June 01, 2015

5 ways to find and keep customer-focused IT pros
One option is to bring in workers with industry experience who can take on business-focused IT roles. ... Among people with those types of backgrounds, he said he looks for “attitude and passion to go after unsolved problems.” Another way to find people who will excel at working with customers is to get a sense of how they would solve a business problem with technology. Aaron Gette, CIO of Bay Clubs, a luxury fitness and country club company, said he cares less about titles and hot IT roles and more about intangible qualities. “I’m looking for nontraditional IT people. They like to talk to people, not just on social media, but actually socializing and being involved in initiatives,” he said. “They need to be involved in member forums and understand what’s working with our programs.”


Organisations are changing how they spend their cyber security budget
“Firms are coming to terms with the inevitability of a cyber breach,” said Duncan Brown, research director at PAC. “Rather than spending a majority of security budget on prevention, firms will apply a more balanced approach to budgeting for cyber attacks.” ... It’s vital that organisations find the right balance between prevention and response. An organisation that puts all its eggs in one basket and solely spends on prevention will find itself in a tough situation when it inevitably suffers a breach, ditto for those that spend solely on response. To find the right balance, organisations needs to implement a framework that combines prevent and protect, and detect and respond – and enables them to work together.


Deep Learning Catches On in New Industries, from Fashion to Finance
“One of the things Baidu did well early on was to create an internal deep learning platform,” Ng said. “An engineer in our systems group decided to apply it to decide a day in advance when a hard disk is about fail. We use deep learning to detect when there might’ve been an intrusion. Many people are now learning about deep learning and trying to apply it to so many problems.” Deep learning is being tested by researchers to glean insights from medical imagery. Emmanuel Rios Velazquez, a postdoctoral researcher at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, is exploring whether deep learning could help to more accurately predict a patient’s outcome from images of his or her cancer.


Private Cloud: Insurers' Secure Solution
“The insurance industry has often been slower to adopt public cloud than many other industries because of regulations of how data needs to be managed,” says Jeffrey Goldberg, vice president of research and consulting at Novarica. “Some of those are legitimate concerns about data security and some of it is also fear-based — they would like to get the advantages of public cloud but want to maintain control.” Private cloud models — which are either implemented on-premises behind a corporate firewall, or off-premises but within the client’s firewall and dedicated solely to the client — have begun to address insurers’ security concerns. This sector is growing fast: Research firm Technology Business Research forecasts 35% growth in the private cloud sector in 2015.


The Internet of Things Will Give Rise To The Algorithm Economy
Data is the oil of the 21st century. But oil is just useless thick goop until you refine it into fuel. And it’s this fuel – proprietary algorithms that solve specific problems that translate into actions – that will be the secret sauce of successful organizations in the future. Algorithms are already all around us. Consider the driver-less car. Google’s proprietary algorithm is the connective tissue that combines the software, data, sensors and physical asset together into a true leap forward in transportation. Consider high frequency trading. It’s a trader’s unique algorithm that drives each decision that generates higher return than their competitors, not the data that it accesses. And while we’re talking about Google, what makes it one of the most valuable brands in the world? It isn’t data; it’s their most closely guarded secret, their algorithms.


Q&A with Benjamin Wootton on DevOps Landscape in 2015
DevOps from an automation perspective is now big enough a field to be a specialist area. There are so many tools and the space is moving quickly that people can concentrate on it full time and deliver competitive advantage to their businesses. Having a team of people working with these tools on these type of activities can really work and help all of the developers and testers to go faster, leveraging up their value to the business.  I like to see senior engineers in this DevOps team who bring a DevOps mindset and career experience across dev, test and operations. They can then go out and coach other staff members onto the central automation platform, ideally giving those teams an increasing amount of ownership of the automation.


