Google has entered the race to develop the technology to develop cheapr sources of renewable energy, promising to spend hundreds of millions on research and development efforts.
The Renewable Energy Cheaper than Coal project will focus initially on advanced solar thermal power, wind power technologies, enhanced geothermal systems and other potential breakthrough technologies
The company will spend “tens of millions” on R&D for the project in 2008. As part of its capital planning process, the company also anticipates investing hundreds of millions of dollars in breakthrough renewable energy projects which generate positive returns.
“We have gained expertise in designing and building large-scale, energy-intensive facilities by building efficient data centers,” said Google co-founder and president Larry Page. “We want to apply the same creativity and innovation to the challenge of generating renewable electricity at globally significant scale, and produce it cheaper than from coal.”
“With talented technologists, great partners and significant investments, we hope to rapidly push forward. Our goal is to produce one Gigawatt of renewable energy capacity that is cheaper than coal. We are optimistic this can be done in years, not decades,” Mr Page said.
One Gigawatt can power a city the size of San Francisco.
“If we meet this goal and large-scale renewable deployments are cheaper than coal, the world will have the option to meet a substantial portion of electricity needs from renewable sources and significantly reduce carbon emissions. We expect this would be a good business for us as well.”
Coal is the primary power source for many around the world, supplying 40 per cent of the world's electricity.
“Lots of groups are doing great work trying to produce inexpensive renewable energy. We want to add something that moves these efforts toward even cheaper technologies a bit more quickly. Usual investment criteria may not deliver the super low-cost, clean, renewable energy soon enough to avoid the worst effects of climate change,” said Dr Larry Brilliant, the executive director of Google's philanthropic arm, Google.org.
“Google.org's hope is that by funding research on promising technologies, investing in promising new companies, and doing a lot of R&D ourselves, we may help spark a green electricity revolution that will deliver breakthrough technologies priced lower than coal.”
For more Future Parc news click here .
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Monday, December 17, 2007
Optus appoints Huawei
OPTUS has appointed Huawei and Nokia Siemens as its vendors of choice in its accelerated roll out of its nationwide 3G/ HSPA (High Speed Packet Access) network.
The company said it would use a combination of 900MHz and 2100MHz frequency ranges, and when complete the network will cover 96 per cent of the population – replicating the Optus 2G network. The 900MHz range will be used primarily in rural and regional Australia.
Optus chief executive Paul O’Sullivan said the company had completed its network upgrade in all capital cities to 3G/HSPA. The first phase of the extended upgrade is also complete, with areas in Newcastle and Wollongong already in service.
“Through our national deployment, more Australians will have access to a competitive, high quality, high speed network and will be able to choose from our array of product plans and flexible pricing,” Mr O'Sullivan said.
“Our 3G/HSPA network currently reaches 60 percent of the population, will reach around 80 percent of the population by June 2008 and is set for completion by December 2008 - 18 months ahead of schedule,” he said.
Mr O'Sullivan said Optus had adopted a multi-vendor strategy for mobile network deployments to drive better competitive and technical outcomes.
“As a result, we have awarded Huawei and Nokia Siemens Networks to deliver the radio network infrastructure required for this extensive roll out,” he said.
Optus customers using the 3G/HSPA network will have access to improved speeds, of up to 3.6Mbps, on Optus Wireless Broadband modems and enabled mobile phones. They will see significant improvement in time to download and upload videos, music, maps and user generated content on their laptops and phones.
“The 900MHz range for 3G/HSPA is perfectly suited to the Australian landscape. Using this frequency, radio signals have a greater range – giving better quality and wider coverage across sparsely populated rural and remote areas,” Mr O'Sullivan said.
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
The company said it would use a combination of 900MHz and 2100MHz frequency ranges, and when complete the network will cover 96 per cent of the population – replicating the Optus 2G network. The 900MHz range will be used primarily in rural and regional Australia.
Optus chief executive Paul O’Sullivan said the company had completed its network upgrade in all capital cities to 3G/HSPA. The first phase of the extended upgrade is also complete, with areas in Newcastle and Wollongong already in service.
“Through our national deployment, more Australians will have access to a competitive, high quality, high speed network and will be able to choose from our array of product plans and flexible pricing,” Mr O'Sullivan said.
“Our 3G/HSPA network currently reaches 60 percent of the population, will reach around 80 percent of the population by June 2008 and is set for completion by December 2008 - 18 months ahead of schedule,” he said.
Mr O'Sullivan said Optus had adopted a multi-vendor strategy for mobile network deployments to drive better competitive and technical outcomes.
“As a result, we have awarded Huawei and Nokia Siemens Networks to deliver the radio network infrastructure required for this extensive roll out,” he said.
Optus customers using the 3G/HSPA network will have access to improved speeds, of up to 3.6Mbps, on Optus Wireless Broadband modems and enabled mobile phones. They will see significant improvement in time to download and upload videos, music, maps and user generated content on their laptops and phones.
“The 900MHz range for 3G/HSPA is perfectly suited to the Australian landscape. Using this frequency, radio signals have a greater range – giving better quality and wider coverage across sparsely populated rural and remote areas,” Mr O'Sullivan said.
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
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Atheros joins navigation club
WIRELESS developer Atheros Communications has announced it is to acquire u-Nav Microelectronics, a semiconductor design firm specializing GPS chipsets and software aimed at location-based services.
The acquisition, for US$54 million in cash and stock, is the latest in the red-hot navigation and location-based services markets.
The addition of u-Nav’s shipping GPS technologies to Atheros’ Radio-on-Chip for Mobile (ROC) portfolio will let the company deliver high-performance, cost-efficient combinations of mobile solutions featuring WLAN, Bluetooth and GPS technologies.
The GPS-enables device market is one of the fast growing electronics segments worldwide. The research firm, In-Stat, forecasts the number of GPS-enabled mobile devices to grow from 180 million units in 2007 to 720 million units in 2011.
The company said this compound annual growth rate of more than 75 per cent is driven by the increasing popularity among consumers of GPS services in wireless handsets and personal navigation devices, and the expansion of the capability into consumer devices such as laptops, mobile gaming products and digital cameras
“With u-Nav’s GPS competency we will deliver an impressive set of wireless solutions that include Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and GPS, increasing the value we bring to our customers,” said Atheros president and chief executive Craig Barratt.
The privately held u-Nav was founded in 2001 and is based in California. Its 54 employees will join Atheros but remain in Irvine and at u-Nav's European engineering facility in Finland. u-Nav chief executive Greg Winner has been appointed general manager of Atheros' GPS business.
For more Navigation and Telematics news click here.
The acquisition, for US$54 million in cash and stock, is the latest in the red-hot navigation and location-based services markets.
The addition of u-Nav’s shipping GPS technologies to Atheros’ Radio-on-Chip for Mobile (ROC) portfolio will let the company deliver high-performance, cost-efficient combinations of mobile solutions featuring WLAN, Bluetooth and GPS technologies.
The GPS-enables device market is one of the fast growing electronics segments worldwide. The research firm, In-Stat, forecasts the number of GPS-enabled mobile devices to grow from 180 million units in 2007 to 720 million units in 2011.
