Tuesday, December 2, 2008

NEWEST POWER SKIN FOR ALL TYPES OF THE APPLE iPHONE




Recharge ALL versions of the iPhone on the go with the iPhone 1800 mAh portable power station. Charge your iPhone without any power outlets. With this charger, you can still use your iPhone while the phone is charging. You can even use the power station as a charging cradle. Perfect for trips where a power socket is not available. The portable power station comes with its sleek and elegant style to honor the design of the Apple iPhone.

Features:


Recharge all iPhone versions in a convenient way
Access to key buttons and ports
Also serves as a docking station
Apple LED indicator when power is on
Choose your color shiny black or shiny white

1) Sleek and Elegant Hi-Glossy "Skin" Charger in 1) shiny black and 2) white..
2) Thinner than other competing Products...
3) Ability to turn "ON and OFF" the Charge Features...
4) Compatibility with "ALL" iPhones''..
5) Hands Free Table Top Viewing.. Free Standing Feature..
6) "Real" 1800 mAh Lithium Battery Pack from one of the largest Lithium Specialists in the world..
7) Only "Skin" available in Hi-Gloss White Color.
8) We have obtained Apple Licensing and Registration,Apple Authorized Vendors are allowed to sell"Power-Skins"
9) Standby charging time is 32 hours...(when the iPhone is used during charging this 32 hours will shrink)
10) Sync and Charge capability as usual.

Dutch;

NIEUW

Laad ALLE uitvoeringen van de iPhone onderweg op met de iPhone 1800 mAh portable ''Power Skin''. Laad uw iPhone op zonder stopcontacten/stroommogelijkheden uit de muur in de buurt. Met de oplader kunt u gewoon uw iPhone onderweg blijven gebruiken terwijl hij aan het opladen is. U kunt hem zelfs als handsfree station gebruiken. Perfect voor reizen zonder oplaadpunten voor uw iPhone. Deze draagbare ''Power Skin'' is stijlvol en elegant in navolging van de Apple iPhone zelf.

Eigenschappen:

Laad ALLE versies van de Apple iPhone op
Met behoud van toegang tot alle bediening op de iPhone zelf
Kan ook als handsfree docking station worden gebruikt
Apple LED indicator brand wanneer hij aan het opladen is
Kies de kleur glanzend zwart of glanzend wit

1) Stijlvolle en elegante hoogglanzende ''Power Skin'' oplader verkrijgbaar in 1) glanzend zwart en/of 2)glanzend wit,
2) Dunner dan andere vergelijkbare ''Power Skins'',
3) Mogelijkheid om het opladen tussentijds AAN en UIT te zetten,
4) Toepasbaar op ALLE iPhone uitvoeringen,
5) Handsfree plaatsingsmogelijkheden,
6) Gegarandeerde capaciteit van de lithium batterij is 1800 mAh, (door een van de grootste Lithium specialisten van
de wereld),
7) Tot nu toe de enige oplader als iPhone Skin in de uitvoering ''glanzend wit'' op de markt,
8) Onze producent heeft de officiele Apple licentie en registratie voor de productie van de zogenaamde ''Power Skins'',
9) Oplaad-standby tijd van 32 uur, (bij gebruik van de iPhone tijdens opladen neemt de 32 uur af)
10) Synchroniseer- en oplaad-capaciteiten zijn vergelijkbaar met de normale standaard Apple oplader.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

LOGMEIN Secure, On-Demand Remote Access and Support

Over 50 Million Devices Connected Worldwide by LogMeIn


LogMeIn is a leading provider of on-demand, remote-connectivity and support solutions to small businesses, IT service providers and consumers.

Businesses and IT service providers use LogMeIn's solutions to deliver remote end-user support and to access and manage computers and other Internet-enabled devices more effectively and efficiently. Consumers and mobile workers use our solutions to access computer resources remotely, thereby facilitating their mobility and increasing their productivity.

Our solutions, which are deployed on-demand and accessible through a Web browser, are secure, scalable and easy for our customers to try, purchase and use. Since our inception, our users have connected over 50 million computers and other Internet-enabled devices to a LogMeIn service.

LogMeIn's software-as-a-service suite of solutions includes capabilities for on-demand customer support of PCs, smartphones and other devices, systems administration, remote access, remote control, file-sharing, virtual private networking, data back-up and online meeting.

Support Remote PCs, Macs, and Smartphones over the Web without Pre-installing Software
New! LogMeIn Rescue now provides advanced session management capabilities for reduced customer wait times and more control over how sessions are routed. Plus, Rescue+Mobile now has extended support for the Symbian OS. More details »













LogMeIn Rescue is used by IT helpdesks to provide instant remote support to customers and employees. Gain control of a remote PC, Mac, or smartphone* over the web in seconds, without the need to pre-install software.





Friday, November 7, 2008

Future Phones to Read Your Voice, Gestures




Buttons are on their way out.

Five years from now, it is likely that the mobile phone you will be holding will be a smooth, sleek brick — a piece of metal and plastic with a few grooves in it and little more.

