Archive for October, 2011


China has built its first supercomputer based entirely on homegrown microprocessors, a major step in breaking the country’s reliance on Western technology for high-performance computing.

China’s National Supercomputer Center in Jinan unveiled the computer last Thursday, according to a report from the country’s state-run press. The supercomputer uses 8,704 “Shenwei 1600″ microprocessors, which were developed by a design center in Shanghai, called the National High Performance Integrated Circuit Design Center.

Details of the microprocessors and the design center were not immediately available.

The supercomputer has a theoretical peak speed of 1.07 petaflops (quadrillion floating-point calculations per second), and a sustained performance of 0.79 petaflops when measured with the Linpack benchmark. This could place it at number 13 in the world’s top 500 supercomputing list. Photos of the chips used and the supercomputer’s data center can be found here.

China’s Shandong Academy of Sciences built the computer. Officials of the academy could not be immediately reached for comment on Monday.

A report from The New York Times said the supercomputer’s name in English was the Sunway BlueLight MPP.

China is increasingly investing in supercomputing technology. Last November, its Tianhe-1A supercomputer briefly grabbed the spot as the world’s most powerful, but the computer used chips from Intel and Nvidia. The Tianhe-1A has a theoretical peak speed of 4.7 petaflops and a sustained performance of 2.5 petaflops.

China currently has 61 supercomputers on the top 500 list. In comparison, the U.S. has 255 on the list. Japan’s “K Computer” is currently ranked first in the top 500 list, after bumping Tianhe-1A to the second place.

Experts have been anticipating that China would build its own supercomputer, using domestically developed chips. Chinese state-run press hailed the new supercomputer as a symbol of China’s strength.

Remains of the Day: The board of Avon

An Apple board member faces scrutiny at her own company, Apple throws another log on the open-source fire, and the Siri-based Apple TV set may listen a little too well. The remainders for Friday, October 28, 2011 are so ready for the weekend.

Avon CEO Andrea Jung Under Fire (Wall Street Journal)

Avon CEO–and Apple board member–Andrea Jung is taking heat at Avon for her management practices, or lack thereof. The company recently announced it’s facing a pair of SEC investigations, and ditching its sales targets. Investors, apparently, are worried that it signals a pattern. Fortunately, Avon has a plan to reassure them by going door-to-door.

Welcome to the Apple Lossless Audio Codec Project (MacOS Forge)

Apple has open-sourced its Apple Lossless codec under the Apache license, providing the source code for its encoder and decoder software, along with a command-line conversion utility. This may encourage third parties to use the format, which provides high-quality audio at around half the size of uncompressed audio files. Don’t worry, this move won’t make Richard Stallman any more bearable.

iOS 5 Already Powering 1 in 3 Eligible Devices (Localytics)

iOS 5 has been out for two weeks now. We know users of Apple technology are generally fast to update, and the stats seem to prove it. Just one week in, 31 percent of all iOS 5-compatible devices had already upgraded to Apple’s latest and greatest. Leading the way, not surprisingly, were users of the iPad 2 and iPhone 4. Compare this with yesterday’s widely referenced report on Android phone updates, which graphically portrays the difference between how the two mobile-device platforms approach software upgrades.

Jack Donaghy Demos the Siri-Based Apple TV (via Daring Fireball)

So, uh, there may be minor problems if your Apple TV set is voice controlled. Nothing that we can’t fix with subtitles. Or convincing actors to come to your house and perform personally for you.

Product News:

Pocket God: Journey to Uranus 1.05.0 – Bolt Creative has updated its interactive universe game with the latest episode: Decapithon. You’ll face the walking dead, just in time for Halloween. $1.

LoopMash HD 1.0 – Steinberg has released an iPad-native version of its iPhone virtual instrument app. It includes more than 250 audio loops, 30 presets, 24 scenes per preset, 19 live performance effects, 4 studio-grade effects, and intuitive 30D swipe-page navigation. $12.

Aperture 3.2.1 – Apple has updated its professional-level photography software to version 3.2.1, fixing a bug where Aperture could quit unexpectedly at launch on Core Duo Macs, another problem where the Crop tool would switch to the incorrect orientation or resize incorrectly, and some rendering issues when cropping with Onscreen Proofing enabled. Additionally, location menus now show up correctly on the map in the Places view when “Photos” is selected in the Library Inspector. Free.

YouTube will start rolling out next month a set of new channels with original programs next month, as the video site beefs up its offering of exclusive, professionally-produced content.

