Dell PowerVault DL2000 : A disk-to-disk system for backup and recovery

Dell has unveiled its PowerVault DL2000 storage, it is a disk-to-disk system that lets you have backup and recovery of the main data storage in a single unit, by providing the faster speed to process data. PowerVault DL2000 storage can put backup and restore software in the single unit as the main data-storage system. The disk-to-disk storage system provides up to 144TB of disk space, and it is well sufficient for medium-sized companies. The main feature of that is- it can have backup and recovery in a single unit with the faster way of processing data on disk rather than reliance on tape backup.

Dell said in a statement that-

By offering both data capabilities in one unit, the system can cut backup times by up to 52 percent and restore times by up to 77 percent compared with tape,

The main features of Dell PowerVault DL2000

  • DeDuplication reduces storage requirements up to 15X
  • Up to 52% faster backups than tape
  • Up to 77% faster restores than tape
  • Remote management, monitoring and reporting
  • Distributed protection of branch offices
  • Continuous protection of data with ( CDR ) Continuous Data Replicator
  • Synthetic full backups
  • File and email archive

Source: Dell

Symantec Acquires MessageLabs

Symantec has acquired MessageLabs for $695 million. MessageLabs is an e-mail security services, IM, and Web-filtering company. This acquisition will help Symantec gains a leadership position in the rapidly growing Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) segment and strengthens its lead in the messaging security market. MessageLabs is the number-one provider of online messaging security worldwide with more than eight million end users at more than 19,000 clients ranging from small business to the Fortune 500. This acquisition also continues the momentum of the Symantec Protection Network, the Symantec SaaS platform.

John W. Thompson, chairman and chief executive officer, Symantec, Said

 MessageLabs extends our investments in the Software-as-a Service segment and will allow us to offer our customers unprecedented choice from a single provider of message security solutions. By combining MessageLabs with our Symantec Protection Network team, we have one of the strongest portfolios of cloud-based infrastructure services and a great foundation on which to grow.

Adrian Chamberlain, chief executive officer, MessageLabs, Said

 Symantec and MessageLabs have a common belief in the benefits of in-the-cloud services and how they enable customers to be protected from threats and enforce policy. MessageLabs’ services help ensure that only safe and appropriate information enters and leave the organization. Together, with Symantec, we can set a roadmap for the future of online services.

Updated desktop management tool : Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack (MDOP) 2008 R2 will release in Nov.

Microsoft unveiled the new updated version of Desktop mgmt tool is MDOP:R2. Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack (MDOP) 2008 R2 is a desktop management toolkit mainly designed to help IT administrators by managing windows desktops, also contains application virtualisation and asset management tools. It will be available in market in the starting of Nov this year.

Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack (MDOP) 2008 R2 includes App-V 4.5 (formerly Softgrid), It is used to integrate with System Center management tools, including the System Center Operations Manager 2007 Management Pack.

The updated  MDOP:R2 includes

1 App-V 4.5 that support Dynamic Suite Composition (DSC).
2.Enterprise Desktop Virtualisation for managing & deploying virtual PCs
3.System Center Desktop Error Monitoring
4.Advanced Group Policy Management 3.0(AGPM)
5.Diagnostics & Recovery Toolset,that helps in recovering a crashed PC
6.support for 11 languages

Windows Coming to Amazon EC2

Windows Coming to Amazon EC2 Amazon takes another big steps towards it’s EC2 services. Amazons is planning to include Windows Server and SQL Server to it’s EC2 cloud services. Currently Windows server on EC2 is in private beta. The big question is, Will Microsoft adopt a true utility pricing model for virtual computers running Windows, allowing Amazon to roll the operating system licensing cost into its hourly fee, or will the Windows licenses have to continue to be purchased separately.? The 32 and 64 bit versions of Windows Server will be available and will be able to use all existing EC2 features such as Elastic IP Addresses, Availability Zones, and the Elastic Block Store. You’ll be able to call any of the other Amazon Web Services from your application. According to Amazon

Amazon EC2 running Windows Server or SQL Server provides an ideal environment for deploying ASP.NET web sites, high performance computing clusters, media transcoding solutions, and many other Windows-based applications. By choosing Amazon EC2 as the deployment environment for your Windows-based applications, you will be able to take advantage of Amazon’s proven scalability and reliability, as well as the cost-effective, pay-as-you-go pricing model offered by Amazon Web Services.

