Archive for June, 2011

Desktop PCs: Dead as a doornail, or maybe just a fax machine

June 27th, 2011

The corporate desktop has looked the same for decades: computer, keyboard, mouse, desk phone, maybe a printer. But do these tools dominate because they’re the perfect combination of technology needed for work today, or is the enterprise workplace due for an extreme makeover?
Death of the mouse
According to industry analysts, hardware vendors, architects and futurists, the odds that major changes will revamp the standard corporate cubicle, technology tools and even buildings, rise every day.
Of course, fundamental changes like this don’t happen at all once. “When you’ve got hardware in place, it’s tough to yank it out,” cautions Rob Enderle, principal analyst for the Enderle Group. “Some corporate PBXs are still in use from the 1980s. Faxing was declared dead in 1995, but I have two in my office.”
Enderle’s point is that it takes a major event to upset the status quo, but that event, or confluence of events, appears to be happening today.
The proliferation of mobile devices, the broad availability of high-speedwireless access, cloud-based services and browser-based videoconferencing mean that employees no long have to be tied to their desktop PCs.
Unplanned obsolesence
“The desktop computer really will become obsolete,” says Amy H. Tabor, director of facilities planning for RNL, a global, full-service design firm. “This change is driven by the way we work, the need for more flexibility and space use, and the younger generation expecting the difference.”
Because employees are on the move, a single desktop computer in every cubicle is no longer enough. “What was once a single device computer system is now a two- or three-device environment,” says Jeff Tripp, a Technology Strategist for Enterprise Clients at Intel. The extra devices are laptops, smartphones and tablets.
“It will be interesting to see if the ‘desktop’ term ever goes away,” says Tripp, who works with enterprise Intel customers, and focuses five years in the future. “Younger kids tend to start with mobile laptops or tablets in kindergarten.”
RNL, along with Steelcase and OfficeScapes, is sponsoring Workplace-2020, a digital forum to “explore workplace trends, spark discussion, and inspire debate regarding the workspace of the future.” Ten years ago, RNL spearheaded Workplace-2010, and built out 6,000 square feet of office space to show off new concepts and provide a place for continued research.
“The technical change is now exponential, faster than ever before,” says Tabor, “and will continue to evolve the technology we know. But maybe not as much as the sea change with the arrival of mobile devices and smartphones.”
The Empty Cubicle Syndrome
Now that employees are mobile, changes are occurring both inside and outside the traditional cubicle. Jenny Englert, senior cognitive engineer at Xerox, launched a study on the future of work in 2008. In 2009, she focused on mobile workers and the technologies to support them.
“We see new work styles, and even people with their own cube or office are always out at meetings and the like,” Englert says. “I’m at my desk only about 20% of the time.” Her group followed work practices, rather than technology, and found that as work has become mobile, technology must support that mobility.

