Upon execution, Rombertik will stall and then run through a first set of anti-analysis checks to see if it is running within a sandbox. Once these checks are complete, Rombertik will proceed to decrypt and install itself on the victims computer to maintain persistence. After installation, it will then launch a second copy of itself and overwrite the second copy with the malware’s core functionality. Before Rombertik begins the process of spying on users, Rombertik will perform once last check to ensure it is not being analyzed in memory.


How much can technology actually improve collaboration?
People are the most important aspect of collaboration, digital or otherwise. If they are unwilling -- or as is often the case, simply don't have the skills and resources to enable them -- to collaborate together openly as a team, then you won't seem results, tactically or strategically. This means that virtually all digital communication tools can be used to collaborate -- as it is peoples' activities and decisions within them that make collaboration happen -- and today's major collaboration platforms tend to focus on features that actually enable this teamwork. These features are typically activity streams to encourage sharing, rich user profiles to help put people in the center, search and discovery mechanisms to enable and encourage learning from prior activities, and so on.


Fortnum & Mason selects open source over commercial software
“The concept of doing a product as part of the pitch is not a traditional consulting approach,” said Cain Ullah, CEO of Red Badger. While consultants often rely on previous case studies, Ullah wanted to to get Fortnum & Mason involved.  “We wanted to use a new piece of technology – Spree,” he said.  To prove it could do the job, the team ran a 48-hour hackathon involving a fully functional multidisciplined, cross-functional project team and invited Fortnum & Mason to see the prototype being developed. “When Red Badger showed us what it had done, we were open to its ideas. From a partner perspective, you want to work with people who have your best interests at heart,” said Zareem-Slade.


Telerik pitches new framework for building Android, iOS, Windows apps
The foundation of the framework is the so-called NativeScript Modules Layer, which translates NativeScript to platform- specific code. Telerik has focused on NativeScript’s user interface, which is one of the biggest challenges when building applications for multiple OSes. With NativeScript, features such as navigation are automatically adapted to work the way users on each OS expect. To help developers get started, Telerik has a dedicated website for NativeScript. Here, developers can find documentation, a showcase of apps built using the framework and a roadmap detailing future upgrades. The plans for developing NativeScript were first made public in June last year, so the company has been working on it for a long time.


The Business Economics And Opportunity Of Open-Source Data Science
The combination of open source software, affordable hardware and reliable high-bandwidth Internet services meant that data storage was no longer an ongoing financial dilemma. The advanced analytics that extracted the value from the data - developed using open source tools - could be updated and modified much more quickly and easily than proprietary software from traditional vendors. The rise of big data was evolutionary, not magical. To be sure, it was a fairly rapid evolution - but it didn’t take place overnight. Many of the advances in big data analytics were written in R, a programming language devised in the late 1990s by two academics in New Zealand. R was developed specifically for statistical analysis, and is consistently ranked the most popular language for data science.


Inside the Internet of Things: The things, and the everything
New, lower-cost technologies and communications tools are making it easier for businesses to stay in contact internally and externally to maximize opportunities and profits. Add to that things like sales/field force automation, fleet management, service/support routing and businesses just need more efficient, more effective communications. People may have a horrible time communicating when they’re sitting across the table from each other; but don’t worry, IoT will make things better. Actually, it’s already underway. IDC estimates that last year, we had over 200 million M2M devices deployed using very slow 2G connections. But the industry plans to speed all that up to 3G/4G connections even if they have to take away some of your cat video streams because we’re talkin’ serious business.


Cisco’s Chambers: A retrospective
One of Cisco’s, and Chambers’, chief failings was a stretch to get into the consumer market. After acquiring Linksys for home routers and Flip for pocket video recorders,Cisco divested these business and product lines for much less than they acquired them for when the potential Cisco initially saw failed to pan out. Apple beat Cisco’s Flip to cloud-based videocam hosting and storage. Linksys hung around for much longer but was ultimately sold off as Cisco honed in on enterprise IT. Cisco’s Eos media and entertainment, and umi consumer telepresence efforts were also killed off. ... “Not everything is going to work out,” says Forrester’s O’Donnell. “Cisco is now facing a big challenge going forward (with initiatives like Internet of Everything and digitization of companies, cities and countries), but it will be faced by Robbins instead of Chambers.”


Identity is key to meeting IoT security challenges, says NetIQ
“Identity is the one thing that is still under the control of the organisation and the individual, and it can help balance the needs of users with the needs of risk managers,” he said. Attacks are inevitable, therefore there is a need to work to mitigate the effects of attacks, and key to this is getting the basics right when it comes to identity and access, said Mount. ... Security needs context, said Mount, which means security and identity can no longer be separate silos within organisations. “The key to delivering context is identity: verifying actors are who they claim to be, seeing how they are using their entitlements, and evaluating whether that use is normal and appropriate,” he said.



