Fujitsu to Offer IaaS Service in North America | PCWorld Business Center

Fujitsu is launching its infrastructure-as-a-service offering in North America in a few months, and will start offering interested customers a free trial next week.

Beginning on May 31, organizations can sign up for a free three-month trial of the service. On Sept. 1, the service will become generally available.

Interested customers can sign up for the service online, and Fujitsu suggests they use it to try out application testing and development as well as processing for workloads like data analytics.

Fujitsu already offers an IaaS service in Japan, Australia, Singapore and the U.K. Expanding into the U.S. means that multinational companies can access the service locally in multiple locations, the company said.

It will offer the North America service from a data center in Silicon Valley with 24-7 support.

via Fujitsu to Offer IaaS Service in North America | PCWorld Business Center.

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Twitter reportedly buying TweetDeck for more than $40 million | Technology | Los Angeles Times

Twitter has been rumored to be in takeover talks with Tweetdeck for more than a month, but the deal is now finalized, according to a report from CNNMoney.

“Twitter has acquired TweetDeck, an application for organizing the display of tweets, for more than $40 million in a mix of cash and stock, according to sources close to the deal,” CNNMoney said in its report.

“The deal has yet to be announced, but papers finalizing the deal were signed Monday.”

The Wall Street Journal and the blog TechCrunch reported last month that Twitter was going to buy TweetDeck for as much as $50 million.

Twitter has yet to comment directly on any of the reports of a deal, and officials at the San Francisco-based social network declined to comment on the latest report.

via Twitter reportedly buying TweetDeck for more than $40 million | Technology | Los Angeles Times.

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Symantec to Send Backup Exec to the Cloud – Data Storage – News & Reviews – eWeek.com

Symantec’s Backup Exec.cloud is aimed at small businesses or remote offices that want to wash their hands of IT infrastructure.

In yet another move of a standard, server-based application to an offsite alternative, Symantec revealed May 3 that its venerable and market-leading BackUp Exec will be adding a cloud-based option later this year.

The company made the announcement–one of several, in fact–at its annual Symantec Vision conference in Las Vegas.

Symantec’s Backup Exec.cloud, aimed at small businesses or remote offices that want to wash their hands of IT infrastructure, will be a hosted, automated backup service that protects files on Windows desktops and servers with a straightforward user interface for online backup and recovery.

Thus, it will soon compete directly with such marketshare-grabbing services as EMC Mozy, Seagate’s i365, CommVault, Acronis, Amazon S3 and others for the SMB cloud storage business.

via Symantec to Send Backup Exec to the Cloud – Data Storage – News & Reviews – eWeek.com.

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TweetDeck Releases Version 2.0 for iPhone

As social media dashboards go, the main benefit is often in the added functionality over the stock interface or application. TweetDeck (news, site), for one, is known for its flexible use of columns to help sort, manage and organize Twitter feeds. TweetDeck has recently launched version 2.0 of its iPhone app, with a handful of new, useful features and UI improvements.

A Re-Imagining of TweetDeck

TweetDeck’s creators say the 2.0 update is a re-imagining of the original TweetDeck iOS application, as the interface has been redesigned from ground up. TweetDeck 2.0 is touted as faster and more user-friendly than the original release, and features custom columns, support for new touch gestures, improved performance and support for long tweets with Deck.ly, among others.

Our team took the original iPhone app and distilled the essence of what made it so popular into a series of guiding principles. They then embarked on creating a brand new app from scratch, making use of all the latest technologies and design approaches, but all the while with an eye on those fundamental principles from the original.”

via TweetDeck Releases Version 2.0 for iPhone.

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Ubuntu 11.04 released, a Natty Narwhal rises from the depths

Canonical has announced the official release of Ubuntu 11.04, codenamed Natty Narwhal. This major update introduces the new Unity desktop shell, which is designed to improve ease of use and deliver a more modern user experience.

Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth unveiled the Unity project a year ago during an Ubuntu Developer Summit keynote in Brussels. The new shell was originally created for the Ubuntu Netbook Edition and first shipped as the default netbook environment in Ubuntu 10.10. The Ubuntu developers have worked intensively over the last six months to adapt Unity for the desktop. The effort entailed a significant overhaul of the Unity frontend that boosts its performance, reliability, and suitability for use on larger screens.

The new Unity-based desktop shows a task dock on the left-hand side of the screen and a panel at the top with an embedded global menu. A screen overlay that emerges from the top panel provides access to additional features through modular content panels called “lenses.” The default environment comes with an application launcher lens and a file management lens.

Although many of the changes introduced in Unity represent tangible usability improvements, there are some parts of the environment—particularly the application lens—that still have some rough edges. Some users might also be put off by Unity’s lack of configurability. The position of the dock is one of several key aspects that can’t be customized. Users who prefer a more traditional environment or want to wait for Unity to mature further before making the switch can simply choose the “Classic” Ubuntu desktop in the system login interface.

Unity requires support for hardware-accelerated rendering, which might not work consistently across all hardware. The classic environment is also used as a fallback for users with unsupported hardware. A “2D” version of Unity, built with Qt, that doesn’t require compositing is under active development and could serve as the fallback in future versions of Ubuntu. The 2D version is shipping today in the Ubuntu ARM netbook port, but not on the regular Ubuntu CD.

In addition to delivering the new Unity shell, the new version of Ubuntu also brings some improvements to desktop theming and bundled software. The Gtk+ theme has a new slim scrollbar style and a number of other enhancements.

via Ubuntu 11.04 released, a Natty Narwhal rises from the depths.

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What Does Your Phone Know About You? More Than You Think – Alexis Madrigal – Technology – The Atlantic

I plugged my phone into my computer and opened an application called Lantern, a forensics program for investigating iPhones and iPads. Ten minutes later, I’m staring at everything my iPhone knows about me. About 14,000 text messages, 1,350 words in my personal dictionary, 1,450 Facebook contacts, tens of thousands of locations pings, every website I’ve ever visited, what locations I’ve mapped, my emails going back a month, my photos with geolocation data attached and how many times I checked my email on March 24 or any day for that matter. Want to reconstruct a night? Lantern has a time line that combines all my communications and photos in one neat interface. While most of it is invisible during normal operations, there is a record of every single thing I’ve done with this phone, which also happens to form a pretty good record of my life.

Figuring that I’ve got nothing to hide or steal, I’d always privileged convenience over any privacy and security protocols. Not anymore. Immediately after trying out Lantern, I enabled the iPhone’s passcode and set it to erase all data on the phone after 10 failed attempts. This thing remembers more about where I’ve been and what I’ve said than I do, and I’m damn sure I don’t want it falling into anyone’s hands.

via What Does Your Phone Know About You? More Than You Think – Alexis Madrigal – Technology – The Atlantic.

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Microsoft Explains Its Location Data Collection Practices – PCWorld Business Center

In the midst of an uproar over ways that Apple and Google collect and store location information from mobile phones, Microsoft has laid out details about its Windows Phone 7 data collection policies.

Microsoft says that it collects location information only if users allow an application to access location data and when that particular application requests location information. It also said that it keeps that data in a Microsoft database.

Apple has come under fire in recent weeks after researchers showed that the iPhone and iPad store location data about users on the devices. Additional research found that both Apple and Google collect location information about users even when applications that require location information aren’t running.

Google has defended itself by saying that location sharing by users of Android-based mobile phones is opt-in and that all location data the company stores is anonymized. Apple has not commented on the situation.

Microsoft said that it assembles and maintains a database of the locations of cell towers and Wi-Fi access points in order to provide its location services. When a user accesses an application that requires location information, Microsoft compares the Wi-Fi access points and cell towers in range of the device with the location database, which contains details of the locations of the access points and cell towers.

via Microsoft Explains Its Location Data Collection Practices – PCWorld Business Center.