The company said this compound annual growth rate of more than 75 per cent is driven by the increasing popularity among consumers of GPS services in wireless handsets and personal navigation devices, and the expansion of the capability into consumer devices such as laptops, mobile gaming products and digital cameras
“With u-Nav’s GPS competency we will deliver an impressive set of wireless solutions that include Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and GPS, increasing the value we bring to our customers,” said Atheros president and chief executive Craig Barratt.
The privately held u-Nav was founded in 2001 and is based in California. Its 54 employees will join Atheros but remain in Irvine and at u-Nav's European engineering facility in Finland. u-Nav chief executive Greg Winner has been appointed general manager of Atheros' GPS business.
For more Navigation and Telematics news click here.
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Dutch govt adopts open source plan
THE Dutch Government has directed its agencies to start using open source software, setting a deadline of April next year to implement the policy, The Associated Press is reporting.
The Netherlands Economic Affairs Ministry said Government agencies were still allowed to use proprietary applications and formats, but would need to justify it under the new open source policy regime, the agency reported.
The Dutch policy states government organisations at the national level must be ready to use the Open Document Format to save documents by April, while state and local authorities must be ready by 2009.
The policy includes document formats, applications and platforms. Though cost savings are seen as an important, document formats are critical given archiving issues.
The new policy is seen as a move to relieve Dutch authorities from a reliance on Microsoft products and formats.
Though many cities and municipalities through Europe have implemented open source procurement strategies, this is the first national Government to dictate such a police.
AP quotes Netherlands Economic Affairs Ministry spokesman Edwin van Scherrenburg saying the plan was approved unanimously at a meeting of two parliamentary commissions on Wednesday.
For more Open CeBIT news, click here.
The Netherlands Economic Affairs Ministry said Government agencies were still allowed to use proprietary applications and formats, but would need to justify it under the new open source policy regime, the agency reported.
The Dutch policy states government organisations at the national level must be ready to use the Open Document Format to save documents by April, while state and local authorities must be ready by 2009.
The policy includes document formats, applications and platforms. Though cost savings are seen as an important, document formats are critical given archiving issues.
The new policy is seen as a move to relieve Dutch authorities from a reliance on Microsoft products and formats.
Though many cities and municipalities through Europe have implemented open source procurement strategies, this is the first national Government to dictate such a police.
AP quotes Netherlands Economic Affairs Ministry spokesman Edwin van Scherrenburg saying the plan was approved unanimously at a meeting of two parliamentary commissions on Wednesday.
For more Open CeBIT news, click here.
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FTC chair attacked over DoubleClick
TWO high-profile privacy advocacy groups have accused US chair of the US Federal Trade Commission of having a conflict on interest in reviewing Google’s planned acquisition of online advertising firm DoubleClick.
The Electronic Privacy Information Centre (EPIC) and the Centre for Digital Democracy (CDD) called on FTC chairwoman Deborah Platt Majoras to recuse herself from the Google/DoubleClick review because of her husband’s involvement in the issue.
In a submission to the commission, the groups complain that DoubleClick has retained a Washington law firm in which Ms Platt Majoras’ husband is a partner to represent it before the FTC.
The submission further complains that Deborah Platt Majoras was also an equity partner in the law firm prior to become FTC chairwoman.
The law firm, Jones Day, is advising DoubleClick on its US$3.1 billion proposed acquision by Google. The companies would combine DoubleClick ad serving technology with Google’s search and cookie expertise.
“While at Jones Day, (Ms Platt Majoras) represented clients on civil and criminal antitrust litigation matters, including mergers and acquisitions, monopolization, price-fixing, distribution issues, and governmental investigations,” a biography on the FTC web site says.
Reports in the US say Ms Platt Majoras is consulting with the FTC’s ethics officer to see whether she should recuse herself from the review.
“As the Chairman of the Commission has previously recused herself in similar matters for similar reasons where there was a lesser conflict of interest, it is clear that she must recuse herself here,” EPIC and CDD said it the submission to the FTC.
For more e-Marketing news, click here.
The Electronic Privacy Information Centre (EPIC) and the Centre for Digital Democracy (CDD) called on FTC chairwoman Deborah Platt Majoras to recuse herself from the Google/DoubleClick review because of her husband’s involvement in the issue.
In a submission to the commission, the groups complain that DoubleClick has retained a Washington law firm in which Ms Platt Majoras’ husband is a partner to represent it before the FTC.
The submission further complains that Deborah Platt Majoras was also an equity partner in the law firm prior to become FTC chairwoman.
The law firm, Jones Day, is advising DoubleClick on its US$3.1 billion proposed acquision by Google. The companies would combine DoubleClick ad serving technology with Google’s search and cookie expertise.
“While at Jones Day, (Ms Platt Majoras) represented clients on civil and criminal antitrust litigation matters, including mergers and acquisitions, monopolization, price-fixing, distribution issues, and governmental investigations,” a biography on the FTC web site says.
Reports in the US say Ms Platt Majoras is consulting with the FTC’s ethics officer to see whether she should recuse herself from the review.
“As the Chairman of the Commission has previously recused herself in similar matters for similar reasons where there was a lesser conflict of interest, it is clear that she must recuse herself here,” EPIC and CDD said it the submission to the FTC.
For more e-Marketing news, click here.
Asia’s datacenter energy needs double
THE energy demands of datacenters in the Asia-Pacific is far outstripping growth in data centre power consumption in other regions, and will double by 2010, a new study has revealed.
The study, by US expert Dr Jonathon Koomey using data from industry analysts IDC said the Asia-Pacific’s (excluding Japan) world share of data centre energy use would jump from 10 per cent in 2000 to 16 per cent in 2010.
The absolute electricity consumption for servers in the Asia/Pacific region under this scenario would more than double from 2005 to 2010, requiring electricity capacity equal to output from two new 1000 megatwatt power plants.
The US share of total world server electricity use from datacenters will likely decline from 40 per cent in 2000 to about one-third by 2010,
Examining electricity use by region from 2000 to 2005, Dr Koomey found that server electricity use in the Asia/Pacific region (excluding Japan) grew at a 23 per cent annual rate, compared to a world average of 16 per cent a year, making this region the only one with server electricity use growing at a rate significantly greater than the world average.
“Our hope is that this research helps bridge the gap between knowledge and action by furthering worldwide understanding of the economic and environmental costs associated with escalating data centre energy consumption,” AMD server and workstation marketing director Bruce Shaw said.
AMD has launched a program called AMD Green that seeks to develop more energy efficient data centre solutions.
“Clearly, we must work harder than ever to not only deliver more efficient server and cooling technology, but also just as importantly, to work with our industry and government partners to develop environmentally sustainable solutions in areas where we see the most dramatic increases in energy use,” the company said.
For more IT Hardware news, click here.
The study, by US expert Dr Jonathon Koomey using data from industry analysts IDC said the Asia-Pacific’s (excluding Japan) world share of data centre energy use would jump from 10 per cent in 2000 to 16 per cent in 2010.
The absolute electricity consumption for servers in the Asia/Pacific region under this scenario would more than double from 2005 to 2010, requiring electricity capacity equal to output from two new 1000 megatwatt power plants.
