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Comment Look for a orchestration platform (Score 1) 191

Use a higher level orchestration platform that's cloud/hypervisor agnostic. As fast as IaaS are evolving, the only thing certain is that they'll keep changing. Amazon & others will expand APIs, and deprecate things, too. OpenStack is new, but still relatively immature. VMWare is mature, but bloated and designed for lock-in.

You'll want to design your VMs in a way that's agnostic to the underlying layers. That way you can migrate easily as cost structures change, or features evolve. You'll want to be capable of that evolution with no discernible change to your users.

If a key feature is LDAP, long-term you'll want a solution that has policy in place now, and runway for you to implement governance and controls down the line. It would also help to have automated monitoring, lifecycle management, notifications, API-based programmability, etc.

You can build the basics with chef/puppet type automation, but then you've got to implement LDAP, policy, & governance on your own.

I'd suggest products like ServiceMesh, Enstratius, vCloud Director, and others. Most are pretty new. vCloud Director is designed to lock you into VMWare. Enstratius may stay relatively cloud agnostic now that Dell (its new owners) are dumping public cloud offerings. ServiceMesh is the disruptive startup with no IaaS alliances (at least until it gets acquired).

Privacy

SXSW: Al Gore Talks Surveillance Culture, Spider Goats 260

Nerval's Lobster writes "Former vice president Al Gore sat down with Wall Street Journal columnist Walt Mossberg at this year's SXSW conference to talk about the future — specifically, what Gore sees as the dangers and opportunities awaiting the planet for the next few years. Gore drilled down into what he referred to as the "stalker economy." The rise of apps such as SnapChat, which allows smartphone users to control how long friends can view messages, is emblematic of people reaching the "gag point" with pervasive recording and surveillance by government and business. "Our democracy has been hacked," Gore also told his audience, referring to the U.S. Constitution as "our operating system." While there's never been a "golden age" of American Democracy, he added, the perils emerging today are new. "If a Congressman or Senator has to spend five hours a day begging special interests or rich people for money," he said, they'll be more concerned about how what they're saying will appeal to those interests—rather than their constituents. In yet another tangent, Gore railed against genetic engineering, including Spider Goats, which are goats with spliced spider DNA that allows them to secrete spider silk along with their milk. The goats breed, extending that trait to future generations. Gore sees such things as a case of science run amok, alternately creepy and scary."
Security

Kevin Mitnick Answers 161

Last week, you asked Kevin Mitnick questions about his past, his thoughts on ethics and disclosure, and his computer set-up. He's graciously responded; read on for his answers. (No dice on the computer set-up, though.) Thanks, Kevin.

Comment Open != Free (Score 1) 595

Open standards != free products.

There are many open standards out there, but they do not mean free products. Look at any other engineering discipline, and you'll find ample sets of standards that help define, build, & create control systems, cars, structures, etc. None of those standards necessitate free products. We have been spoiled in software engineering that in the past many open standards have resulted in free products. Those days are over.

Content is king, and $ is the name of the game. Apple & Adobe are jockeying for long-term position in content delivery - i.e. future revenue. They're investing tons of $ to control eye-balls not just now, but years into the future. Companies (think P&G, ESPN, NY Times, WalMart) have to make money to survive. They will send their $ to whoever controls the most eye-balls. In the recent past, that was television, now its TV & internet, and in the future it will be internet driven, but the receiving devices will not be computers as we think of them. No one knows what they will be. Apple is trying to shape & dominate those devices. Adobe wants to make sure it doesn't get cut out. Google & Microsoft are playing catchup, but aren't necessarily Adobe's friends in this fight.

Adobe is no saint bearing the flag for free or open. They want lock-in to their products/platforms as much as Apple does. Let's be honest, these are massive companies engaged in a turf battle that each recognizes carries significant long-term value for their shareholders. The principles of open/free/compatible are nothing more than pawns used to gain competitive advantage.

This is all about the benjamins...

Personally, I don't care about Flash. I developed in ShockwaveFlash w/ Lingo 10+ years ago, and fundamentally, that's the same core technology set that Adobe's still peddling as Flash now. More bells, more whistles, more tools, same idea. As a company, they have every right to protect their cash cow (see Microsoft).

Like Apple or hate Apple, you have to say they're innovating, and they're not afraid to toss the past, even their own cash cows, in favor of the future. Integrated easy to use devices are for certain a big part of the future, and they proved it by refining the phone in a way no one else had the creativity to do.

Censorship

Sharp Rise In Jailing of Online Journalists; Iran May Just Kill Them 233

bckspc writes "The Committee to Protect Journalists has published their annual census of journalists in prison. Of the 136 reporters in prison around the world on December 1, 'At least 68 bloggers, Web-based reporters, and online editors are imprisoned, constituting half of all journalists now in jail.' Print was next with 51 cases. Also, 'Freelancers now make up nearly 45 percent of all journalists jailed worldwide, a dramatic recent increase that reflects the evolution of the global news business.' China, Iran, Cuba, Eritrea, and Burma were the top 5 jailers of journalists." rmdstudio writes, too, with word that after the last few days' protest there, largely organized online, the government of Iran is considering the death penalty for bloggers and webmasters whose reports offend it.
Image

Wells Fargo Bank Sues Itself 445

Extreme economic problems require extreme solutions, and Wells Fargo Bank has come up with a good one. They have decided to sue themselves. Wells Fargo holds the first and second mortgages on a condominium that is going into foreclosure. As holder of the first, they are suing all other lien holders, including the holder of the second, which is Wells Fargo. It gets better. The company has hired a lawyer to defend itself against its own lawsuit. The defense lawyer even filed this answer to the complaint, "Defendant admits that it is the owner and holder of a mortgage encumbering the subject real property. All other allegations of the complaint are denied." On the website The Consumer Warning Network, Angie Moreschi wrote: "We've apparently reached the perfect storm for complete and utter idiocy by some banks trying to foreclose on homes."

Comment Commercial tool also available (Score 1) 216

Inxight (now apparently part of Business Objects) has a very good knowledge search, data mining, and concept analysis system in their Smart Discovery servers. I don't work for them, but helped evaluate and deploy the product in a previous job. Definitely had some useful features beyond just indexed search. http://www.inxight.com/products/

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