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer announced in London today that the company will unveil its own "cloud operating system" at its big developer conference at the end of this month. According to The Register, Ballmer said:

We need a new operating system designed for the cloud and we will introduce one in about four weeks, we’ll even have a name to give you by then. But let’s just call it for the purposes of today ‘Windows Cloud’. Just like Windows Server looked a lot like Windows but with new properties, new characteristics and new features, so will Windows Cloud look a lot like Windows Server.If you talk to Google they’ll say it’s thin client computing but then they’ll issue a new browser that’s basically a big fat operating system designed to compete with Windows but running on top of it, Our big problem is there’s just no secret that gets kept in Microsoft. The guy in the office next door to somebody working on Midori is not supposed to know about Midori. The last thing we want is for somebody else to obsolete us, if we’re gonna get obseleted [sic] we better do it to ourselves

Media and Technology Companies Unite to Fight Against Piracy

artsandlabs-Media and Technology companies unite to Fight Against piracy Arts+Labs is a collaboration between technology and creative communities that have embraced today’s rich Internet environment to deliver innovative and creative digital products and services to consumers. From the early development of motion picture technology, voice recordings and radio to today’s 3D computer graphics, streaming digital movies, “on-demand” entertainment and online virtual games, innovative technologies and creativity have always gone hand in hand to enrich our understanding and appreciation of arts, entertainment and culture.

Arts+Labs partners include entertainment companies, software providers, telecommunications providers, artists and creators committed to delivering innovative and creative digital products to consumers. AT&T Inc, Viacom Inc, NBC Universal, a unit of General Electric Co, Cisco Systems Inc, Microsoft Corp and the Songwriters Guild of America are then members of Arts+Labs. Arts+Labs is co-chaired by Mike McCurry, former White House press secretary to President Bill Clinton and Mark McKinnon, former media adviser to the campaigns of President Bush and current GOP presidential nominee John McCain. SGA President Rick Carnes and Chuck Sims of the law firm Proskauer Rose also have agreed to join Arts+Labs as the first members of its advisory board.After the launch, the Arts+Labs team kicked off a three-city media tour with stops in New York, Nashville and Los Angeles

3M Mobile ID Reader :Swipe and Reads MRZ and RF Chip Data

3M_handheld_mobile_reader 3M Mobile ID Reader :Swipe and Reads MRZ and RF Chip Data

3M Mobile ID reader is a portable device with an OCR swipe that reads MRZ and RF chip data from passports and Visas. 3M Mobile ID reader uses 3M’s own reader technology with Psion Teklogix’s WORKABOUT PRO hand-held data terminal to scan passengers’ identity documents and capture their biometric data. Then 3M Mobile ID reader quickly verifies data against local or international watch lists, through wireless networks. The unit is integrated with a touch screen and keyboard enabling security officials manually enter  data or they can correct the incorrect data.

The reader comes with a sunlight-safe color touch screen display, a capacitive fingerprint sensor, Wi? , GSM/GPRS EDGE wireless, and of course, Microsoft Windows Mobile 6. The reader uses an encrypted format for data transmission and the device has the capacity of 8GB. Before launching this into the market 3M has a case study over the summer at the Euro Cup 2008 soccer tournament that tested the capacity to deal with large, unpredictable crowds.