The US share of total world server electricity use from datacenters will likely decline from 40 per cent in 2000 to about one-third by 2010,
Examining electricity use by region from 2000 to 2005, Dr Koomey found that server electricity use in the Asia/Pacific region (excluding Japan) grew at a 23 per cent annual rate, compared to a world average of 16 per cent a year, making this region the only one with server electricity use growing at a rate significantly greater than the world average.
“Our hope is that this research helps bridge the gap between knowledge and action by furthering worldwide understanding of the economic and environmental costs associated with escalating data centre energy consumption,” AMD server and workstation marketing director Bruce Shaw said.
AMD has launched a program called AMD Green that seeks to develop more energy efficient data centre solutions.
“Clearly, we must work harder than ever to not only deliver more efficient server and cooling technology, but also just as importantly, to work with our industry and government partners to develop environmentally sustainable solutions in areas where we see the most dramatic increases in energy use,” the company said.
For more IT Hardware news, click here.
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Navteq owners approve Nokia deal
SHAREHOLDERS of digital mapping data specialist Navteq have overwhelmingly approved the company’s acquisition by phone company Nokia.
The completion of the US$8.1 billion (A$9.2 billion) deal is still subject to certain regulatory approvals, although the acquisition has already passed inspection by US anti-trust regulators.
More than 99 per cent of the total votes cast at the special meeting of shareholder this week, were voted in favour of the adoption of the merger agreement.
Navteq makes digital mapping software for consumer and corporate applications. It software and devices are found in personal cars as well as fleet vehicles and trucks.
While the company’s heritage is in navigation systems, it is has become a leader in location-based solutions, which made it attractive to mobile phone maker Nokia.
For more Navigation and Telematics news click here.
The completion of the US$8.1 billion (A$9.2 billion) deal is still subject to certain regulatory approvals, although the acquisition has already passed inspection by US anti-trust regulators.
More than 99 per cent of the total votes cast at the special meeting of shareholder this week, were voted in favour of the adoption of the merger agreement.
Navteq makes digital mapping software for consumer and corporate applications. It software and devices are found in personal cars as well as fleet vehicles and trucks.
While the company’s heritage is in navigation systems, it is has become a leader in location-based solutions, which made it attractive to mobile phone maker Nokia.
For more Navigation and Telematics news click here.
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Microsoft acquires UK’s Multimap
MICROSOFT has stepped up its search and location-based services efforts through the acquisition of UK-based online mapping innovator Multimap.
The company said the Multimap location and mapping technologies would be used in conjunction with existing Microsoft products like Virtual Earth, Live Search, Windows Live services and the recently acquired aQuantive advertising platform.
Microsoft said the technology would likely also be integrated into other products and platforms in the coming years. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
“This acquisition will play a significant role in the future growth of our search business and presents a huge opportunity to expand our platform business,” Microsoft Online Services Group general manager Sharon Baylay said.
Multimap is one of the best-known online mapping companies worldwide, and is one of the Top 100 technology companies in the UK. The company will operate as a wholly owned subsidiary of Microsoft, as part of the Virtual Earth and Search teams in the Online Services Group.
Multimap chief executive Jeff Kelisky said partnering with Microsoft gave the company new opportunities to build mapping services into new applications.
For more Web Applications news, click here.
The company said the Multimap location and mapping technologies would be used in conjunction with existing Microsoft products like Virtual Earth, Live Search, Windows Live services and the recently acquired aQuantive advertising platform.
Microsoft said the technology would likely also be integrated into other products and platforms in the coming years. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
“This acquisition will play a significant role in the future growth of our search business and presents a huge opportunity to expand our platform business,” Microsoft Online Services Group general manager Sharon Baylay said.
Multimap is one of the best-known online mapping companies worldwide, and is one of the Top 100 technology companies in the UK. The company will operate as a wholly owned subsidiary of Microsoft, as part of the Virtual Earth and Search teams in the Online Services Group.
Multimap chief executive Jeff Kelisky said partnering with Microsoft gave the company new opportunities to build mapping services into new applications.
For more Web Applications news, click here.
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WiMAX: 80m subscribers in 5 years
THE number of subscribers to WiMAX mobile broadband services will start to boom in 2010, and will exceed 80 million globally by 2013, according to Junior Research.
The report says that more than 50 Mobile WiMAX 802.11e trials and network contracts had been announced in this year, and that the WiMAX market was active in all geographies.
Juniper Research’ report author Howard Wilcox says the value of Mobile WiMAX services revenues would grow to US$23 billion ($26.1 billion)
The ‘Mobile WiMAX: Global Opportunities, Strategies & Forecasts, 2007-2013’ found that the US, Japan and South Korea would be the three largest markets for WiMAX.
Australia is already becoming a WiMAX player – and per capita could become one of the biggest users, with large-scale plans already in motion to roll-out WiMAX nationwide as part of the previous Government broadband schemes.
Mr Wilcox said there were several wildcard factors could increase the size of the WiMAX market, including the emergence of low cost laptops, and adding broadband capability to devices like MP3 players, and games consoles.
“Mobile WiMAX will be a device-based technology, whether handsets, laptops, datacards, or other types of consumer device such as media players,” Mr Wilcox said.
“The twin challenges are for vendors to produce the right devices at the right time and price, and for Mobile WiMAX service providers to differentiate their offerings from existing mobile operators,” he said.
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
The report says that more than 50 Mobile WiMAX 802.11e trials and network contracts had been announced in this year, and that the WiMAX market was active in all geographies.
Juniper Research’ report author Howard Wilcox says the value of Mobile WiMAX services revenues would grow to US$23 billion ($26.1 billion)
The ‘Mobile WiMAX: Global Opportunities, Strategies & Forecasts, 2007-2013’ found that the US, Japan and South Korea would be the three largest markets for WiMAX.
Australia is already becoming a WiMAX player – and per capita could become one of the biggest users, with large-scale plans already in motion to roll-out WiMAX nationwide as part of the previous Government broadband schemes.
Mr Wilcox said there were several wildcard factors could increase the size of the WiMAX market, including the emergence of low cost laptops, and adding broadband capability to devices like MP3 players, and games consoles.
“Mobile WiMAX will be a device-based technology, whether handsets, laptops, datacards, or other types of consumer device such as media players,” Mr Wilcox said.
“The twin challenges are for vendors to produce the right devices at the right time and price, and for Mobile WiMAX service providers to differentiate their offerings from existing mobile operators,” he said.
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
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Asus EeePC spurs competition
THE spectacular sales success of the tiny, low-cost Eee PC notebook from Asus has prompted the sincerest form of flattery from its competitors – imitation.
Research group Gartner says rival companies are already developing products that compete with Eee PC at the low-cost end of the market.
Asus launched the Eee PC in Australia less than a month ago. Selling through Myer as exclusive retailer, the product has already sold out. It is the same in other markets like the US and UK.
The appeal of the Eee PC is that it is small (less than a kilo) and cheap (less than $500). But Gartner says in its Semiconductor DQ Monday Report this week that the Eee PC has attracted the attention of vendors who want to produce low-cost notebooks with better functionality – and steal Asus’ market.
