Archive for November, 2011

HP unveils new products for sorting ‘unstructured data’

November 30th, 2011

Determined to make the most of a controversial $10 billion acquisition, Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) on Tuesday said it has developed new products that combine software-maker Autonomy’s ability to sort through so-called “unstructured data” with other analytics software and with HP’s commercial computer hardware.

The new products should help business and government customers parse information from a variety of sources, from traditional financial records to social networking posts, and identify useful patterns or trends, according to HP Executive Vice President Michael Lynch, who was a co-founder and CEO of Autonomy until HP bought the company this fall.

Analysts say that’s a growing market where HP has lagged behind some of its biggest tech rivals, as well as some smaller software companies.
“HP has not been a part of that conversation” for most customers, said Mark Smith of Ventana Research, an independent consulting firm, who added that IBM, Oracle (ORCL) and Germany’s SAP “have all been capitalizing on” the burgeoning interest in data analytics.

The new products are the first to result from the Autonomy deal, which former HP CEO Léo

Apotheker negotiated last summer. While some experts praised Autonomy’s software, many said the deal’s price was excessive, at roughly ten times Autonomy’s annual revenue.

Apotheker announced other controversial moves on the same day, Aug. 18, including the prospect that HP might exit the personal computer business. A month later, HP’s board dumped Apotheker and replaced him with Meg Whitman, who decided to keep HP’s PC business while also endorsing the Autonomy deal.

Lynch now reports to Whitman and oversees a new HP business unit that sells software from Autonomy and other recent acquisitions, including Vertica, which makes software for analyzing structured data, such as transaction records, that can be stored in columns or rows.

One new product announced Tuesday is an updated version of Autonomy’s main product, known as IDOL, which the company has touted for its ability to search
“unstructured” data such as audio and video recordings as well as blog posts and emails. The new version incorporates Vertica’s software for analyzing structured data, Lynch said in an interview, “so it can handle both structured and unstructured information, seamlessly.”

HP also announced a line of “appliances,” or self-contained computer systems that will come with Autonomy’s software and other programs pre-installed on HP hardware that is tuned for specific purposes, such as archiving data or searching for digital records to comply with legal or regulatory orders.

Oracle has also developed new appliances that combine data analytics and other software with hardware from its acquisition of Sun Microsystems. While Autonomy has traditionally sold to big corporations, Lynch said HP will also market the appliances as an easy-to-use product for smaller companies.

Whitman, meanwhile, told analysts last week that Lynch’s unit has developed new sales leads for HP’s hardware business, which in turn is sharing names of prospective customers with the software operation.

Autonomy’s line of products includes software from other acquisitions, and some analysts say the company needs to integrate those tools in a more cohesive package,

while augmenting them with additional deals.

Whitman has said HP won’t make any more big acquisitions for a while, although she also told analysts that she may be open to software deals for $1 billion or less — “but we’ve got to be sure it fills a hole, that we don’t pay too much for it and that we are financially disciplined about it.”

Source:http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_19428839

IOCELL NetDISK 351UNE Network Storage Device

November 29th, 2011

The first thing that IOCELL Networks wants you to know about the NetDISK 351UNE is that it is not a NAS; instead it is a network-direct-attached-storage (NDAS) device. It does not function as a server, and there are some distinct benefits that come with that. For one: size, cost and complexity go way down. Two: it does not use TCP/IP to connect to your network, which eliminates all common TCP/IP-based methods for hacking into your data. Three: it’s faster, since there is so much less overhead to manage. Sometimes, less is more. Benchmark Reviews has looked at several full-range NAS products in the last few months, now let’s investigate what a more tightly focused approach can provide.

The NetDISK 351UNE uses a proprietary Lean Packet Exchange (LPX) protocol to transfer data to and from your network, and this protocol is contained in a driver package that must be loaded on each computer that desires access to the data store. Before you balk at that, it’s the same with printers, scanners, or any other peripheral device on your network, so don’t despair. There are advantages, such as the fact that no one is likely to hack into your LPX device. I’ll take that over troubles with DHCP settings, any day.