Cloud computing more about agile development than cost
"For CIOs, the message is clear: Shift into the driver seat, or others will," Forrester said in releasing its cloud forecast. "A lot of enterprises are voting with their budgets and they're adopting cloud across the board," Rymer says Small wonder then, that for many organizations, the first question about the cloud is a settled matter -- not a question of if, but when, and how. ... "The bottom line here is ... cloud is the next platform," Rymer says. "We don't get a lot of questions from clients anymore about whether or not they're going to go to public clouds. It's really how do we get there." So how do they get there? To Forrester, it is essential to bridge the gap between the IT shop and the business lines of an organization.


The enterprise technologies to watch in 2015
The new technologies on the list include a few that aren't well-known but I believe represent either key advances likely to grow in strategic importance (machine learning, data science), or new developments that offer very significant benefits tactically with relatively little effort to realize (containers,instant app composition, machine-to-machine systems.) There are also a few long-standing categories which have re-emerged recently as leading areas of technology focus for most organizations with new approaches, or have actually developed into parallel tracks with different levels of impact, often with a clear separation of efforts within many companies (hybrid cloud and commercial public cloud, for example.) I've also consolidated some of last year's items as well, as explained above.


Salesforce teams up with Google and others to breakdown big data tech barriers
“Salesforce Wave for Big Data connects the Analytics Cloud to the industry’s most comprehensive ecosystem of big data innovators. Now every company can extend any data source to business users to transform every customer relationship,” he added.  Google’s contribution will tackle the volume piece of the big data equation by allowing users to run advanced queries on their datasets, while Cloudera will provide users with a centralised hub where their information can be stored and analysed securely. Meanwhile, New Relic’s software analytics platform is being introduced to tackle velocity, by providing users with a means of deriving real-time information about the performance of a company’s web and mobile apps.


AI Supercomputer Built by Tapping Data Warehouses for Their Idle Computing Power
Data centers often have significant numbers of idle machines because they are built to handle surges in demand, such as a rush of sales on Black Friday. Sentient has created software that connects machines in different places over the Internet and puts them to work running machine-learning software as if they were one very powerful computer. That software is designed to keep data encrypted as much as possible so that what Sentient is working on–perhaps for a client–is kept confidential. Sentient can get up to one million processor cores working together on the same problem for months at a time, says Adam Beberg, principal architect for distributed computing at the company. Google’s biggest machine-learning systems don’t reach that scale, he says.



Quote for the day:

“No great manager or leader ever fell from heaven, its learned not inherited.” -- Tom Northup

May 31, 2015

IT party is over. Now's the time to reinvent or die
What's happening in the industry is `creative destruction'. New technologies are destroying old jobs but creating many new ones. There is an insatiable demand for developers of mobile and web applications. For data engineers and scientists. For cyber security expertise. So for anyone who is a quick learner, anyone with real expertise, there will be abundant opportunities. ... While India may have a big challenge overall in creating enough jobs for its youthful population, at the individual level there is no shortage of opportunities. The most important thing is a positive attitude. The IT boom was a tide that lifted all boats -even the most mediocre ones.However, this has bred an entitlement mentality and a lot of mediocrity . To prosper in the new world, two things will really matter.


Virtual Eyes Train Deep Learning Algorithm to Recognize Gaze Direction
The problem here is that large databases of this kind do not exist. And they are hard to create: imagine photographing a person looking in a wide range of directions, using all kinds of different camera angles under many different lighting conditions. And then doing it again for another person with a different eye shape and face and so on. Such a project would be vastly time-consuming and expensive. Today, Erroll Wood at the University of Cambridge in the U.K. and a few pals say they have solved this problem by creating a huge database of just the kind of images of eyes that a machine learning algorithm requires. That has allowed them to train a machine to recognize gaze direction more accurately than has ever been achieved before.


Best Kept Secrets for Successful Data Governance
Across industries, a growing number of organizations have put data governance programs in place so they can more effectively manage their data to drive the business value. But the reality is, data governance is a complex process, and most companies practicing data governance today are still at the early phase of this very long journey. In fact, according to the result from over 240 completed data governance assessments on http://governyourdata.com/, a community website dedicated to everything data governance, the average score for data governance maturity is only 1.6 out of 5. It’s no surprise that data governance was a hot topic at last week’s Informatica World 2015.


