Data Furnaces Could Bring Heat to Homes – NYTimes.com

TO satisfy our ever-growing need for computing power, many technology companies have moved their work to data centers with tens of thousands of power-gobbling servers. Concentrated in one place, the servers produce enormous heat. The additional power needed for cooling them — up to half of the power used to run them — is the steep environmental price we have paid to move data to the so-called cloud.

Researchers, however, have come up with an intriguing option for that wasted heat: putting it to good use in people’s homes.

Two researchers at the University of Virginia and four at Microsoft Research explored this possibility in a paper presented this year at the Usenix Workshop on Hot Topics in Cloud Computing. The paper looks at how the servers — though still operated by their companies — could be placed inside homes and used as a source of heat. The authors call the concept the “data furnace.”

They acknowledge that it is more likely that data furnaces, if adopted, would be placed first in basements of office and apartment buildings, not in individual homes. But as a “thought-provoking exercise,” the authors give homes the bulk of their attention.

If a home has a broadband Internet connection, it can serve as a micro data center. One, two or three cabinets filled with servers could be installed where the furnace sits and connected with the existing circulation fan and ductwork. Each cabinet could have slots for, say, 40 motherboards — each one counting as a server. In the coldest climate, about 110 motherboards could keep a home as toasty as a conventional furnace does.

via Data Furnaces Could Bring Heat to Homes – NYTimes.com.

Google vows to support Android vendors in lawsuits | The Digital Home – CNET News

Android vendors have been hit hard by lawsuit after lawsuit from competitors. But in a show of strength, Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt said today in Taiwan that his company will stand by those firms in any lawsuit.

“We tell our partners, including the ones here in Taiwan, we will support them,” Schmidt told reporters today, according to Reuters. “For example, we have been supporting HTC in its dispute with Apple because we think that the Apple thing is not correct.”

HTC’s troubles with Apple started last year when the iPhone maker filed a complaint with the U.S. International Trade Commission, arguing HTC’s device violates 20 of its patents.

“We can sit by and watch competitors steal our patented inventions, or we can do something about it. We’ve decided to do something about it,” Apple co-founder Steve Jobs said in a statement at the time. “We think competition is healthy, but competitors should create their own original technology, not steal ours.”

In response, HTC fired back with several lawsuits of its own against Apple, arguing that the iPhone violated patents it held. In September, HTC upped the ante a bit by suing Apple using patents it received from Google.

Although Schmidt argues that his company has stood by Android vendors, HTC’s lawsuit using Google patents was arguably the first major step the search giant took to help its partners. Previously, Google had taken a backseat to the lawsuits, possibly for fear of getting embroiled in a head-to-head court battle with Apple. That fear was stripped away earlier this year, however, after Google announced plans to acquire Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion. The deal is designed to provide Google with the patent protection the compa

via Google vows to support Android vendors in lawsuits | The Digital Home – CNET News.

Facebook’s Picks Sweden For First Data Center Outside U.S. | PCMag.com

Facebook has tapped a Swedish town about 62 miles south of the Arctic Circle to be the home of its first data center outside of the U.S. Located in the northern town of Lulea, Facebook said the server site will improve performance for European users.

“Facebook has more users outside the U.S. than inside,” Facebook’s director of site operations Tom Furlong told the Associated Press. “It was time for us to expand in Europe.”

Facebook currently has servers in California, Virginia, and Oregon and is building another complex in North Carolina. The company chose Lulea for its first European site because of its chilly climate, necessary for keeping servers cool. In the winter the temperature stays far below freezing and in the summer, it rarely climbs above about 80 degrees.

Lulea was also selected for its proximity to sources of renewable energy. The town is near a river with hydropower stations that generate double the electricity yielded by the Hoover Dam, Facebook told the AP. Powering the servers will require 120 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 16,000 homes, according to the Telegraph.

The new site can run entirely on renewable energy, but Facebook has plans to build 14 backup diesel generators capable of producing 40 megawatts of electricity in case of a blackout, the AP said.

via Facebook’s Picks Sweden For First Data Center Outside U.S. | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.