Like the iPhone, it will be mostly display; unlike the iPhone, it will respond to voice commands and gestures as well as touch.

"So much of how we understand technology is visually driven," says Rachel Hinman, a strategist with Adaptive Path, a user-experience and design-consulting firm. "Mobile interface design has to mimic the touch, sight, gesture and auditory feeds that we use to interact with our environment."

That means speaking to your phone rather than typing, pointing with your finger instead of clicking on buttons, and gesturing instead of touching. You could listen to music, access the internet, use the camera and shop for gadgets by just telling your phone what you want to do, by waving your fingers at it, or by aiming its camera at an object you're interested in buying.

Over the last few years, advances in display technology and processing power have turned smartphones into capable, if tiny, computers. As a result, phones have gone beyond traditional audio communication and texting to support a wide range of multimedia and office applications.

The one thing that hasn't changed, until recently, is the tiny keypad. Sure, there have been some tweaks, such as T9 predictive text input that cuts down on the time it takes to type, a QWERTY keyboard instead of a 12-key one, or the touchscreen version of a keyboard found on the iPhone. But fundamentally, the act of telling your phone what to do still involves a lot of thumb-twiddling.

Experts say the industry needs a new wave of interface technologies to transform how we relate to our phones. The traditional keypads and scroll wheels will give way to haptics, advanced speech recognition and motion sensors.

Touchscreens Everywhere

Until Apple's iPhone came along, keypads were a standard feature on all mobile phones. The iPhone paved the way for a range of touchscreen-based phones, including the T-Mobile G1 and the upcoming BlackBerry Storm.

"What's a shame is everyone's following Apple now," says Gus Desbarats, chairman of The Alloy, a UK-based product-design firm. To take the next step in phone design, mobile-phone companies will have to make radical changes in how they create their products. The Alloy's two touchscreens phone prototype

"Most user interface experiences today start around a new generation of microprocessor or new screen technology," says Desbarats. "Those things are important, but companies need to ask themselves: What kind of devices do we want people to really have?"

Take the touchscreen. So far, even iPhone clones require navigation across multiple screens to complete a task.

That will change as touchscreens become more sophisticated and cheaper. Instead of a single large screen that is fragile and smudged by fingerprints, phone designers could create products with multiple touch screens.

A prototype from The Alloy shows two touchscreens folded into a clamshell with the keypad and other functionality available on one of the screens and the ability to manipulate photos and other information on the other.

Speak to Me

Users could also interact with their phone by simply speaking to it using technology from companies such as Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Vlingo.

Vlingo's application allows users to command their phones by voice. That could enable you to speak the URLs for web pages or dictate e-mail messages.

Natural speech recognition has long been challenging for human-computer interface researchers. Most devices with speech-recognition capabilities require users to speak commands in an artificially clear, stilted way. They also tend to have high error rates, leading to user disenchantment.

Unlike conventional voice-recognition technologies, which require specific applications built to recognize selected language commands, Vlingo uses a more open-ended approach.

User voice commands are captured as audio files and transferred over the wireless connection to a server, where they're processed. The technology personalizes itself for each individual user, recognizing and training itself based on the individual user's speech patterns.

"If you say Boston and it shows up as Austin you can correct it on screen," says Vlingo CEO Dave Grannan. "And when you make the correction you are training the system."

It also means no need to memorize a list of commands or change the way you speak.

The technology has already found a major partner in Yahoo, which offers voice-enabled search on BlackBerry phones. Vlingo's completely voice-powered user interface is also available on Research In Motion phones, such as the BlackBerry Curve and Pearl.

Vlingo hopes to expand its services to additional platforms such as Symbian, Android and feature phones over the next few months.

Speedier Keypads

Even the traditional keypad is set to get a face lift. Typing on a touchscreen keypad is slow and difficult, even for those without stubby fingers or long nails.

That's where Swype comes in. It allows users to use trace a continuous motion on an onscreen QWERTY keypad instead of tapping individual characters

For instance, instead of typing the word infinity, users can just draw a line through each of the characters.Swype keypad

It's fast and remarkably error-free. "This is a game-changer," says Swype founder Cliff Kushler as he draws a line through the characters on the keypad to create the word infinity. "You have a subconscious awareness of where things are on the keyboard and people can ramp up on this to 40-50 words per minute."

When Kushler is done, the line on his touch screen keypad traces through all of the letters of the word infinity — a path that, coincidentally, resembles the infinity symbol.

The 55-year old Kushler is no texting addict, but he has changed the way we interact with our phones before.

About a decade ago, Kushler helped invent the T9 predictive-text input system, which lets people enter text on 12-button phone keypads more quickly than the old multitap system (press 2 once for A, twice for B, and so on).

Briefly a college drop-out, Kushler had set out to create an interface that would make it easier for disabled people to interact with their phones. But along the way, his research morphed into T9, which became a runaway success: It is now available on 3 billion phones.

He hopes Swype will have a similar impact on touchscreen phones. His instincts are certainly good: Researchers at IBM Almaden research center have developed a similar technology, called ShapeWriter, which is available for download from the iPhone App Store.