Gartner said China’s Hasee Computer plans to launch a low-cost notebook soon, with a bigger display than the Eee PC, a more powerful processor and more storage.
The Hasee Q540X notebook will run an Intel Celeron 540 processor, an 80Gb hard drive, weighing 2.2 kilos and priced at about US$400 (A$450) .
The Eee PC has built in wireless connectivity and uses the Linux open source operating system.
For more Mobile Computing news, click here.
Research group Gartner says rival companies are already developing products that compete with Eee PC at the low-cost end of the market.
Asus launched the Eee PC in Australia less than a month ago. Selling through Myer as exclusive retailer, the product has already sold out. It is the same in other markets like the US and UK.
The appeal of the Eee PC is that it is small (less than a kilo) and cheap (less than $500). But Gartner says in its Semiconductor DQ Monday Report this week that the Eee PC has attracted the attention of vendors who want to produce low-cost notebooks with better functionality – and steal Asus’ market.
Gartner said China’s Hasee Computer plans to launch a low-cost notebook soon, with a bigger display than the Eee PC, a more powerful processor and more storage.
The Hasee Q540X notebook will run an Intel Celeron 540 processor, an 80Gb hard drive, weighing 2.2 kilos and priced at about US$400 (A$450) .
The Eee PC has built in wireless connectivity and uses the Linux open source operating system.
For more Mobile Computing news, click here.
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Telstra claims rare ACCC victory
TELSTRA has claimed a rare victory in its unhappy relationship with the competition regulator after the Federal Court quashed a competition notice it ruled had been issued illegally.
The court dispute related to two Telstra fixed line home phone products – one a wholesale line rental product and the other a retail home phone product.
The products were originally offered in mid-2005, but the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) issued a competition notice on the products in April 2006.
Telstra complains that just four days after the ACCC issued the notice, “Optus commenced its own legal proceedings against Telstra on the back of the competition notice.”
Justice Annabelle Bennett ruled that the ACCC had acted illegally in issuing the competition notice, because it denied Telstra the procedural fairness. The ruling related to discrepancies between the competition notice and the consultation notice issued prior to it.
Telstra, which has a relationship with the ACCC best described as poisonous, is using the ruling to again call for the ACCC to have its powers curbed.
Telstra's Group General Counsel Will Irving said: "As we said in April, the ACCC's powers should be overhauled given the finding of the Court that the ACCC had not treated Telstra fairly.
“The ACCC's competition notice exposed Telstra to potential fines of up to $3 million a day, as well as third-party litigation of precisely the type we saw from Optus,” Mr Irving said.
“Telstra has long argued that Part XIB of the Trade Practices Act gives the ACCC too much selective power that is clearly susceptible to gaming by competitors.”
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
The court dispute related to two Telstra fixed line home phone products – one a wholesale line rental product and the other a retail home phone product.
The products were originally offered in mid-2005, but the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) issued a competition notice on the products in April 2006.
Telstra complains that just four days after the ACCC issued the notice, “Optus commenced its own legal proceedings against Telstra on the back of the competition notice.”
Justice Annabelle Bennett ruled that the ACCC had acted illegally in issuing the competition notice, because it denied Telstra the procedural fairness. The ruling related to discrepancies between the competition notice and the consultation notice issued prior to it.
Telstra, which has a relationship with the ACCC best described as poisonous, is using the ruling to again call for the ACCC to have its powers curbed.
Telstra's Group General Counsel Will Irving said: "As we said in April, the ACCC's powers should be overhauled given the finding of the Court that the ACCC had not treated Telstra fairly.
“The ACCC's competition notice exposed Telstra to potential fines of up to $3 million a day, as well as third-party litigation of precisely the type we saw from Optus,” Mr Irving said.
“Telstra has long argued that Part XIB of the Trade Practices Act gives the ACCC too much selective power that is clearly susceptible to gaming by competitors.”
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Office Live Workspace beta launched
MICROSOFT has started the roll out of its first public beta of its Office Live Workspace product, a kind of hybrid software-plus-services that lets users more easily collaborate across the internet.
Office Live Workspace is a secure online workspace that Microsoft Office users can share Word, PowerPoint, Excel or PDF files – working remotely from virtually any web-connected PC and collaborate on with others.
The services initially gives users 500Mb of storage, and is limited to users in the US, though it is scheduled for roll-out internationally in 2008.
The Office Live Workspace is Microsoft’s hybrid answer to the Google Doc & Spreadsheets service
Microsoft Office director of consumer and small business product management Kirk Gregersen said the product helped solve collaboration challenges by giving everyone in a workgroup access to the same version of a document.
“This is just the start of a wave of new products we’re rolling out to deliver on our vision of software plus services, bringing together the features and performance of software with the convenience and reach of services delivered over the internet,” Mr Gregersen said.
“We think that Office Live Workspace will be important for our 500 million Office customers because it’s one of the first tightly integrated web-based sharing and collaboration services designed to give a seamless experience for Office users,” he said.
For more Business Software news, click here.
Office Live Workspace is a secure online workspace that Microsoft Office users can share Word, PowerPoint, Excel or PDF files – working remotely from virtually any web-connected PC and collaborate on with others.
The services initially gives users 500Mb of storage, and is limited to users in the US, though it is scheduled for roll-out internationally in 2008.
The Office Live Workspace is Microsoft’s hybrid answer to the Google Doc & Spreadsheets service
Microsoft Office director of consumer and small business product management Kirk Gregersen said the product helped solve collaboration challenges by giving everyone in a workgroup access to the same version of a document.
“This is just the start of a wave of new products we’re rolling out to deliver on our vision of software plus services, bringing together the features and performance of software with the convenience and reach of services delivered over the internet,” Mr Gregersen said.
“We think that Office Live Workspace will be important for our 500 million Office customers because it’s one of the first tightly integrated web-based sharing and collaboration services designed to give a seamless experience for Office users,” he said.
For more Business Software news, click here.
Microsoft bags CNBC advertising
AS competition in the online advertising space ratchets up, Microsoft has announced it will start exclusively serving ads to the popular financial news site CNBC.
The competition between Google, Microsoft and Yahoo is turning into a land-grab for customers.
Google earlier this year announced its intention to acquire display advertising leader DoubleClick – which is still awaiting Federal approval – while Microsoft spent US$6 billion acquiring display online ad specialist aQuantive.
Microsoft will serve up contextually relevant advertising to the more than 2.6 million unique visitors to CNBC.com each month. Microsoft will be the exclusive third-party provider for both display and contextual advertising.
The companies said advanced technology would connect advertisers with CNBC.com users through a combination of graphical advertisments and automated text-based ads targeted to content.
Over time, the technology would also enable the anonymous aggregation of user behavior, the companies said in a statement.
“The addition of CNBC to our syndicated advertising partner sites will help the advertisers that work with Microsoft reach an even broader set of users in this highly strategic audience segment,” Microsoft Online Services Group senior vice-president Steve Berkowitz said.
Microsoft will start serving CNBC.com with text advertising later this month, and online display advertising in March next year.
For more e-Marketing news, click here.
The competition between Google, Microsoft and Yahoo is turning into a land-grab for customers.