Architects are taking notice of empty cubicles, says RNL’s Tabor. “There’s more emphasis on building collaboration space. Companies are giving up individual space for team space.”
Daniel Burrus, business strategist and technology futurist, is also the author of the new book “Flash Foresight: How to See the Invisible and Do the Impossible”, a New York Timeshardcover bestseller.
“The workplace is changing dramatically, and the tipping point is now,” Burrus says. “In 2010 more non-Windows machines, like tablets, iPhones and other devices, than Windows computers were plugged into the Internet. Smartphones outsold laptops and PCs.”
Burrus says that increasingly the computer of choice is a smartphone or a tablet. “We will see enterprise level apps for services workers, sales, maintenance. It’s a form factor that’s incredibly powerful.”
Chuck Wilsker, head of the Telework Coalition, says we all are already teleworkers, but we may not know it. “I spoke recently to a group of 260 businesspeople. I asked how many were teleworkers, and only about 10% raised their hands. Then I asked how many worked only at their primary place of employment and never from home or the road. Only two people raised their hands. The reality today is that almost every knowledge worker is now a teleworker.”
In her research for Xerox, Englert found that mobile workers were outside the office about 80% of their workday. They tried to print what they needed before they left, but that didn’t always work. Xerox then introduced a mobile enterprise printer that supports output from a mobile phone.
The video void
On the flip side, employees who regularly work at home can feel isolated. The obvious answer is videoconferencing, but personal videoconferencing has been slow to catch on.
“The big problem with personal videoconferencing is companies bring products to market that don’t work with other products,” says analyst Enderle. “I’ve been working on those projects since the mid 1980s, and they just don’t work together.”
“There are dozens of videoconferencing systems out there now, and have been for years,” Wilsker adds. “We will get to interoperability one of these days between phones, and get used to using video. Young people are driving this. I met a 28 year old man from Turkey, and he uses Skype on his laptop to get cooking lessons from his mother, who’s still in Ankara.”
Lucky for the cooking student, his mother isn’t scared of the camera, but many still are. “The biggest problem with videoconferencing for some companies is that some people are self-conscious about being on camera,” Wilsker says.
Judging by the number of young people in YouTube videos, future workers won’t have that problem. Add in the fact that Apple now provides cameras in front and back of the new iPads and iPhones, and an audio-only conversation may be rare in a few years.
Or you may log in and control a personal telepresence robot to move around the office and talk to people through the speaker and video screen on the robot. Anybots now has these for sale.
Plus, Avaya and others offer browser-based immersive environments for corporatecollaboration.
The evolving office
No matter how quickly videoconferencing becomes mainstream, Tabor at RNL says employees have reasons to be in an office with other employees even if they often work anywhere. “Companies will have technology that users can’t afford, so it will be centralized. Offices provide sociability, and maintain the company’s brand and identity. There’s still a need for office space.
Companies must now support four and five generations of workers, Tabor says, in one workspace, because Baby Boomers plan to work longer than previous generations. “Each will have a different set of expectations and demands, and there will be some accommodation of generational preferences. But younger people will drive the innovation, and the most successful older folks will be those who adapt to the newer way of doing things.”
“One huge change for the future will come as we leverage Moore’s Law and move processing to the cloud,” Burrus says. “Watch that jump ahead as you can use a smartphone to access super computer capabilities in the cloud. How about having IBM’s Watson in your smartphone?”
No matter what’s in the cloud, how devices access that cloud will change soon. Rich Cheston, executive director and distinguished engineer for Lenovo, says, “It’s shortsighted to view every endpoint as just a piece of gorilla glass. IT people want better security.”
Cheston says Lenovo has developed technology that leverages the capabilities of the endpoint by introducing a way for cloud applications to interrogate clients and treat them differently. Need better security? If your laptop has a fingerprint reader, the cloud app can demand two-factor authentication, then tailor your access based on your increased security clearance. If the cloud application can tell if a laptop has a camera, it can automatically provide a videoconference option.
And your future office will leverage new tools to share information between devices. “My devices should know when I walk into a conference room, and that I have a conference scheduled at the time,” says Intel’s Tripp. “It should prepare an embedded projector in the room, and make the video connection, etc. This will be leaps and bounds forward. And if my phone has a GPS but my laptop doesn’t, they should share information between them.”
Englert at Xerox works with the Rochester Institute of Technology in her research. Students ask “Why can’t your wall become your workspace,” she says. “Walk into a room, and it will customize to you. Tools will become gesture based, not touch. Just look at a software tool, and it will automatically show up. But it’s been interesting to see from the young people they wanted face to face interaction.”
Intel’s Tripp agrees. “It’s hard to beat people in one room with a whiteboard for brainstorming with our current technology. Tech is getting there, and smart boards help, but there’s value in the daily interactions people have. Hard to replicate walking into a room and working together.”

Source:http://www.networkworld.com/news/2011/062711-desktop-doomed.html?hpg1=bn

Hewlett-Packard is Among the Companies in the Computer Hardware Industry with the Best Relative Performance

June 27th, 2011

Below are the top five companies in the Computer Hardware industry as measured by relative performance. This analysis was compiled based on yesterday’s trading activity as we search for stocks that have the potential to outperform.

Hewlett-Packard (NYSE:HPQ) ranks first with a loss of 0.94%; NCR (NYSE:NCR) ranks second with a loss of 0.98%; and Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) ranks third with a loss of 1.47%.