Where are the self-tuning systems?
In 2015, self-tuning systems mostly don’t exist. Every single piece of software still relies on magic numbers found empirically or pulled out of thin air, by developers or by users, possibly manually adjusted later in order to get closer to an acceptable security/reliability/performance balance. Collecting system, application and network metrics is a long-solved problem. Accessing all the knobs in a unified way remains an unsolved, but engineering-only problem (that systemd is bound to tackle at some point). Databases, network stacks, and virtual memory managers have been partly self-tuning for a long time, but only partly. Cluster resource managers/schedulers are pretty smart, but still rely too much on parameters whose value has to be chosen by humans.


The Persuasiveness of a Chart Depends on the Reader, Not Just the Chart
The user’s attitude matters. Research from Ansul Pandey and colleagues at New York University indicates that the persuasive power of dataviz may not be perfectly universal. The success of a visualization seems to be dependent on the initial attitude of the person assessing it. When participants in their study didn’t have strong opinions about the message being conveyed, visuals persuaded effectively. But they were less effective when participants held strong opinions in opposition to the message being conveyed. This makes sense. It takes more to convince someone who doesn’t believe you than someone who simply doesn’t know or doesn’t care. But there’s more. Those with stronger opposing views were more likely to be swayed when a disagreeable message was presented in the form of a table.


The real reason why micro SD card slots are disappearing from smartphones
The reason that smartphone manufacturers are ditching micro SD card slots in their devices, especially at the high end, is money. Manufacturers can't charge a premium for an SD card slot, but they can charge a $100 for a few extra gigabytes of flash storage. What Apple began with the iPhone, other manufacturers are now doing with their smartphones. And from a making money point of view, it makes good sense. A 128GB iPhone 6 costs the consumer $200 more than the 16GB version, but adding that extra storage costs Apple less than $50. For the consumer, this means having to decide up front how much storage they plan to need over the lifespan of the device, and a lot of hassle or even early obsolescence if space becomes an issue.


Google Wants You to Control Your Gadgets with Finger Gestures, Conductive Clothing
“You could use your virtual touchpad to control the map on the watch, or a virtual dial to control radio stations,” said Poupyrev. “Your hand can become a completely self-contained interface control, always with you, easy to use and very, very, ergonomic. It can be the only interface control that you would ever need for wearables.” Poupyrev also showed how he could perform the same motion in different places to control different things. He used the scrolling gesture to adjust the hour on a digital clock, then moved his hand about a foot higher and used the same motion to adjust the minutes. No details were given on what kind of devices the radar sensor might be built into.


How the cloud helped police warm up to body-worn cameras
While the cloud has paved the way for the data-intensive process of managing these cameras, the technology still has room for improvement. Automatic syncing of video footage from the camera to the cloud sounds ideal, but it's simply not practical yet. With Vievu, for example, officers need to bring their cameras back to their department headquarters, manually connect them to a PC, and load the footage to the cloud storage system on their own. Although the software is designed to prevent officers from tampering with the footage before storing it in the cloud, the process still leaves room for error. Policies may mandate that officers upload all of their footage, but that likely won't stop an officer with something to hide from destroying the device before immortalizing any incriminating footage.


CoderDojo’s vision to bring coding to every child in every school
The dream of bringing CoderDojo sessions like this to young people around the world may sound ambitious, but Mizzoni sees little difference between this and the establishment of sports clubs in school environments. “It’s important that every child is exposed to coding in some shape or form at school,” she said. “It’s like [the way] you might learn football in your PE class in school and, if you got a real interest for it, you’re going to go and join a football club, and that’s what CoderDojo is. It’s fun, it’s social, it’s informal learning. There’s no curriculum. It’s about kids learning what they want to learn and building what they want to build, so it’s entirely different to a school environment.”