Swype CEO Mike McSherry says he is negotiating with handset makers to integrate the technology into phones.

Slowly Moving Forward

In a few years, mobile phones are also likely to come with embedded micro-projection displays that will allow the device to project a screen or a keyboard onto a table or any surface so users can navigate using the virtual interface, says Desbarats.

User experience will also improve, as phones integrate disparate features, such as GPS and camera, to provide a better interface. Nokia's "point and find" technology, for instance, is based on image-recognition technology. The feature allows users to point their phone's camera at objects and then uses image recognition to help identify them and bring up more information.

But don't rush to the stores yet. While the industry's direction seems clear, it will take a long time before these innovations hit the market.

The 18-month average lead time for a handset to make it to market increases the pressure on companies. Manufacturers shy away from really experimental interfaces, fearing that such changes will be off-putting to consumers. Instead, they make devices that push the envelope just a little bit at a time.

"It isn't about the technology but it is about the company's ability to use the technology in a compelling and profitable way," says Adaptive Path's Hinman.

In the short term, look for small, incremental improvements as mobile-phone manufacturers strive to make their handsets evermore usable by cleverly utilizing technology and capabilities that already exist.

"The thing about the future is it is built out of bits that are there in the present," says Desbarats. "In the future we will be looking at how to put those bits together in different ways to create innovative solutions."

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Fujitsu to Acquire Siemens's Stake in Fujitsu Siemens Computers

Tokyo and Munich, November 4, 2008 — Fujitsu Limited and Siemens AG announced today that Fujitsu will acquire Siemens's 50% share in their joint venture Fujitsu Siemens Computers (Holding) B.V., effective April 1, 2009 subject to the approval of relevant government agencies.

Fujitsu Siemens Computers was established on October 1, 1999 as a 50-50 joint venture based in Maarssen, The Netherlands. In just a decade, the company has established a leading position in the EMEA market for IT infrastructure, earning a reputation for quality and innovation in the server, PC, and data storage fields. Responding to the needs of its customers, Fujitsu Siemens Computers has also rapidly expanded its infrastructure services business to deliver a full range of innovative IT solutions.


"Fully integrating Fujitsu Siemens Computers into the Fujitsu Group fits perfectly into our global growth strategy," said Kuniaki Nozoe, president of Fujitsu. "We're inheriting a strong customer base in EMEA and an R&D capability that can support our global products development—not to mention a tremendously talented group of employees who share our values and commitment to grow with our customers as their trusted business partner."



















"We continue to focus our Company on the strategic sectors Energy, Industry and Healthcare. We are happy that our joint-venture partner Fujitsu will acquire our stake in Fujitsu Siemens Computers and will take the company to its next level of success," added Joe Kaeser, Siemens’s chief financial officer.

Under the share purchase agreement signed between the companies, Fujitsu will acquire Siemens's stake for approximately 450 million euros. The companies plan to close the transaction on April 1, 2009 after approval from relevant government agencies. Fujitsu Siemens Computers will continue to operate as a joint venture until the transaction is completed.

Fujitsu and Siemens also announced that the CEO and president of Fujitsu Siemens Computers, Bernd Bischoff, has resigned for personal reasons. Kai Flore, chief financial officer of Fujitsu Siemens Computers, has been appointed the new CEO and president of the company.

Over the years, Fujitsu and Siemens have developed a mutually beneficial partnership encompassing technology sharing and other collaborative business activities in the information communications field. The companies intend to continue collaborating in various fields of technology in the future.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

THE FIRST HARDWARE EVER FROM ORACLE...

Oracle Exadata is a family of high performance storage software and hardware products that can improve data warehouse query performance by a factor of 10X or more. Oracle Exadata Storage is a combination of smart storage software from Oracle and industry-standard hardware from HP. Overcoming the limitations of conventional storage, Oracle Exadata uses a massively parallel architecture to dramatically increase data bandwidth between the database server and storage. In addition, smart storage software offloads data-intensive query processing from Oracle Database 11g Servers and does the query processing closer to the data. The result - faster, parallel data processing and less data movement through higher bandwidth connections.

The HP Oracle Exadata Storage Server is based on the HP ProLiant DL180 G5 server, and is a fast, reliable, high-capacity, industry-standard storage building block. With a choice of SAS or SATA drives and a storage capacity up to 12 TB per server, it has Oracle Exadata software pre-installed. In addition to extremely fast query processing for your large data warehouses, the massively parallel architecture offers linear scalability and mission-critical reliability.

Oracle Exadata Storage provides the foundation for building dynamic storage grids, and is the building block for the HP Oracle Database Machine. Designed for large, multi-terabyte data warehouses, the HP Oracle Database Machine is a complete package of software, servers, and storage. Simple and fast to implement, it has the power to tackle large-scale business intelligence problems immediately and can scale linearly as your data warehouse grows.

Oracle OpenWorld Highlights Larry Ellison & Mark Hurd, HP

iBrain: Surviving the Technological Alteration of the Modern Mind.