Google earlier this year announced its intention to acquire display advertising leader DoubleClick – which is still awaiting Federal approval – while Microsoft spent US$6 billion acquiring display online ad specialist aQuantive.
Microsoft will serve up contextually relevant advertising to the more than 2.6 million unique visitors to CNBC.com each month. Microsoft will be the exclusive third-party provider for both display and contextual advertising.
The companies said advanced technology would connect advertisers with CNBC.com users through a combination of graphical advertisments and automated text-based ads targeted to content.
Over time, the technology would also enable the anonymous aggregation of user behavior, the companies said in a statement.
“The addition of CNBC to our syndicated advertising partner sites will help the advertisers that work with Microsoft reach an even broader set of users in this highly strategic audience segment,” Microsoft Online Services Group senior vice-president Steve Berkowitz said.
Microsoft will start serving CNBC.com with text advertising later this month, and online display advertising in March next year.
For more e-Marketing news, click here.
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Monday, December 10, 2007
IBM unveils supercomputer on a chip
IBM Research has announced a photonics breakthrough that it says will soon allow the power of a supercomputer to be packed onto a single chip.
The company said it had developed way to convert electrical signals into pulses of light. The breakthrough means a chip uses pulses of light through silicon instead of electrical signals on wires.
In addition to putting the extraordinary power of a supercomputer into a single, notebook sized machine, IBM said the breakthrough had obvious benefits of drastically lower power consumption and reduced heat.
He breakthrough would also mean dramatically lower cost, while increasing speed and performance between cores by more than 100 times.
“While today’s supercomputers can use the equivalent energy required to power hundreds of homes, these future tiny supercomputers-on-a-chip would expend the energy of a light bulb,” IBM said in a statement.
In a paper published in the journal Optics Express, the IBM researchers detailed a significant milestone in the quest to send information between multiple cores – or “brains” – on a chip using pulses of light through silicon.
The breakthrough – known in the industry as a silicon Mach-Zehnder electro-optic modulator – performs the function of converting electrical signals into pulses of light.
The IBM modulator is 100 to 1,000 times smaller in size compared to previously demonstrated modulators of its kind, paving the way for complete optical routing networks to be integrated onto a single chip.
“Work is underway within IBM and in the industry to pack many more computing cores on a single chip, but today’s on-chip communications technology would overheat and be far too slow to handle that increase in workload,” said IBM Research vice-president for Science and Technology, Dr T.C. Chen.
“What we have done is a significant step toward building a vastly smaller and more power-efficient way to connect those cores, in a way that nobody has done before,” Dr Chen said.
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The company said it had developed way to convert electrical signals into pulses of light. The breakthrough means a chip uses pulses of light through silicon instead of electrical signals on wires.
In addition to putting the extraordinary power of a supercomputer into a single, notebook sized machine, IBM said the breakthrough had obvious benefits of drastically lower power consumption and reduced heat.
He breakthrough would also mean dramatically lower cost, while increasing speed and performance between cores by more than 100 times.
“While today’s supercomputers can use the equivalent energy required to power hundreds of homes, these future tiny supercomputers-on-a-chip would expend the energy of a light bulb,” IBM said in a statement.
In a paper published in the journal Optics Express, the IBM researchers detailed a significant milestone in the quest to send information between multiple cores – or “brains” – on a chip using pulses of light through silicon.
The breakthrough – known in the industry as a silicon Mach-Zehnder electro-optic modulator – performs the function of converting electrical signals into pulses of light.
The IBM modulator is 100 to 1,000 times smaller in size compared to previously demonstrated modulators of its kind, paving the way for complete optical routing networks to be integrated onto a single chip.
“Work is underway within IBM and in the industry to pack many more computing cores on a single chip, but today’s on-chip communications technology would overheat and be far too slow to handle that increase in workload,” said IBM Research vice-president for Science and Technology, Dr T.C. Chen.
“What we have done is a significant step toward building a vastly smaller and more power-efficient way to connect those cores, in a way that nobody has done before,” Dr Chen said.
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Cabinet approves $1b schools plan
FEDERAL Cabinet has signed off on a $1 billion plan to give every student in years nine to 12 their own computer at school, with the first $100 million in funding to become available in March.
The plan is one of the first election commitments to be put through the Cabinet process, and means that schools can start applying now for funding of up to $1 million each.
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said an national audit of schools’ computer resources and broadband facilities would be conducted to determine those in most need.
Though funding is available to all schools – public and private – the first round money will go to those found to be in most urgent need.
Mr Rudd said schools can elect to spend the funding on a range of digital equipment – from computers, interactive whiteboards, networking equipment, digital projects and improved broadband connectivity.
Deputy Prime Minister and education Minister Julia Gillard has also outlined broad plans to improve teacher training in ICT skills to ensure they are equipped to teach in computer-equipped classrooms.
Under its National Secondary School Computer Fund commitment during the election, Labor noted that ICT “is also now becoming critical to most jobs in most industries,” for mining, to agriculture, manufacturing and services.
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The plan is one of the first election commitments to be put through the Cabinet process, and means that schools can start applying now for funding of up to $1 million each.
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said an national audit of schools’ computer resources and broadband facilities would be conducted to determine those in most need.
Though funding is available to all schools – public and private – the first round money will go to those found to be in most urgent need.
Mr Rudd said schools can elect to spend the funding on a range of digital equipment – from computers, interactive whiteboards, networking equipment, digital projects and improved broadband connectivity.
Deputy Prime Minister and education Minister Julia Gillard has also outlined broad plans to improve teacher training in ICT skills to ensure they are equipped to teach in computer-equipped classrooms.
Under its National Secondary School Computer Fund commitment during the election, Labor noted that ICT “is also now becoming critical to most jobs in most industries,” for mining, to agriculture, manufacturing and services.
For more Mobile Computing news, click here.
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Oracle buys Web apps specialist
BUSINESS software Goliath Oracle has acquired a Dutch software vendor Mobiforce, which specialises in monitoring the availability and performance of web applications.
Oracle said Moniforce’s technology was expected to strengthen its Enterprise Manager suite that lets application administrators to proactively detect and resolve end-user experience and application logic issues.
Moniforce boasts customer spanning key industries, including financial , retail, and government. Financial details of the acquisition were not disclosed.
“The transaction underscores Oracle's strategy of lowering total cost of ownership and delivering higher quality of service for customers running packaged or custom applications in Oracle or non-Oracle environments,” said Oracle Product Development executive vice-president Chuck Rozwat.
Moniforce chief executive Willem-Jan Scholten said real end-user information was essential for improving application usage and business performance – and for lowering total cost of ownership.
“We're proud to become part of the world's largest enterprise software company and look forward to delivering solutions that maximise our customers' return on their application investments by ensuring the highest end-user satisfaction.” Mr Scholten said.
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Oracle said Moniforce’s technology was expected to strengthen its Enterprise Manager suite that lets application administrators to proactively detect and resolve end-user experience and application logic issues.
Moniforce boasts customer spanning key industries, including financial , retail, and government. Financial details of the acquisition were not disclosed.