The IOCELL NetDISK 351UNE is the first logical step up from an ordinary direct-attached-storage device. Hooking an external drive up to your PC with USB 3.0 or eSATA makes that storage available on the PC it’s connected to, and it can also be accessed by other computers on the network through drive sharing. The downside is that the target PC may not always be turned on, or if it’s a laptop, it may not even be in the building. Also, folder sharing is still a little cumbersome, and introduces security risks. If you’re worried about hidden malware on your own PC, just imagine the number and the types of threats that are contained on the typical teenager’s laptop.

The 351UNE is one of the lowest cost storage units on the market to offer a full complement of interfaces – Ethernet, eSATA, and USB. The unit I tested came without a drive, and there are also units available with 1TB and 2TB drives installed at the factory. I like the ability to choose the brand and type of HDD that contains my data, so this unit is the one I would most likely purchase.

Three features dominate the discussion of network storage hardware: data capacity, data security, and data transfer speed. The current crop of NAS devices offer a dizzying array of applications to help manage and distribute the data, and provide several new ways of accessing that data. The 351UNE is content to live a simpler life, serving up files and folders with a stripped down interface that looks and acts just like a local drive. As such, it focuses intently on those three critical features: capacity, security and speed. Going back to basics also caps the cost as well, which always an advantage.

Benchmark Reviews wants to believe that smaller, faster and cheaper is better, but we remain skeptics at heart. Let’s dig in and carry out a full review of this new class of network storage products, and see how it compares to more traditional solutions.

Source:http://benchmarkreviews.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=849&Itemid=70

A Computer Cluster for Those Cold Winter Nights

November 29th, 2011

As servers get denser and hotter, datacenters are scrambling for ways to get rid of all that waste heat. But for the average homeowner forking out thousands of dollars a year to keep their house warm, the idea of waste heat is something of an oxymoron.

Why not just put the servers in peoples’ homes and let nature do the rest? A recent article in the New York Times points to some research that aims to do just that. The article describes a paper presented at the latest USENIX Workshop on Hot Topics in Cloud Computing that makes a case for relocating compute cloud servers inside homes, where the waste heat can be recycled at the source. The researchers, who hail from Microsoft and the University of Virginia, refer to the concept as the “data furnace.”

From a manageability and security point of view, the researchers admit that, at least initially, the most likely scenario for waste heat recovery is for mid-sized datacenters that can be relocated in or near office buildings or apartment complexes. In fact, there are experimental versions of this model starting to pop up around the world, especially where electricity rates are high.

The NYT article mentions the IBM Research-Zurich effort I.B.M. Research-Zurich to recapture waste heat from a water-cooled supercomputer for a local university. The technology, called Aquasar, uses hot water to cool the processors on the x86 servers — water which can then be used for to warm buildings. Next year, that research will get a field trial with the three-petaflop SuperMUC supercomputer to be installed in Munich, Germany

But the paper’s primary purpose is to push the envelope beyond these larger-scale setups and look at the feasibility of setting up micro-datacenters to be used as the primary heat source in a single family home. The researchers performed a TCO analysis of their data furnace idea across different climates by looking at the costs/benefits in five cities: Minneapolis, Pittsburgh, Washington DC, San Francisco, and Houston.

They used Dell PowerEdge 850 servers as the hardware and assumed a 1700 square foot residential house that is moderately insulated and sealed with a heating setpoint of 21°C (70°F). They also assumed the necessary air circulation would be provided by the existing heat distribution system in the house. Even given that the residential electricity rates were twice as much as industrial rates, the results showed a savings of between $280 to $324 per year per server.

The analysis was done for generic cloud computing infrastructure, but it could also apply to typical HPC setups as well. The data furnaces can house 40 to 400 CPUs, which covers a lot of middle ground for moderate-sized HPC clusters today. In fact for HPC work, the economics may be even more favorable, given that these systems run hotter than the average cloud cluster and the resulting computational work tends to be more valuable.