Secret iPhone prototype left at a bar — again – CSMonitor.com

An Apple engineer accidentally left an iPhone prototype at a bar in Silicon Valley. No, this isn’t a republished story from 2010. This is a bizarre moment of tech deja vu almost exactly one year after an Apple employee left a different iPhone prototype at a bar in Silicon Valley.

Apple security hustled to recover this second missing prototype, according to CNET, who uncovered the story.

Whereas last year’s incident included checkbook journalism, accusations of criminal misconduct, and a police investigation of the tech blog Gizmodo, “this year’s lost phone seems to have taken a more mundane path,” reports CNET. “It was taken from a Mexican restaurant and bar and may have been sold on Craigslist for $200.”

RELATED: What will Apple think of next? Five ridiculous predictions.

The iPhone 5 prototype (or whatever the upcoming handset will be called) landed in San Francisco’s Cava 22, a tequila bar. A couple days after it went missing, Apple reps reached out to the San Francisco police, according to CNET’s anonymous source.

The company electronically tracked down the experimental phone to a home in the city’s Bernal Heights neighborhood. With an Apple rep in tow, the police approached the house and interviewed a resident in his twenties. The man “acknowledged being at Cava 22 on the night the device went missing,” but insisted he knew nothing about the missing prototype. He agreed to let police search his home. The officers found nothing.

via Secret iPhone prototype left at a bar — again – CSMonitor.com.

Anonymous claims release of BART police officers’ data – Computerworld

Hackers claiming to belong to the Anonymous hacking collective this morning publicly posted the names, home addresses, email addresses and passwords of 102 police officers belonging to San Francisco’s Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) agency.

The move was in apparent retaliation for BARTs decision to temporarily cut off underground cell phone service to commuters last Thursday in response to a planned protest against the shooting of a homeless man by BART police in March.

News of the attack was released via a Twitter account associated with Anonymous’ attacks on BART. However, another Twitter account used by Anonymous noted that “no one claimed responsibility” for this morning’s incident.

“Some random Joe joined a channel and released the data to the press,” the tweet noted. Another tweet noted that the leak of BART police data “could be the work sanctioned by those who truly support anonymous, or agent provocateurs. Stay skeptical.”

via Anonymous claims release of BART police officers’ data – Computerworld.

Is Microsoft launching a social network? – Computerworld

The social networking world may be getting even more interesting.

Microsoft may have accidentally leaked an image of its own social networking platform. Called “Tulalip,” the site is designed to enable users to “find what you need and share what you know easier than ever,” according to the image of its home page.

Judging from the one page, users would be able to sign in to the site using their Facebook or Twitter accounts.

According to the Fusible.com website, the image was discovered at the Microsoft-owned domain socl.com. The site, Fusible reported, was not operational when it was found this week.

As of Friday morning, the page had been removed from the site and replaced with this message: “Thanks for stopping by. Socl.com is an internal design project from a team in Microsoft Research which was mistakenly published to the web. We didn’t mean to, honest.”

via Is Microsoft launching a social network? – Computerworld.

1/4 of smartphone users rely on their device for Internet access — Tech News and Analysis

For one quarter of smartphone users, their handset is the primary way they access the Internet, according to new data from the Pew  Internet & American Life Project. It’s a sign of the growing dependence on smartphones and also shows that for a sizable chunk of users, it’s out of necessity because they don’t have a home broadband connection.

Among smartphone users, 87 percent said they used the Internet or email on their device including 68 percent who say they do it on a daily basis. Twenty-five percent said that they go online primarily with their phones rather than on a computer. That’s in part because one-third of these respondents come from cell-only households that don’t have home computers. This is particularly true among smartphone owners under the age of 30, non-white smartphone users, and smartphone owners with relatively low income and education levels.

The Pew study also found that 35 percent of American adults have a smartphone with smartphone adoption strongest among richer households as well as with younger users. Almost six in ten (59 percent) smartphone users come from households with $75,000 or more in income while 58 percent of American cell phone owners between the ages of 25 and 34 own a smartphone and 48 percent of people ages 18-24 have a smartphone. Among African Americans and Latinos, 44 percent own a smartphone. Android was particularly popular among African Americans with 26 percent of all cell phone owners in this group using an Android device, far ahead of whites and Latinos. Overall, Android led the way with 15 percent of all cell phones owners, followed by the iPhone and BlackBerry at 10 percent each. The Pew results are based on a national telephone survey of 2,277 adults conducted between April 26 and May 22, 2011.

via 1/4 of smartphone users rely on their device for Internet access — Tech News and Analysis.