Gary Small, M.D. is the Director of the UCLA Memory & Aging Research Center at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience & Human Behavior. His research has made the headlines of The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and USA Today, among other publications. Scientific American magazine has named him one of the world’s top innovators in science and technology.

Dr. Gary Small's latest book is iBrain: Surviving the Technological Alteration of the Modern Mind. In iBrain Dr. Small and co-author Gigi Vorgan, reveal the remarkable brain evolution caused by the constant presence of technology today.

If you think our incessant use of the Internet, Blackberrys, iPods, text-messaging and video games has changed our lives and our children's lives, here's some breaking news: Technology has not only altered our lives, it's altered our brains.

One of America’s leading neuroscientists reveals the remarkable brain evolution caused by the constant presence of technology today, separating the digital natives–those born in the computer age – from the digital immigrants, who discovered computer technology as adults.

Today’s frenetic progress in technology, communications, and lifestyles is evolving the way young brains develop, function, and process information – creating new neural pathways and altering brain activity at a biochemical level.

To compete and excel in this age of brain evolution, all of us must adapt, and Dr. Gary Small elucidates the strategies and tools that we need to enhance our technological, social, and empathic abilities, including:
• Key strategies for bridging the brain gap
• Empathy upgrades for digital natives
• A technology toolkit for digital immigrants
• Tips for managing techno-brain burnout
• Ways to avoid video game-brain
• Strategies for beating high-tech addiction
• Social skills for re-connecting face-to-face


REVIEWS

"A book about your brain that should make you think--twice."
-- Alvin Toffler, author of FUTURE SHOCK

“A valuable road map for the race to stay on track during the current evolution of the brain.”
-- Terry Semel, CEO, Windsor Media, former CEO, Yahoo!

Sunday, October 26, 2008

AC/DC Music Video with Microsoft Excel

This AC/DC music video is presented using Microsoft Excel and is one of the greatest things I have ever seen!

I remember my AC/DC days back in High School and enjoy hearing their music again here and there, but this music video just rocked. The Visual video was created using MS Excel and really give respect to the creators - Phil Clandillon and Steve Milbourne.

You do not have to be an AC/DC fan to appreciate the creativity and Excel skills presented in this AC/DC video and can really enjoy a cool presentation. It may be different in style than the Spaghetti Western Art Video or the Blu Stop Motion Animation, but it truly deserves a high spot for imagination and illustration.

It is also available for download at: acdcrocks.

Just a note: the actual Excel video begins after 30 seconds or so.

56 Useful Mac Shortcuts


This will focus on basic tips and tricks for the new user to the Mac system. Since Macs are growing in popularity I thought it was a good idea to show some sort of tips to anyone in this category.

This list will be split up into two sections basic key commands and the rest of them.

It will not include any F1-12 shortcuts as these vary widely depending on the keyboard and age of computer. Of course, if you have anymore that are not features on the list please leave a comment below.

Overview
A quick over view of the shortcut symbols used on this page. They should display correctly as they are unicode as part of the font. This works on Firefox and Safari so you should be ok. The list below is for anyone who isn’t quite sure.

⌘ = Command, the most common modifier.
⌥ = Option or Alt.
⇧ = Shift
^ = Control. Not used as frequently but is still there.

Basic Shortcuts
This is a list of shortcuts that should be hardwired into your brain. These are usually the most commonly used. Most of the shortcuts on the list are for Finder, although a lot will work in other applications. If I wrote a list for every single application out there I would be here for ever.

⌘ + Q = Quit
⌘ + W = Close window
⌘ + O = Open a file in your application
⌘ + P = Print
⌘ + C = Copy
⌘ + V = Paste
⌘ + X = Cut
⌘ + S = Save
⌘ + Z = Undo
⌘ + A = Select All
⌘ + Y or Space = Quicklook
⌘ + Tab = Cycle through windows

Personally I use all of those shortcuts all of the time. It helps to remember them and use them. Most will come naturally over time.

Other Shortcuts
This is the list where every other shortcut resides. Have a look through and see if there is anything which is of interest to you.