Transferring large data sets to and fro, however, is another matter, given the limited broadband available to most homes. Security is another potential showstopper, and latency issues may also preclude a number of applications that require real-time response. Also, since your average homeowner is not a computer geek, system management can be another big challenge.

The paper goes into a lot more detail about different scenarios, various classes of data furnaces, and some of the other limitations. And while this looks impractical for certain types of applications, it offers a thought-provoking look at how true distributed computing might come to pass in the not too distant future.

Source:http://www.hpcwire.com/hpcwire/2011-11-28/a_computer_cluster_for_those_cold_winter_nights.html

Embedding Digital Certificates In Hardware

November 29th, 2011

It was always known that if we chain trust to a known trusted source that the overall trust is improved. Most of the implementations of PKI certificates use some hardware to store the private keys, so that forging a signature or obtaining a key is difficult. At this time, this hardware takes the form of hardware security modules (HSMs) in the case of server operations, or a USB device for client machines.
The question is: what if these keys were embedded in the processor itself?

It is only natural for the industry to attempt to combine the trusted hardware into the main processor — that will enhance the value of the hardware and make strong authentication part of the mainstream industry. The growth of applications that require strong authentication and the growth of ecommerce and other applications that handle sensitive data will perhaps make these feature very important additions to the standard “faster, better, cheaper” way of the growth of the processor industry.

A couple of issues about trust models: first, we should avoid the full flexibility that we did in the browser world since its beginning. A good number of the weaknesses of the current e-commerce environment can be avoided if we prevent “suspect” CAs from being trusted at the root, for example.

Secondly, we don’t want to swing the pendulum the other way completely and create monopolies. Instead, we should embark on designing a good system that will allow us to build this industry correctly. Allowing a trusted CA to be a part of the system should be easy to do, assuming that we know how to revoke a CA key and that revocation checking is a standard part of all operations — all standard operations.

Source:http://www.darkreading.com/authentication/blog/232200185/embedding-digital-certificates-in-hardware.html

Military crypto modernization leads to applications like smartphones, tablet computers on the battlefield

November 29th, 2011

Embeddable cryptographic processors used for crypto modernization are enabling a host of new military communications applications, such as smartphones and rugged tablet computers for tactical use on the front lines, as well as secure tactical Wi Fi, unmanned vehicle control, and real-time targeting.

Almost everyone has a sense that embedded computing technology constantly is becoming more powerful and power efficient, while getting smaller and more lightweight. We also see the results of this evolution: cell phones with more computing horsepower and capability than the Apollo 11 moon mission; ubiquitous global positioning system (GPS) satellite navigation for cars planes, and boats; and eReaders with instant access to thousands of books, magazines, and newspapers.

What some people might not realize, however, is the relentless forward progress of microprocessors, field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), digital signal processors (DSPs), small-form-factor single-board computers, and other advanced embedded computing technology also is making wireless communications safer and more secure. In fact, today’s small, fast, and power-efficient embedded computing is the primary enabling technology to a new generation of modernized cryptography that promises to provide secure wireless computing for military forces, even to the front lines of battle.

U.S. military and national security authorities are in the midst of the largest and most significant program of crypto modernization in the past half-century. Not only is advanced embedded computing paving the way to wearable and handheld computing and wireless communications that are secure from enemy interception and eavesdropping, but it also is making the case for never-before-used approaches to modern cryptography to safeguard vital military computing and communications.

While previous generations of military cryptography mandated the use of secret algorithms and stand-alone encryption hardware, today’s encryption technology increasingly is using commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) crypto algorithms and processing hardware as perhaps the most effective way of fighting off the effects of technology obsolescence, enabling network-centric military operations, coping with a flood of data dissemination and data sharing, making imagery and video a central component of military intelligence and situational awareness, fielding new technology quickly, keeping the costs of developing and maintaining cryptographic technology to a minimum, inserting the latest cryptographic capability into legacy secure systems, and ensuring interoperability among U.S. and allied secure communications and computer systems.