Windows 8: What You Need to Know | PCWorld

Microsoft showed its first public demo of Windows 8 on Wednesday, and it’s not at all like the Windows operating systems you’ve come to know over the past 25 years. The next version of Microsoft’s operating system (“Windows 8″ is just a codename) is a radical departure, designed around touch screens.

What Windows 8 features did Microsoft demonstrate?

Essentially, Microsoft showed how Windows 8 will work on both tablets and traditional PCs. The operating system’s home screen is filled with big, touchable panels, like the live tiles in Windows Phone 7, and from there you can tap and swipe your way to other touch-based applications. But underneath that touchy layer is plain old Windows, with a task bar, file manager, app icons–everything.

Swipe across to multitask. (Click to Zoom)How does the touch interface work?

From the start menu, which shows basic information like time and unread e-mail counts, users swipe upwards to reveal the home screen and its tiles. As with Windows Phone 7, apps can show some information within the tiles–users needn’t click on the weather app to see the current temperature, for example. Swiping from the right bezel brings up a menu that can take users from an app back to the home screen.

Users can multitask between open apps by swiping across from the left bezel. And therein lies the coolest-looking feature of Windows 8: When swiping in a new app, users can snap it in place next to the app that’s currently running. This allows users to view two apps at the same time–something that no existing tablet OS can do.

via Windows 8: What You Need to Know | PCWorld.

Winklevoss twins taking Facebook case to Supreme Court | The Digital Home – CNET News

Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, along with partner Divya Narendra, have one last card to play in their legal battle with Facebook.

The twins’ attorneys announced yesterday that they intend to file a petition with the U.S. Supreme Court, asking the high court to hear their case against Facebook and co-founder Mark Zuckerberg.

The petition stems from a settlement the Winklevosses and Narendra signed with the world’s largest social network in 2008 after claiming Zuckerberg stole their idea for a social-networking site they called ConnectU. At that time, they were awarded $65 million from Facebook and Zuckerberg in exchange for dropping all further litigation against the site.

After the settlement was reached, the Winklevosses and Narendra said that the $65 million was based on a valuation of Facebook that was inaccurate. Facebook, which is now worth more than $50 billion, denied the claims, saying that the Winklevosses and Narendra received their fair share.

Last month, U.S. Ninth Circuit Court Judge Alex Kozinski shot down the Winklevoss’ case, saying that the settlement they reached in 2008 was still binding.

“The Winklevosses are not the first parties bested by a competitor who then seek to gain through litigation what they were unable to achieve in the marketplace,” the chief judge wrote in the ruling. “And the courts might have obliged, had the Winklevosses not settled their dispute and signed a release of all claims against Facebook.”

via Winklevoss twins taking Facebook case to Supreme Court | The Digital Home – CNET News.

Over 23,000 IP addresses cited in BitTorrent suit | The Digital Home – CNET News

A BitTorrent file-sharing case could soon have more than 23,000 defendants.

Back in March, Judge Robert Wilkins of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia allowed Nu Image, a production company and the plaintiff in the case against “Does 1 to 6,500,” to start seeking out contact information, including full name and address, related to IP addresses it had already collected.

Those IP addresses, Nu Image said at the time, were “Doe Defendants” who had allegedly pirated copies of last year’s “The Expendables” using the BitTorrent protocol. Sylvester Stallone directed and starred in the film; LA-based Nu Image was involved in its production.

Last week, Nu Image filed another court document that included more than 23,000 IP addresses of people who allegedly pirated the film. If folks who use those IP addresses are sued as part of the case, it could become the biggest BitTorrent-related lawsuit thus far.

This case, filed earlier this year, is one of many that have been or are currently under way against alleged copyright infringers across the U.S.

via Over 23,000 IP addresses cited in BitTorrent suit | The Digital Home – CNET News.