The Big Business of ‘Big Data’ – NYTimes.com

Is Big Data a Bubble?

In case you’re in a hurry: Of course it is. And that is good.

Longer version: Last week there were several events that convinced me that one of the great tech bubbles inflating right now is around what people have agreed to call “Big Data.” Basically the term reflects the fact that its now so easy to digitize and put on the Internet all kinds of information — things as diverse as the measurements of passive sensors,  most or all the world’s books, 200 million tweets a day and most of the world’s significant financial transactions — that the data is growing enormously.

Big Data is really about, however, the benefits we will gain by cleverly sifting through it to find and exploit new patterns and relationships. You see it now in things like Facebook ads, which are put in front of you because the posts you have read and contributed to (which Facebook’s algorithms get to examine as the price of this “free” service) indicate you might be ready to buy the advertised good.

Other companies look at air and soil data to write insurance about crop production. Further out, people want to seek patterns in raw medical data for possible causes and cures for disease, bypassing much of the old hypothesis-experiment model; this article from Wired tells of how the Google co-founder Sergey Brin used this in Parkinson’s research.

Last week’s gathering of the tech tribes, the Web 2.0 conference, focused heavily on the benefits of the ubiquity of Big Data — ad placement at Google, Coca-Cola vending machines that develop a personal relationship with the buyer, or what Facebook algorithms are doing to the cultivation of our souls. Microsoft held a one-hour session for developers on all the big, reliable databases it would offer them to make new products.

via The Big Business of ‘Big Data’ – NYTimes.com.

Apple reportedly setting up system for remote iPhone diagnostics

AppleCare technicians may soon be able to glean troubleshooting information from your iPhone, saving you a trip to the Apple Store. The company is reportedly set to deploy a Web-based tool to collect various bits of diagnostic information from an iOS device in order to transmit it directly to Apple’s servers for analysis.

According to a source speaking to HardMac, Apple has internally announced that it has created a Web-based version of diagnostic tools that AppleCare technicians are already using. The tool allows a technician to send an e-mail (or presumably an SMS) with a specially crafted URL. When a user clicks the URL, it connects to Apple’s servers and collects various bits of data about the device’s state, the health of the battery, and the version of iOS running.

via Apple reportedly setting up system for remote iPhone diagnostics.

Adobe Adds Flash Privacy Controls — InformationWeek

Adobe is aiming to make Flash safer for users, in part by blocking questionable website-tracking practices.

The company on Thursday released Flash Player version 10.3, which now enables users to wipe the data stored by Flash from within the browser. That capability is designed to help people block the use of persistent Flash cookies–also known as Local Shared Objects (LSOs)–which some advertisers use to surreptitiously track every website that a user visits, regardless of their cookie or cache settings.

The new plug-in-wiping feature is facilitated by an API known as NPAPI:ClearSiteData. “This new API allows the browsers to communicate a user’s desire to wipe user data stored by installed browser plug-ins. Now, when users go into their browser settings to clear their browser history or clear their cookies, they will be able to clear both their browser data as well as their plug-in data,” according to a blog post from Adobe.

Any browser plug-in can use the new API, though Flash is the first to do so. For open source browsers, the functionality is currently only available for Chrome developers, but Adobe said “we expect to have official support across all open source browsers in the near future.” Meanwhile, Adobe also worked with Microsoft to develop an equivalent capability–now live–for Internet Explorer 8 and 9.

via Adobe Adds Flash Privacy Controls — InformationWeek.

Google Quietly Releases Docs For Android | ConceivablyTech

Google is now offering its cloud productivity suite also in a stripped version for Android smartphones. It has fewer features that the established products, but there is one particular feature that could convince you to switch to Google.

Docs for Android

A few weeks ago, we reviewed three popular productivity suites for Android. Google missed the opportunity initially and did not even offer a simple note application with Android. Docs for Android finally came to market yesterday, which provides viewing and editing access to your online documents, as long as they are Google Docs and in text or spreadsheet form.