7 Questions For The Guy Who Designed Minority Report's Futuristic UIs
Even if you don’t know the name "John Underkoffler," you surely know his work. His gesture-based interface for Minority Report influenced the 13 years of of user interface and hardware innnovation that have followed. But Minority Report's magical UI is only one of many products to come from both his his days at MIT and his LA studio Oblong. And his consistent quality is why he received a 2015 Cooper Hewitt National Design Award for interaction design. In recognition of the win, Underkoffler agreed to go through our seven-question wringer.



Quote for the day:

"I don't believe in taking foolish chances. But nothing can be accomplished without taking any chances at all." -- Charles Lindbergh

May 30, 2015

How wearables will shape the future of mobile payments
PayPal's Varun Krishna, senior director of its consumer wallet division, sees wearable computing as a significant opportunity for the company that will eventually "give rise to more connected, more personal experiences." ... "Wearables provide connectivity at a point that mobile apps can't," Krishna says. "By nature, they're more connected to the user than a phone can be." However, Krishna stressed that the mass adoption of wearables for mobile payments will hinge on the size of the "acceptance network," or the number of retailers and destinations that support a wide variety of digital payment options. PayPal is aggressively trying to develop and expand that acceptance network, according to Krishna.


The biggest news from Google I/O? That the search giant is streamlining
Sundar Pichai, the senior vice president in charge of projects like Android and Maps, spoke about the need for refinement and streamlining. This is a trend that makes sense for anyone who has followed tech for more than a few years. Before the days of Facebook and Twitter, and even before Google became a tech monolith, those in IT circles spent many long hours in meetings with business groups trying to explain the need for simplicity. In the 90s, IT admins tried to explain how it makes more sense to use one main operating system for all computers. Then, we tried to explain that everyone using a different app for business purposes or even a different phone didn't make sense.


Microsoft Universal Mobile Keyboard is the best in class
The mechanical operation feels natural when typing, a product of the key spacing, large keys, and width of the keyboard. The experience rivals that of many laptops, at least those with nice keyboards. The keys on the Microsoft model go all the way to the edge of the unit, which is as wide as the iPad. Microsoft uses dedicated keys for the tablet control functions that are commonly found on keyboards, e.g. Home, Back, volume controls. This is great, as it means there is no need for using the Fn key in combination with another key to control the tablet. There is a small power button on the right edge of the unit, although the keyboard turns on when the lid is opened. There are two rubber strips on the bottom of the keyboard unit that keep it from moving, even on a relatively slippery surface.


Is your organisation throwing big data down the drain?
The problem is that today, the term 'mobile technology' in business is often synonymous with the use of consumer-grade smartphones. However, consumer smartphones are not equipped to deal with the stresses and strains of large and complicated workplace environments.  In many sectors, consumer-grade smartphones simply do not equip employees with the ability to safely access data or analytics on the go. With the proliferation of consumer device use, many companies have resorted to strategies incorporating consumer devices and implementing BYOD strategies in an attempt to give employees efficient access to data. This brings with it a whole host of compliance, security, technology and accessibility issues.


Top 8 Smart Devices For The Kitchen Of The Future
The Internet of Things is building the kitchen of the future. Everything from an app to turn on your coffee maker to a pan that monitors heat on your iPhone to cook the perfect steak is so close we can (almost literally) taste it. ... This one aims to be an easy-to-use kitchen baking scale that guides you through select recipes connected to an iPad app. You pick out which recipe you want on the app and then place a bowl on the bluetooth connected scale, drop in each ingredient until the app says you have added enough into the bowl and follow along with the instructions to make the perfect cake, cookies or whatever else you desire. ... The HAPIfork is an electronic fork that helps you monitor and track your eating habits for weight loss. It measures how long it took you to eat, the amount of fork servings and the time in between servings.