These new channels are meant to complement YouTube’s core user-generated amateur videos and the non-exclusive, professional movies and TV shows it redistributes.

The strategy is intended to attract more viewers to YouTube, already the web’s most popular video site, and offer advertisers new opportunities for marketing their products.

The new channels will also make YouTube a more direct competitor to producers and broadcasters of original, professionally-produced programs, including other Internet companies like Yahoo, as well as TV and cable networks.

YouTube has been setting the stage for the rollout of these channels over the past year or so through programs that offer funds and training to video content creators.

“These channels will have something for everyone, whether you’re a mom, a comedy fan, a sports nut, a music lover or a pop-culture maven,” wrote Robert Kyncl, YouTube’s Global Head of Content Partnerships, in a blog post on Friday.

YouTube viewers can take a peek at the upcoming channels and sign up to be alerted when they launch.

The channels include “DanceOn” backed by Madonna, “Life and Times” from Jay-Z, Brooke Burke’s “Modern Mom,” a lifestyle issues channel produced by The Wall Street Journal and “The Chopra Well” from Deepak Chopra.

Cooperation between Sprint Nextel and Clearwire on LTE should help to bring two versions of that technology together, leading to increased device choices and roaming opportunities for subscribers in developed markets.

Sprint disclosed Wednesday that it has agreed to work with Clearwire to make the two carriers’ LTE (Long-Term Evolution) networks work together. Sprint will turn to Clearwire for additional capacity to fill growing mobile data demand, probably beginning in 2013. Because the two carriers plan to use different types of LTE, they will need to make the two versions work together smoothly, a development that may have impact beyond the two U.S. partners.

Sprint and Clearwire currently share a WiMax network, with Clearwire as the operator and Sprint reselling services for its 4G phones and data devices. Both are moving on to LTE, the 4G technology with the most international acceptance, but they plan to do so separately. Clearwire plans to use TD (time-division) LTE, which uses the same band to send and receive signals, while Sprint will use FD (frequency-division) LTE, which uses two bands.

With a view to letting subscribers use both networks, the two companies have completed a non-binding memorandum of understanding to cooperate on technical issues such as what chips to use in devices, when and where to set up base stations and how to smoothly hand off data sessions. For subscribers, the two networks will have to look like one.

“It shouldn’t be too much of a challenge, but still, it’s not something that’s ever really been tried before,” said Monica Paolini, an analyst at Senza Fili Consulting.

The carriers’ cooperation is likely to be good news for users of TD-LTE, which has strong momentum in China and India but not in the developed markets of North America and Europe, Paolini said. European carriers are looking to TD-LTE for future supplemental capacity after their current FD-LTE systems start to strain under growing demand, she said.

As Sprint builds its LTE business, it will need to line up mobile devices that can use both types of networks, as well as the separate frequency bands that Sprint and Clearwire are using. The carriers will also have to work out likely teething pains in making devices go on to the best network where both are available, Paolini said. One saving grace is that the LTE networks won’t be carrying voice calls, which are even more sensitive to bumpy handoffs between networks.

This may help to prime the pump for dual-technology devices in the developed world, separate from the types of products being developed for TD-LTE networks in China and India. But the deal with Sprint is especially important for Clearwire, which otherwise would have had trouble getting a lot of devices made for its own services or wholesale deals with smaller carriers, Paolini said. Clearwire has already announced a partnership with China Mobile to help build a TD-LTE ecosystem.

To keep up with demand for mobile data over the next few years, Sprint has already laid out elaborate plans for a flexible new infrastructure and a partnership with satellite-cellular startup LightSquared, all of which is separate from its Clearwire relationship. But on Wednesday, Sprint finally described a continuing role for Clearwire beyond the companies’ WiMax wholesale deal, which expires at the end of next year.

The promise of a continuing revenue stream from Sprint should help Clearwire raise the funds necessary to build its LTE network, for which the company has said it needs to raise about $600 million. But analysts said it’s doubtful Clearwire will be able to maintain its own branded mobile service, called Clear. The company has been cutting back marketing efforts for several years under financial constraints.

Clearwire has already spent too much money selling a mobile data service that essentially competes against its wholesale partners, said analyst Chetan Sharma, from Chetan Sharma Consulting.

“Unless some boatload of money magically appears, it’s unlikely that’s a strategy they can pursue,” Sharma said.