⌘ + ⇧+ 3 = Take fullscreen picture
⌘ + ⇧ + 4 = Take selected area screenshot
⌘ + ⇧ + 4 + Space = Take screenshot of window or menu
⌥ + ⌘ + Escape = Bring up Force Quit window
⌘ + Space = Spotlight search
⌘ + ` (back tick) = Cycle through applications windows
⌘ + . = Cancel operation
⌘ + ⇧ + ? = Open help
⌘ + I = Get Info
⌘ + [ = Go backwards in history in Finder
⌘ + ] = Go forwards in history in Finder
⌘ + Up Arrow = Go to previous folder in hierarchy
⌘ + Down Arrow = Open folder of file in Finder
⌘ + ⌥ + T = Show hide Finder’s toolbar
⌘ + Delete = Move item to Trash
⌘ + ⇧ + Delete = Empty Trash
⌘ + E = Eject disk
⌘ + F = Find
⌘ + G = Next result in Find option
⌘ + H = Hide application
⌘ + M = Minimize
⌘ + N = New window
⌘ + ⌥ + W = Close all windows
⌘ + ⇧ + Z = Redo
⌘ + ⇧ + H = Go to Home folder
⌘ + ⇧ + D = Go to Desktop
⌘ + ⇧ + C = Go to Computer
⌘ + ⇧ + K = Go to Network
⌘ + ⇧ + I = Go to iDisk
⌘ + ⇧ + A = Go to Application
⌘ + ⇧ + U = Go to Utilities
⌘ + ⇧ + G = Go to folder
⇧ + ⌘ + Q = Log out
⇧ + ⌘ + ⌥ + Q = Log out immediately.
⌘ + D = Duplicate in Finder
⌘ + ⌥ + 8 = Turn on Voice Over
⌘ + ⌥ + + = Zoom in (if turned on)
⌘ + ⌥ + - =Zoom Out
⌘ + ⌥ + D = Show/Hide Dock
^ + Eject = Show shutdown dialog
^ + ⌘ + Eject = Close all and restart
⌥ + ⌘ + Eject = Sleep
⌘ + Shift + F = Find file by name
⌘ + R = Refresh widget

Conclusion
Although a lot of these are for Finder they are very useful to learn especially if you use a function quite frequently. If you have any more general shortcuts please add them in the comments. If you want a cool little application to check which shortcuts are availble to you I recommend KeyCue. It is a good little application for finding new shortcuts on your system.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Vernedering topbasketballer hit op YouTube

Kansloos moest NBA-basketballer Devin Harris toezien hoe hij door een amateur uit Groot-Brittannië werd 'gepoort'. De vernedering werd gefilmd en is al meer dan drie miljoen keer bekeken.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

First Lazer-TV launched

This is a newscast of one of the most exciting technologies of 2008. It offers a lot of advantages then LCD and plasma screens; realistic colors, sharper image, longer lifetime, lower price, and lower energy use... Mitshubishi is the first producent of the lazer-tv's:

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Intel, Oracle Head For 'The Cloud'


CEO Paul Otellini
discusses plans for the public and private cloud at OpenWorld 2008.

SAN FRANCISCO -- Intel and Oracle, which have partnered for 15 years, are heading for the cloud, Intel CEO Paul Otellini announced at Oracle OpenWorld 2008 Tuesday.

"Today Intel and Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL) are announcing that they're taking the enterprise aspect of cloud computing and driving it outwards," Otellini said. The two will work on security and flexibility for migration between private and public clouds, and on industry standards for this migration.

Earlier in the week at OpenWorld, Oracle announced that it has partnered with Amazon to let customers deploy and back up its applications in the cloud.

Otellini also unveiled some of Intel's (NASDAQ: INTC) other plans, bringing other Intel executives on stage to elaborate. These include a new toolset to help C++ developers learn about parallel programming, and details of when products based on forthcoming Nehalem chip will ship.

By tackling the migration between private and public clouds, Intel and Oracle are going head to head with VMware, whose vCloud initiative, announced last week at VMworld 2008 in Las Vegas, will do the same thing. Oracle has its own hypervisor, (define) based on the Xen open source hypervisor.

Enterprises can now license Oracle's Database 11g, Fusion Middleware and Enterprise Manager over Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). It also introduced a secure backup module for Amazon's Simple Storage Service (S3).

Oracle is itself leveraging virtualization heavily within its own infrastructure, and recently announced its VM Templates suite, which combines Oracle Database 11g, Enterprise Manager 10g, Siebel CRM 8 and Enterprise Linux, with all the applications preinstalled and preconfigured.


To elaborate on his announcement about working with Oracle, Otellini brought out Renee James, vice president and general manager of Intel's software solutions group. "Most of our datacenter customers are already using virtualization in their infrastructure behind the firewall; we want to help them take it out into the public cloud," James said.

She added that Intel has added several features in its CPU and chipsets to ensure the best performance for virtualization, and "we're delighted to see Oracle's getting a 17 percent performance improvement on the Oracle virtual machine using the hardware features we've put in."

The move to multicore
Turning to parallel computing, James said that, within the next couple of years, all Intel's processors will be multicore, and, to help C++ developers prepare for this, Intel has come up with a new set of tools for C++ developers called Intel Parallel Studio.

Intel will run a beta trial for most components of Intel Parallel Studio from November through May 2009.

Intel's Otellini also announced that Intel will go into production in the fourth quarter with the Nehalem chip for desktops and workstations. It will offer a product for database servers which will be available from its hardware partners in the first quarter of 2009, he added.

Nehalem was the code name for the processor when it was in development, but it's official name is the Core i7.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

A little bit of Oracle Open World

Charles Phillips @ OPN Forum, OpenWorld, 20 Sep 2008

ORACLE - NETAPP PARTNER RELATIONSHIP











NetApp is a leading vendor of innovative storage and data management solutions that help organizations around the world store, manage, protect, and retain their data. Headquartered in Sunnyvale, California, NetApp is a member of the NASDAQ-100 and ranks on the Fortune 1000.