Diebold (NYSE:DBD) follows with a loss of 2.06% and Dell (NASDAQ:DELL) rounds out the top five with a loss of 2.09%.

In the past 52 weeks, Hewlett-Packard share prices have been bracketed by a low of $33.95 and a high of $49.39 and are now at $34.90, 3% above that low price. Over the past week, the 200-day moving average (MA) has gone down 0.3% while the 50-day MA has declined 1.5%.

Source:http://www.fnno.com/story/fast-lane/331-hewlett-packard-among-companies-computer-hardware-industry-best-relative-performance-hpq-ncr-aapl-dbd-dell-f

Tips for buying a compact laptop

June 27th, 2011

Small and convenient laptop back into question. The role of this article is to explain what you must include these “little ones” to be proficient.
Drawn by: Bogdan Belle
5 points that you have in mind when buying a laptop
1. Display: 10 to 12 inch high resolution (1024 x 600 pixels) with Backlight LED lighting economic. For use in such a non-reflecting display with high light output is better.
2. Connections: 3 USB 2.0 (1) card slot (2), input-output audio (3) and VGA connection (4) are considered standard. Video Interface HDMI and USB 3.0 support missing rule.
3. Autonomy: according to tests made ​​by connect, autonomy average eight to ten hours. Batteries 45 to 60 watts and greater autonomy promise.
4. Connectivity: WLAN, LAN and Bluetooth 3.0 are most common. Rarely be equipped netbooks with UMTS modem and SIM card slot (see picture) for the mobile Internet.
5. Keyboard keys and order of their size should be the standard computer keyboards on. Try before buying personal keyboard.
It is recognized that small things are often the most enjoyable. Connect readers know that we refer to a smartphone or netbook, but the desire to have a laptop with a weight of 1-1.5 kg is easier to accomplish. Offer mini PCs that fit in a briefcase and have a screen or as an A4 page, start at 250 euros. A well equipped and powerful netbook price may be twice as high. The article is worth trying to explain why give a high price for this gadget that is worth the additional options required and what should be considered when buying a mobile PC.
Netbook, notebook or tablet PC?
emergence sites iPad Touch-sensitive screens, which use conventional keyboard instead of finger movements, justifies the question: Who needs netbook in these conditions? The answer is simple: those who want to use office applications and other typical PC applications anywhere, with the known system, a comfortable and common software such as Microsoft Office suite or a fully equipped browser.
Why not buy a notebook performance? Older brothers have the advantage of netbook a higher power greater diagonal, equipped with sophisticated programs and complex games. The price paid for these advantages, however, is quite large, the weight of the notebook is considerable, but limited period of battery operation significantly reduces the flexibility to use mobile. Depending on the requested profile indicated a compromise between the types of computer. How meanwhile are smoother transitions between the different types, users can choose a personalized attendant.
Beware of choosing the screen!
Those who choose a netbook should first decide on the size display. Common diagonal are between 10.1 and 12.1 inches (25.6 and 30.7 cm). The display is larger, the easier it can be viewed Web pages larger, much easier to work on complex Office documents. If you look directly screen before purchase, it’s good to know that it must have a uniform brightness, sharp contrast and natural colors. Glow more than 180 cd / mp promising better readability and in kind. Ideal resolutions are 1024 x 600 or 1366 x 768.
A larger number of pixels on the screen steady surface means that the viewer sees more of a web page open. At higher resolution icons folder sites and programs, and writing are clear but smaller in size and asking for more. Help Fri usual zoom and the ability to control functions of the operating system. Like the laptops, the trend is to have reflective screen with black background and bright colors and effect. Under unfavorable light, these screens are irritating reflections. A matte screen readability netbook on the terraces or in parks.
Operating range
