Archive for April, 2011

The desktop mouse turns 30

April 28th, 2011

It’s thirty years to the day since the first computer with a mouse came on the market, when Xerox launched the Star 8010 workstation on 27 April 1981.

Mouse technology had been around for some time, and its predecessor the trackball was created in the early 1950s, thanks to Canadian military research. But the mouse in its modern form was developed at Xerox’s legendary PARC research centre.

The mouse was part of a prototype system developed called the Xerox Aero, which had most of the hardware today’s PCs are designed around, including a graphical user interface (GUI), Ethernet and parallel ports (now supplanted by USB) and a printer connection – as well as the mouse.

It was originally rolled on two wheels, but Bill English developed the omni-directional ball mouse that became standard. The first model had three buttons, arranged vertically down the centre of the device and used light to register the movement of the wheel.

The Xerox Star 8010 workstation was not a success – priced at around $75,000 and sold by a company that thought of itself as a photocopier manufacturer it soon sank without a trace. But the mouse became incredibly popular, thanks to its adoption by Apple.

Steve Job gave Xerox stock in the small company for a two day tour of the PARC facilities, over the strong objections of some of its staff. Apple’s subsequent development of the GUI seen on the Alto is well-known, but Jobs was also impressed with the concept of a mouse, particularly in light of moving from text-based to graphical computing.

In his recent autobiography Paul Allen recounts a passionate lecture from Jobs on mouse design, after he questioned Apple’s adherence to the single button format. Allen pointed out that two buttons would be more useful, but Jobs argued that simplicity was more important.

“You know, Paul, this is all about simplicity verses complexity. And nobody needs more than one button on a mouse,” Allen recalls. Apple adopted multi-buttoned mice in 2005.

The traditional ball mouse has now been replaced with laser models, which are capable of working with greater accuracy on a wide range of surfaces. In the 1990s the addition of movement sensors allows for 3D control, although this hasn’t caught on outside the gaming market.

The mouse looks likely to be part of computing’s history in the near term, but is unlikely to see another thirty years in common use. The increasing spread of touchscreens, both in the laptop and tablet market, and motion sensors like Microsoft’s Kinect platform, will probably doom the device in the long term.

Nevertheless the mouse will leave certainly a lasting mark on its generation. Physiotherapists have long warned that twisting the forearm to use a mouse is a leading cause of muscle and nerve damage, and many of today’s users will be feeling the effects of the mouse for some time to come.

Source:http://www.v3.co.uk/v3-uk/the-frontline-blog/2046367/mouse

Android, Chrome OS, and Ubuntu United in One Platform

April 28th, 2011

With so many exciting new operating systems to choose from today, it can be tough to settle on just one–particularly if you’re an open source fan.

Recently, however, Always Innovating has created an option that allows users to avoid choosing altogether. A new platform demonstrated recently by the company on YouTube (video below) combines Canonical’s Ubuntu and Google’s Android and Chrome OS with its own, custom Linux-based operating system to offer a quad-boot alternative.

Yes, that’s four operating systems in one, downloadable for free from Always Innovating’s site in just 2.04GB.

Four OSes in One

Dubbed Super-Jumbo, the new offering was designed for the Beagle Board, a high-performance, low-power and open source computer produced by a community including Texas Instruments and distributed by Digi-Key. Priced at $149, the Beagle Board is a fanless, single-board computer based on TI’s OMAP3530 system-on-a-chip, which in turn uses the ARM Cortex-A8 core.

Also compatible with Always Innovating’s own Touch Book and Smart Book hardware, Super-Jumbo is a single image that provides four operating systems fully optimized for the third-generation OMAP chip: Google’s Android 2.3, or Gingerbread; Ubuntu Linux 10.10, or Maverick Meerkat; Chrome OS; and Always Innovating’s own AIOS, which is a fork of the Ångström Linux distribution built for embedded devices.

The platform represents the first time Chrome OS has ever been released for the OMAP3 generation of processors, the company says.

No Rebooting Necessary

Users of Super-Jumbo–which is bundled with hundreds of applications, Always Innovating says–can run the four operating systems concurrently and then switch among them without rebooting or incurring any performance loss. Each can also be set to load by default.

