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Businesses

The Twighlight of Small In-House Data Centers 180

dcblogs writes "Virtualization, cloud services and software-as-a-service (SaaS) is making it much easier to shift IT infrastructure operations to service providers, and that is exactly what many users are doing. Of the new data center space being built in the U.S., service providers accounted for about 13% of it last year, but by 2017 they will be responsible for more than 30% of this new space, says IDC. 'We are definitely seeing a trend away from in-house data centers toward external data centers, external provisioning,' said Gartner analyst Jon Hardcastle. Among those planning for a transition is the University of Kentucky's CIO, who wants to reduce his data center footprint by half to two thirds. He expects in three to five years service provider pricing models 'will be very attractive to us and allow us to take most of our computing off of our data center.' IT managers says a big reason for the shift is IT pros don't want to work in data centers at small-to-mid size firms that can't offer them a career path. Hank Seader, managing principal of the Uptime Institute, said that it takes a 'certain set of legacy skills, a certain commitment to the less than glorious career fields to make data centers work, and it's hard to find people to do it.'"
Cloud

Ask Slashdot: Is Your Data Safe In the Cloud? sponsored by: SourceForge 332

With so much personal data being kept on the cloud, including government and health records or your source code, do you have any concerns about it falling into the wrong hands? Do you think the cloud's benefits are outweighed by continuing security issues?

Comment XBox Live PSN (Score 1) 171

Don't mistake this for fanboyism or anything like that (I have both a PS3 and Xbox), but XBox has the only online service thats worth paying for. PSN and Wii are pathetic. The funny part was that the idea of paying for online gaming was one of the big sticking points that PS3 fanboys had against the Xbox. I guess now that Sony has a sizable market share, it's about time to change that tune. Oh well, at least it plays blu-ray.

Comment Re:But without water, there's no life (as we know (Score 3, Insightful) 184

Comparing silicon to water is wrong - silicon based life could exist, but we are not water based life, we are carbon based. Water is a solvent which we use, so where we'd need to look is where there are other liquid solvents and enough energy to allow the required reactions to happen. As already said, liquid methane might do the trick as a water substitute, but silicon wouldn't.

Comment Re:No Western Industrial Espionage (Score 1) 220

Not really - the motive is the same, giant corporation taking secrets for commercial benefit vs giant corporation (which happens to be owned by the Chinese government) taking secrets for commercial benefit. The Chinese government, with its many state-owned operations, is not equivalent to the US government - the Chinese government as much concerned about running businesses as it is about governing.

Note that I'm not condoning either the Chinese or the US behaviour, I'm simply trying to inject some perspective into the current debate which often consists of hysterical 'us and them' finger-pointing, just as used to occur with the Russians who the US now gets along quite well with. It all reminds me of Orwell's "We're at war with Eastasia. We have always been at war with Eastasia."

To provide an alternative and perhaps more relevant example of non-Chinese industrial espionage, the US accused the French government of industrial espionage in the 90s, and vice versa.

Comment Re:It's a whole lot more basic than that (Score 1) 312

On its face, the anti-missile defense systems for wide dispersal are a stupid idea. Why?

How many missile attacks have there been on the US?

On account of that number being "0", what is the most likely means of getting a nuclear device into the United States?

Compared to said missile defense systems, how much would it cost to:

1) Cease immigration from hostile nation-states and/or start profiling intelligently?
2) Start trying to effectively patrol the borders?
3) Reduce the number and size of enclaves in which likely Islamists can hide (through deportation of illegals).

Somehow, despite the effort, I suspect the cost would be cheaper than the missile systems. But regardless of anything like that, it won't be attempted due to such efforts biting the hand that feeds... and "new shiny" makes good copy.

Comment Re:Let the anecdotal counterpoints begin. (Score 2, Insightful) 368

Your doctor doesn't know any better than you do. He or she is making highly educated guesses, and that's about the end of it.

This is true - the human body is a darn complicated thing. And to be honest it's true of mechanics too - a car engine is darn complicated too.

Nonetheless, in either situation, I'd take a highly (and appropriately) educated guess over an ordinary guess any day.

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