Stephen Lawson covers mobile, storage and networking technologies for The IDG News Service. Follow Stephen on Twitter at @sdlawsonmedia. Stephen’s e-mail address is stephen_lawson@idg.com

For a relatively new medium, the World Wide Web still relies on a comparatively ancient method of presenting information to the reader, that of scrolling. Now, the creator of the widely used CSS (Cascading Style Sheets), and current CTO of Opera, wants to replace the browser scroll bar with page-based navigation.

“About 2,000 years ago, people used scrolls. That’s how they recorded information. The Romans tore the scrolls apart, and binded the pages together as books,” Opera CTO Håkon Wium Lie said in an interview. “Books are much easier to handle than scrolls.”

Lie has authored a proposed extension for CSS, called CSS Generated Content For Paged Media (GCPM), which, if standardized and implemented in browsers, would give browsers the ability to do e-reader-like navigation.

This week, Lie met with publishers in New York, pitching the standard as an easier and lower-cost alternative to building and maintaining dedicated e-readers. Next week he’ll meet with other CSS designers at the W3C Technical Plenary / Advisory Committee Meetings Week, taking place in Santa Clara, California, to discuss folding this set of specifications into the upcoming version 3 of CSS.

Opera itself has posted some sample pages, and a downloadable Opera Reader that mimics the functionality of a browser supporting this extension.

Today, many text-based Web pages, including probably this news story, are formatted as a single column of text. Lengthy texts may be divided across multiple Web pages, with a “next page” button at the bottom of each. If the text fills up more than a single browser screen, the browser provides a scroll bar to move up and down the page.

Browsers deployed scroll bars because they “allowed any screen to show any document,” Lie said. But, he argued, the scroll bar–an idea borrowed from desktop applications such as word processors and photo editors–places limitations on how content is rendered and viewed.

One problem is that the material being displayed rarely fits neatly into the browser window. The reader may see half-lines, or bits of an image, at the top or at the bottom of the page. “You never hit the line exactly,” Lie said. The approach also limits how pages are designed, with many sites defaulting to a single column of text per page, rarely taking advantage of how a browser can move its view horizontally as well as vertically. Also, printing Web pages can be problematic, with the browser not having any instructions how to break up the Web page across multiple printed pages.

“The page can have a much more beautiful presentation,” Lie said. “The flipping of the page becomes an event. I think few people would sit and read ‘Alice in Wonderland’ with a scroll bar.”

The goal behind the specification is to provide a minimal set of markup to “turn any website into a paged experience,” Lie said. It provides rule-sets to address formatting issues such as setting the number of columns per page, how to paginate a site and how to hyphenate text.

Using a tablet, Lie demonstrated how a Web page could be viewed with a browser that supported this markup. He presented a mockup of a newspaper, complete with multiple columns and full-page ads. The experience of moving through the paper closely resembled that of using the Amazon Kindle reader for tablets, or a stand-alone magazine app such as that from “The New Yorker.”

The reader could flip to the next page by swiping a finger across the screen from right to left, and jump to the index by swiping up. Nowhere in the demo did a scroll bar appear. On the desktop, a user could navigate with a mouse, or with the arrow keys and the page-up or page-down keys, or with a pop-up navigator.

Of course, an ambitious webmaster could render the look and feel of a multi-column newspaper today, but it would involve writing a lot of HTML and possibly some JavaScript. By contrast, GCPM will offer a number of controls that can be easily added to the stylesheet.

“Authors should be able to [create pages] without having to hire expensive app developers, and do it in languages they know and in code they recognize,” Lie said. “It doesn’t take much code to do this.”

An obvious market for the technology would be that of book and periodical publishers, who could redesign their websites to look like their printed editions, Lie said. They could even use CSS as the common code-base for all the editions of their products. Beyond the publishing industry, the stylesheet extension could also help Web application developers build apps that more closely resemble native desktop and mobile applications. .

“We’re putting this out as a ‘lab build’ to let people play with it,” Lie said.

At present, no browser supports this CSS markup, even Opera’s own. But Lie hopes browser makers see the value in this markup, as a way to promote greater use of the Web in general. Much as CSS provided the basis for Web developers to design pages with a certain degree of elegance, GCPM would provide the basis for formatting pages in a more stylish manner.

“We’re Web fundamentalists,” he said, referring to Opera. “We feel all the information that mankind produces should be on the Web. And once it’s there, we should have a good way of presenting it.”

Joab Jackson covers enterprise software and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Joab on Twitter at @Joab_Jackson. Joab’s e-mail address is Joab_Jackson@idg.com

Security, cited as an issue with cloud computing when the concept began to take hold several years ago, remains a pivotal concern for developers, an IBM official stressed on Wednesday afternoon.