Can more choice and flexibility ever be a bad thing, particularly when it’s all Linux-based, free and (mostly) open? I certainly don’t think so. Below is the video demonstrating Super-Jumbo in action. Time to take it for a test drive.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/226435/android_chrome_os_and_ubuntu_united_in_one_platform.html

Virtual computer achieves record growth in desktop virtualization market

April 28th, 2011

Virtual Computer, the market leader in distributed desktop virtualization, today announced the company has hit a number of key milestones within the last year, including accelerated market traction, advanced development of products, stronger collaboration with industry leaders on key initiatives and products, and added senior management expertise. Virtual Computer grew sales year-over-year by 5X while deploying thousands of seats in production with an overall satisfaction rating of 4.3 out of 5.

The company also aggressively focused on building traction and capturing the market by collaborating with industry leaders such as Intel and Lenovo on products, technologies and market education. Virtual Computer’s NxTop® desktop virtualization solution is now compatible with the previous three generations of Intel® processors, and Virtual Computer also is collaborating with Lenovo (HKSE: 992) (ADR: LNVGY) to optimize NxTop on a broad set of Lenovo PC hardware, including systems based on the Second Generation Intel Core™ processor family. Lenovo customers will be able to have Virtual Computer’s NxTop client loaded onto their custom images, direct from the factory. In addition, Virtual Computer, Intel and Lenovo have been co-developing market-leading educational content on distributed desktop virtualization, including a four-part webinar series.

“We have gathered incredible momentum that we expect to continue throughout 2011 and beyond,” said Dan McCall, CEO of Virtual Computer. “Virtual Computer’s growth is due to our success in attacking the hard problems in client-hosted virtualization, putting an excellent team in place, and partnering with the best in the industry.”

Earlier this month, Virtual Computer released NxTop 3 Service Pack 1, which further enables the concept of “One PC, Two Lives” and offers better manageability than VDI (Virtual Desktop Infrastructure) without the cost or infrastructure investments. The new release provides full IT control of the end-point through advanced management capabilities in NxTop Center, while at the same time enabling greater end-user flexibility.

“The additional capabilities to centrally manage desktops and to set policies for end-user personalization are fantastic,” said Andrew Wood of Gilwood Consulting, currently implementing NxTop in a UK government department. “By allowing local users to inherit properties as their initial settings, IT administrators save time for themselves and the users by eliminating the need to set up certain options or settings manually.”

Reflecting its increased technology, sales and marketing activities, Virtual Computer deepened its senior management team with the addition of Simon Graham as chief scientist, John Glendenning as senior vice president of worldwide sales and business development, Sham Sao as chief marketing officer, and Kae Kronthaler-Williams as vice president of corporate marketing. The company is anticipating continued growth in 2011 and will be expanding all areas of the company including engineering, sales, marketing and support.

Source:http://www.sys-con.com/node/1808880

Eurocom launches corporate trade in program 2011

April 27th, 2011

Eurocom Corporation (www.eurocom.com), a leading developer of high performance computing solutions has updated its Corporate Trade in Program to incorporate the latest Server on the Go and full line of Mobile Workstation solutions.
The Eurocom Corporate Trade In program allows customers to maximize their IT budget and acquire fully upgradeable high performance computer solutions (EUROCOM notebooks, Mobile Workstation, Mobile Servers and all-in-one energy efficient PCs) in the most cost effective fashion.

“The Corporate Trade in Program allows companies to upgrade their aging desktop centered hardware to newer, portable and efficient computer technology without a major impact on their IT budget” explains Eurocom Corporate Sales Manager Matthew Thompson.

With the Eurocom Corporate Trade in Program, customers can save up to 20% off the purchase of new Eurocom technology when they trade in their aging non-EUROCOM equipment (notebook, desktop PC or server).

The two key benefits of the program are the prolonged life span of computer hardware, as EUROCOM systems are fully upgradeable, and the acquisition of more flexible portable computer equipment that allows more intelligent utilization of company resources than the traditional desktop based computer hardware.

The Eurocom Trade In program gives companies an opportunity to trade in their aging desktop-based PC hardware for the newest Intel i7, Xeon, AMD, NVIDIA and Sandy Bridge based portable technology. Eurocom Corporation offers a perfect solution for those companies who need the mobility of a notebook, but who do not want to compromise the power and functionality of a traditional desktop computer. With workforces changing fast, the ease of movement becomes a crucial factor when buying new computer equipment. The Eurocom Corporate Trade in Program provides businesses, government, health care sector, educational institutions and individuals with the means of disposing their aging computer hardware.