“The transaction underscores Oracle's strategy of lowering total cost of ownership and delivering higher quality of service for customers running packaged or custom applications in Oracle or non-Oracle environments,” said Oracle Product Development executive vice-president Chuck Rozwat.
Moniforce chief executive Willem-Jan Scholten said real end-user information was essential for improving application usage and business performance – and for lowering total cost of ownership.
“We're proud to become part of the world's largest enterprise software company and look forward to delivering solutions that maximise our customers' return on their application investments by ensuring the highest end-user satisfaction.” Mr Scholten said.
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Moon 2.0 attracts first entrant
THE Google-sponsored Lunar X Prize competition – which aims to encourage private sector space exploration – has attracted its first official entrant.
Odyssey Moon Limited, a privately-held company based in the Isle of Man and boasting shareholders from many different countries, announced its plans to launch a robotic mission to the surface of the moon.
The Google Lunar X Prize offers US$30 million (A$34 million) prize to the first company that sends a robotic lander to the moon that is capable of carry out a series of exploration tasks.
Odyssey Moon is the brainchild of Dr Bob Richards, a founder of the International Space University
Richards said that the company’s goal is to lower the price of getting to the Moon by an order of magnitude. Exploration would encourage a “moonrush” to Earth’s sister world, which he describes as an eighth continent rich in energy and resources.
“Our business plans have been in development for a series of missions to the Moon during the International Lunar Decade in support of science, exploration and commerce,” Dr Richards said.
Odyssey Moon has pulled together a team with deep experience in space exploration, overseen by chairman Ramin Khadem, a well-known figure in the international satellite industry and a former chief financial officer of InMarSat.
Odyssey Moon has appointed as its prime contractor MDA of Canada, a company with vast space heritage in providing robotics on the Space Shuttle and International Space Station, and more recently for satellite servicing and planetary exploration.
For more Future Parc news click here .
Odyssey Moon Limited, a privately-held company based in the Isle of Man and boasting shareholders from many different countries, announced its plans to launch a robotic mission to the surface of the moon.
The Google Lunar X Prize offers US$30 million (A$34 million) prize to the first company that sends a robotic lander to the moon that is capable of carry out a series of exploration tasks.
Odyssey Moon is the brainchild of Dr Bob Richards, a founder of the International Space University
Richards said that the company’s goal is to lower the price of getting to the Moon by an order of magnitude. Exploration would encourage a “moonrush” to Earth’s sister world, which he describes as an eighth continent rich in energy and resources.
“Our business plans have been in development for a series of missions to the Moon during the International Lunar Decade in support of science, exploration and commerce,” Dr Richards said.
Odyssey Moon has pulled together a team with deep experience in space exploration, overseen by chairman Ramin Khadem, a well-known figure in the international satellite industry and a former chief financial officer of InMarSat.
Odyssey Moon has appointed as its prime contractor MDA of Canada, a company with vast space heritage in providing robotics on the Space Shuttle and International Space Station, and more recently for satellite servicing and planetary exploration.
For more Future Parc news click here .
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Li Ka-shing buys Facebook stake
HONGKONG billionaire tycoon Li Ka-shing, Asia’s richest man, has acquired a 0.4 per cent sliver of equity in the social networking site Facebook for a reported US$60 million (A$68.1 million).
Wire reports say the investment was made through the Li Ka-shing Foundation, and did not involve his flagship companies Cheung Kong or Hutchison Whampoa.
79-year-old Mr Li is a much-loved business superstar in Hongkong, a genuine rags-to-riches success in the former British colony.
The investment follows a series of high-profile stakes taken in Facebook in recent months. In October, Microsoft paid UA$240 million (A$272.5 million) for a 1.6 per cent chunk of Facebook.
Forbes magazine puts Mr Li’s personal fortune at about US$23 billion, making him the ninth wealthiest man in the world.
Mr Li and Microsoft’s investments value the privately-held Facebook at US$15 billion.
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Wire reports say the investment was made through the Li Ka-shing Foundation, and did not involve his flagship companies Cheung Kong or Hutchison Whampoa.
79-year-old Mr Li is a much-loved business superstar in Hongkong, a genuine rags-to-riches success in the former British colony.
The investment follows a series of high-profile stakes taken in Facebook in recent months. In October, Microsoft paid UA$240 million (A$272.5 million) for a 1.6 per cent chunk of Facebook.
Forbes magazine puts Mr Li’s personal fortune at about US$23 billion, making him the ninth wealthiest man in the world.
Mr Li and Microsoft’s investments value the privately-held Facebook at US$15 billion.
For more e-Marketing news, click here.
IBM lodges Asus patent complaint
IBM wants the US government to ban the imports of Taiwanese OEM manufacturing giant Asustek, claiming the company infringes IBM patents in a broad variety of its tech products.
Asustek, which is best known for manufacturing PCs, notebooks and other products on behalf of big brand companies, has in recent years established it own ASUS brand in a growing number of international markets.
IBM claims it has made “repeated attempts” to reach licensing agreements with Asustek and its subsidiary in the US, ASUS Computer International.
Big Blue has now filed a complaint with the US International Trade Commission outlining three specific breaches concerning patents covering power supply, automatic fan speed control, and computer clustering.
“The infringing Asustek computer products include notebook computers, so-called barebones computer systems, servers, routers and various computer components,” IBM said in a statement.
The US International Trade Commission is an independent federal agency that has the authority to ban the importation of products found to infringe the patents of US companies.
Asustek, which builds products on behalf of companies like Dell and Hewlett Packard, has denied the allegations.
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Asustek, which is best known for manufacturing PCs, notebooks and other products on behalf of big brand companies, has in recent years established it own ASUS brand in a growing number of international markets.
IBM claims it has made “repeated attempts” to reach licensing agreements with Asustek and its subsidiary in the US, ASUS Computer International.
Big Blue has now filed a complaint with the US International Trade Commission outlining three specific breaches concerning patents covering power supply, automatic fan speed control, and computer clustering.
“The infringing Asustek computer products include notebook computers, so-called barebones computer systems, servers, routers and various computer components,” IBM said in a statement.
The US International Trade Commission is an independent federal agency that has the authority to ban the importation of products found to infringe the patents of US companies.
Asustek, which builds products on behalf of companies like Dell and Hewlett Packard, has denied the allegations.
For more IT Hardware news, click here.
Hostworks acquired for $69 million
ADELAIDE-based hosting and managed services firm Hostworks has been acquired by Broadcast Australia for $68.9 million.
Hostworks has been an industry pioneer, and is one of the largest full-service web hosting companies in the region. Its customer base includes NineMSN, ABC, SBS, News Ltd, Optus, and AAMI.
More than 15 per cent of all page views each month by Australia’s 10 million internet users are hosted by Hostworks.
Hostworks’ board of directors unanimously recommended that shareholders accept the Broadcast Australia offer. Major Hostworks shareholders including managing director Marty Gauvin and non-executive director Stephen Chapman granted Broadcast Australia an option over a 19 per cent parcel of Hostworks shares.
In the eight years since foundation, Hostworks has become recognized as Australia’s leading provider of managed services for on-line media and entertainment companies and management and hosting services for a broad range of critical applications.