Quote for the day:

“To dream by night is to escape your life. To dream by day is to make it happen.” -- Stephen Richards

May 08, 2015

EMC-owned Spanning sounds alarm over enterprise attitude to SaaS backups
“People think that when they go to the cloud and SaaS the provider is going to take care of all their backup and recovery needs, but what the provider does is protect itself from its own errors,” said Erramouspe. “I’m never going to lose data in Google because a server goes down. That’s never going to happen. However, if I accidentally delete that data myself then it’s gone,” he said, describing how the thought process might take place. The situation becomes even more complex when users rely on SaaS services that plug-in to other cloud offerings and the effects of user error can spread even further. “A typical Salesforce customer integrates Salesforce at a data level with at least 10 different apps.


Frank Wang On DJI's Milestones, Miscarried GoPro Partnership & Corporate Espionage
Unlike other Chinese technology giants such as Alibaba and Xiaomi, which grew big mainly by tapping into the enormous consumer market in their home country, DJI derives about 70% of its sales from outside of Asia. It is the first Chinese company to lead a global tech revolution. In three sit-down interviews with FORBES, Wang shared stories of DJI’s early days, his drive as a “perfectionist” and challenges that the company faces ahead. His focus has allowed him to accomplish a childhood dream of creating a flying robot, and he now heads up the largest consumer drone maker in the world.


Why Bitcoin Could Be Much More Than a Currency
One twist, though, is that bitcoins themselves are still inherent to the process: they provide the incentive for people to help make all this happen. Verifying transactions and storing their data in the blockchain earns “miners” newly minted bitcoins. In other words, any service that aims to use the blockchain as a general-purpose database will have to pass a bitcoin (or a fraction of one) around in the process. Or it will have to find some other way to motivate miners to put the information into the ledger. The concept of a blockchain is not limited to Bitcoin, and several other networks have recently emerged as potential alternatives. Indeed, Bitcoin’s blockchain isn’t even necessarily the one that is best equipped to have applications built on top of it. But Bitcoin has gained by far the most traction and has the biggest network, which makes it more resilient than the others, says Monegro.


Google Brings Exascale Bigtable NoSQL To The Masses
As the name suggests, BigTable takes the unstructured data housed in a file system like GFS and makes it look like a giant database table or spreadsheet from the point of view of programmers and applications. BigTable’s successor – and that is not precisely the right word, just like Omega is not precisely the successor to Google’s Borg job scheduling program but is much more of an augmentation of it – is a geographically distributed database called Spanner, and it runs atop of BigTable and a follow-on to GFS called Colossus, which is a geographically distributed file system. BigTable is a key element of Google’s Mesa data warehouse, which is used to ingest and store the telemetry from its AdSense, AdWords, and DoubleClick advertising systems, which have an immense amount of data that they have to ingest.


All hail the next big job, the Chief IoT Officer
One person who sees a potential need for a Chief IoT officer to coordinate connected-product development is Philippe Ameryckx, general manager of remote diagnostics at Abbott Labs, a multi-billion dollar pharmaceuticals and health care products company. IT departments and CIOs "are focusing on the internal informatics, and not what is going on with the customer," said Ameryckx, who was at the ThingWorx conference. The person who acts as the Chief IoT officer "should be in charge of informatics projects that go to the customer," said Ameryckx. The idea of creating a Chief IoT officer is beginning to get attention, but it's unclear whether anyone today holds that title exclusively. More likely, IoT is getting attached to the list of CTO and CIO requirements. But the pressure for a better development model is there.


Behavioral analytics vs. the rogue insider
“It identifies and scores anomalous activity across users, accounts, applications and devices to predict risks associated with insider threats.” This should not be a surprise. Data analytics are being applied to just about every challenge in the workplace, from marketing to efficiency. So it is inevitable that it would be used to counter what has always been the weakest link in the security chain – the human. Americans have also been told for years that personal privacy is essentially dead. Still, some of them may not appreciate just how dead it is, or soon will be, in the workplace. But Nayyar and others note that there should be no expectation of privacy in the workplace when it comes to corporate data. “This technology is simply monitoring activity within a company’s IT systems,” she said. “It does not read emails or personal communications.”