of modern screens were replaced mini-neon used as backlight LED, more energy efficient. Indicated that Li-Ion battery attached to powerful, yet small and lightweight. Manufacturer is more significant than the information carrying capacity of battery: 6-cell model has a storage capacity between 45 and 60 watts, thus operating conditions between cycles long. These data are not always found in the technical book, but the batteries are included. If values ​​are within the range mentioned and that the manufacturer integrates energy-saving components, a netbook has a range of up to ten hours, according to measurements made ​​by the 100cd/mp connect. The average standard netbooks have a range of seven to eight hours. Stronger and larger models have autonomy only five to six hours.
Mobility before the performance
Most netbooks come with Intel Atom. These cheap processor performance does not reach far from the current multi-core CPU or Core series processors and with that come the last generation of PCs and laptops. But spare battery Atom chips are ideal for mobile devices. N450 or N455 current working versions between 1.6 and 1.8 GHz, the latest netbooks but use the first series dual-core processor Atom N550 1.5 GHz. It turned out that the latest generation of processors does not contribute decisively to increase performance, so the CPU does not have to be the most important when buying a netbook.
Graphics Power for entertainment
standard Intel graphics solutions (GMA3150) prove obsolete in accessing sites with flash animation, video playback or some sophisticated games. Casual players can use a powerful graphics card such as Nvidia Ion 2. But customers interested in multimedia would be appropriate to equip the netbook with AMD graphics card. Intel’s competitor offers a dual core AMD Fusion (C-50), very powerful for netbook with integrated graphics called the Radeon HD 6250, which has a more 3D speed. A video accelerator provides smooth playback of HD videos or data stream from YouTube. With these advantages architecture becomes a real alternative for AMD processors Atom dominant market at this time.
Basic amenities comparable
A typical current generation netbooks use as Windows 7 Starter and may, in addition to Atom processor and 1GB memory is equipped with a 250 GB hard drive. For an optical drive CD / DVD is not enough space. No flash, much faster, are used as standard, thanks to high prices of these SSDs (solid state drives). It is unfortunate that such statements are not used, they are much quieter than the classic hard drives. However it is indicated that hardware to be quiet so as not to disturb others especially when used in public spaces. Housing must be a stable plastic, to withstand wear better created by using mobile netbook. Glossy cover models who are demanding and must be cared for at all times, while matte or slightly structured enclosures are easy to use.
Typing should be done in luck
utilization in practice is given netbook keyboard buttons and alternative use of the mouse. Although the area under the keyboard is small, the size of keys and their order must correspond to the classic computer keyboards. If the distance between keys is less than 19 mm or position shift keys, enter, etc.. places are not common, occur more spelling mistakes and lose precious time for correction. Keys must have clear points of touch and pressure. In practice using keyboards without spaces between the keys. Cursor movement is performed using a touchpad, which has two additional buttons – right button counterpart, namely the left mouse. Touch surface of the touchpad should be large enough to react to finger movements. Additional keys must be positioned so as to be handy. How to use these keys is made ​​differently by users, it is advisable to try before buying netbook.
Windows 7 makes mobile
license Microsoft offers manufacturers a simplified version of the current operating system at a promotional price, making the final price for a netbook buyer to please. Windows 7 Starter version gives more used to media centers, which facilitates management and playback of TV clips, pictures and audio files using Windows Media Player’s, part of the operating system. DVD playback on an external drive is impossible. 32-bit operating system does not support touch screens. Wallpaper and sound system also can not be changed. These saving measures have a role too important not to use mobile netbook, especially multitasking operating system that can execute multiple processes in parallel. Starter bad is that preinstalled version is closely related to hardware demands. This explains the similar provision of netbooks. Who wants to avoid these restrictions, you must pull more money out of pocket and can buy Windows 7 Home Premium version. Can thus buy a 1215P Asus Eee PC at a price of 449 euros with 2GB memory.