“Broadcast Australia’s proposal represents an excellent outcome for our shareholders as well as providing significant benefits for customers and employees,” Mr Gauvin said in a statement.
Broadcast Australia is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the ASX-listed Macquarie Communications Infrastructure Group.
“We are pleased to have entered into an agreement to acquire Hostworks, which enhances Broadcast Australia’s core business of being a trusted provider connecting content owners to customers across multiple platforms,” said Broadcast Australia managing director, Graeme Barclay.
For more IT Services news, click here.
Hostworks has been an industry pioneer, and is one of the largest full-service web hosting companies in the region. Its customer base includes NineMSN, ABC, SBS, News Ltd, Optus, and AAMI.
More than 15 per cent of all page views each month by Australia’s 10 million internet users are hosted by Hostworks.
Hostworks’ board of directors unanimously recommended that shareholders accept the Broadcast Australia offer. Major Hostworks shareholders including managing director Marty Gauvin and non-executive director Stephen Chapman granted Broadcast Australia an option over a 19 per cent parcel of Hostworks shares.
In the eight years since foundation, Hostworks has become recognized as Australia’s leading provider of managed services for on-line media and entertainment companies and management and hosting services for a broad range of critical applications.
“Broadcast Australia’s proposal represents an excellent outcome for our shareholders as well as providing significant benefits for customers and employees,” Mr Gauvin said in a statement.
Broadcast Australia is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the ASX-listed Macquarie Communications Infrastructure Group.
“We are pleased to have entered into an agreement to acquire Hostworks, which enhances Broadcast Australia’s core business of being a trusted provider connecting content owners to customers across multiple platforms,” said Broadcast Australia managing director, Graeme Barclay.
For more IT Services news, click here.
Malware incidents double in 2007
EUROPEAN tech security specialist F-Secure has reported it has detected as many malware signatures during 2007 as it had in the entire preceding 20 years.
And the company is predicting a miserable 2008, with malware volumes continuing to increase as criminals successfully create a network-based underground ecosystem, trading malware development tools, skills, capabilities and resources.
F-Secure says in its 2007 Data Security Wrap-Up that it has identified a total about 500,000 malware signatures in its cumulative database – compared to 250,000 a year ago. The number of examples of malware had doubled in just one year.
“We've never seen as many samples arrive to our labs,” F-Secure Corporation Chief Research Officer Mikko Hypponen said.
“We would be unable to handle such huge samples loads if we would not have built a high degree of automation into our malware analysis systems over the past years,” he said.
The company said that while no truly new malware technologies were seen the existing ones were refined and adapted for much greater effectiveness.
Financial transactions remain a favorite target for network crime. The amount of phishing sites continues to increase, but as bank customers have become more aware of this threat the criminals have started employing more sophisticated techniques.
For more IT Security news, click here.
And the company is predicting a miserable 2008, with malware volumes continuing to increase as criminals successfully create a network-based underground ecosystem, trading malware development tools, skills, capabilities and resources.
F-Secure says in its 2007 Data Security Wrap-Up that it has identified a total about 500,000 malware signatures in its cumulative database – compared to 250,000 a year ago. The number of examples of malware had doubled in just one year.
“We've never seen as many samples arrive to our labs,” F-Secure Corporation Chief Research Officer Mikko Hypponen said.
“We would be unable to handle such huge samples loads if we would not have built a high degree of automation into our malware analysis systems over the past years,” he said.
The company said that while no truly new malware technologies were seen the existing ones were refined and adapted for much greater effectiveness.
Financial transactions remain a favorite target for network crime. The amount of phishing sites continues to increase, but as bank customers have become more aware of this threat the criminals have started employing more sophisticated techniques.
For more IT Security news, click here.
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ATO briefs on massive contract
THE Australian Taxation Office will conduct its first briefing for potential tech suppliers to its $1 billion outsourcing plan.
The briefing covers the first stage of a program that will eventually replace the nine-year outsourcing contract the ATO has held with US services giant Electronic Data Systems (EDS).
The ATO announced through the Commonwealth tenders website it would meet with interested suppliers to the Managed Network Services component of its plans on Monday December 17.
The Tax Office said its sourcing plans called for market testing of various services between mid-next year and mid-2010. It plans to issue a series of Expressions of Interest (EoIs) and Requests for Tender (RfTs) during that period.
The first EOI, for Managed Network Services, will be released in late January. It will cover areas ranging from voice, mobile and data carriage services, desktop handsets and PBX systems, network switches and security gateways.
Following the EOI, the Tax Office is expected to select a shortlist of suppliers to participate in further briefings and workshops before being invited to respond to a formal RfT.
For more IT Services news, click here.
The briefing covers the first stage of a program that will eventually replace the nine-year outsourcing contract the ATO has held with US services giant Electronic Data Systems (EDS).
The ATO announced through the Commonwealth tenders website it would meet with interested suppliers to the Managed Network Services component of its plans on Monday December 17.
The Tax Office said its sourcing plans called for market testing of various services between mid-next year and mid-2010. It plans to issue a series of Expressions of Interest (EoIs) and Requests for Tender (RfTs) during that period.
The first EOI, for Managed Network Services, will be released in late January. It will cover areas ranging from voice, mobile and data carriage services, desktop handsets and PBX systems, network switches and security gateways.
Following the EOI, the Tax Office is expected to select a shortlist of suppliers to participate in further briefings and workshops before being invited to respond to a formal RfT.
For more IT Services news, click here.
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IBM wins expanded Telstra deal
IT’S not every day that IBM’s global chief rolls into town. So when Big Blue CEO Sam Palmisano blew into Australia for the first time since taking the helm, it was always a good bet that the local subsidiary would make a big announcement.
No surprise that the announcement should involve Australia’s largest company (and a nine-figure number).
IBM said it has expanded its existing seven-year supply chain deal with Telstra, an extension that would deliver $200 million in additional cost reduction benefits to the telecom giant.
Telstra procurement executive director Ian Wheatley said Phase One of the company’s supply chain project with IBM had been a success and the company was on target to save $500 million over seven years.
The next phase of the supply chain transformation program would focus on improving Telstra’s efficiency in ordering, managing and delivering telecommunication parts needed by technicians and engineers to perform network maintenance, fault repairs and activation of customer services.
“In the first phase of our supply chain transformation, we replaced four payment and ordering systems with IBM's out-of-the-box software,” Mr Wheatly said.
“In phase two of the program, IBM will provide a single end-to-end view of our inventory supply chain and enable us to deliver the right part, at the right place, at the right time – improving customer service and reducing costs. This is great news for our customers and shareholders,” he said.
Telstra says it has reduced its procurement costs by $159 million since September last year.
For more Business Software news, click here.
No surprise that the announcement should involve Australia’s largest company (and a nine-figure number).
IBM said it has expanded its existing seven-year supply chain deal with Telstra, an extension that would deliver $200 million in additional cost reduction benefits to the telecom giant.
Telstra procurement executive director Ian Wheatley said Phase One of the company’s supply chain project with IBM had been a success and the company was on target to save $500 million over seven years.
The next phase of the supply chain transformation program would focus on improving Telstra’s efficiency in ordering, managing and delivering telecommunication parts needed by technicians and engineers to perform network maintenance, fault repairs and activation of customer services.