IT Staff Fearful Of Cloud? Try Cloud Whispering
Business leaders see the cloud in very different ways from IT workers. Business leaders see improved speed to market; the ability to rent instead of own, especially as things relate to new ventures that might not be permanent; and the ability to rent infrequently used assets (like those for disaster recovery). And, of course, business leaders read those annoying tech-light biz strategy magazines like all executives do, and they may have an overly inflated sense of what cloud computing can do for their organizations. ... IT pros tend to fall into two different camps. There are those that see the value of public cloud -- think of developers who don't have to wait for weeks to create a new app, or those that don't have to wait for weeks to scale their apps. And then there are those who fear that Death has arrived, and that he rides a pale and cloudy horse.


​Linksys brings fastest Wi-Fi router ever to market
Linksys does claim that the EA8500 with its Qualcomm MU | EFX MU-MIMO technology+ chipset can hit a combined 2.53 Gbps Wi-Fi speeds. That breaks down as 1,733 Megabits per second (Mbps) with 5 GHz and 800 Mbps with 2.4 GHz. I've benchmarked more Wi-Fi devices than I can recall, and I think what you'll see in your office will be more like 600 Mbps and 200 Mbps. That's still almost certainly a lot faster than what your current equipment is giving you. The really interesting practical news isn't so much its raw speed. What sets Wave 2 equipment apart is that MU-MIMO can transfer data clients simultaneously. Older Wi-Fi and 802.11n and 802.11ac standard gear can only serve one client at a time.


NSA phone metadata tracking ruled illegal
However, the court did not call for an immediate halt to the collection of US phone metadata, but urged Congress to make a decision on Section 215 that is set to expire on 1 June. The programme has to be re-authorised every three months by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC). The circuit court said the outcome of debate in Congress over the re-authorisation of the controversial section 215 of the Patriot Act “may (or may not) profoundly alter the legal landscape". Members of Congress are set to vote next week on a bill, the USA Freedom Act, that would end the NSA's collection of bulk data, reports the BBC. “We hold that the text of section 215 cannot bear the weight the government asks us to assign to it, and that it does not authorise the telephone metadata programme,” the judgement said.


Your Home Will Be Connected. Here Are Three Options.
Innovation in the connected home environment is flourishing, leading to more intelligent and integrated connected home platforms. Based on the 2014 Gartner consumer survey, 16% of U.S. online households (equivalent to 20 million households) own a connected home device. An additional 4% of survey participants reported owning at least two or more devices. Our three Cool Vendors in the Connected Home illustrate a cross section of innovation in the area of the connected home platforms. Their offerings include devices, apps and services as well as infrastructure components. ... The Wink Hub communicates with devices that do not to speak the same wireless language by translating the different communication protocols — including Bluetooth, Z-Wave and ZigBee.



Quote for the day:

“You have a choice: pursue your dreams, or be hired by someone else to help them fulfill their dreams.” -- Jay Samit

May 07, 2015

CIO-CSO tension makes businesses stronger
"There's a natural tension between these roles because they have what appear to be different priorities, and because in many larger organizations, the CSO role, and security in general, becomes a higher priority," says Justin Cerilli ... It's not so much that the goals of the CIO and the CSO are different, but that the priorities are flipped, says Bhutta. For CIOs, speed of delivery - for new hardware, software and applications - and efficiency are paramount. For CSOs, the concern is with the security of data, information and privacy, says Bhutta. Contention comes into play when the CIO and CSO don't work together to plan and agree on an overall strategy that takes both of their needs and concerns into account, says Robert Orshaw


The dawn of artificial intelligence
Even in the short run, not all the consequences will be positive. Consider, for instance, the power that AI brings to the apparatus of state security, in both autocracies and democracies. The capacity to monitor billions of conversations and to pick out every citizen from the crowd by his voice or her face poses grave threats to liberty. And even when there are broad gains for society, many individuals will lose out from AI. The original “computers” were drudges, often women, who performed endless calculations for their higher-ups. Just as transistors took their place, so AI will probably turf out whole regiments of white-collar workers. Education and training will help and the wealth produced with the aid of AI will be spent on new pursuits that generate new jobs. But workers are doomed to dislocations.


Alibaba: Will it succeed being the AWS of China (and elsewhere)?
The big question is whether Alibaba will be content being the AWS of China. Can it expand into the U.S. market as well as emerging economies? Possibly. In a research note, Forrester Research handicapped the public cloud race. The report was primarily focused on HP's plans in the cloud and noted that private cloud vendors will have to deliver public cloud capabilities to keep enterprises interested. ... The U.S., however, is ahead of the rest of the world when it comes to cloud. There's no reason why Alibaba couldn't be a China cloud juggernaut and then expand to other markets---especially emerging ones. If that formula sounds familiar that's because it is. Lenovo used that playbook well before. There's no reason why Alibaba couldn't run the same plays in the cloud.


