Archive for September, 2011

Hexagrid Certifies Boston IT Partnership for Cloud Hardware and Integration

September 28th, 2011

Hexagrid, a leading developer of cloud enablement solutions, announces today a partnership with Boston Limited, an established distributor and integrator of Supermicro Computer server and storage solutions (NASDAQ: SMCI), to build complete pre-configured Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) clouds as an optimized solution delivery model that simplifies and accelerates private cloud adoption.
“We are excited to team-up with Boston Limited to co-engineer pre-packaged private clouds that streamline business adoption and service delivery with maximum ROI potential for both end-users and solution providers,” says Suresh Mandava, CEO of Hexagrid Computing. “This partnership promises to simplify private cloud deployment for our distribution partners who deliver customized cloud solutions to business end-users. Now, for one predictably low price, cloud solution providers offer their customers a comprehensive private cloud package that’s business-ready and massively scalable with plug-and-play simplicity. With the Hexagrid-Boston Partnership, solution providers can deliver the best of both worlds with private cloud security and public cloud support.”
Hexagrid and Boston Limited have co-engineered these bundled private clouds for optimal hardware utilization, speed-to-market cloud delivery, and remotely managed-service capability all pre-configured for unparalleled plug-in-and-go performance. This partnership will simplify and thereby accelerate private cloud adoption as Boston Limited integrates Hexagrid’s award-winning IaaS software for solution providers to deliver as either a hosted-private or on-premise private cloud. The Hexagrid-Boston Partnership currently offers two cloud configurations based on power optimized Supermicro™ hardware, including the eight-node MicroCloud® and the four-node Boston Quattro® which both include clustered file storage and remote management capabilities. These off the shelf solutions enable service providers to easily deliver these pre-packaged cloud modules out-of-the-box or augmented with additional services to build cloud solutions further tailored to meet clients’ needs.
“These pre-packaged Hexagrid IaaS cloud computing platforms have been jointly engineered by Boston and Supermicro™ as optimized appliances for creating private clouds,” says Manoj Nayee, Managing Director of Boston Limited. “Hexagrid’s Unovie Cloud is suitable for the most demanding applications and is sold as a business-ready out-of-box offering to achieve a complete private cloud software stack running on our MicroCloud® and Quattro® solutions. These solutions make use of local storage and external NFS or iSCSI and high performance networking options are supported with 10GbE and low-latency onboard QDR InfiniBand options. We are delighted with this collaborative partnership with Hexagrid and look forward to launching these solutions today at Interop Mumbai in India.”
Hexagrid will showcase the Boston Limited MicroCloud® and Quattro® private cloud configurations on September 28-30 at Interop Mumbai, booth numbers 60 and 61—the cornerstone of the cloud computing zone. Follow @Hexagrid on Twitter or contact us to learn more about how the Hexagrid-Boston partnership simplifies and accelerates both business adoption and service provider delivery of private IaaS cloud solutions.

Source:http://www.prweb.com/releases/2011/9/prweb8834590.htm

Price of new Amazon tablet could be big attraction

September 28th, 2011

Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) is expected to launch its long-awaited tablet computer on Wednesday, sporting a low-enough price to give Apple Inc’s (AAPL.O) iPad some serious competition for the first time.

At a news conference Wednesday morning in New York, Amazon will likely unveil a seven-inch tablet that will let users read e-books, download digital music and video games and stream movies and TV shows.

Analysts expect the tablet to be priced around $250, roughly half the price of Apple’s dominant iPad, which starts at $499.

“If Amazon prices the Kindle Fire at $250, it has the potential to become the most successful competitor to the iPad,” Gene Munster, an analyst at PiperJaffray, said on Tuesday.

Having its own tablet is important for Amazon because the company has amassed a mountain of digital goods and services that could be sold through such a device. As the world’s largest Internet retailer, a tablet might also encourage Amazon customers to shop online for physical products more often.

Munster surveyed 410 consumers last week, asking whether they would buy a 10-inch iPad for $599 or a seven-inch Amazon tablet at $249.

Just over 60 percent of those surveyed said they would purchase the Amazon device, while 21 percent said they would likely buy the iPad, Munster reported. The analyst used a $599 price because he said that is the average price of the iPad.

“It all comes down to price point,” said Colin Gillis, an analyst at BGC Parnters. “To crack into the tablet market, that’s really the only variable where you can truly compete right now.”

A lower price on Amazon’s tablet will likely mean the device will have fewer bells and whistles than the iPad.