Rich Sanders, business manager for 3M Security Systems Division,Said

3M’s new Mobile ID Reader offers airport authorities, border management officials and transportation officers a complete, easy-to-use, portable solution in verifying identity that provides the security they expect from 3M Battery operation enables the use of this hand-held unit in virtually any travel situation - from airports to ships, trains and vehicles

Roger Zaugg, Commander Region North , said

With this technology at our disposal, we were able to stop people who thought trains offered a soft border entry point before they reached Switzerland and the tournament, quickly disrupting their travel plans Officers carry lots of equipment and are pleased that we have a device that is small-enough to be transported in cars and is easily operated in the confined space of a train carriage.

Source : Wired

256GB Solid State Drives with MLC Technology by Toshiba

256GB Solid State Drives with MLC Technology by Toshiba On September 26, 2008 Toshiba has launched a 256GB SSD using multi-level cell (MLC) technology. MLC technology offer competitive read and write speeds at a lower price point than single-level cell (SLC) SSDs. The drives will use the SATA II interface, and will be read at up to 120 mbps. The new 256GB SSD mounts NAND flash memory on a 70.6mm (L) x 53.6mm (W) x 3.0mm (H) platform. The drive offers performance characteristics essential for today’s mainstream notebook PCs: highly reliable, high density data storage and support for fast data transfer rates, with a maximum read speed of 120MB a second and maximum write speed of 70MB a second, via a high speed SATA 3.0Gb/s interface.

Flash Modules are fabricated on a 50mm x 30mm platform and offer a maximum read and write speeds of 80MB and 50MB a second, respectively. Flash Modules are also compatible with the SATA interface and will support continued development of the fast growing market for netbook PCs, UMPCs and mobile and peripheral applications by offering developers a wider range of SSD for integration in differentiated products.

Outline of New Products

Type Product Number Capacity Samples Start of Mass Production
256GB SSD 2.5 ”
SATA
THNS256GE8BC 256GB Sep, 2008 4Q, 2008
Flash Module
SATA
THNSA08G0P4L 8GB Sep, 2008 4Q, 2008
THNSA16G1P4L 16GB Sep, 2008 4Q, 2008
THNSA32G1P4L 32GB Sep, 2008 4Q, 2008

256 SSD Specification

Interface Serial ATA-2 (3Gbps)
Voltage 5V (2.5” type)
Reading speed Maximum speed at 120MB a second (sequential mode)
Writing speed Maximum speed at  70MB a second (sequential mode)
Temperature 0 to 70 degrees Celsius

Flash Module

Interface Serial ATA-2 (3Gbps)
Voltage 5V
Reading speed Maximum speed at 80MB a second (sequential mode)
Writing speed Maximum speed at 50MB a second (sequential mode)
Temperature 0 to 70 degrees Celsius

Google’s First acquisition in Asia: TNC become part of Google

 

Google's First acquisition in Asia: TNC become part of Google 

Today Google Announced that it has acquired a Korean company- a blogging software in Korea called TNC (Tatter and Company), TNC provides Textcube, which is a blogging and publishing platform along the same lines as WordPress. TNS also recently launched a hosting service named Textcube Dot Com, which combines the best of blogging and SNS. TNC has been one of the most famous Web 2.0 startups in Korea.

Chang W. Kim, co-founder of the company explains

Google is the underdog in this region, but Korea is the worlds sixth largest market in terms of Internet users. The Korean users mainly use Yahoo-style portal services to do everything on the web. With the acquirement, Google created a new way to get to the customers. Kim also state- that, as a part of Google, TNC will work on increasing Google’s market share.

TNC offers a blogging platform similar as Automatic. It’s easy to use, and works close to the open source community. Biggest difference is that WordPress is fairly unknown here, so they represent a big blogging market, being used by a lot of nation’s A-list bloggers. it is one of the first Google acquisitions in Asia.

Why Google acquired TNC ? on this question CEO of TNC stated that - First, we had a killer product: Our previous work, Tistory blog service (now property of Daum as we sold the service to the Korea’s #2 portal), made to the top 10 Korean web destination in less than a year from launch, showing some 30,000% growth over the initial 8 months. While other blog services seem to be exploring the idea of integrating social networks with blogs only lately, our new blog service Textcube (link in Korean) had already implemented the feature much earlier. Secondly, we have great engineering talents.

Source : web20asia

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Why the World Might Just End Today at 12:30 pm IST

Today at 12.30 pm IST, a group of physicists will turn on a machine that will recreate the birth of the universe,this will be the largest experiment in human history. Scientists will take a step closer to understanding the beginning of time when the European Organization for Nuclear Research(CERN) powers up the world’s biggest magnetic loop in the search for the universe’s missing matter.

Back during the days of the atomic bomb development, some scientists feared that an atomic bomb could destroy the entire atmosphere. However, Robert Oppenheimer’s team soon proved that this was a calculation error (they didn’t have computers as we understand them today). Scientists Konopinski, C. Marvin, and Teller wrote the report LA-602, showing that ignition of the atmosphere was impossible, not just unlikely.

Similarly, now some fear that the Large Hadron Collider, which is a state of the art European particle accelerator that will send beams of protons around a 17-mile underground ring, will create a black hole, putting the Earth and all of its creatures at risk. CERN issued a report revealing that, even if a black hole were to form, it would rapidly evaporate due to Hawking Radiation.

The unknown outcome has prompted a challenge at the European Court of Human Rights by chemist Otto Roessler, of the University of Tuebingen in Germany, to try to stop the experiment, claiming the event will create a black hole that will destroy the planet.

Particle physicists on the outskirts of Geneva are trying to find out what most of the universe is made of, and where it is, because most of the matter created in the “Big Bang” 13.7 billion years ago has disappeared. Adding up all the stars, planets, and black holes in the universe only accounts for about 4 percent of all the mass created when time began. The rest is dark matter (23%) and dark energy (73%). Physicists think the LHC could provide clues about the nature of this mysterious “stuff”. The LHC should answer one very simple question: What is mass? “We know the answer will be found at the LHC,” said Jim Virdee, a particle physicist at Imperial College London. The currently favoured model involves a particle called the Higgs boson - dubbed the “God Particle”. According to the theory, particles acquire their mass through interactions with an all-pervading field carried by the Higgs. 

After a decade of work, physicists will fire the first particles around a 27-kilometer (16 mile) long magnetic loop buried 100 meters (328 feet) under ground in a tunnel large enough for subway trains through an environment colder than outer space. As the particles lap at close to the speed of light some will collide, triggering new particles that may also help scientists understand why the expansion of the universe is accelerating instead of slowing as predicted by theory.“We may find a whole new family of particles that might account for the missing mass, the `dark matter’ that we know must be there,” says David Evans, a scientist who helped to build some of the electronic equipment that have one-billionth of a second to spot a collision. “One way or another, there’s a 100 percent chance we will find something new to physics.”

Within a year the particle accelerator’s four experiments, one of which involves equipment weighing 7,000 metric tons or the equivalent of a subterranean Eiffel Tower, will have spewed enough data to fill a pile of compact discs 12 miles high. Some of the material that the physicists may find is labeled “dark energy,” and may help explain why “something is still driving the expansion of the universe, but at the moment we have no idea what it is,” says Evans, who dismisses the risk of earth being swallowed by a black hole. The experiments are “a once- in-a-lifetime experience, 10-times more powerful than anything anyone has ever built and the first time we know for sure that something new and exciting is going to happen.”

At the heart of this is the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), which was constructed at a cost of $4.4 billion. It is the latest in a series of successively more powerful particle accelerators that have been built at the European Centre for Nuclear Research (CERN) laboratory in Geneva. Within the LHC’s circular tunnel, 27 km in circumference, beams of protons will be accelerated to up to 99.999999% of the speed of light. When they smash together, they will generate concentrations of energy resembling those that occurred during the first trillionth of a second after the Big Bang.

The Wednesday fear: End of the World

It is one of the biggest and most controversial experiments to be carried out in recent times. On September 10, a machine costing a staggering $7.75 billion (Rs 31,000 crore) will be fired up to recapture conditions not seen since the birth of the universe almost 14 billion years ago. The machine, located at CERN, a Geneva-based nuclear research lab, will carry on the experiment inside a 27-km tunnel deep beneath the French-Swiss border.The news of the experiment has evoked resentment from some experts, who feel that such an experiment could cause the end of the universe. In fact, scientists working on to recreate forces that occurred immediately after the Big Bang have received death threats. The main thing is India’s contribution  in search of the universe’s missing matter by smashing particles like during the Big Bang is equally impressive. Around 200 of the 2,000 scientists doing the experiment are from India.

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What is LHC: The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the largest and most complex machine ever made and the platform for what experts say is the largest scientific experiment in human history about 10,000 people working in 500 universities in 80 countries. the LHC is nothing like as simple as flipping a switch. A chain of smaller accelerators, built for earlier projects, are first used to speed up the proton beams to the point where they can be injected into the machine. The start of the process is a bottle of hydrogen gas no bigger than a fire extinguisher.Hydrogen atoms are stripped of their electrons to produce streams of protons that are fed into accelerators of increasing size.The last link in the chain before the LHC, the Super Proton Synchrotron, is itself buried underground and stretches for more than four miles. Timing between the Synchrotron and the LHC has to be accurate to within a fraction of a nanosecond. The £5billion collider is designed to smash sub-atomic protons into each other at energies up to seven times greater than any achieved before. At different points around the tunnel, the beams will be guided to cross paths, near four massive ‘detectors’ that monitor the collisions for interesting events. The LHC could help scientists explain mass, gravity, and the mysterious ‘dark matter’ that fills much of the universe.

What exactly the experiment is: The LHC is buried under 300ft of rock and straddles the borders of Switzerland and France between Lake Geneva and the Jura mountains.The beams of protons will be accelerated in opposite directions through the ring-shaped tunnel, which is supercooled to just 1.9 degrees above absolute zero (minus 271C), the lowest temperature allowed by nature.Reaching velocities of 99.99 per cent of the speed of light, each beam will pack as much energy as a Eurostar train travelling at 93mph.The particles will be brought together in four huge ‘detectors’ placed along the ring. Each detector is like a giant microscope, designed to probe deeper into the heart of matter than has ever been possible before.

Why we need this experiment:

  • It could give the first evidence of extra spatial dimensions that have been hypothesised by physicists such as Stephen Hawking.
  • The particle collider could provide proof of Stephen Hawking’s theory that black holes emit radiation.
  • It could also give- Without the Higgs particle (Named after physicist Peter Higgs), electrons would have no mass and atoms wouldn’t stick    together. We would fall apart into piles of atomic nuclei.
  • Most scientists believe is the only explanation of an expanding universe, should show how stars and planets came together.

Protons have made their first complete lap of the world’s most powerful accelerator to cheers and high fives from assembled physicists.At 1025 (local time) scientists sent a single beam of protons in a clockwise direction around the full 27 kilometers of the Large Hadron Collider at the CERN laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland.The journey began at 09:30 when LHC project leader Lyn Evans and his team launched protons into the ring. Progress was made in short steps of a few kilometers, so that physicists could learn how to steer the beam, which is travelling at 99.9998% the speed of light.”We’ve got a beam on the LHC,” project leader Lyn Evans told his colleagues, who burst into applause at the news.The several hundred physicists and technicians huddled in the control room later celebrated loudly again when a particle beam completed a trajectory of the accelerator in one direction, a key step a CERN spokeswoman described as “fantastic.”

Particle physicist Dr James Gillies, a spokesman for the LHC, said:

“We have received a lot of worried calls from people about it.”There’s nothing to worry about, the LHC is absolutely safe because we have observed nature doing the same things the LHC has done. “Protons regularly collide in the earth’s upper atmosphere without creating black holes.”

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