Replacing aging technology allows organizations to restructure operations by incorporating Server on the Go (SOTG) and Engineering on the Go (EOTG) strategies, thereby allowing for more efficient and effective mobile operations. EOTG and SOTG allows for business activities anywhere in the world made available by capable mobile hardware solutions that allow engineers to receive and process feedback while being face-to-face with customers, co-developers, final users and other third parties.

Eurocom donates old equipment received under the Trade In Program to various charitable organizations, such as Computers for Schools, helping young students gain greater access to computer technology and acquire computer skills needed to succeed in today’s economy and society.

Source:http://www.echannelline.com/usa/brief.cfm?item=18211

Google to give away Chrome OS Notebooks for $10-$20/Month subscription?

April 27th, 2011

If the recent rumors are true, you’ll soon be able to get a Chrome OS notebook as a subscription from Google for $10-$20 a month.

According to a report from Neowin , the new Google notebook (probably similar to the Cr-48 test notebook) will be available in late June/early July with this subscription model, which will also include hardware refreshes and repairs. So you’ll always have an up-to-date laptop, albeit one that’s more browser than mean machine.

When my PCWorld colleague Edward N. Albro first looked at the Cr-48, Google’s prototype Chrome OS computer, he found it “little more than a browser in a box” (even though it can be hacked to run Mac OS X and Windows). Because of this, a decision by Google to give the hardware away and just charge a monthly fee makes great sense.

The Cr-48 drew mixed initial impressions all around, but it was only a beta preview for testers and the next iteration of the Google notebook could overcome the pilot notebook’s shortcomings (lack of a caps-lock key, for example), while keeping its nice features (such as fast boot and resume times and over 8 hours of battery life). PCWorld blogger Jared Newman reported last month that Google confirmed on Twitter that Chrome OS notebooks would be coming mid-year. This jives with the Summer 2011 Chrome notebooks rumors we’re now hearing.

It’s an interesting concept–a cheap computer you can get for $240 a year–though not really revolutionary (anyone remember PeoplePC and other “free” PCs?). If a subscription plan isn’t for you, Neowin reports that you’ll be able to purchase the Chrome OS notebook in regular one-time payment fashion as well.

Computerworld has rounded up some comments that pretty much summarize my confused thoughts. What do you think? Will you be subscribing to a Google OS notebook?

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/article/225916/google_to_give_away_chrome_os_notebooks_for_1020month_subscription.html

Dell Unveils Specialized Workstations

April 27th, 2011

Dell just made life a bit easier for those working in high-resolution 2-D and 3-D graphics and large data with its next generation of Precision mobile workstations.
By taking advantage of the latest Intel processors and advanced graphic capabilities, the updated Dell Precision M4600 and M6600 laptop computers, as well as the dual-socket Dell Precision R5500 rack workstation, are designed for specialized, graphics-intensive computing. Engineers, software developers, computer graphics, and animation specialists can all benefit from the new workstations, said Don Maynard, senior product manager for Dell Precision Tower and Rack workstations.

At Cloud Connect 2011 in Silicon Valley, TechWeb’s David Berlind gets a demonstration of CA’s recently acquired 3Tera AppLogic graphical private cloud deployment tool.
“There’s a very large demand for specialized workstations like this,” Maynard said in an interview. “When it comes to our new Precision workstation, some customers have to have the most powerful thing out there to get the job done. The rendering work done two years ago that took about half a day, now takes an hour.”

The Dell Precision M4600 includes Intel’s Core i5 and i7 second-generation processors, with the potential to upgrade to Intel Core i7 Extreme Edition. The computer has an expansive DDR3 memory with four DIMM slots for up to 32 GB of 1333-MHz memory or up to 16 GB of 1600-MHz memory. The graphics options include ATI FirePro 5950, Nvidia Quadro 1000M or 2000M, with 1 GB and 2 GB of graphics memory available, and support for two to five monitors depending on the configuration. It also includes either an AMD or Nvidia discrete graphics card with up to 2 GB of dedicated memory.

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“Because we have a unique chassis [with the Precision M4600 and M6600], we are able to offer the graphics our customer’s require,” said Mano Gialusis, senior product manager for Dell Precision mobile workstations, in an interview. “They can choose between an AMD or Nvidia graphics cards.”

The 17.6-inch Dell Precision M6600 is similar to the M4600, but has higher scaling graphics options and additional storage with up to three options including an optional second HDD and 128-GB solid state drive (SSD) mini card with RAID 5 support. The M6600 also will offer the new flagship Nvidia Quadro 5010M mobile professional graphics with 4 GB of GFX memory in the coming months.

The 15.6-inch M4600 and 17.3-inch M6600 both are housed in aluminum cases designed to withstand temperature extremes, dust, and vibration.
Dell partnered with software vendors to create certifications on applications from Autodesk, Dassault Systemes, PTC, Siemens PLM software, and others to create software reliability for demanding applications.

Dell also introduced its Precision R5500 rack workstation that allows remote workers scalability while safeguarding and centralizing customer data. The R5500 rack features Intel Xeon processors and memory capacity up to 192 GB with dual-wide GPU slots that scale up to 450 watts. It also includes GPU options such as the Nvidia Quadro and Nvidia Tesla.

Dells new Precision upgrades follows closely on the heels of HP’s release of its EliteBook w-series workstations, introduced on April 15. The EliteBook workstations are also targeted toward designers, animators, and engineers and feature similar hardware and graphics offerings. Dell first introduced the Precision laptops in 2009.
The Dell Precision M4600 starts at $1,678 and the M6600 starts at $2,158. The laptops will be available May 10. The Dell Precision R5500 starts at $2,551 and will be available in the U.S. on May 3.

Source:http://www.informationweek.com/news/hardware/desktop/229402306

Force10 Networks launches Open Cloud Networking

April 26th, 2011

Force10 Networks launched its Open Cloud Networking (OCN) framework today, a strategic blueprint for how it sees cloud and conventional datacentre construction proceeding in the coming years.

As a first step, the vendor released the first hardware and software tied into OCN aimed at offering global multinationals and ISPs networking kit designed to boost network speeds, and automation and scalability in their datacentres.

Force10 product marketing senior director Jeff Baher characterised OCN as “at least one part philosophy and two parts product”.

Commenting on the cloud strategy, Rob Bamforth, Quocirca principal analyst for communication, collaboration and convergence, said, “Manageability will be key because of the need for flexibility. Firms need to be able to scale up and down as needs change. For example, when firms need to deploy mobile technology and due to the consumerisation of the end points.

“There are a lot of people talking as if cloud is all or nothing – i.e. on premise or on remote public cloud datacentres. The reality will be much more of a hybrid with private clouds, public clouds and on-premise boxes,” he said, adding that managing this flexibility in a dynamic way without escalating costs or the number of chairs in the IT department will become ever more important.

Hardware

The new hardware being unveiled by Force10 Networks today gives firms a choice of datacentre architectures for their core switching needs.
The hardware is branded as ZettaScale by Force10 Networks, in sync with its earlier TeraScale and ExaScale architectures.
Companies can choose between centralised and distributed core datacentre architectures.
For firms considering a distributed core architecture, Force10 Networks is offering the Z9000 switch, which has 32 line-rate 40Gbit/s ports in a two rack unit (RU) form factor [see picture].

The centralised core switch announced by Force10 Networks is the 19RU form factor Z9512, which will be available this autumn. The Z9512 will have a switching capacity of 9.6Tbit/s, 48 x 10Gbit/s bi-directionally, although users will be able to choose 40Gbit/s or 100Gbit/s ports if they want.

Lastly, Force10 Networks is unveiling the top-of-rack S7000 Open Cloud Switch, which it says converges networking, applications and storage in a 2RU form factor.

The S7000 can have 36 x 10Gbit/s ports, and has Fibre-channel-over-Ethernet (FCoE) connectivity, and can also add more 10Gbit/s or 40Gbit/s ports. The S7000 can also run third-party applications directly on the switch as well, since it has four expansion bays for blade hardware [see picture].

Software

A key to making the OCN work favourably for enterprises and ISPs is the software Force10 Networks is releasing to work with the hardware.

There are two focuses in this respect: the firmware released with the switches, Force10 Networks Operating System (FTOS); and an upgrade to Force10’s Open Automation system to version 2.0 from version 1.0.

A new feature in Open Automation 2.0 is the opening of ScriptStore. This is a combined online resource and forum where firms can buy scripts written in Perl or Python programming languages, and share knowledge to let them automate key network functions with the Force10 Network hardware.

For example, firms could automate management of network devices, and automate network alerts.

Source:http://www.computing.co.uk/ctg/news/2044771/force10-networks-launches-cloud-networking

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