Liaising with mobile networks
Netbooks connect to the internet via wireless LAN. Present generation of devices usually support all versions of common WLAN (802.11 b / g / n) with rates of 54 Mbps raw data, even 300 Mbps. A well-equipped netbook is shown to have installed a Bluetooth module for wireless connection to ensure a smartphone, a printer or other devices nearby.
A link between netbook and a Bluetooth mobile phone with modem UMTS / HSPA integrated, making can access the Internet through your mobile. Operators provide subsidized netbooks with integrated UMTS modem and SIM card externally, including all necessary data rates. Those who want mobile Internet access with multiple computers alternatively, may opt for a surf stick to HSPA operators, connecting to the internet easy and flexible.
Do not miss a connection
standard repertoire of contacts with the outside world enables the widespread use of mini PCs. A LAN output enables connection netbook wired home network. Three USB 2.0 interface for UMTS sticks, flash memory and a mouse a netbook related equipment. Those who want to charge your iPhone or mobile phone even when the netbook is not working, you can use a USB connection. Netbook is provided with slot for SD memory card, SDHC or MMC and two 3.5 mm jacks. The audio inputs that can connect a headset performance. Using a headset microphone is shown as the integrated and the integrated speakers you can not expect too much. If the edge of the screen there is a webcam, then communication via Skype & Co., is no longer anything in its path. To submit pictures or to make a presentation at a business meeting and VGA output using pictures or slides can play in larger size. HDMI digital output in the near future will be enhanced to allow playback Full HD TVs in May bunăpe. USB 3.0 interfaces promise faster data transfer, provided that the communication partner to have this opportunity. These exclusive features are still very expensive and not justified only in situations where concrete is known to use USB 3.0 or HDMI.
Software and other
big advantage of a netbook is that the user has to reach frequently used programs. Starter Edition is pre-installed Word and Excel Free – simplified form of Office 2010. If the user does not want to give up some features and is not interested in ads that appear to play space decreases documents may wish to install these programs with the license, which costs extra. However additional programs can use limited pre-installed free in this form. You should not give too much importance to buying a netbook offered extra programs. A chic case, well-prepared, a display of high quality and autonomy are the most important characteristics of a netbook purchase. If the keypad proves easy to use, the netbook is a mobile companion, which can be worn long discussions.
Some models take into account:
Asus Eee PC 1215P
High Resolution 12.1-inch (1366 x 768 pixels) offers comfort to surf the Internet. Processor Intel Atom Dual Core Series 2 GB, Windows 7 Home Premium preinstalled. Stable plastic housing comes in silver, red or black (matte or glossy).
Acer Aspire One 522
Equipped with a 10.1 inch screen, this netbook is ready to play HD movies and promises many rewards as you travel. Graphics card is a Radeon HD 6250, the processor is dual core C-50 (Fusion). Netbook has a 1080p HDMI video output. The operating system is Windows 7 Starter.
HP Mini 210
More power, funny colors. New Dual Core Atom is the processor (N550), which has more power especially is more economical in terms of energy. The keyboard is no space between the keys and has a touchpad. For use in nature, Mini 110 (priced from 279 euros) offers a slightly modified version, with a 10.1-inch matte display and a simple processor (N455).
Samsung NC 110
This netbook comes with an Intel Atom (N455 frequency of 1.66 GHz), 1 GB RAM, motherboard 250 GB and a 10.1 inch screen with WSVGA resolution (1024 x 600), Windows 7 Starter. This netbook is equipped with good but not spectacular. What it raises is 6-cell battery that promises autonomy with the 6600 mAh extended, especially equipment that creates the conditions to support a large autonomy.

Source:http://www.connect.ro/sfaturi-pentru-achizitionarea-unui-laptop-compact/

China to drive growth wave in PC industry

June 27th, 2011

China will become a major driver of the worldwide PC market over the next five years, research firm Gartner Inc said recently, citing commercial demand from lower-tier Chinese cities.

The global PC market is forecast to grow at 9.2 percent year-on-year this year, slower than previous years because of the impact of tablet computers, stalling business models and changing consumer behavior, according to Gartner.

As mature markets like the US, Europe and Japan have encountered economic headwinds, emerging markets will represent nearly 50 percent of the global PC market this year, which is expected to reach about 385 million units in total, the research firm said.

Tracy Tsai, principal research analyst at Gartner, told a media briefing that PC shipments in China reached 16.8 million units in the first quarter of this year, pushing the country past the US to become the world’s largest PC market.

market driver

“China represents a great driver of the global PC market,” she said. “All PC vendors are increasing their investments in the country to consolidate their market share over the next three to five years.”

In the first three months of this year, Lenovo Group Ltd (聯想) led the Chinese PC market with over 25 percent of the market share, followed by Dell Inc, Acer Inc (宏碁), Hewlett-Packard Co and Asustek Computer Inc (華碩).

Taiwan-based Acer recorded the highest year-on-year shipment growth of 203 percent in the period thanks to a tie-up with Chinese PC vendor Founder Group (方正集團), while Hewlett-Packard, which continues to be hurt by product recalls in 2009 and last year, became the biggest loser among the top five vendors with a decrease of 11 percent from a year earlier.

opportunities

Tsai predicted better PC growth opportunities in the commercial segment of tier three to tier six Chinese cities from this year to 2013, which will need more hardware such as computers to improve infrastructure.

However, growth will be slower than that experienced in higher-tier cities because of relatively lower personal incomes and fragmented reseller channels, Tsai said.

According to Gartner, the compound annual growth rate in the Chinese PC market will be around 16.5 percent from this year to 2015, lower than the 24 percent recorded from 2006 to last year.

“The PC market is expected to benefit from China’s next economic plan, which will shorten the wealth gap in inner and western regions by 2015 and make personal computers affordable to most Chinese,” Tsai said.

Small businesses will continue to be the fastest-growing professional segment, while the replacement of desktop computers by mobile PCs will accelerate, Tsai added.

Source:http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/biz/archives/2011/06/27/2003506766

If not Android, then Windows 8?

June 27th, 2011

By the time Windows 8 tablets hit the market in 2012, Microsoft will have had ample time to analyze the initial missteps of the Android platform, not to mention its own unimpressive attempts at “slate” operating systems over the years. Generally speaking, Microsoft may miss with the first few whacks at something new but they’re usually good at eventually nailing an operating environment. If only because of their tenacity. They will persevere for years, even decades, until they get it right.

And, in fact, it’s been about a decade since Microsoft announced the tablet concept. At that time, Bill Gates infamously predicated at the Comdex trade show in Las Vegas that “the tablet would become the most popular form of PC within five years…The size of a legal notepad and half the weight of most of today’s laptop PCs.”

Tack on a few years and that prediction may be getting close to the truth. Not at Microsoft or Motorola or Dell, but Apple.

Windows 8 may be a watershed, however. Thanks to Apple, Microsoft now has a much better idea of what a tablet should be. And tablets are large-screen (relative to smartphones) devices, an operating environment Microsoft is comfortable with. Better still, Windows 8 can tap into plenty of horsepower–another thing Microsoft is good at. By next year, chip suppliers like Nvidia, Qualcomm, and Texas Instruments will have improved dual-core–and, in some cases, quad-core–chips replete with improved graphics. Not to mention Intel’s plans to beef up its next-generation Atom processor by next year.

And since Windows 8 will run on both Intel and the ARM design-based chips cited above, Win 8 tablets will appear quickly, possibly in the form of a Microsoft-branded slate.

Did I mention apps? Microsoft has a few universally used applications–some might say pre-baked killer apps–that may work well in a Windows 8 tablet format. In short, never underestimate the demand for Microsoft Office. Microsoft could also move the tablet interface forward in a big way with a technology like Kinect.

All of this, I think, lays the groundwork for a successful platform. My only fear is that Microsoft and its partners fall prey to PC-itis and design clunky, thick, heavy tablets laden with ports in an effort to shoehorn a laptop into a tablet format. That would be a big mistake. (And, yes, Android 4.0 will have arrived by then, so the competition in non-Apple devices will not go away.)

But barring that scenario, would you buy a Windows 8 tablet? I see it as potentially giving the iPad a run for its money and likely equal to anything Google can concoct in the next 12 months.

Source:http://news.cnet.com/8301-13924_3-20074253-64/if-not-android-then-windows-8/

HP gambling on TouchPad tablet

June 27th, 2011

During an interview at Hewlett-Packard’s Palo Alto headquarters, Todd Bradley, the head of the $41 billion PC group, is, as always, full of praise for his microprocessor suppliers.

Intel and Advanced Micro Devices are “important partners,” he said. Then he holds up a TouchPad, his company’s first tablet computer, which is powered by a Qualcomm chip and HP’s in-house operating system, webOS. It goes on sale Friday, starting at $500.

“The AMD-Intel thing,” he said, “I think that’s kind of over.”

HP had no choice but to distance itself from the Microsoft-Intel ecosystem. For years, HP used its supply-chain prowess to lead a commodity PC market, and eke out 8 percent operating margins.

Now, in the age of mobile, HP’s margins are down to 5 or 6 percent. The TouchPad is part of a big gamble that began last year with HP’s $1.3 billion purchase of Palm and webOS: to build an ecosystem of its own, despite a landscape littered with the carcasses of others that tried.

For this bet to pay off, HP needs a tech trifecta.

First, webOS devices must offer Apple-like simplicity, built on top of loads of applications and content. It won’t be easy, but HP could quickly outdistance most iPad rivals, including tablets running Google’s Android operating system.

Like Apple, HP controls both the hardware and the software, which gives the company a huge design advantage, said Tim Bajarin, president of Creative Strategies.

“They at least are trying to control their destiny, while all the others are putting it in the hands of Google or Microsoft,” Bajarin said.

For instance, a webOS feature called Synergy lets developers design applications that talk to each other. Facebook friends’ birthdays automatically show up in your contacts. Work and personal calendars, even those of a spouse, appear together. Users can make a call using their wireless carrier or Skype, without having to open separate applications.

“The concept from the very beginning of this is, ‘Your life is moving to the cloud,’ ” said Jon Rubinstein, who helped create the iMac and iPod at Apple before becoming chief executive officer of Palm.

Second, HP must break Apple’s lock on developers. The TouchPad will hit the market with 300 tablet-specific applications. (The iPad has 90,000.) A recommendation engine will make it easier to discover new apps. Users who like cooking might see Epicurious pop up on their suggested list.

The company is wooing holdouts such as Netflix by offering slots in webOS Pivot, an app showcase on all webOS devices. It’s a cross between an app store and digital magazine.

“We’ll come out of the gates behind, but I’m really confident we’ll catch up,” Bradley said.

Even if HP nails webOS and wins over developers, there’s the obvious third task: getting people to buy the devices.

With its 20,000-plus global sales force, the company has a good shot at landing corporate customers, Bajarin said. To sell to consumers, he said, HP will have to train Best Buy and 600,000 other dealers to show customers the glories of webOS.

HP has paid retailers to set up its own section within stores and is dispatching several hundred employees to demonstrate the product next month, said Stephen DeWitt, Personal Systems Group senior vice president. HP is spending hundreds of millions on an ad blitz starring Jay-Z and other celebrities.

Bradley and Rubinstein say that if the TouchPad’s reception is lukewarm initially, they’ll be patient.

“We have a really good opportunity to become No. 2 in tablets fairly quickly,” Rubinstein said. “Possibly No. 1.”

Source:http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/06/26/BU1E1K1UAA.DTL&type=business

Microsoft’s Cloud-based Office 365 Still a Little Foggy in Beta Release

June 24th, 2011

Microsoft’s Office 365 is a cloud-based version of its well-known desktop and office applications, with Web versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Lync and more available as SaaS, or software-as-a-service.

Microsoft Office 365 will be released later this month.

The full Office 365 suite will be released very soon (target date: June 28th), with various subscription levels and packages aimed at small and medium sized businesses, as well as larger enterprises.

There is a dedicated Office 365 site for Canadians.

Online or cloud-based apps like Office 365 promise enhanced collaborative and sharing capabilities; reduced operating and hardware costs; as well as the ubiquity of Internet-based access to valuable business documents and administrative tools.

In some ways, Office 365 is Microsoft’s answer to Google’s own online app suite, which has been available as a free consumer version and a business solution for some time.

Office 365 offers users the abilty to create two websites – one is public, and very suitable in establishing an online presence for a SOHO or small business

The other is an internal or private site, established specifically for collaborative teamwork among employees, co-workers and staff.

So Office 365 was first unveiled last October, and it has been in public beta for several months now. Gathering feedback, wish lists, complaints and big reports is part of the process, and Microsoft is expected to address a few of the grey areas in its cloud service offerings with official release.