Household Robots Are Here, but Where Are They Going?
They can’t wash windows or make an omelet. “When they can do physical work, that will be much more compelling,” Mataric says. Roboticists hesitate to guess when that will happen. “Eventually, they’ll be able to make gumbo,” says Cynthia Matuszek, a robotics researcher at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. But “multiple decades” is her closest guess to when that will be. In the meantime, social robots can perform fairly simple tasks, with varying degrees of success, in response to voice commands. Echo goes by the name “Alexa,” So you can say “Alexa, play the new Mumford & Sons album,” and it will do so. Or you can ask it for the weather forecast. Jibo, meanwhile, can engage in simple conversations, as it swivels and wriggles about and displays video images. It can teach kids languages, or, sitting on the kitchen counter, teach adults recipes.


Trusting the ecosystem that sustains and maintains the Internet of Things
IoT ecosystem trust needn’t be tied purely to IoT security, in terms of my discussion in this IBM Data magazine article from 2013. Trusting IoT ecosystems involves more than making sure every IoT manufacturer, service provider and application developer isn’t planting malware. It also requires a more comprehensive certification of confidence in the provenance and ongoing maintenance of every element that anyone in the ecosystem might provision into the Internet of Things. Certification is not too strong a word to describe what’s needed. Having some rudimentary degree of certification-based trust across the IoT ecosystem would enable all users to count on some basic assured level of reliability, availability, isolation, performance and interoperability associated with any endpoints or infrastructure nodes, considered individually or in various combinations.


CIO interview: Billie Laidlaw, RSPCA
“I’m always mindful of cost. Is it the right thing to do? Can we really spend any money on anything other than the animals? We are considering this all the time,” says Laidlaw. And with the organisation largely dependent on donations, she’s acutely aware that supporters are motivated by animal welfare concerns, not the state of the charity’s IT systems, when it comes to parting with their cash. “When they put a pound in a collecting tin, they’re not thinking, ‘Oh, wow, that’ll go towards the cost of a new customer relationship management [CRM] system or reporting suite’, they’re thinking about how their contribution will make a difference to a kitten or dog in our care,” says Laidlaw.


Not Your Father's EMC
The benefits to the customer are clear – more features, more quickly, without lock-in. “And free?” I hear you say. Not necessarily. I still believe that most customers will want to buy a complete working system (hardware + software + service) and for that they will be happy to pay. I do not believe we are heading back to a world where organizations buy component parts to spend days and weeks doing self-assembly. With that in mind, last week, we announced the CoprHD open source project, essentially a release of the ViPR Controller source code into the community. I’ve been very clear that this project is merely the first we’ve picked and it is a part of a much more expansive open source effort you’ll see roll out over the next year.


From Doodles to Delivery: An API Design Process
Succeeding with an API design means designing an interface whose usage fosters its purpose. As API designers, each decision we make has an impact on the success of the product. There are big decisions to be made, such as the transport protocol that the API will use, or the message format that it will support. But, there are also many smaller decisions related to the controls, names, relationships and sequences of an interface. When you put them together, all these decisions drive a pattern of usage. If you’ve made only good decisions, then that pattern will support and foster the purpose of the API perfectly. If you want to make a correct design decision, you’ll probably need to make the wrong one first and learn from that experience.



Quote for the day:

"Commitment doesn't guarantee success, but lack of commitment guarantees you'll fall short of your potential." -- Denis Waitley

May 28, 2015

NSA chief: Encryption isn't bad, it's the future
"Can we create some mechanism where within this legal framework there's a means to access information that directly relates to the security of our respective nations, even as at the same time we are mindful we have got to protect the rights of our individual citizens?" Encryption is a hot topic right now: following the revelations by NSA-contractor-turned-whistleblower Edward Snowden about the scale of internet surveillance by the intelligence agency, many more companies have started encrypting their customers' communications. However, the growth in such communications has in turn led to fears from intelligence agencies and law enforcement - particularly in the US and UK - that, by using uncrackable encrypted communications, criminals will be able to plot in secret.


