Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Gmail 5.0 for Android gets a new look, Exchange support

Written By Unknown on Senin, 03 November 2014 | 16.01

The upcoming version of google's Gmail app for Android features a new look and support for non-Gmail email accounts, Android Police reports.

The new look app features the material design that Google has developed for Android apps, and has a retooled navigation interface. The mailbox pane, for instance, lives in a restyled slide-out "drawer," and the message viewer has a new, cleaner look. The app also has a brighter color scheme compared to the ubiquitous light gray of the older Gmail app.

Also new is support for Microsoft Exchange, as well as POP and IMAP email accounts (think Yahoo Mail, iCloud, email from your ISP), so you no longer have to use two different apps to check all your email. With version 5.0, Gmail for Android becomes a full-fledged general-purpose email client. 

Why this matters: Material Design is Google's name for a new look and feel for its apps, and it's a key new feature of Android 5.0 Lollipop. Gmail 5.0 is not the first app outside of Android 5.0 to get the new look: Version 5.0.13 of the Google Play app also features this new design.

Google will push the updated app to users' phones, but it may take a while before your phone gets it. If you want to get the updated app now, however, Android Police has provided links to mirrored versions of the APK that you can download and install onto your phone manually.


16.01 | 0 komentar | Read More

Samsung acquires flash caching software developer Proximal

Samsung Electronics has acquired Proximal Data, a developer of software that caches I/O in the server virtualization layer, to boost its SSD offering in the server market.

The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Proximal in San Diego, California, offers AutoCache, which attaches inside standard hypervisors such as VMware ESXi, where it inspects I/O from all virtual machines and places hot I/O into a local PCIe flash card or SSD. Embedded intelligence provides hot reads back to virtual machines that request them, without needing the system administrator to modify the deployed storage or VM infrastructure, according to a product brief.

Its CEO and founder Rory Bolt was involved in three startups, including as CTO of enterprise-class data protection software company, Avamar Technologies, which was sold to EMC in 2006 for US$165 million. Bolt said in a statement Sunday that after the acquisition, AutoCache will be enhanced and new products in enterprise storage will be developed.

Proximal said on its website that the software was developed to address I/O bottlenecks, a big barrier in virtualized server environments. AutoCache is said to efficiently cache I/O in the server virtualization layer while minimizing the use of system resources "without guest OS agents." The software works with standard flash PCIe cards or SSDs in virtualized servers, such as Microsoft Hyper-V or VMware ESXi.

Samsung said the acquisition will help expand its SSD business in the server and data center markets. The company acquired Nvelo in Santa Clara, California, in 2012, a privately held company that specialized in SSD caching. Samsung has offered the Nvelo technology for its branded SSDs since last year, it said.

The South Korean company evidently sees software as a key differentiator, even as it focuses on newer NAND technologies at the chip level.

Samsung said in October it had started mass production of its 3-bit, multi-level-cell (MLC), three-dimensional vertical NAND flash memory for use in SSDs. The 3D V-NAND technology achieves higher density with 32 vertically stacked cell layers per NAND memory chip for a total of 128 gigabits of storage per chip.

The company did not immediately respond to a request for more information, including on how much it paid for Proximal.


16.01 | 0 komentar | Read More

Adobe's e-reader software collects less data now, EFF says

Tests on the latest version of Adobe System's e-reader software shows the company is now collecting less data following a privacy-related dustup last month, according to the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Digital Editions version 4.0.1 appears to only collect data on ebooks that have DRM (Digital Rights Management), wrote Cooper Quintin, a staff technologist with the EFF. DRM places restrictions on how content can be used with the intent of thwarting piracy.

Adobe was criticized in early October after it was discovered Digital Editions collected metadata about ebooks on a device, even if the ebooks did not have DRM. Those logs were also sent to Adobe in plain text.

Since that data was not encrypted, critics including the EFF contended it posed major privacy risks for users. For example, plain text content could be intercepted by an interloper from a user who is on the same public Wi-Fi network.

Adobe said on Oct. 23 it fixed the issues in 4.0.1, saying it would not collect data on ebooks without DRM and encrypt data that is transmitted back to the company.