For more than a decade, Oracle and NetApp have been collaborating and sharing the same vision. We focus on developing solutions that help you reduce the costs of managing and storing information.

Joint Initiatives
Oracle and NetApp believe that technological synergy is critical to minimizing the complexity of integrated enterprise solutions. To ensure the greatest possible interoperability, we collaborate closely on product integration, including performance testing, product validation, and joint development.

NetApp SnapManager® for Oracle creates a framework that empowers Oracle DBAs to easily perform database backups, restores, and other storage-related tasks without requiring storage administrator involvement.

With NetApp FlexClone™ technology, SnapManager® for Oracle can create instantaneous copies of databases that use no additional physical space until changes are made.

NetApp FlexVol® offers true virtualization that allows you to pool storage resources automatically, enabling you to add or shrink storage to meet the dynamic needs of your enterprise. Plus, you get the added benefit of improved performance and higher utilization, resulting in greater flexibility.

NetApp SnapLock®
, NetApp’s unified storage architecture and the Oracle Databaseprovide an ideal platform to implement an information lifecycle management solution that provides cost-effective tiered storage, data migration, archiving, and compliance.

NetApp Lifetime Key Management and Oracle Advanced security provide you with extensive yet easy-to-manage data protection which enables you to secure data at rest and in transit while helping you address your privacy and compliance requirements.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

I'm a PC ad made on a MAC!


Priceless!


The new microsoft ad campaign includes photos in their website made on a mac!


Hilarious!

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Must-See Products At Oracle OpenWorld

Oracle Open World.
More than 43,000 Oracle partners and customers will converge on San Francisco this week (and occupy every hotel room north of SFO airport) to attend Oracle OpenWorld 2008. There they can check out the latest news from the world's second largest software company about its database, middleware and application software.

Attendees can also check out what's hot from the more than 400 exhibitors on the show floor at the Moscone Center. Dozens of vendors, service providers and other companies in the Oracle ecosystem are expected to announce new products and services and we've collected 11 of them here to offer a taste of what Oracle OpenWorld attendees can expect.


To Infiniband And Beyond
Voltaire will showcase its Grid Director 2004, a 20 Gbps-DDR InfiniBand switch populated with InfiniBand ports and new 10-Gigabit Ethernet and storage gateways. Voltaire says it's the first switching provider to announce full Infiniband support for Oracle Real Application Clusters 11g. The company said companies can increase the performance of their applications by as much as 50 percent over Ethernet-based configurations.

Change For The Better
Need to reconfigure your Oracle E-Business Suite applications? Newmerix is showing the latest version of Newmerix Automate!Change, a comprehensive, integrated change management system for creating and executing reusable change workflow templates for Oracle E-Business Suite applications. The new release includes Unix remote command execution, SFTP file transfer and command line execution. With the solution users can create workflow templates through Oracle Forms Customizations and Personalizations and Oracle Framework Customizations. Newmerix said it's the only change management software that spans the entire change management lifecycle for Oracle EBS applications.

Pillar Of Oracle Society
Pillar Data Systems will announce customized profiles for Oracle database and application environments for its Axiom storage system. The profiles help IT centrally manage data storage within Oracle environments and improve system performance and uptime. The new product is tightly integrated with Oracle 10g and 11g databases, Oracle virtual machines and the Oracle Unbreakable Linux operating system.

Palm Reader
Having problems with "shoulder surfers," those people who hover around you while you're typing your password? At Oracle OpenWorld Fujitsu Computer Products of America will be showing off its new PalmSecure LogonDirector that uses a person's unique palm vein pattern for security. The technology embeds highly accurate biometric identification technology in a mouse that uses near-infrared light to capture a person's palm vein pattern. That generates a unique biometric template that's matched against a palm-vein pattern record stored in an encrypted repository.

Cutting Through The Haze
DBA's trying to figure out the contents of a database often feel like they're lurching about in a fog. Quest Software will be showing a new release of its Foglight Database Performance Analysis software that offers real-time analysis for diagnosing and tuning Oracle instance and application workloads. A new WebView component provides Web-based access, enhanced alerting and streamlined administration. Quest will also be showing a new release of its Toad for Data Analysis query and reporting tool with native support for the Sybase database and the ability to reverse-engineer SQL queries.

Say 'Yes' To Noetix
Noetix will be showing Noetix Views for Release 12, a new version of the vendor's report development software for Oracle E-Business Suite Release 12 applications. The tool automatically creates business views of the database underlying the applications. Also on the show floor will be a new release of Noetix Generator that populates Business Objects, Cognos BI and Oracle BI reporting tools with data from Oracle E-Business Suite and PeopleSoft Enterprise data.

Special Delivery
F5 Networks will be showing a new application delivery networking system for Oracle's Siebel 8 CRM application the company is scheduled to formally debut Sept. 29. The system includes Viprion Application Delivery Controllers (pictured) and WAN optimization devices specifically tuned for Siebel CRM. The F5 solution ensures successful deployment of Siebel apps across the network.