A press event planned for the official release date will reportedly have senior Microsoft executives speak to the beta development and enhancement process.

Meanwhile, a ‘first look’ evaluation here at What’s Your Tech.ca has been underway for a few weeks.

One initial concern was that the powerful Microsoft desktop software solutions are ‘too big’ and ‘too powerful’ to be web-based apps, but for the most part, they run reasonably well in a browser.

While full software functionality is very important to some (like in Excel spreadsheets), some users might find a scaled back version like Google’s apps to be smoother and faster to use.

The cloud’s been around for a while, and although it seems everywhere these days, in terms of new products and services, Microsoft was slow to offer a complete solution (some Office apps like Word, PowerPoint and Excel were online before the Office suite).

Office 365 provides online editions of Word, PPT, Excel and OneNote; e-mail and mobile calendaring is done through Exchange.

Server tools include in the package support SharePoint collaboration on the ‘Net, with Lync used for IM and other online conferencing and calling activities.

Designed to also support mobile media, it does appear that some bugs lurk – mobile phone users who may attempt to visit a public site may be asked for passwords and log-ins, and control over this is difficult, as the ability to turn off the mobile version of a site collection is not available through the online version of SharePoint (it is in SharePoint 2010, so maybe it will be ported over soon).

Some users have noted that it’s interesting that the new online suite uses Outlook Exchange servers for e-mail versus Windows Live.

But Microsoft says the Exchange Online feature in Office 365 will have more robust search, archiving, retention and other admin features.

But right now, moving users to Outlook Exchange Online does require some new cloud-based migration tools.

Other admin tools in the beta Office 365 allow users to connect their company’s current domain, and to create those two distinct webites. While the interface seems straightforward (Add a Domain) enough at first, the fact is that if you are not careful – and knowledgeable – misconfiguration of some not so common records can occur.

Configuring the DNS settings for your company’s Web and email domain properly is crucial, so some tweaking of the instructions, user’s guide or actual functionality may be needed here.

Even if you get through the five or six steps successfully, the domain setting changes still have to be confirmed at the company service provider, which can take a few days with some companies.

So while the Office 365 seems aimed at as wide a swath of users as possible, the admin section alone drives home the fact that for a company to use the service, there still needs to be at least one reasonably advanced computer nearby – either someone who is an advanced Office users, and/or someone with some hands-on blog or website admin experience.

So the benefits of cloud computing for small business, one of them at least, is the ability to reduce IT overhead in house, and yet still have a big capability in terms of being able to access programs, data and services online.

It’s true that a small company or a home based office operation could run entirely in the cloud, with full access to the Office 365 suite of critical business tools for communication, scheduling, accounting and more (it’s unclear right now how well existing direct customer billing processes can be integrate into the Office suite), but the need for a reasonably skilled IT person has not been entirely eliminated it seems. Microsoft does offer support, of course, for users if needed.

With your company’s apps and documents stored in the cloud, a business can reduce or eliminate some hardware costs associated with new server or storage technology.

There are some costs still associated with using Office 365, for sure, but at least they are predictable Ands less susceptible to fluctuating as needed third-party IT support.

Office 365 is not a one-size fits all solution, so companies have to look carefully at a rather complex series of price points, plans and options (including an Office Professional Plus software add-on) that are available, anywhere from about two dollars to more than $25 per user per month). And there are still license considerations for the desktop apps being mirrored in the cloud (if you need both, you may need to pay for both).

One other cost, or risk to be evaluated, is in the nature of cloud computing in general. Businesses must consider, from a safety, security and legislative compliancy point of view, if cloud based services are appropriate and possible for them.

For many businesses, all that will still be a lot cheaper than operating on in-house IT department, or facing capital costs increases.

Microsoft Office 365 is designed to let you and your co-workers work from virtually anywhere and on almost any device. The benefits can be quite substantial, whether you run a small office or a large enterprise.

As the product matures, it will be interesting to see just how bright and sunny the cloud can be for the bottom line.

Source:http://whatsyourtech.ca/2011/06/24/microsoft%E2%80%99s-cloud-based-office-365-still-a-little-foggy-in-beta-release/

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