Quintin wrote the EFF's latest test showed the "only time we saw data going back to an Adobe server was when an ebook with DRM was opened for the first time. This data is most likely being sent back for DRM verification purposes, and it is being sent over HTTPS."

If an ebook has DRM, Adobe may record how long a person reads it or the percentage of the content that is read, which is used for "metered" pricing models.

Other technical metrics are also collected, such as the IP address of the device downloading a book, a unique ID assigned to the specific applications being used at the time and a unique ID for the device, according to Adobe.


16.01 | 0 komentar | Read More

The best gaming rigs, the fastest graphics cards: PCWorld celebrates glorious PC excess

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 02 November 2014 | 16.00

Sad but true: Sony and Microsoft's so-called next-generation gaming consoles don't seem very next-gen at all, with a slew of top games locked at 30 fps and still struggling to hit even 1080p resolutions. Even entry-level PC graphics cards can pull that off.

But we're not here to harsh on consoles. Instead, we're celebrating just how good we PC enthusiasts have it. All week long, PCWorld's basked in glorious, face-melting excess that's possible only on PCs: Breaking benchmarks with AMD and Nvidia's top graphics cards, building audacious rigs, and showcasing graphically beautiful—and PC-punishing—games.

There's truly never been a better time to be a PC gamer. Buckle up.


16.00 | 0 komentar | Read More

Microsoft Universal Mobile Keyboard hands-on: Solid, but not quite universal

Lawyers, pedants and fanboys may hold that Microsoft wasn't lying when it named its Universal Mobile Keyboard. But Windows Phone users may come away unconvinced.

From a hardware standpoint, Microsoft's $80 Universal Mobile Keyboard continues its tradition of excellence, with a well-thought-out design incorporating a hardware switch to reconfigure the keyboard for Android, iOS, and "Windows" devices. Look closer, though, and what Microsoft bills as a "universal" keyboard simply doesn't deliver, because it doesn't support Windows Phone. 

It's yet another frustration for Windows Phone users, who have become accustomed to playing second fiddle, even within Microsoft itself. It's a practice that Microsoft's Ifi Majid, head of experiences marketing for Microsoft's Devices Group, promised would end—but Microsoft's design teams apparently didn't get the memo.

Great hardware, if a trifle small

Closed, the keyboard looks something like a Lenovo ThinkPad—just a rectangular oblong of black plastic. But when opened, the keyboard reveals itself, and powers on automatically. Charge it overnight, Microsoft says, and it's good for six months. If you hold the power button on for several seconds, it pairs with discoverable Bluetooth devices that support the Bluetooth HID standard.

microsoft windows universal mobile keyboard switch Mark Hachman

A switch reconfigures the Microsoft Universal Mobile keyboard for Mac/iOS, Android, and Windows devices.

The upper part of the case "holds" a phone or tablet with one of two plastic ridges that grab it, like holding on to a ledge with your fingernails. But despite that metaphor, the construction is quite sturdy. Initially, the ridges didn't hold the mobile device at an angle I found convenient. Surprise! The keyboard's top half detaches, allowing you to find a comfortable angle to work. The most important consideration is how thin the device is: I would expect all modern smartphones to fit, but the the ridges wouldn't grab a thick Microsoft Surface Pro 2 tablet. 

The flagship feature of the keyboard is to the upper right—a switch that slides between icons for the Android (4.0+), iOS (6.0+), Mac (10.7+) and Windows 8/RT operating systems. In this, Microsoft's Mobile Keyboard is similar to the Logitech Bluetooth Easy-Switch K811, a similar mobile keyboard released last year, which uses separate Bluetooth profiles for each device. What Microsoft's keyboard does is automatically remap some of the keyboard keys to functions each device supports. (If you forget the flip the switch, as I did, some function keys may exhibit wonky behavior.)

microsoft universal windows mobile keyboard ridges Mark Hachman

A pair of ridges hold the phone, although not totally securely.