Executives from IBM and Amazon sparred over the degree of security issues pertinent to cloud computing during a conference panel session at the ZendCon 2011 event in Santa Clara, Calif. Transitioning from a dedicated facilities to a shared environment in the cloud means developers must build proper security in their applications, said Mac Devine, IBM Distinguished Engineer. Developers cannot assume the public cloud provider will secure everything, he warned: “You can’t depend on the fact that, ‘OK, nobody can get behind my firewall.’”

[ Also on InfoWorld: Gartner cites private clouds as a last resort for enterprises. | Download InfoWorld's Cloud Security Deep Dive for advice and best practices on protecting your data in the cloud. ]

“You need to be thinking differently. It’s a shared environment,” he said. Risk comes with the collaboration enabled by the cloud, Devine added.

But Jeff Barr, senior Web services evangelist at cloud provider Amazon Web Services, shot back, “I do agree that you need to worry about security, but you also have to realize that you do get effectively infrastructure that has a lot of [a security focus] already built into it.” Instead, developers need to worry about application-level security, Barr said.

Security and availability are probably the top two priorities at Amazon, Barr asserted. Amazon has security certifications such as ISO 27001 and SAS 70, he said, adding that large-scale cloud providers can make expensive, long-term investments in security that others cannot. Devine noted a cloud infrastructure provider can offer regulatory compliance and operational security. In some cases, clouds have more security than on-premises systems, he said.

Panelists also debated use of SQL and database connectivity in clouds. SQL as a design pattern for storage “is not ideal for cloud applications,” said Adrian Otto, senior technical strategist for Rackspace Cloud. Afterward, he described SQL issues as “typically the No. 1 bottleneck” to elasticity in the cloud. With elasticity, applications use more or fewer application servers based on demand. Otto recommended that developers who want elasticity should have a decentralized data model that scales horizontally. “SQL itself isn’t the problem. The problem is row-oriented data in an application,” which causes performance bottlenecks, said Otto.

Developers, Barr said, should not get attached to individual resources in a cloud: “You need to think of them as essentially transient and replaceable.” An audience member raised the issue of inconsistent I/O in the cloud. Barr, while declining to make any announcements, hinted Amazon was working on something in this vein. “We’re always trying to make everything better. How about that?”

This article, “Security remains a top concern for cloud app builders,” was originally published at InfoWorld.com. Follow the latest developments in business technology news and get a digest of the key stories each day in the InfoWorld Daily newsletter. For the latest business technology news, follow InfoWorld on Twitter.

Read more about cloud computing in InfoWorld’s Cloud Computing Channel.

The European Commission approved on Wednesday the acquisition by Seagate Technology of the hard disk drive (HDD) business of Samsung Electronics, after concluding that there will still be enough players in the market after the acquisition.

Seagate said in April that it was acquiring the HDD business of Samsung Electronics for US$1.4 billion in stock and cash, a month after competitor Western Digital said it would buy Hitachi Global Storage Technologies, the hard drive unit of Hitachi, for $4.3 billion in cash and stock.

After the acquisition, Samsung will have about 9.6 percent ownership of Seagate, the companies said in April.

The EC opened in May separate investigations under the EU Merger Regulation into the two transactions. Seagate notified the commission of the proposed acquisition on April 19, a day earlier than Western Digital.

In view of a priority rule based on the date of notification, the commission assessed the Seagate-Samsung transaction on the basis of the market situation existing before the notification of the Western Digital-Hitachi transaction which is still pending.

In 2010, HDD shipments from both Seagate and Samsung added to 261.2 million units, giving the combined companies 40 percent of the HDD market, IHS iSuppli analyst Fang Zhang said in May in a blog post. Western Digital and Hitachi GST still held the number one position with a 50 percent share.

The main impact of the Seagate-Samsung transaction would be on the markets for 3.5-inch desktop hard disk drives and 2.5-inch mobile hard disk drives where the investigation revealed that Samsung is not a particularly strong competitor, the commission said in a statement.

Three strong suppliers would remain in the 3.5-inch desktop market, including the merged entity, Western Digital and Hitachi GST, the commission said. The 2.5-inch mobile market would have these three players and Toshiba.

“With at least three suppliers, customers will retain sufficient possibilities to switch suppliers,” the commission said.

The commission also found that the removal of Samsung is not likely to lead to the risk of coordination among the remaining HDD suppliers, and that the proposed acquisition will also not affect the HDD heads business of Japan’s TDK, as the merged entity will continue to buy a sufficient volume of components from TDK post-merger.