20 Expert Tips on Integrating Mobile and Cloud Strategies
“Put an API layer between mobile and cloud,” advised Chris Purpura, VP of digital enterprise strategy, MuleSoft. “Most mobile applications need to access many backend services, which might include identity, CRM, location, storage, social graph, customer history, and payment status… With an API strategy and platform in place, you can easily swap or update services behind the scenes.” To fast track your mobile development efforts, Jeff Bolden, managing partner, Blue Lotus SIDC, suggests you utilize the mobile SDKs offered by public cloud providers to take advantage of the server PaaS you are using. Do it with some trepidation, warned Bernard Golden, VP of strategy, ActiveState,


What scares you most about ‘the cloud’?
Beyond eliciting the usual tick-box survey responses, one of the questions included in the study simply asked: “What is the scariest or most bizarre business use of cloud services you have come across?”, letting participants type whatever they wanted in response. Our aim was to bring to life some of the dangers associated with the inappropriate use of cloud, which are so easy to ignore when discussed in an abstract or theoretical manner. On the ‘bizarre’ front, apart from a couple of references to employees being caught uploading their porn-collection so they always had it at hand (ahem), we didn’t hear much of general interest. On the subject of ‘scariness’, however, we received a lot of responses that collectively illustrate some of the most common challenges.


CTOvision Interviews RADM Paul Becker, Director for Intelligence, On The Cyber Threat
Better defenses are imperative. But it is also important to put in place, better Information Sharing with those who can help: That is to say if you are in industry and being attacked and you know it, you need to be incentivized to ask for help. No one can beat an adversary like Russia or China alone. Tell the local law enforcement or the FBI that you're being attacked. And call in professionals from industry who know how to rapidly assess and react to breach. Studying the high-end threat should also lead you to think through how to protect your most important data. Prioritizing protection around your crown jewels will enable you to mount a better defense and perhaps contain damage while you are signaling for help.


Pictionary Agile Retrospectives
Practice team he works with looks for creative ways to breathe life back into stale retrospectives. They love to embody techniques that require engagement from the WHOLE team, and prevent a few strong personalities from taking over the session. Teams get bored when they have run the sailboat six sprints in a row. They get even more bored when the cadence reverts to “what went well” and “what did not go well”. It´s easy for teams to go through the motions when retrospectives get boring, and their suite of retrospective techniqueswill definitely prevent boredom from creeping into your team’s mindset.  This technique is what they call “Pictionary”, and requires your team to rely on their art skills to convey improvement opportunities throughout the sprint.


Managing a cloud computing project
Cloud computing can both simplify a project (since capabilities already exist and providers want to help) and make it more complex (since not all required features or qualities may be readily available). Each cloud project should be planned and organized to fit its user’s requirements and to ensure sufficient control is applied to the processes. ... The on-demand availability of cloud resources can present interesting opportunities for the PM to move some activities forward, to eliminate some activities, and to apply more agile design, development and continuous improvement processes. For example, testing on a production platform, access to common security functions, pay-as-you-go billing are areas of focus in cloud computing projects that are either glossed over or taken for granted on traditional projects.


Meeker: Internet Has Only Begun Changing Our Lives
Time spent with digital media per day has shown regular growth -- from 2.7 hours a day in 2008 to 5.6 hours today. Mobile computing is almost entirely responsible for that growth. Use of a desktop or a laptop computer as the means of access has remained basically steady at 2.4 hours a day. Access via mobile device has increased from .3 hours to 2.8 hours, now accounting for 51% of the total, Meeker said. The growing use of mobile opens the door for more mobile advertising. Mobile users account for 24% of the time spent on the Internet but just 8% of the $50 billion in advertising dollars spent trying to reach Internet consumers. That means there's a $25 billion opportunity remaining for new mobile advertising, Meeker said.


How your employees put your organization at risk
The danger is more than a potential work-place harassment lawsuit. Most of these sites often hide malicious content within links. That's how websites offering free adult content make their money, through installing malware on your computer. So it's less about the content employees are accessing, and more about the threats that lie within the links, according to Joseph Steinberg, cybersecurity expert and author. Steinberg points out that the threat is greater than websites offering free pornography. It also includes "anything that has pirated software and movies," he says. "A lot of them are actually in the business of putting malware onto computers. So it's not just the blocking for the sake of preventing the employee from doing something wrong, it's also preventing damage to the businesses computers and potentially data."