It only sounds confusing

On iOS, both the ESC and CMD keys on Microsoft's keyboard take you to the home screen of your iPhone and iPad. Pressing a dedicated function (Fn) key plus the ALT key can open or close your virtual keyboard on your iPad. If an Android phone or tablet is connected, tapping a dedicated "Home" key brings you back to the home screen. Hitting ESC equates to the Android back button. And tapping CMD is equivalent to the CTRL key on Android—which I would have assumed to be the menu option, showing a list of recently opened programs on my Galaxy Note 3. But it doesn't seem to have a specific function on that particular phone.

It all sounds rather confusing, but in reality there's only a few key combinations that shift from OS to OS. Most people already instinctively know to type ESC to back out of an operation. I kept the keyboard cheat sheet near me for a few minutes, but found I could discard it after then.

But there's one major problem: Microsoft's Universal Mobile Keyboard doesn't seem to pair with Windows Phone. Yes, it pairs with Windows; if you have a Windows tablet without a keyboard, you can use the universal keyboard instead. But if you want to connect to Windows Phone, it doesn't pair. I tried it with two: a Nokia Lumia Icon (Windows Phone 8.1) and the latest Lumia 830 (Windows Phone 8.1 Update) just to check, but—nope. Why, Microsoft, why?!

A solid keyboard

Overall, the keyboard measures about 9.4 inches by 4.2 inches, with an official weight of 12.875 ounces. I measured each key at about 1.3 cm on a side, about 27 percent smaller than the keys on the Surface Pro 3 Type Cover.  The tactile feedback is surprisingly good for what's essentially a chiclet keyboard. (I wrote this entire review on it, while seated at my dining-room table.) 

microsoft windows universal mobile keyboard bottom keys Mark Hachman

Microsoft takes keys from several different keyboard layouts.

So how does it type? Pretty well, but with a few hiccups.

In general, I found I could type at about 80 to 90 percent of the speed I can reach on a Surface Pro 3—which isn't all that fast, about 50 words per minute or so. (Unlike the SP3, the Universal Mobile Keyboard lacks a touchpad or pointing device.) The smaller keys didn't lead to many additional errors, although my fingers sometimes drifted down to the bottom row of command keys. Fortunately, that didn't produce any negative results, although I did find myself tapping the Fn+SPACE keyboard combo by accident, which briefly displays the keyboard language on the screen.

Personally, I find I type fairly quickly over short periods on a smartphone keyboard. But that isn't the target customer for Microsoft's Universal Keyboard—it's the executive who totes around a bunch of different devices in a backpack or briefcase, and has to do some real work in a pinch for a half hour or so. Just not on a Windows Phone. 


16.00 | 0 komentar | Read More

North Korea reportedly blocks Facebook and Twitter

North Korean authorities have reportedly blocked access to Facebook and Twitter for the few people in the country with open Internet access.

The move came into effect earlier this week, according to a report by the Russian ITAR-TASS news agency, which is one of the few foreign news services to maintain a bureau in the country.

Most North Koreans don't have access to a computer, and those who do are restricted to a nationwide intranet. Available through universities, libraries and other state-run establishments, the intranet has websites that include government propaganda, information about science, technology and culture, and even cooking recipes.

Access to outside information is tightly curtailed by the government, which jams foreign radio broadcasts and restricts international phone calls and texts. North Korea is consistently ranked among the worst counties for press freedoms and human rights.

The handful of foreign residents who live there, many of them aid workers and business people, are permitted to access the Internet through fixed and wireless connections, but even over those links, access to Facebook and Twitter has been cut, ITAR-TASS reported.

The report couldn't immediately be verified, and neither Facebook nor Twitter responded to requests for comment.

In September, North Korea's State Radio Regulatory Department told foreign embassies and aid organizations they could not use Wi-Fi or satellite Internet connections without government approval. The ruling, a copy of which was obtained by specialist news site NK News, hinted that an earlier report that embassies were deliberately running open Wi-Fi networks to provide public Internet was correct.

The ruling said, "the signals of regional wireless network, installed and being used without licence, produce some effect upon our surroundings."

Organizations wishing to continue using Wi-Fi were instructed to consult with the government so their services could be checked. Those that didn't were threatened with an $11,000 fine.