Western Digital said in May it was informed by the EC that the review of its proposed acquisition had entered a second phase.

The proposed acquisition, which is subject to several closing conditions, including the receipt of antitrust approvals in certain jurisdictions, is now expected to close in the fourth calendar quarter of 2011, Western Digital said. The company had earlier said the acquisition would close in the third quarter.

John Ribeiro covers outsourcing and general technology breaking news from India for The IDG News Service. Follow John on Twitter at @Johnribeiro. John’s e-mail address is john_ribeiro@idg.com

Sony said Thursday it has been forced to postpone the launch of a new camera and cut production of another because a factory in Thailand has been affected by the widespread flooding there.

The company’s new “NEX-7″ high-end portable digital camera was due to be released next month in time for this year’s holiday season, but its launch has now been postponed indefinitely. Production of Its new SLR “Alpha 65,” which had already launched in some countries, has also been cut off. Several accompanying lens kits and headphone products have also been affected.

Months of heavy monsoon rains have flooded the central and northern portions of the country, killing over 300 people, according to media reports. Tens of thousands more have been evacuated and Bangkok is now under threat, and hundreds of factories producing everything from cars to semiconductors have been swamped.

“Sony is currently shifting production to another unaffected factory in Thailand that normally makes car audio products, but there is no set date when production will start up again,” spokesman Yasuhiro Okada said.

The affected factory is in Ayutthaya, north of the capital in the central portion of Thailand. It was used mainly used for assembling parts manufactured in other regions, Okada said.

Sony has expanded its streaming music and on-demand gaming services to its new tablet, a spokeswoman said Thursday.

The Tokyo-based company has launched a new version of its “Music Unlimited” application that broadens the service to the Android-based Sony Tablet released last month. The new application is available in nine countries including the U.S., Australia, and parts of Europe, spokeswoman Noriko Shoji said.

A tablet version of its “PlayStation Store” has also been released, allowing officially certified games to be purchased and downloaded to the device. That service is available to a different group of countries, which include the U.S., Canada, Japan and major European markets.

Sony is the only major electronics maker to have its own music, movie and video game franchises, and is hoping to use them to differentiate its tablets from the pack in pursuit of Apple’s iPad. Its streaming music service, which comes in capped and unlimited versions, is now available on its Bravia TVs, PlayStation game consoles and Xperia phones, as well as its computers and tablets. It also runs on other Android devices.

The music service was offered on its new tablets slightly after they were launched because more time was required for development, Shoji said. She said the company will make the service compatible with future tablets, such as the two-screen clamshell unit that goes on sale later this month.

On the Android Market website, the initial reception to the Music Unlimited service for tablets was negative, with 33 users giving it one star and several comments saying it doesn’t start up properly.

The company said it will also launch an eBook store for its tablets later this month.

China on Thursday responded to U.S. concerns about its blocking of company websites, saying that China’s Internet policies are open and clear. However, China said it objected to the U.S. exploiting the issue of Internet freedoms to interfere in its internal affairs.

“The Chinese government encourages and actively supports the Internet’s development and we also protect the freedom of expression of citizens in China,” said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu. “We welcome foreign companies to invest and develop here, and we will continue to foster an open policy market.”

“To promote the healthy development of the Internet, we are willing to work together to set up communication and exchanges,” she said.

On Wednesday, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative announced it was asking China to explain its policies covering the blocking of U.S. company websites in the country. The request, filed under World Trade Organization rules, is an effort to understand the trade impact of such blocking after a number of U.S. businesses have made complaints about access to their websites in China.

China heavily censors the Internet for anti-government and politically sensitive content. As a result, popular U.S. websites including Twitter, Facebook and YouTube have all been blocked in the country. The censorship is so prevalent, that companies including Google, have complained that the Internet blocking acts as a kind of trade barrier.

While China’s foreign ministry said the country’s Internet policies have been open and clear, the country’s online censorship has often occurred without explanation when in practice. At times, Twitter-like services operated by local Chinese companies have blocked certain terms linked with protesting or Internet freedoms. Google also reported in March that its Gmail service was being blocked, a move experts said was part of a government-backed information clampdown.

The U.S. Trade Representative requests specifically seeks to understand how China’s Internet policies work so that U.S. companies can avoid disruptions to their websites. Some of the questions include who in China determines which websites should be blocked, and if affected businesses can appeal the decision.

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