Crypto history

The heart of U.S. military cryptography has been, and remains today, the National Security Agency (NSA) at Fort Meade, Md. Any military communications or computing system using security encryption is subject to approval by the NSA to certify that encryption is effective and implemented correctly. Until recent years, moreover, the NSA actually developed military encryption algorithms, and maintained each algorithm as a closely held secret. These classified crypto algorithms were designated “Type 1″ security.

While the NSA still creates and administers classified Type 1 — or what today is called “Suite A” — crypto, what is new today is how the NSA amasses the nation’s arsenal of cryptographic technology. NSA over the past several years has begun accepting unclassified crypto algorithms created in private industry, as long as NSA experts can verify the effectiveness of these algorithms and certify them for deployed military systems. Industry-developed non-classified crypto algorithms most often are known as “Suite B” cryptography.

The NSA and U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) began the continuing Cryptographic Modernization Program in 2005 to solve problems in older crypto approaches, which included obsolescence, expensive maintenance, insufficient bandwidth, and difficult systems integration and systems upgrades.

Before the crypto modernization program began, “there hadn’t been many changes in how we developed and fielded crypto solutions,” explains Aaron Brosnan, director of tactical systems at military radio designer Thales Communications Inc. in Clarksburg, Md. “It was an obsolescence issue. We had crypto box solutions that were going obsolete and couldn’t be supported anymore.”

In addition, current needs for small electronic devices for applications such as unmanned vehicles or handheld devices is incompatible with legacy crypto technology, points out Don Turrentine, information assurance and core product manager at Rockwell Collins in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. “Back at the beginning of crypto modernization, the normal size of a cryptography subsystem might have been a 3-by-5-inch circuit board. There are now cryptographic subsystems on a chip about the size of your thumb nail.”

Compounding the problem today, Brosnan says, are more complex military communications, and the need for radio and crypto interoperability to communicate sensitive information with allied forces. “Nowadays everything is networked, and we need to use commercial solutions,” Brosnan says. “You can’t use point-to-point communications anymore, and we need to communicate with coalition forces.”

The case for crypto modernization

Data throughput in legacy crypto devices has failed to keep pace with modern military communications technology. “The previous generation of cryptographic equipment had throughput of less than 20 megabits per second, and that would cover all the devices,” says Rockwell Collins’s Turrentine. “Today industry can provide to the DOD cryptographic throughput in the tens of gigabits, which allows quick encryption and decryption of streaming video. The military can analyze this information and get usable intelligence back to the warfighter in a matter of minutes. That same process previously would take hours, if not days.”

In the recent past, most U.S. military cryptography involved hard-coded devices that were difficult and costly to upgrade, points out Troy Brunk, senior director of airborne communications products at Rockwell Collins. “Now crypto is in the way of software-defined technology, loadable crypto, and loadable updates to crypto.”

Brunk says military networking, computer technology, and information flow has exploded in recent years, which drives home the realization that “we can’t afford to be in a stove-pipe mode. We have to be able to respond to the technology quicker, hence the software-definable and -loadable algorithms.”

Staying with a system in which the NSA creates and maintains all crypto algorithms is simply too expensive for the government, says David Kleidermacher, chief technology officer at real-time software specialist Green Hills Software in Santa Barbara, Calif. “NSA says it’s too expensive to rely on these proprietary standards, and needs to take advantage of the commercial market, as well as promote open standards that get closer to what they need.”

Modern crypto approaches

Now that NSA officials are allowing the use of unclassified, industry-developed crypto algorithms for certain kinds of military communications, the typical crypto approach today involves three components: Suite A crypto, which uses classified NSA-administered algorithms for the most secret and sensitive communications; Suite B crypto, which uses unclassified crypto algorithms developed in industry; and the so-called “layered COTS” approach that layers different security products from different commercial vendors in a “good-enough” approach where appropriate. All approaches are subject to NSA certification and approval.

Suite A offers the highest level of security, and also is referred to as “Type-1″ crypto. “Suite A is a classified algorithm — even the algorithm is classified,” says Thales’s Brosnan. “You have to lock it up at night, and be careful how you treat it.” Suite A crypto is used for government communications up to top secret and beyond.