16.00 | 0 komentar | Read More

Startup Slack gets $120M infusion to kill email at work

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 01 November 2014 | 16.00

Slack, a cloud startup that's landed some big name clients for its business communications product, has raised $120 million [m] at an eye-popping $1.12 billion [b] valuation.

The San Francisco company's funding and early customer wins are signs that venture capitalists and bold CIOs are eager to back entrepreneurs with modern software that can improve business processes, usually by tapping the cloud and mobility and adapting consumer apps for workplace use.

Slack aims to provide a better environment for communications than usually happens over email. A lot of startups demonize email and make it their mission to provide something better. It was an early rallying cry of enterprise social networking (ESN) providers, though many soon realized they would need to co-exist with email. Time will tell whether Slack can overcome the entrenched email corporate culture.

Slack is a SaaS (software as a service) workplace messaging tool for one-to-one or group communication framed within a chat room-like interface. The product also has a strong search engine to let users easily find content in its archive.

The latest funding round, announced Friday and co-led by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Google Ventures, brings the total raised by the company to $162 million. Slack, whose CEO is Flickr co-founder Steward Butterfield, plans to use the cash injection to fuel its marketing, grow internationally and pursue acquisitions.

About 30,000 teams are using Slack, generating 200 million messages per month. About 73,000 out of its 250,000 daily users are on a paid subscription. Adoption has been through word-of-mouth because the company doesn't yet have a sales and marketing team, although it's adding over $1 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR) each month.

Slack has an open API and is integrated with "dozens" of third-party services, including Twitter, Dropbox, Asana, Google Docs, MailChimp and Zendesk. It launched just eight months ago and customers include Dow Jones, Times of London, eBay, Urban Outfitters, HBO, Nordstrom and Live Nation.


16.00 | 0 komentar | Read More

FCC eyes new rules to protect consumers as voice networks transition to IP

The Federal Communications Commission will consider new rules to ensure real consumer choice as the U.S. shifts from copper-based networks to IP networks, agency officials said Friday.

FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler will offer a set of proposals aimed at protecting voice customers during the commission's Nov. 21 meeting, senior agency officials said. In addition to network-sharing rules, the FCC will consider requiring power backup systems on VoIP networks, officials said.

In its consumer-protection proposals, which the FCC would release for public comment, the agency will consider rules for large telephone carriers that are currently required to share their last-mile networks with competitors, often to serve small-business customers. Wheeler's proposal would require the large carriers to also share their last-mile IP networks, under similar terms and prices to their copper infrastructure, FCC officials said.

In the transition to IP networks, the FCC believes voice customers shouldn't end up with fewer competitive options, an FCC official said during a press briefing. That proposal could be controversial, as large carriers have traditionally not shared their IP networks with competitors.

The transition to IP-based networks is at a "tipping point," Wheeler wrote in a blog post Friday.

To protect competition, his proposal would "ensure that small- and medium-sized businesses do not have the benefits of competition yanked away from them," Wheeler wrote. "The mere change of a network facility or discontinuance of a legacy service should not deprive consumers or businesses of competitive choices. That would only lead to higher telecommunications prices that are passed along to consumers."

In the FCC's notice of proposed rulemaking, or NPRM, the agency will also ask whether it should require battery backups that will enable VoIP customers to dial 911 during emergencies and make other calls during power outages.

The traditional copper-based telephone network supplies power to connected telephones, but phones connected to fiber-based networks need their own power source. During natural disasters and other emergencies, it's important for VoIP customers to be able to make phone calls, FCC officials said.

The FCC is worried not only about customers being able to dial out during power outages, but also about 911 emergency dialing service interruptions at call-routing centers that increasingly handle emergency traffic from wide geographic regions, the FCC officials said. The agency has tracked an "unprecedented" number of large-scale 911 service outages this year, not due to storms or disasters, but to software and other technology errors.

In April, a software coding error at a large 911 routing center knocked out service to more than 11 million residents of seven states, including California, Minnesota and Florida, for up to six hours. More than 6,600 emergency 911 calls did not go through during the outage, the FCC said.