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The Practice of Law in the Era of ‘Big Data’

www.nlj.com  - “Big Data,” a name for new data-analysis technologies as well as a movement to develop real-world uses for these capabilities, holds big promise. With regard to the practice of law, the impact of these technologies on electronic discovery is likely the first practical application that comes to mind. Managing the burdens of the information explosion, including volumes of data that made manual review impractical, expensive, and less effective than necessary, was the last paradigm shift in the practice. With Big Data tools, the focus turns from managing the burden of large amounts of information to leveraging its value. See, e.g., John Markoff, “Armies of Expensive Lawyers, Replaced by Cheaper Software,” N.Y. Times, March 4, 2011.

Another practical application of Big Data will be to predict the outcome of disputes with a greater level of accuracy and granularity than now possible. In one interesting study, new insights into the U.S. Supreme Court’s jurisprudence were revealed through modeling and animating the cases the Court relied upon in its opinions over time. See Computational Legal Studies, “The Development of Structure in the Citation Network of the United States Supreme Court — Now in HD!.”

The analytical power of Big Data, however, also raises big concerns. For example, outside the practice of law, Big Data techniques have proven effective at suggesting new courses of action to battle illness. However, there is at least a chance that the results of such a study could backfire against the study participants, by enabling, for example, discrimination against those who are most likely to get sick. In one possible scenario, these results could provide a prospective employer with the information needed to identify potential hires who are most likely to get sick and miss work. See, e.g., Nicholas Bakalar, “What’s a Little Swine Flu Outbreak Among Friends?,” N.Y. Times, Feb. 3, 2011. Accordingly, it is important to question the impact of Big Data. As a start to this conversation, this article addresses several of the resulting privacy concerns.

First, one of the characteristics of Big Data is that the analysis of large data sets sometimes reveals new information that is not just a summation of the individual underlying information. Assuming that the data underlying a particular Big Data project are collected from publicly available sources, do the individuals who provided the underlying data have privacy rights in the new information obtained by analysis? A recent case, U.S. v. Maynard, 615 F.3d 544, 555 (D.C. Cir. 2010), suggests that they may.

via The Practice of Law in the Era of ‘Big Data’.

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The Sedona Conference® Publishes “Database Principles” : Electronic Discovery Law

1. Absent a specific showing of need or relevance, a requesting party is entitled only to database fields that contain relevant information, not the entire database in which the information resides or the underlying database application or database engine.

2. Due to differences in the way that information is stored or programmed into a database, not all information in a database may be equally accessible, and a party’s request for such information must be analyzed for relevance and proportionality.

3. Requesting and responding parties should use empirical information, such as that generated from test queries and pilot projects, to ascertain the burden to produce information stored in databases and to reach consensus on the scope of discovery.

4. A responding party must use reasonable measures to validate ESI collected from database systems to ensure completeness and accuracy of the data acquisition.

5. Verifying information that has been correctly exported from a larger database or repository is a separate analysis from establishing the accuracy, authenticity, or admissibility of the substantive information contained within the data.

6. The way which a requesting party intends to use database information is an important factor in determining an appropriate format of production.

via The Sedona Conference® Publishes “Database Principles” : Electronic Discovery Law.

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Oracle drops OpenOffice from commercial software portfolio – IT News from V3.co.uk

Oracle has announced it is dropping the OpenOffice application suite from its commercial software offerings, and handing the code to the open source community.

The company said in a statement that it would be concentrating its open source efforts on MySQL and Linux, where there was a broad base of corporate and government support. Oracle didn’t say if it would still be investing in OpenOffice going forward.

“Given the breadth of interest in free personal productivity applications and the rapid evolution of personal computing technologies, we believe the OpenOffice.org project would be best managed by an organization focused on serving that broad constituency on a non-commercial basis,” said Edward Screven, Oracle’s chief corporate architect.

“We intend to begin working immediately with community members to further the continued success of Open Office. Oracle will continue to strongly support the adoption of open standards-based document formats, such as the Open Document Format (ODF).”

via Oracle drops OpenOffice from commercial software portfolio – IT News from V3.co.uk.

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