Rethinking the Manufacturing Robot
Many manufacturers are eager to explore new manufacturing approaches because the cost of labor is climbing quickly, especially in China. The era in which manufacturers save money by setting up operations in areas of the world where workers are cheap is coming to an end, says Justin Rose, a partner at the Boston Consulting Group and coauthor of a recent report on the potential impact of collaborative robotics. The report found that 60 percent of all direct manufacturing tasks could be plausibly automated or augmented by robotics. The government of Guangdong province in China, where much of the country’s manufacturing takes place, announced last month that it would spend $152 billion to replace human workers with robots.


Having ‘the ear of the CEO’ is key to battling cyberthreats
The potential for hacks and data breaches amounts to "an existential threat to the corporation, and there needs to be someone in charge," Mueller says, "someone who has the ear of the CEO." More than 500 top IT leaders responded to our online survey to help us gauge the state of the  One of the most important hires is the CISO," Mueller says. ... "Cyberattackers are leapfrogging traditional defenses," Brown says, noting that the challenge is further compounded by the number of infiltrations and attacks that go undetected. When Symantec begins working with an organization to help respond to a cyber incident, company officials "find several others already in progress," according to Brown. Mueller recalls efforts to increase cybersecurity awareness throughout the workforce during his time at the bureau, at times running counter to the hierarchical culture at the organization.


Data analytics helps auditors gain deep insight
Audit regulators are watching the technological developments in this area with great interest. Martin Baumann, the PCAOB’s chief auditor and director of professional standards, said in a video interview that regulators need to make sure auditing standards facilitate possible improvements in auditing rather than serving as an obstacle to progress in this area. “That’s important for us as standard setters to stay on top of that, such that the technology and potential uses of it in auditing don’t get ahead of where the auditing standards are,” said Baumann, who was sharing his own opinion and not that of the PCAOB or its staff. “We wouldn’t want auditing standards to be an inhibitor that might otherwise allow technological audit achievements to move ahead.”


Awareness lessons from the Sony hack
While it is important to detect messages, it is as important to ensure that employees report potential phishing messages, which is also an aspect of a good security awareness program. Password reuse was also a vulnerability targeted by the North Korean hackers. In a good security awareness program, password reuse would be addressed as part of a Password Security Awareness campaign. The attackers exploited the likelihood of password reuse by not just the average users, but by administrators as well. And if an administrator reuses passwords between his personal and corporate administrative accounts, there are likely other accounts that are similarly vulnerable. So in this case it is clear that you cannot just classify the phishing messages as being due to “stupid users.”


The secret to becoming a 'digital master'? Close the IT/business gap.
Here's an interesting takeaway for CIOs: Shadow IT may provide a workaround for injecting new technology into the business (a must for digital transformation, by the way), but it's a short-term solution at best. Shadow IT perpetuates departmental silos, and if businesses want to make the digital transformation leap, they'll need to knock down those silos and pave the way to better communication. ... The more pressing question for businesses is how to build a better bridge between IT and the business. "I don't think anyone has figured it out completely," Bonnet said. But he pointed to trends like two-speed IT and the rise of the chief digital officer as examples of businesses searching for ways to overcome that hurdle.


Do IT professionals have to abandon technology to progress in their career?
Ultimately technology management focuses on the relationship between the management of technology and innovation, and how these relate to other areas of management, including operations, finance, supply chain and logistics and strategy.  This means looking at how existing technologies can work together to enhance an organisation's processes and products or services. It requires a broad perspective on what's available and an understanding of what works best, when, where and why. Technology managers appreciate how technology can be integrated; how the skills they and their team have can be employed to improve business operation and deliver value, both internally and externally, and where and when they need to bring new skills in to do so.


Continuous Quality and the Cloud: How You Should Be Testing Mobile Apps
Continuous Quality is a methodology for embedding quality activities into every step of the SDLC process— from design through build to production— all based on supporting processes, tools and testing lab infrastructure that is customized to support an organization’s specific requirements. A successful Continuous Quality process optimizes time to market, drives faster and more frequent releases and enables minimizing escaped defects to production by managing risk in an automated way as early as possible. The main driver behind the rise of Continuous Quality is the constant need to release high quality mobile apps (Native, Hybrid, etc.) more frequently. ... Embedding all of the quality aspects into each build and delivering constant feedback to the development team gives them early insights into bugs - this is the core value of continuous quality.



Quote for the day:

“Increasingly, management’s role is not to organize work, but to direct passion and purpose.” -- Greg Satell