Five ways retailers can start using IoT today
The Internet of Things (IoT) is viewed as a major driver of the third Industrial Revolution. There is no question that the connectivity of "things" will only continue to affect how businesses run in the future. However, retail and CPG companies should avoid chasing after the 'killer IoT application' that promises to solve all their problems. Rather, they should focus on near-term IoT use cases that will demonstrate positive returns on investment in IoT, lay down the groundwork, and prepare the organization for that yet-to-be developed 'killer IoT application'. ... With the massive number and variability of SKUs in the retail supply chain, retailers face an ever-growing challenge of being able to properly manage and understand where the inventories are. In the near term, retailers should use IoT to focus on inventory. Here are areas where the IoT can be employed to improve retailers' operations


Dealing with Politics in Agile or Lean Teams
Politics seems to me seems to occur because of internal motivations and interpretations of individuals about what’s going on around them. Although Agile/Lean might make activities, intentions and outcomes more clear, it doesn’t control the motivations and interpretations of the individuals who are doing the activities, having the intentions and dealing with the outcomes – so that’s all still prone to delusion, aversion and misunderstanding if you don’t have good facilitation. For instance, one of the key complaints about stand-ups is that they run too long or are ineffective. A pattern you will notice in stand-ups is that although it appears that the team have transparency because people are displaying their current status openly, they can still (and do) generate politics inside, before and after that standup – just because its natural for human beings to try to influence outcome to their own agenda



Quote for the day:

"Leadership is a dynamic process that expresses our skill, our aspirations, and our essence as human beings." -- Catherine Walker

May 27, 2015

CIO Interview: Mike Young, CIO, Dentsu Aegis Network
“One of the issues CIOs have to contend with is how to bring the data story together while doing this other stuff around the tech,” says Young. “We’ve deliberately made our IT transformation process a move to simplified architecture rich in collaboration toolswith one provider – Microsoft – to allow us to tap into the simplified data architecture that gives us,” he says. The hub, which is based on Cloudera, has a service-oriented architecture and allows the firm and its clients to analyse customer data and adapt their marketing strategy to boost sales. The hub hosts global applications that are available to all clients, connecting them to the big data system, and allows use of a statistical model called “R”, allowing on-boarding, cleansing and analytical insight, all in real-time.


Deliver Infrastructure at the Speed of Need
Working in tandem with VACS, Cisco UCS Director combines the virtual network fabric and services with compute, storage and virtualization components to deliver infrastructure templates. These templates deliver infrastructure pre-configured to the specific application’s needs, such as Puppet on Windows, SQL with high availability, dev/test environments or multi-tier generic infrastructure instances. Now for the real magic. The built-in Stack Designer with Cisco ONE Enterprise Cloud Suite enables application architects to combine infrastructure templates with application components to create automated application services. These application services can be deployed, via the self-service portal, into private or hybrid cloud environments within minutes.


Data breach costs now average $154 per record
According to the Ponemon report, data breach costs varied dramatically by industry and by geography. The US had the highest per-record cost, at $217, followed by Germany at $211. India was lowest at $56 per record. Sorted by industry, the highest costs were in the healthcare industry, at an average of $363 per record. The reason, said Barlow, is because the information in a medical record has a much longer shelf life than that of, say, a credit card number. "With credit cards, the time frame from the breach to mitigation is very short," he said. The credit card company just has to cancel the old credit card number and issue a new one, he said. "But the healthcare record can be used to establish access in perpetuity," he said, pointing out that healthcare records include a wealth of personal information as well as Social Security numbers and insurance numbers.