Still, Suite A crypto still has many of the problems associated with legacy crypto: it is difficult and costly to develop, maintain, and implement. It places a severe time and cost burden on the NSA. Suite A-encrypted systems, moreover, must be handled only by personnel with appropriate security clearances. Those without clearances cannot operate Suite A equipment, which severely limits how military forces can use it in the field.

Suite B crypto uses unclassified algorithms, which are openly published and understood. “People know it, and know how it works, but what makes it secure is how you implement it,” Brosnan says. Since Suite B crypto uses unclassified algorithms, personnel without security clearances can operate equipment using Suite B encryption, which opens up its use to a broad variety of warfighters — particularly those on the front lines. Suite B crypto often is appropriate for secret or otherwise sensitive information with a short shelf life — such as a position report on a moving enemy force.

Layered COTS, also called Commercial Solutions for Classified (CSFC), is perhaps the newest approach to crypto modernization. “Layered COTS means taking different security products from different vendors, and laying one on top of the other, and is good enough to protect secret,” explains Mike Guzelian, vice president of secure voice and data products at General Dynamics C4 Systems in Scottsdale, Ariz.

“You could have a laptop that runs a CISCO VPN piece of software — that is one layer of encryption — next to Juniper Networks running another layer; the data is getting encrypted twice,” Guzelian says. “The concept is it is less expensive and easier to use, but it really depends on the application.”

While layered COTS might not be quite a secure as Suite B and Suite A crypto, this approach holds the promise of being relatively inexpensive, quick to develop and field, and easy to maintain, in applications where it is appropriate. “You take commercial equipment, and layer off-the-shelf technologies out to the network and enterprise area,” says Richard Takahashi, director of information assurance products at military radio designer ITT Exelis Communications Systems in Tempe, Ariz.

“By layering different technologies you have equipment that can handle secret and below data,” Takahashi says. “The objective is to take advantage of commercial technology — particularly mobile devices — to handle secret-and-below data. The compromise is you are using off the shelf technology rather than full-custom secure equipment.”

Suite A crypto has limited use, layered COTS crypto still is in its infancy, and most of industry’s attention in cryptography and crypto modernization is on Suite B, industry experts say.

Enabling technologies

The primary enabling technologies for crypto modernization are the latest generations of small, fast, and power-efficient microprocessors, FPGAs, DSPs, and hypervisor software that enables different software operating systems to run together virtually with little risk of operating systems or data corrupting one another.

Encryption algorithms can be long and complex, yet today’s microprocessors, FPGAs, and DSPs have evolved in capability such that they are able to handle running crypto algorithms in real time. “We use the latest FPGA technology — nothing fancy,” says General Dynamics’s Guzelian. “Commercial processors have gotten to where they are fast enough to do it.”

As commercial processor technology has increased in speed and capability, so has industry’s ability to capitalize on commercial processors to develop specialized crypto processors — particularly for embedded applications in small handheld devices. “The enabling technologies are the COTS programmable crypto devices,” says Thales’s Brosnan. “There are a number of people who make that encryption device — L3, Raytheon, General Dynamics, Harris, ITT, and others.”

Thales is using the company’s Suite B-certified COTS programmable crypto processor in the Thales Rifleman radio, which is a handheld software-defined radio for infantry soldiers that complies with the DOD’s Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) program, Brosnan says.

“It can be a simpler implementation, because the crypto is in the software, and can take advantage of commercially available algorithms,” Brosnan says. “The whole idea of Suite B is getting NSA involved to endorse commercial algorithms, and if NSA decides it is implemented properly, they will certify the device.”

At Rockwell Collins, company crypto experts launched a program about six years ago to develop the company’s own programmable crypto engine and embed it in products such as the Rockwell Collins AN/ARC-210 military radio for aircraft, Brunk says. Embedding crypto in the radio saves space and weight, and enables the company either to make more lightweight radios or add capability.