Amazon outsourced the hardware design and manufacture to Quanta Computer Inc (2382.TW), a big Taiwan-based firm that makes computers and tablets for other PC companies, according to consumer-electronic news website gdgt.com.

Mary Osako, a spokeswoman at Amazon, did not return a phone message and email sent seeking comment.

The Kindle Fire may have a slower processor than Research in Motion Ltd’s (RIM.TO) PlayBook, which was also made by Quanta, gdgt.com reported this week. TechCrunch said the Kindle Fire will not have cameras, unlike the iPad.

Still, Munster said a lack of high-end features might not deter most tablet users.

PiperJaffray’s survey found the top four uses of tablets were Internet browsing, reading, watching movies and playing games.

Source:http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/09/27/amazon-idUSS1E78Q18620110927

Apple Talk: iPad hardware case against Samsung’s Galaxy Tab is patent nonsense

September 28th, 2011

Apple recently won the latest legal battle in its ongoing war with key competitor and key component supplier Samsung.

A German judge appears to have agreed with Apple’s assertion that Samsung has “slavishly” copied the iPad with its latest tablet the Galaxy Tab 10. The Galaxy Tab is consequently banned from going on sale in Germany.

Explaining her decision, judge Johanna Brückner-Hoffmann stated: “The court is of the opinion that Apple’s minimalistic design isn’t the only technical solution to make a tablet computer. Other designs are possible.”

She added: “For the informed customer there remains the predominant overall impression that the device looks [like the iPad].”

I have little sympathy with Apple’s assertions about Samsung and others imitating its hardware, particularly when it claims the iPad’s form has been imitated. Tablets existed before the iPad and in principle they all look similar.

Two of Apple’s design claims were “a rectangular product shape with all four corners uniformly rounded” and “the front surface of the product dominated by a screen surface with black borders”. You can see why Samsung might feel aggrieved.

In its defence, Samsung produced documents claiming film director Stanley Kubrick invented the tablet form when he had his astronauts watch news videos on iPad-like devices in 2001: A Space Odyssey. The filing summed up how daft that part of the case was.

I’ve held a dozen tablets and none of them looks exactly alike but they all look tablety. Every tablet looks more or less the same and Apple can hardly claim to have invented the form factor, any more than it can claim to have invented the form factor of touchscreen phones.

It’s what happens when you turn them on that makes the difference, and this is where I do have sympathy with Apple’s case. The physical form of the device is less important than the software that gives it life. Apple has understood that this key point is the only way of making tablets commercially successful – through its iOS software and its touch paradigms.

Windows tablets and touchscreen devices have been around for a while. They failed to capture either the imagination of consumers or the unit sales in the way the iPad has. Most relied on desktop versions of Windows and, heaven forbid, a stylus.

iOS is the main reasonthe iPhone and the iPad have been a success and it’s hard to argue that Android hasn’t taken more than a little inspiration from iOS. Likewise, QNX and webOS.

Two more Apple trade dress claims relate to a display of a “grid of colourful square icons with uniformly rounded corners” and “a bottom row of square icons – the springboard – set off from the other icons and that do not change as the other pages of the user interface are viewed”.

Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10 is at the epicentre of Apple’s patent firestorm, designed to protect the iPad
Photo: Samsung
Looking at Android and other mobile operating systems that utilise trays of icons, it’s easy to see why Apple is arguing this point.

I remember Steve Jobs at the 2007 keynote introducing the iPhone. “We have invented a new technology called multitouch, which is phenomenal,” Jobs told delegates.

He listed some of its key features, such as its accuracy and the range and added: “And boy, have we patented it.” Turns out he wasn’t kidding.

Yes, Apple has clearly taken on elements of both the BlackBerry and Android recently in iOS 5. The notifications screen and iMessage are two examples. However, Android couldn’t exist without the iPhone, neither could the PlayBook or the webOS devices. These are embellishments on a theme and not a reinvention of the big idea.

There are three major challenges for iPad competitors.

The first is avoiding the patent firestorm taking place at the moment by flying too close to Apple’s look and feel. It’s hard to do another way, and takes R&D and money. It’s much easier to shake hands with an imitator than to start from scratch.

The second is in marketing. Consumers have to recognise a tablet as a tablet. The iPad is currently dominant and consumers think of the iPad as a tablet.

Some claim there is no tablet market: there’s an iPad market. But really the issue here is the mindset of consumers about what represents a tablet. If it doesn’t look like an iPad, it may not sell. If it looks too much like an iPad, then you get sued.

The longer Apple manages to keep its competitors at bay in certain territories through patent disputes, the longer its marketing messages can sell the iPad vision.

On the face of this, the challenge is either to reinvent the tablet or to reinvent the peripheral areas of the OS to make it sufficiently different to avoid litigation.

Which brings us to the third, more difficult challenge: to innovate and start afresh.

Customer choice would be greatly improved if competitors choose to innovate at the software level the way Microsoft is doing. And no, I can’t believe I just wrote that either.

Microsoft unveiled Windows 8 a short time after judge Brückner-Hoffmann issued her judgement against Samsung. “Other designs are possible,” she said, and here’s Microsoft right on cue.

Stung by years of copycat accusations from Apple and the rest of the industry, Microsoft went back to the drawing board and reimagined its Windows Phone software.

The Metro interface, shortly to be reinvented as Mango, is a refreshing change from the standard grid alignment of square icons waiting to be jabbed and swiped. Microsoft’s tiles offer a combination of launch icons and app previews, snippets of text and data.

It’s true that Windows 8 suffers from Microsoft’s ideological insistence that PCs will last forever – the tablet interface sits on top of the standard Windows interface. It also suffers because it’s not going to be released for another 12 months or so but it is a refreshing change of approach.

There are other advantages to innovating on software design, beyond not being sued senseless by Apple’s vast legal corps armed with its patent arsenal.

As the market matures, it will surely benefit from some of the innovation that Microsoft will deliver sometime in 2012 with Windows 8.

The iOS interface has been around since 2007 and has changed little in overall appearance or in how users interact with it.

A number of my friends who work in design and user experience are eyeing the Windows Phone interface with great interest. Dyed-in-the-wool Apple fans lusting after Microsoft products.

For the time being, the iPad’s paradigm of tablet computing defines the genre. Over time the attraction of something a little different might appeal to the iPad audience. Familiarity breeds contempt.

“Other designs are possible.” Amen to that.

Source:http://www.silicon.com/technology/hardware/2011/09/27/apple-talk-ipad-hardware-case-against-samsungs-galaxy-tab-is-patent-nonsense-39748003/

IT industry news: Pricier tablets ‘doesn’t mean better tablets’

September 28th, 2011

More expensive tablet computers are not the ones with the better features and quality, according to James Holland, editor at electricpig.co.uk, a gadget news website.

“It’s all down to the care and consideration used by the manufacturers,” he explained.

He illustrated his point by recalling the “ill-fated” HP Touchpad. “It’s a fantastic device, and now it’s been discontinued, the prices are falling and it is flying off the shelves,” he said, adding this was a great example of hardware and software working together well.

He said right now a few Android tablets come close to marrying up the hardware and software experience. But he said they still feel “clunky”.

In other IT industry news, It is marketers and sales and business executives who are exploring the potential of flexible working via devices such as tablets and smartphones rather than IT professionals, Echoworx has speculated.

Source:http://www.computeach.co.uk/IT-news/IT-Computer-Technology-News/IT-industry-news-Pricier-tablets-doesn-t-mean-better-tablets/800739032

Toshiba announces DX735 AIO computer

September 28th, 2011

Toshiba has announced a new AIO computer that will launch soon called the DX735. The computer has a 23-inch full HD multi-touch screen and is designed to be an entertainment hub for the dorm or home. The machine is designed to be space saving and offer a good viewing experience. Toshiba ships the machine with a Bluetooth wireless keyboard that has a 10-key number pad.

The machine also comes with a wireless mouse that uses Bluetooth. Both the mouse and keyboard are paired out of the box so the machine is ready to use. The AIO has a HDMI input to allow the connection of game consoles or other components. Toshiba also gave the AIO Onkyo speakers for sound quality when gaming or watching movies on the screen.

The hardware includes a second gen Intel Core i5 or i7 processor, 4GB of DDR3 RAM, and a 1TB HDD. The computer also has a USB 3.0 port with Sleep and Charge and a quartet of USB 2.0 ports. An integrated SuperMulti drive is located on the side of the machine. It will launch October 2 for $956.99 and will be available in Best Buy locations.

Source:http://www.slashgear.com/toshiba-announces-dx735-aio-computer-27183204/

Lenovo in $300m joint venture in China

September 28th, 2011

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Lenovo, the world’s third-largest PC company by unit shipments, is setting up a US$300m joint venture with one of its contract manufacturers, an unprecedented step which underscores the pressures in the computer industry.