No Gridlock Here
GridApp Systems will be showing Clarity 4.7, the next generation of the company's flagship database management system. New capabilities include the ability to automate operational and administrative tasks surrounding Oracle database upgrades, enhanced Real Application Clusters scaling, and more tools for day-to-day DBA tasks such as rotating logs, checking backups and inspecting audit logs.

Pumping (Application) Iron
Foundry Networks will be demonstrating ServerIron Software release 11.0, a new version of the software that runs the vendor's ServerIron line of application delivery and traffic management switches (pictured). A major enhancement is IPv6 support, including IPv6 management and IPv6 pass-through traffic handling. Other key enhancements include an improved graphical user interface for application management and monitoring, and TCP SIP server load balancing.

Special Delivery II
Zebra Technologies, which develops specialty printing and automatic identification solutions, will announce the Enterprise Connector Solution that allows direct label printing from ERP systems such as Oracle's. The product uses a PC-based graphical user interface for creating label designs the system converts into the Zebra Programming Language. The ZPL commands are used to generate the labels as the ERP system processes transactions.

Change For The Better II
Embarcadero Technologies will be showing off its new Embarcadero Change Manager 5.0 tool for managing changes in database configuration, schema and data. The new release provides developers and database administrators with new capabilities such as advanced schema to compare and alter functionality, configuration auditing, and data compare and synchronization features. The product comes in personal, standard, professional and ultimate editions and now supports the Oracle 11g, SQL server 2005 and 2008, Sybase 15 and DB2 9.5 databases.

Friday, September 19, 2008

With Microsoft in Sight, Cisco Buys Jabber

With Microsoft in Sight, Cisco Buys Jabber

Cisco said this morning it would buy instant messaging service Jabber for an undisclosed amount. The deal is another move by the networking company into the collaboration space — this time highlighting the importance of presence awareness and interoperability in collaboration. It follows nicely with Cisco’s buy of PostPath and WebEx acquisition earlier this month, as well as its Cisco CEO John Chambers has been pretty vocal in its desire to go after three hot markets: collaboration, virtualization and video.













Doug Dennerline

From Cisco’s press release:

“Enterprise organizations want an extensible presence and messaging platform that can integrate with business process applications and easily adapt to their changing needs,” said Doug Dennerline, Cisco senior vice president, Collaboration Software Group. “With the acquisition of Jabber, we will be able to extend the reach of our current instant messaging service and expand the capabilities of our collaboration platform. Our intention is to be the interoperability benchmark in the collaboration space.”












Jabber is based on Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP), the same protocol being used by several open-source IM implementations. Services like Twitter use XMPP. Jabber also operates with Google Talk, and with the AIM Gateway from Jabber, it can be used to communicate with AOL users. Jabber also communicates with users of Microsoft Windows Live Messenger and Yahoo Messenger.


















Yesterday, Cisco CTO Padmasree Warrior told that the company believes collaboration to be a $34 billion business, and emphasized the move away from selling only networking gear. Services are a crucial part of the that strategy and a robust presence platform is one of the essential services in offering real-time collaboration that Warrior highlighted in her keynote. And for those keeping score in Microsoft/Cisco showdown, Jabber is way more compelling that what I’ve seen demonstrated in Microsoft’s unified communcations efforts through SharePoint.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

HTC Touch Diamond

Is this a business phone or just a 'goody'?







Steve Jobs Stanford Commencement Address



STAY HUNGRY STAY FOOLISH.....

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 1 of 7

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 1-2 of 7

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 2 of 7

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 3-1 of 7

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 3-2 of 7

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 4 of 7

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 5-1 of 7

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 5-2 of 7

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together Part 5a

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together Part 5b

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 6 of 7

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 7-1 of 7

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 7-2 of 7

Steve Jobs on Microsoft

Larry Ellison on Microsoft

Announcing Oracle Database 11g

Oracle VM installation

Friday, September 5, 2008

Logos Today

Today there are many corporations, products, services, agencies and other entities using an ideogram (sign, icon) or an emblem (symbol) or a combination of sign and emblem as a logo. Resultingly, only a few of the thousands of ideograms people see are recognized without a name. It is sensible to use an ideogram as a logo, even with the name, if people will not duly identify it. Currently, the usage of both images (ideograms) and the company name (logotype) to emphasize the name instead of the supporting graphic portion, making it unique by its letters, color, and additional graphic elements.

A logo (Greek λογότυπος = logotypos) is a graphical element, (ideogram, symbol, emblem, icon, sign) that, together with its logotype (a uniquely set and arranged typeface) form a trademark or commercial brand. Typically, a logo's design is for immediate recognition, inspiring trust, admiration, loyalty and an implied superiority.

The logo is one aspect of a company's commercial brand, or economic or academic entity, and its shapes, colors, fonts, and images usually are different from others in a similar market. Logos are also used to identify organizations and other non-commercial entities.