New applications

Perhaps the most exciting aspect of crypto modernization involves the new applications that new crypto design approaches will facilitate. Among the highest-profile new applications will be commercial cell phones and tablet computers on the battlefield.

Green Hills Software, for example, is using its hypervisor technology to enable Android smartphones to run unencrypted data and encrypted secure data side-by-side on the same device, Kleidermacher says. “We are working with the NSA and some of the [cell phone] carriers on the leading edge of satisfying these emerging government requirements,” he says. “We make the phone so it can be used in secret, and perhaps even to-secret communications using standard Android stack and protocols, and come up with Suite B-compliant VPN and secure voice capability.”

ITT Exelis is developing two Android hand-held products that will be considered for front-line military use — the GhostRider cell phone and the GhostWarrior tablet computer, Takahashi says.

The enabling technology for GhostRider and GhostWarrior is a secure network processor that packages together with the battery of a commercial smartphone or tablet computer. This technology also could be used to secure Wi Fi access points, personal computers, or USB data storage devices.

ITT Exelis officials have demonstrated the GhostRider secure network processor with a commercial smartphone, and say they hope to receive NSA certification for the device sometime next year. “Our technology is platform-agnostic,” Takahashi says. “We can use any commercial smartphone that is Android based by replacing the original battery with our battery, which is coupled with our network processor.”

One of the features of the GhostRider cell phone is operating on unsecure commercial networks and secure military networks with the same device, Takahashi explains. “While the soldier is in garrison, he could use the phone to call home, but then bring it into the field to use for tactical communications.”

This kind of embedded crypto also could be used for secure data exchange and control of unmanned vehicles, as well as sending secure targeting information from soldiers on the front lines to attack aircraft in the area, officials say.

Source:http://www.militaryaerospace.com/index/display/article-display/6398796363/articles/military-aerospace-electronics/exclusive-content/2011/11/military-crypto_modernization.html

SteelSeries Rolls Out Limited Edition 7H Fnatic Headset And Sensei Mouse

November 28th, 2011

Still on the hunt for gaming peripheral gifts? Here’s some others to consider. SteelSeries has just introduced their limited edition Fnatic Headset and Mouse — SteelSeries 7H Fnatic Limited Edition headset and SteelSeries Sensei Fnatic Limited Edition mouse, to be precise. Available now on SteelSeries Web Shop, the Limited Edition 7H headset features 50mm dynamic driver units with new, sound isolating SNDBlock ear cushions; while the Limited Edition Sensei features award-winning technology like its 32 bit ARM processor that powers SteelSeries’ ExactTech settings and customization abilities, all of which are housed in an ambidextrous, black, orange and white Fnatic color design and illuminated Fnatic team logo.

The headset will go for $139.99 / €114.99, while the Sensei mouse goes for $99.99 / €99.99. Pricey, but hey — it’s worth the investment if you’re a hardcore gamer, right?

Source:http://hothardware.com/News/SteelSeries-Rolls-Out-Limited-Edition-7H-Fnatic-Headset-And-Sensei-Mouse/

Intel working on a PC Dock Thunderbolt

November 28th, 2011

Intel is working on a new dock for ‘ power in Ultrabook . The Ultrabook computers are thin, style MacBook Air . These are the laptops of the future because they are very thin, as well as keeping a good light and hardware. will be the protagonists of the annual conference of CES (Consumer Electronics Show) to be held in January 2012 .

The new connector for this type of computer seems to have taken a Thunderbolt near with a true connector for power. The door of the Thunderbolt connector may be used to improve nutrition, but also an Ethernet connection which is required for Intel vPro technology. Obviously then we will know more with the introduction of this connector.

Apple had been working on a similar project, but more simple, which is already in production. In fact, had connected the power supply and socket for attaching the Thunderbolt Thunderbolt Cinema Display . Apple had planned this to make life easier for customers who may not use so many cables.

Source:http://www.applemagazine.it/2011/11/27/intel-lavora-ad-un-dock-thunderbolt-per-pc/

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