Documents that are downloaded via Google Cloud Connect from Microsoft Office documents cannot be edited, but only viewed, which is somewhat annoying and needs to be addressed by Google in one way or the other. The advantage over Microsoft’s Office 365, especially when accessing documents via a smartphone is the fact that Google Docs is much more simple in its structure and allows users to work with existing files or create new files much more easily.

via Google Quietly Releases Docs For Android | ConceivablyTech.

Sony to launch two Android tablets later this year – Computerworld

Sony will make its long-awaited entry into the tablet PC market later this year with two models based on the latest version of Google’s Android operating system.

The tablets, which carry the development names S1 and S2, will be launched worldwide from the fall, Sony said on Tuesday.

The company didn’t announce pricing details or specific launch dates, but it did offer some basic specifications and demonstrate prototypes of the two machines at a Tokyo news conference. (Video of the new tablets is available on YouTube.)

The S1 is a slate design and has a 9.4-inch screen with 1,280 by 800 pixels resolution. At first glance it looks similar to most competing tablets, but look more closely at its profile and you’ll see it’s shaped like a wedge. The upper portion of the tablet is thicker than the lower portion and that makes it easier to hold, said Sony.

The S2 is a folding device equipped with dual 5.5-inch screens, each with 1,024 by 480 pixels resolution. It has a rounded design and is small enough to fit in the inside pocket of a jacket. Unveiling the tablet at the Tokyo news conference, Kunimasa Suzuki, deputy president of Sony’s consumer products group, reached inside his jacket and pulled it out.

Both tablets will run Android 3.0, the so-called “Honeycomb” version of the operating system, and can connect to Wi-Fi hotspots and cellular networks. Sony is building support for its Qriocity online audio and video services into both tablets, and users will also be able to browse and buy electronic books.

They are both based on NVidia’s Tegra 2 processor and each has front and rear cameras.

via Sony to launch two Android tablets later this year – Computerworld.

The Rise And Rise Of FCPA

Deloitte’s fourth version of its ‘Look before you leap’ survey on global risk includes much more focus on the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), due in part to increased enforcement of the regulation over the past decade.

The regulation has been on the books for significantly longer – it was enacted in 1977 to make it unlawful to make payments to foreign government officials in order to obtain business – but given increased international trade and commerce over the last 30 years and, more cynically, the profitability enforcement has garnered for the government, Deloitte’s new focus makes perfect sense.

Almost two thirds (63 percent) of respondents, who included corporate executives, investment bankers, private equity executives and hedge fund managers, say the FCPA and anti-corruption legislation have led to aborted or renegotiated deals such as M&A, joint ventures and distributor relationships.

As the trend toward increased enforcement is expected to continue, insiders say it behooves US businesses to implement compliance programs, keep careful records and thoroughly train their employees if they want to remain competitive on the global stage. And even though anti-corruption legal experts agree the FCPA may hinder US competitiveness in certain respects, they also say it may point to the need for an international set of anti-corruption standards.

via The Rise And Rise Of FCPA.

Google launches preemptive strike at Office 365 | Office software – InfoWorld

How much is good enough? That question kept resonating through my Office 365-drenched brain as I started using the final version of Google’s new Office add-in, dubbed Google Cloud Connect for Microsoft Office (moniker gets high points for steak, not much for sizzle).

The product is a gussied-up version of DocVerse, a collaboration program Google bought in February 2010, and it doesn’t bring anything new to the online collaboration ball game. But it’s fast, easy, free to an extent — more about that shortly — and it offers a few unique capabilities you may find inviting.

Here’s how it works. After you download and install Cloud Connect and re-start Word, Excel, or PowerPoint, you’re prompted to enter your Google credentials. Google asks for permission to allow Cloud Connect (Pavilion) access to your account. You can choose to save your documents to the Google Cloud automatically (every time you save in the application), or you can make the cloud sync manual (when you specifically click on the Sync button).

When the Office app comes up for air, it sprouts a new Ribbon (yech). Although it takes up substantial screen real estate, it allows you to change the sync state between automatic and manual, and it holds the requisite Sync button. When you save a document in automatic mode, or when you click the Sync button, a copy of the doc goes to your Google Docs account. As soon as the doc appears in Google Docs it’s assigned an URL, which you can email to other people and thus invite collaboration.

via Google launches preemptive strike at Office 365 | Office software – InfoWorld.