A transition to IP-based networks will allow 911 call centers to receive texts, videos and data from vehicle crash sensors, Wheeler wrote in his blog post. "But the introduction of new technologies has also introduced new vulnerabilities that cannot be ignored," he added. "We have seen a spike in so-called 'sunny day' outages, when failure comes from the failure of software or databases and not from natural disasters."

In the IP transition proposal, the FCC would require public notification of major changes to 911 service and would expand its 911 service certification requirements.

Wheeler's proposal would also require telephone carriers to notify customers when transitioning to IP networks and consider the impact on legacy telephone-based services before making the switch, the FCC said.


16.00 | 0 komentar | Read More

North Korea reportedly blocks Facebook and Twitter

North Korean authorities have reportedly blocked access to Facebook and Twitter for the few people in the country with open Internet access.

The move came into effect earlier this week, according to a report by the Russian ITAR-TASS news agency, which is one of the few foreign news services to maintain a bureau in the country.

Most North Koreans don't have access to a computer, and those who do are restricted to a nationwide intranet. Available through universities, libraries and other state-run establishments, the intranet has websites that include government propaganda, information about science, technology and culture, and even cooking recipes.

Access to outside information is tightly curtailed by the government, which jams foreign radio broadcasts and restricts international phone calls and texts. North Korea is consistently ranked among the worst counties for press freedoms and human rights.

The handful of foreign residents who live there, many of them aid workers and business people, are permitted to access the Internet through fixed and wireless connections, but even over those links, access to Facebook and Twitter has been cut, ITAR-TASS reported.

The report couldn't immediately be verified, and neither Facebook nor Twitter responded to requests for comment.

In September, North Korea's State Radio Regulatory Department told foreign embassies and aid organizations they could not use Wi-Fi or satellite Internet connections without government approval. The ruling, a copy of which was obtained by specialist news site NK News, hinted that an earlier report that embassies were deliberately running open Wi-Fi networks to provide public Internet was correct.

The ruling said, "the signals of regional wireless network, installed and being used without licence, produce some effect upon our surroundings."

Organizations wishing to continue using Wi-Fi were instructed to consult with the government so their services could be checked. Those that didn't were threatened with an $11,000 fine.


16.00 | 0 komentar | Read More

Major banks ready their own mobile payment apps

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 31 Oktober 2014 | 16.01

Several major national and international banks are planning to launch their own mobile payments apps next year.

The banks would be major competitors to handset makers Apple and Google because unlike others pushing mobile wallet technology, such as mobile phone carriers and retailers, they already have an intimate relationship with consumers and know their spending habits.

"Banks all around the world are working on this right now," said James Anderson, senior vice president for mobile and emerging payments at MasterCard.

Anderson didn't name any of the banks, but said MasterCard is already in conversations with them on how to add mobile payment capability to the existing apps that millions of consumers already have on their phones.

The most likely way will be through a technology called host card emulation, that was introduced in Android 4.4 "KitKat" and allows software apps to emulate the secure element chip found on some bank cards and the iPhone 6. Using software means wider compatibility with phones than if a dedicated chip was required.

The mobile payments market had been relatively quiet until recently. Google Wallet and Softcard, a competitor backed by cellular carriers, were in the market but consumer awareness and interest appeared to be low.

That changed with the launch of Apple Pay on October 20. A million cards were activated in the first three days of use and early adopters have praised its ease of use: users just need to hold their thumb over the iPhone 6 fingerprint reader and bring the device near a terminal for payment to be made.

As a result, competitors are planning their attack. Next year CurrentC, backed by some of the biggest retailers in the U.S., will launch and companies like PayPal are also hoping to expand their footprint in stores.

But an app from a bank might have an edge because it removes a potential hurdle to adoption: unease among consumers that at a third-party is getting access to details of purchases they make.

Apple has stressed that it doesn't see any of the purchases made by its users but Google's system is set up so that all payments run through the company's servers—giving the company an additional layer of information into the lives of its users.

A bank already has access to this information because of its nature and is presumably trusted by its customers. If a customer has a banking app on their phone, it would suggest they also have faith in the bank's online security system.


16.01 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger