Archive for February, 2011

Pyro chooses IBM for a ‘Green Revolution’ in telecom deployments

February 23rd, 2011

Pyro walking the ‘Green path’ implements telecom deployments on IBM’s highly-energy efficient hardware and middleware solutions to develop cutting-edge products

Pyro, a leader in providing innovative mobile technology solutions has joined hands with IBM of going the green way through which the world’s largest computer company will power Pyro’s range of products with high-end energy-efficient servers, highly–efficient hardware and optimized middleware solutions that help minimize energy usage in compact designs.

With this strategic alliance, IBM will beef-up Pyro’s mobile technology solutions with energy-efficient BladeCenter Servers, SAN (Storage Area Network), Switches and Routers etc., that are optimized to perform better. Benefits of this are visible to Telecom operators instantly who have an efficient system with cost reducing capability.
Pyro has made a conscious effort to move on to an eco-friendly mode by deploying resources that ensure Green Technology is leveraged in all the platforms and products being deployed with customers. All components used for deployment of a Pyro product or solution are checked for the carbon footprint created while manufacturing the product.

“Pyro has ensured linear scalability of systems without increasing the power and cooling requirement linearly. Pyro’s Road Map is also to work with partners such as IBM on solutions which will work in all environments and lead to optimization of Data Centre footprint besides ensuring optimal system design” said SM Reddy, CEO, Pyro Group. He also added that Pyro’s products and solutions ensure optimized and highly efficient Hardware, Energy Efficient Software, Reduced footprint on the Data Centre, Less Heat generation, Less Power consumption, involvement of lesser resources and human intervention, and many more benefits.

Pyro, earlier last year had entered into a USD 19 million strategic partnership with IBM for development, testing and management of its products and solutions.

Source:http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/pyro-chooses-ibm-for/green-revolution/-in-telecom-deployments/426125/

Lenovo Unveils Sandy Bridge ThinkPads

February 23rd, 2011

Lenovo has introduced a half-dozen ThinkPads that offer the computer maker’s latest business technology, including video and voice calling features and improved power and performance management.

The latest laptops, launched Tuesday, include the thin T420s that weighs less than four pounds and the T420, which gets up to 30 hours of battery life using Lenovo’s extended battery. Other systems include the W520 mobile workstation, which has twice the performance of its predecessor. The remaining models are the T520, L420, and L520. The L Series is Lenovo’s mainstream business laptop.

The latest ThinkPads bring new features to business customers by leveraging technology in Intel’s second-generation Core processors, codenamed Sandy Bridge. Shipments of Sandy Bridge processors were halted in late January due to faulty chipsets, but replacements were expected to ship this week. Intel’s Turbo Boost Technology 2.0 increases processor speed automatically when handling heavy workloads, such as video editing, data analysis, and 3D applications, while also reducing power to non-essential hardware. Lenovo has added technology that keeps processor temperatures down, enabling the chip to run longer at higher speeds.

The ThinkPad T420 and T420s get up to 15 and 10 hours, respectively, of battery life, when a six-cell battery is used. A nine-cell battery available for the T420 can extend the battery life to up to 30 hours, Lenovo says. The T and W Series laptops are the first Lenovo business laptops to include Nvidia Optimus automatic graphic switching technology, which also helps in lowering power consumption. The technology switches between integrated graphics and a graphics card, depending on application requirements, to extend battery life.

For video and voice calling, all the new laptops include private chat and conference call microphone modes, with either available through a mouse click. The private chat mode uses noise canceling technology to better focus on a single voice, while the conference call setting can capture audio from anywhere around the laptop for conversations involving multiple users.

Enterprise design features include the ability for the T, W, and L Series to share the same docking station. In addition, all the laptops use the same basic battery. Lenovo also offers as options multiple layers of security throughout the hardware, software, BIOS, as well as encrypted hard drives with remote management support, such as the ability to disable lost or stolen systems. Lenovo includes with each of the laptops its Enhanced Experienced 2.0 software for Windows 7 that can shave 20 seconds off the boot time

The new systems are scheduled to be available in March. Pricing for the T420s, T420, T520, L420, L520, and W520 starts at $1,329, $779, $909, $719, $719, and $1329, respectively.

The ThinkPad line of laptops is Lenovo’s most popular product in the United States. The Chinese company is the world’s fourth largest computer maker, and acquired the line in 2004 from IBM in a deal worth $1.75 billion.

Source:http://www.informationweek.com/news/hardware/desktop/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=229219023&cid=RSSfeed_IWK_All

Lucidport technology introduces cipherguard computer encryption system

February 23rd, 2011

LucidPort Technology today introduced the CipherGuard Computer Encryption System. The CipherGuard secures the private data on a computer with a physical key.

The CipherGuard creates an AES-256 encrypted area on your computer’s hard drive. With the CipherGuard plugged in, this area appears as another drive in the system. Create files and install applications normally. When you unplug the CipherGuard, your private data is no longer accessible. Like a key for your car, plug or unplug the CipherGuard anytime, no passwords or re-boots are required. The size of the encrypted area is not limited by the CipherGuard device.

“Save sensitive files directly on your local hard drive without worrying about someone stealing your data,” said Reid Augustin, Vice President of Product Development at LucidPort. “You don’t have to rely on a VPN connection to keep your files safe.”

The CipherGuard is now available as a semi-finished product. This includes a production ready PCB, all necessary software, and complete documentation. The CipherGuard design is also available for OEM licensing.

Source:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/lucidport-technology-introduces-cipherguard-computer-encryption-system-116646694.html

Windows 7’s first service pack arrives

February 23rd, 2011

Today marks an important milestone for Windows 7: the arrival of its first service pack since the operating system’s release in late 2009.

Service Pack 1 was released to manufacturers earlier this month, with the announcement that it would arrive in consumers’ hands this week. The software is set to hit Windows Update later today, with it already being posted as a 1.95GB download bundle for all versions on Microsoft’s Download Center. TechNet subscribers and Microsoft volume license customers got access to the update last week.

Microsoft says the standalone update package should weigh in at 527MB for x86 users, about 903MB for x64 users, and 511MB for users on Itanium chips. In Windows Update, the download sizes are much smaller:

The service pack doesn’t bring any new whiz-bang features for consumers, but it includes two important back end additions that promise to improve performance in Windows 7’s server counterpart, Windows Server 2008 R2. The update adds Dynamic Memory and RemoteFX, technologies that increase, respectively, the density of virtual machines and the graphical prowess of thin-client hardware (more on those here). The RemoteFX feature is also coming to the consumer version of Windows 7 in the form of client-side support.

Also included in SP1 are a number of fixes for bugs and security holes, which may be useful for those who don’t use the auto-update feature or are applying the update to machines that don’t have an active Internet connection. Other small changes include improved HDMI audio-device performance, a fix for printing mixed-orientation XPS documents, and “improved support” for Advanced Format storage devices.

SP1 first appeared in beta form in July of last year, with its first release candidate hitting the company’s testing channels in October. Leaks of the release for the manufacturers’ version of the software appeared on file-sharing networks last month.

Source:http://news.cnet.com/8301-10805_3-20034845-75.html

Did Acer Accidentally Invent the Cloud Workstation?

February 23rd, 2011

An intriguing report on German news site Heise.de on Monday unveiled a cheap monitor that includes built-in PC functionality. The Acer DX241H is an otherwise standard 1920×1080 pixel HDMI monitor, but it also features an operating system running on top of an ARM Cortex-A8 chip–the same processor commonly found in cell phones and tablets. All this comes in at around just $400, although that price would likely be significantly lower if the product reaches the United States.

Initial reports said that the “monitor” ran Google’s forthcoming Chrome OS, which would have made it the first commercial product to do so. Acer is one of Google’s partners so this wasn’t infeasible.

However, it transpired that this was a spec-list mistake. Instead, the DX241H will run the Chrome browser, almost certainly on top of an unspecified Linux distro. The only other software, it appears, will be a multimedia player.

Acer is touting the DX241H as a monitor that happens to have browsing built in, just like some monitors have simple computing functionality built in that lets them display pictures on memory cards, for example.

However, the product proposes an intriguing concept: Could it be the first of many inexpensive all-in-one monitor-and-PC combos featuring low-power ARM processors that allow them to run Chrome OS? Could Acer have accidentally created the first true cloud terminal?

The all-in-one PC field has boomed in recent years, pushing aside standard “box-based” desktop computers, despite the fact that more of us are switching to mobile computers and leaving desktop machines behind.

However, the prices of all-in-ones tend to be on the high side; you’ll struggle to find one for less than $600, for example. More often than not they’re designed to be stylish and compact additions to homes, taking their lead from the Apple iMac. The business market is largely untapped as of yet although I’ve seen a handful on desks here and there.

IT bosses are perhaps loathe to use all-in-ones because, price notwithstanding, a monitor bonded to a PC means that the whole unit is written off if any item of hardware dies. Additionally, upgrading is much trickier.

However, I’m not sure these complaints would be realistic with a cloud terminal. A cloud desktop computer could be an entirely solid-state machine, and we know from past experience that solid-state technology rarely fails.

Hyper-efficient ARM chips usually don’t require fans for cooling, and moving parts are usually the first thing to die inside a computer. There’d be no need for hard disks either; a few gigs of flash chips on the motherboard would be more than enough.

The monitor would last forever–unlike cathode-ray tube (CRT) monitors of old, the TFT panels these PCs use won’t degrade over time. They won’t go blurry, for example. Their brightness might dim over the space of a few years if they use cold-cathode backlighting, but the trend nowadays is for LED backlighting, which should retain its luminosity for the life of the machine.

As for upgrade possibilities, the reality is that it’s rare for businesses to change hardware within computers. It’s just not an efficient use of staff time and PCs are treated as commodity items, to be used until they die and then disposed of. Any upgrades are limited to RAM or, even less frequently, hard disks. In many cases all-in-one PCs manufacturers make the RAM easy to upgrade, and if the computer is used as a cloud terminal then running out of storage will not be an issue. Nothing other than the OS is stored locally.

Cloud terminals really would be commodity units that could be swapped in and out as needed, just like mainframe terminals of old. If one died, the tech support operative could get another out of storage and just plug in the same keyboard and mouse. There would be no need to take data off the machines when they reach the end of their lives because the data would be stored in the cloud. Users wouldn’t even be aware they were using a new computer because their desktop environment would be stored in the cloud.

Of course, all of this is pure speculation–fantasy, even. Businesses are still wary about working within the cloud, and there’s no sign of an end of the security deadlock that’s stopping many businesses moving over to the cloud.

But most of all, the history of corporate IT is one of buying PC boxes, and that’s not going to change overnight. The IBM PC set a pattern that we’ve yet to break, despite 30 years having passed.

It’s fun to see how lots of different computing technologies are converging at the moment to made cloud computing a possibility, if not a reality. As they said in “The Six Million Dollar Man,” we have the technology. However, how we use it is down to how quickly we can abandon our prejudices.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/220300/did_acer_accidentally_invent_the_cloud_workstation.html

Mcallister software systems launches “mash” computer hardware support program

February 18th, 2011

MASH covers hardware purchased from McAllister Software Systems as well as qualified hardware purchased from other sources. It is designed to save veterinary practices time and money compared with local IT support plans.

MASH provides assistance with networking issues, printing issues, and other hardware-related problems. The cost is a fraction of what many local IT companies charge for similar services. MASH technicians can repair most problems remotely, either over the phone or by logging in to a veterinary practice’s computer. If a problem does require local support, MASH can work with a local technician to resolve the problem.

“The new MASH program is designed to solve hardware problems not covered by the AVImark software technical support plan,” said Scott McAllister, president, McAllister Software Systems. “Because we can solve problems remotely, we can often get practices up and running more quickly than waiting for a local technician to arrive. Clinics that have reliable hardware and software support can enjoy peace of mind and focus on providing the best patient care possible.” MASH is offered through McAllister Software Systems’ IT Solutions division, which also provides a variety of business-class computers and accessories — including desktops, laptops, servers, workstations, routers, switches, and printers — from leading vendors. MSS computer experts provide a free network analysis to determine what hardware a practice needs. Once the hardware is ordered, MSS will configure the equipment to work with AVImark practice management software before it is shipped to the practice. On-site setup is also available, if needed.

Source:http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2011/02/17/5321798.htm

Stratasys is among the companies in the computer hardware industry with relatively high current ratio (ssys, ccur, dbd, smci, aapl)

February 18th, 2011

Below are the five companies in the Computer Hardware industry with the highest Current Ratios. Current ratio is useful to get an idea of how quickly a company can repay its short-term liabilities with its short-term assets. The higher the current ratio, the more capable the company is of paying its obligations.

Stratasys (NASDAQ:SSYS) ranks highest with Current Ratio of 3.24; Concurrent Computer (NASDAQ:CCUR) ranks next with Current Ratio of 2.82; and Diebold (NYSE:DBD) ranks next highest with Current Ratio of 2.38.

Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ:SMCI) follows with Current Ratio of 2.14 and Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) rounds out the group with Current Ratio of 1.85.

SmarTrend currently has shares of Super Micro Computer in an Uptrend and issued the Uptrend alert on October 01, 2010 at $10.98. The stock has risen 41.5% since the Uptrend alert was issued.

Source:http://www.zacks.com/research/get_news.php?id=048l0506

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