New Image Compression Technique Helps Reduce Image Payload
According to the May 2014 Forrester Research report entitled “Optimize Your Responsive Website Performance To Overcome Mobile Hurdles,” reducing the image weight with resizing and variable compression techniques — as appropriate to screen size and resolution — significantly reduces time-to-first-render and time-to-first-interaction. “As we see web browsing behavior continue to spike across multiple devices, browsers and connection speeds, a fast and consistent delivery experience is more important now than ever” says Kent Alstad, vice president of acceleration, Radware. “Designed to be fast and easy to implement, the click of one button allows an image to be compressed with up to an 80% image payload reduction despite the browser the end user has chosen, and virtually no difference in image quality.”


Big data helps Conservation International proactively respond to species threats
From our perspective, what we want to do is get the best available data at the right spatial and temporal scales, the best science, and the right technology. Then, when we package all this together, we can present unbiased information to decision makers, which can lead to hopefully good sustainable development and conservation decisions. These decision makers can be public officials setting conservation policies or making land use decisions. They can be private companies seeking to value natural capital or assess the impacts of sourcing operations in sensitive ecosystems. Of course, you never have control over which way legislation and regulations can go, but our goal is to bring that kind of factual information to the people that need it.


Employees know better, but still behave badly
Ironically, employees working in the IT sector were among the worst offenders, with only 12 percent saying that they had not engaged in any of these risky behaviors, second only to charity and non-profit employees, at 5 percent. ... The highest level of awareness, overall, had to do with opening attachments from unknown sources and viewing adult content on work devices. On average, 73 percent of respondents rated each of these behaviors it was risky or seriously risky. Only 2 percent said that opening attachments from unknown senders posted no risks, and only 3 percent said the same about adult content. However, 20 percent admitted to opening those attachments, and 6 percent to viewing adult content at work.


More responsive PSN security compliance regime goes live
Public sector bodies will now need to take five steps towards completing an application for a PSN connection compliance certificate. These involve completing a Code of Connection (CoCo); providing a network diagram; providing an IT Health Check (ITHC) report; updating contact details; and, finally, submission. Of these steps, CoCo completion remains the heaviest burden, and will cover the nature of the infrastructure that the council wishes to connect. This includes information such as network size, user numbers, number of sites and number of IP addresses on the network.


Semantic Technology Unlocks Big Data's Full Value
While organizations realize the potential of effectively incorporating data into multiple facets of their business, many are unsure as to how to best take action upon this insight. Consider the amount of data generated on an on-going basis in the financial services space alone; there is transaction data, consumer data, market data, regulatory data—the list goes on. The volume of information alone can be staggering and many organizations may not even have the appropriate tools to access all of their data. This is where semantic technology comes into play. At the highest level, semantic technology gives meaning and context to both structured and unstructured data, and makes it actionable, thereby solving major challenges financial institutions are facing when it comes to realizing the full value of their data.


Apple Pay’s weakest link
In order to use Apple Pay, the user (or the fraudster, it turns out) must enter pertinent information about her credit or debit cards. In addition to the static card information from the user, Apple provides the issuing bank with some low-level information on the user, such as the device’s name and location. But when a fraudster gets the card information in conjunction with a hijacked Apple iTunes account, all of that information too can be spoofed, thereby allowing fraudsters to enter their victims’credit card data into an iOS device. Once the credit card data is entered and accepted (by the banks) into Apple Pay, it becomes as powerful to the fraudster as a physical card. It can even then be used at any of the brick-and-mortar companies that accept Apple Pay because they will think the fraudster has possession of the card.


Net neutrality could become law in Italy - unless internet users would rather opt out
"The premise of the bill is that having neutral access is a right and the providers cannot strip their users of it. At the same time, users can give up that right by voluntarily asking for prioritization of sort, provided that they do it voluntarily and without having been induced to," Quintarelli said. For example, a customer might ask that, on top of their normal (neutral) subscription, their VoIP traffic should be treated as privileged on their access loop so that they could keep having conversations even when, say, some heavy file transfer is going on. The same thing could be put in place for IPTV or cloud backup services' traffic. "But it must be the customers asking for it because it fulfills their needs," Quintarelli said.



Quote for the day:

"With ordinary talent & extraordinary perseverance, all things are attainable." -- Thomas Foxwell Buxton