Lenovo and Compal, the world’s second-largest notebook contract manufacturer by unit shipments, said the new venture, in which Lenovo will hold a 51 per cent stake, would build a new plant in Hefei, the capital of the central Chinese province of Anhui, to produce laptops and all-in-one desktop computers from late 2012.

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Both companies’ shares rose after the announcement. Lenovo shares jumped 8.5 per cent in Hong Kong, and Compal was up 5.9 per cent in Taiwan. But analysts expressed some doubts about the move.

“This is a fairly abnormal thing,” said Alvin Kwock, a technology analyst at JPMorgan. “It may be an attempt by Lenovo to secure capacity as [contract manufacturers’ ] strategies are changing.”

Quanta and Wistron, Compal’s two largest rivals in the notebook manufacturing business, have started making servers for cloud operators such as Google and Facebook, in an attempt to escape the profit margin squeeze imposed by a few powerful notebook brands such as Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Lenovo and Acer.

Compal said the company used a joint venture model because competitive pressure and the increasing complexity of making PCs meant that it is no longer possible for contract manufacturers to shoulder all the costs of building new plants.

“For notebook PCs, we have seen the trend of there being more and more different models, with shorter and shorter time for each product cycle. This has meant a need for more engineers and for PC manufacturers to quickly build up an ecosystem,” said Gary Lu, finance chief at Compal.

Lenovo has long made a much higher proportion of its PCs in factories of its own than its competitors. While HP, Dell and Acer outsource almost all production, Lenovo owns five other factories in China and several others in India, Europe and the Americas.

The company argues that this makes it more flexible and helps it retain a stronger product innovation capability, but investors have challenged that notion and stressed that using contract manufacturers helps PC brands to bring products to market much faster and their much larger factories help bring down cost.

With the joint venture, Lenovo hopes to combine the strengths of both models while ensuring capacity and limiting the cost burden in a downcycle.

The move to set up the plant in Hefei opens up yet another new frontier in technology hardware companies’ move away from the traditional manufacturing hubs in coastal China where costs are skyrocketing. It follows the formation of a new PC manufacturing cluster in the cities of Chongqing and Chengdu in Western China.

But some analysts questioned the choice of location, saying that it could be due to government pressure and might pose a challenge to Compal to operate there.

Source:http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/269aad14-e8f3-11e0-ac9c-00144feab49a.html#axzz1ZGXYfVru

Easy PC Troubleshooter Pro

September 28th, 2011

Easy PC Troubleshooter Pro is an application designed for the Android smartphone that allows users to solve a wide variety of computer-related problems from their Android. Easy PC Troubleshooter Pro is ideal for users who have a computer that is running Windows 7, but may be used for any operating system. Easy PC Troubleshooter Pro is available from the Android Market for $0.99 and can be installed either directly or manually, depending on the user’s preference.

How To Use Easy PC Troubleshooter Pro

While other programs that are designed to assist users who are experiencing technical difficulties often require the user to answer questions about their current system specifications as well as the issue itself, Easy PC Troubleshooter Pro includes an explanation of what causes each issue and how to fix it without requiring the user to input any information. Once the user has installed Easy PC Troubleshooter Pro on his/her Android smartphone, he/she can open the application and choose between Troubleshooting, Installation, or Reference, which each cover a wide variety of solutions. While Troubleshooting consists of solutions for technical problems, such as BSOD (Blue Screen of Death), slow CPU, and no Internet connection, Installation includes detailed instructions for installing hardware components, including storage devices, RAM, video cards, and the Windows Operating System. Additionally, the Reference menu features resources, such as diagrams, shortcuts, and default router IP addresses, that can be used to solve all other problems not covered in the rest of the application.

Advantages

Easy PC Troubleshooter Pro is an advantageous application because it allows users to correct computer-related errors from their Android smartphone when access to the malfunctioning computer is unavailable. Users who have this application can easily find solutions to the most common computer-related issues at the click of a button and keep the instructions pulled up while repairing the computer itself. While the application has a few minor disadvantages, the application only costs $0.99 and is well worth it.

Disadvantages

Disadvantages of Easy PC Trouble Pro include a relatively long loading time compared to other applications and may occasionally fail while loading if the user installs the application manually rather than directly from the Android Market. Users should also note that the application includes a built-in Back button and that pressing the Android Back button will take the user back to his/her App list. These issues are said to be corrected in the next update of the application.

Source:http://www.tech-faq.com/easy-pc-troubleshooter-pro.html

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