Ideograms (icons, signs, emblems) may be more effective than a written name (logotype), especially for logos being translated into many alphabets; for instance, a name in the Arabic language would be of little help in most European markets. An ideogram would keep the general proprietary nature of the product in both markets. In non-profit areas, the Red Cross (which goes by Red Crescent in Muslim countries) is an example of an extremely well known emblem which does not need an accompanying name. Branding aims to facilitate cross-language marketing. The Coca-cola logo can be identifed in any language because of the standards of color and the iconic ribbon wave.




Some countries have logos, e.g. Spain, Italy, Turkey and The Islands of The Bahamas, that identify them in marketing their country. Such logos often are used by countries whose tourism sector makes up a large portion of their economy.

Color


Color is important to the brand recognition, but should not be an integral component to the logo design, which would conflict with its functionality. Some colors are formed/associated with certain emotions that the designer wants to convey. For instance, loud colors, such as red, that are meant to attract the attention of drivers on highways are appropriate for companies that require such attention. In the United States red, white, and blue are often used in logos for companies that want to project patriotic feelings. Green is often associated with health foods, and light blue or silver is often used to reflect diet foods. For other brands, more subdued tones and lower saturation can communicate dependability, quality, relaxation, etc.
Color is also useful for linking certain types of products with a brand. Warm colors (red, orange, yellow) are linked to hot food and thus can be seen integrated into many fast food logos. Conversely, cool colors (blue, purple) are associated with lightness and weightlessness, thus many diet products have a light blue integrated into the logo.















Dynamic logos.
In 1898, tire manufacturer, Michelin, introduced the Michelin Man, a cartoon figure who was presented in many different ways, such as eating, drinking, and playing sport. By the early 21st century, other large corporations such as MTV, Google and Saks Fifth Avenue had also adopted dynamic logos, that change over time and from setting to

Logo design

Logo design is an important area of graphic design, and one of the most difficult to perfect. The logo (ideogram), is the image embodying an organization. Because logos are meant to represent companies' brands or corporate identities and foster their immediate customer recognition, it is counterproductive to frequently redesign logos.

Examples Due to the design, the color, the shape, and eventually additional elements of the logotype, each one can easily be differentiated from other logotypes. For example, a box of Kellogg's cereals will be easily recognized in a supermarket's shelf from a certain distance, due to its unique typography and distinctive red coloring. The same will be true when one is at the airport looking for the booth of the Hertz Rent-A-Car company. The logotype will be recognized from afar because of its shape and its yellow color.










Some well-known logos include Apple Inc.'s apple with a bite out of it, which started out as a rainbow of color, and has been reduced to a single color without any loss of recognition. Coca Cola's script is known the world over, but is best associated with the color red; its main competitor, Pepsi has taken the color blue, although they have abandoned their script logo. IBM, also known as "Big Blue" has simplified their logo over the years, and their name. What started as International Business Machines is now just "IBM" and the color blue has been a signature in their unifying campaign as they have moved to become an IT services company.






















































































There are some other logos that must be mentioned when evaluating what the mark means to the consumer. Automotive brands can be summed up simply with their corporate logo- from the Chevrolet "Bow Tie" mark to the circle marks of VW, Mercedes-Benz and BMW, to the interlocking "RR" of Rolls-Royce each has stood for a brand and clearly differentiated the product line.

Other logos that are recognized globally: the Nike "Swoosh" and the Adidas "Three stripes" are two well-known brands that are defined by their corporate logo. When Phil Knight started Nike, he was hoping to find a mark as recognizable as the Adidas stripes, which also provided reinforcement to the shoe. He hired a young student (Carolyn Davidson) to design his logo, paying her $35 for what has become one of the best known marks in the world (she was later compensated again by the company).
Another logo of global renown is that of Playboy Enterprises. Playboy magazine claims it once received a letter at its Chicago, Illinois offices with its distinctive "bunny" logo as the only identifying mark appearing where the mailing address would normally be written.

Corporate identities today are often developed by large firms who specialize in this type of work. However, Paul Rand is considered the father of corporate identity and his work has been seminal in launching this field. Some famous examples of his work were the UPS package with a string (replaced in March 2003) IBM, and NeXT Computer.
An interesting case is the refinement of the FedEx logo, where the brand consultants convinced the company to shorten their corporate name and logo from "Federal Express" to the popular abbreviation "Fed Ex". Besides creating a shorter brand name, they reduced the amount of color used on vehicles (planes, trucks) and saved hundreds of thousands of dollars in paint costs. Also, the right pointing arrow in the new logo is a subliminal hint of motion.

Logos in subvertising

The wide recognition received by the most famous logos provides the brand's critics with the possibility of meme-hacking, a process also known as subvertising, turning the marketing message carried by the logo (either in its pristine form, or subtly altered) into a vehicle for an alternative message, frequently highly critical to the brand in question. An example is the AdBusters' corporate flag, a U.S. flag with the stars replaced by major corporate logos.

Virtually all distinctive design elements related to brands or logos can become subjects to subvertising. The best-known organizations subverting established logos and brands are ®™ark and AdBusters.