Ministry of Justice consults on Bribery Act guidance – International Law Office

On September 14 2010 the Ministry of Justice opened a consultation on its draft adequate procedures guidance. The government is obliged to produce such guidance under Section 9 of the Bribery Act 2010 and has pledged to consult and publish a final version before the act comes into force in April 2011.

The ministry is seeking the views of businesses and other interested parties. In his introduction Kenneth Clarke, the lord chancellor and secretary of state for justice, states that:

“In deciding what bribery prevention measures best suit their particular circumstances, commercial organisations should be assisted by the guidance published under Section 9 of the Act. It is essential that any guidance the government publishes is informed by the wealth of knowledge, experience and expertise to be found outside government, in (for example) the business community and non-governmental organisations.”

The consultation documents include:

a questionnaire for interested parties comprising five questions;

draft guidance focusing on six key principles;

additional commentary on some specific issues, such as facilitation payments; and

five illustrative examples – which are not part of the guidance – focusing on key risk areas, such as hospitality.

via Ministry of Justice consults on Bribery Act guidance – International Law Office.

Microsoft | Microsoft launches services to compete with Google Apps | Seattle Times Newspaper

In another step onto Google’s turf, Microsoft launched Office 365, a Web-based version of Office and e-mail rolled into a monthly service for less than the cost of a Netflix subscription.

The new Office 365 is the answer to Google Apps, a Web version of word processing and spreadsheets that Google offers to businesses for $50 per year. Microsoft’s new basic service will cost $72 a year. Microsoft said people can start signing up for a free test version, and the service will start selling next year.

“Customers will get the best of everything we know about productivity 365 days a year,” said Kurt DelBene, the new president of Microsoft’s Business division, at a Tuesday news conference in San Francisco.

It’s one of the many ways Microsoft is pushing into cloud computing: selling software served from and stored in the company’s giant data centers.

“We believe it’s one of the most impactful transformations that will happen in our generation,” DelBene said of the cloud.

For businesses with fewer than 25 employees, Microsoft is offering the $6 monthly service that combines Office Web Apps — Word, Excel, PowerPoint — with SharePoint for collaboration, Exchange for e-mail and Lync for communications.

For larger businesses, Microsoft can offer a combination of services for $2 to $27 per user, so that companies can scale the package software for different types of employees, whether they’re factory workers or accountants.

via Microsoft | Microsoft launches services to compete with Google Apps | Seattle Times Newspaper.

MeeGo Based Tablet PC Introduced At IDF — Tablet PCs — InformationWeek

The WeTab, the first tablet to run the open source MeeGo operating system, will make its debut next week in Germany. The device was introduced during a keynote address at this week’s Intel Developer Forum (IDF) in San Francisco.

WeTab makers Neofonie and 4tiitoo said the device will initially be available only in Germany but hope the operating system will help it garner widespread attention. 4tiitoo CEO Stephan Odofer said they started working on WeTab three years ago on Ubuntu but recently decided to make the switch to MeeGo. MeeGo was launched last February at the Mobile World Congress by Intel and Nokia.

Odofer said they found MeeGo to be a very optimized and comprehensive operating system for tablets. The OS provides a flexible user interface and application environments and supports all popular file formats. Users have the ultimate control — the device’s interface even has a ‘root’ button that opens up a Linux command prompt.

Boot-up times for the tablet are just 16 seconds, the companies claim, with a one second recovery time when it is in sleep mode. WeTab is an 11.6-inch tablet with a high contrast 1366 x 768 screen resolution and multi-touch display, as well as an ambient light sensor and acceleration sensor. The basic version comes with 16GB and WLAN and weighs about 1.8 pounds, and the 3G version has 32GB, WLAN, full high-definition 1080p through HDMI, and GPS and weighs 1.9 pounds.

via MeeGo Based Tablet PC Introduced At IDF — Tablet PCs — InformationWeek.