“In the first phase of our supply chain transformation, we replaced four payment and ordering systems with IBM's out-of-the-box software,” Mr Wheatly said.
“In phase two of the program, IBM will provide a single end-to-end view of our inventory supply chain and enable us to deliver the right part, at the right place, at the right time – improving customer service and reducing costs. This is great news for our customers and shareholders,” he said.
Telstra says it has reduced its procurement costs by $159 million since September last year.
For more Business Software news, click here.
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We’ll proceed without Telstra: Tanner
THE Rudd Government was unfazed by Telstra blunt rejection of plans to build a national broadband network based on joint public-private funding and ownership.
Newly sworn-in Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner has told ABC Television the Labor Government would proceed with the $4.7 billion plan for the national network with or without Telstra.
And the Government’s new Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, Stephen Conroy, said Labor remained committed to building a national fibre-to-the-node network.
Senator Conroy said government hoped to complete the tender process to select partners to build the network by the middle of next year.
“It will be open access, promote competition and put downward pressure on consumer prices,” Senator Conroy said. “We will hold an open and transparent process to determine who will build the network with our ambition being to complete the process by the end of June next year,”
“We expect that there will be much public commentary, jockeying and lobbying from parties as they work to convince the Government that they are best placed to build the new network and seek the terms that are most favourable to them.”
Labor promised in March that it would contribute $4.7 billion in public money toward a public-private national “open access’’ network. Government will issue tenders next year seeking proposals from the private sector to build the network.
But Telstra chief executive Sol Trujillo last week last week rejected the plan, saying the company would only participate in projects that “we own and control.”
Mr Tanner said the Government’s plans were not contingent on Telstra taking part.
“The policy we put forward some months ago is a position that still stands. We are going to proceed,” Mr Tanner said.
“It is Telstra’s choice as to what role they want to play or not,” he said.
Government would wait until seen private sector proposals as part of the tender process before deciding how to structure the network.
Mr Tanner said the policy had been kept as flexible as possible so that the private sector could develop new ideas for implementing a cost effective and technologically efficient network.
“We are going to proceed with the position that we put to the Australian people,” Mr Tanner told the ABC Inside Business program.
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
Newly sworn-in Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner has told ABC Television the Labor Government would proceed with the $4.7 billion plan for the national network with or without Telstra.
And the Government’s new Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, Stephen Conroy, said Labor remained committed to building a national fibre-to-the-node network.
Senator Conroy said government hoped to complete the tender process to select partners to build the network by the middle of next year.
“It will be open access, promote competition and put downward pressure on consumer prices,” Senator Conroy said. “We will hold an open and transparent process to determine who will build the network with our ambition being to complete the process by the end of June next year,”
“We expect that there will be much public commentary, jockeying and lobbying from parties as they work to convince the Government that they are best placed to build the new network and seek the terms that are most favourable to them.”
Labor promised in March that it would contribute $4.7 billion in public money toward a public-private national “open access’’ network. Government will issue tenders next year seeking proposals from the private sector to build the network.
But Telstra chief executive Sol Trujillo last week last week rejected the plan, saying the company would only participate in projects that “we own and control.”
Mr Tanner said the Government’s plans were not contingent on Telstra taking part.
“The policy we put forward some months ago is a position that still stands. We are going to proceed,” Mr Tanner said.
“It is Telstra’s choice as to what role they want to play or not,” he said.
Government would wait until seen private sector proposals as part of the tender process before deciding how to structure the network.
Mr Tanner said the policy had been kept as flexible as possible so that the private sector could develop new ideas for implementing a cost effective and technologically efficient network.
“We are going to proceed with the position that we put to the Australian people,” Mr Tanner told the ABC Inside Business program.
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
Monday, December 3, 2007
ICT get a boost in new Cabinet
THE technology industry has been given a major profile boost in Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s first Cabinet, with the appointment of two senior Ministers with responsibility for ICT-critical issues.
Stephen Conroy was appointed as Minister to the newly-named portfolio of Broadband, Communications and Digital Economy. Senator Conroy has been shadow IT and communications spokesman since 2004, and had been expected to retain those responsibilities – largely because of the incredible complexities of telecommunications regulation (and Telstra-related regulatory issues).
Senator Conroy was a driving force behind Labor’s bold A$4.7 billion national broadband pledge, made in March.
Less expected was the appointment of fellow Victorian Senator Kim Carr as Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research. Senator Carr had been shadow Industry Minister, but Mr Rudd bolstered the portfolio with the addition of Innovation.
Senator Carr will oversee the implementation of industry assistance programs – which will play a huge role in the development of indigenous software companies.
The appointments have been welcomed by the industry.
“We are pleased that the Prime Minister-elect, Kevin Rudd, has acknowledged technology as the driving force of our nation’s economic prosperity and reinforced this stance by including the ICT portfolio in Cabinet,” said the Australian Computer Society’s out-going national President Philip Argy.
“Innovation is a pivotal force in building our national economy and energising our industry. Our prosperity is dependent on productivity gains underpinned by innovation in information and communications technologies,” Mr Argy said.
Lindsay Tanner’s appointment as Finance Minister in the Rudd Cabinet has also been welcomed. Mr Tanner has been a Shadow Communications Minister and is very familiar with the industry.
As a technology buyer, the federal government wields, tremendous influence through the Australian Government Information Management Office (AGIMO), which falls within the Department of Finance.
For more e-Government news, click here.
Stephen Conroy was appointed as Minister to the newly-named portfolio of Broadband, Communications and Digital Economy. Senator Conroy has been shadow IT and communications spokesman since 2004, and had been expected to retain those responsibilities – largely because of the incredible complexities of telecommunications regulation (and Telstra-related regulatory issues).
Senator Conroy was a driving force behind Labor’s bold A$4.7 billion national broadband pledge, made in March.
Less expected was the appointment of fellow Victorian Senator Kim Carr as Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research. Senator Carr had been shadow Industry Minister, but Mr Rudd bolstered the portfolio with the addition of Innovation.
Senator Carr will oversee the implementation of industry assistance programs – which will play a huge role in the development of indigenous software companies.
The appointments have been welcomed by the industry.
“We are pleased that the Prime Minister-elect, Kevin Rudd, has acknowledged technology as the driving force of our nation’s economic prosperity and reinforced this stance by including the ICT portfolio in Cabinet,” said the Australian Computer Society’s out-going national President Philip Argy.
“Innovation is a pivotal force in building our national economy and energising our industry. Our prosperity is dependent on productivity gains underpinned by innovation in information and communications technologies,” Mr Argy said.
Lindsay Tanner’s appointment as Finance Minister in the Rudd Cabinet has also been welcomed. Mr Tanner has been a Shadow Communications Minister and is very familiar with the industry.
As a technology buyer, the federal government wields, tremendous influence through the Australian Government Information Management Office (AGIMO), which falls within the Department of Finance.
For more e-Government news, click here.
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Facebook buried in privacy complaints
FACEBOOK has been forced to overhaul its new advertising system following an avalanche of privacy complaints and bad press about the company’s lack of respect for its users.
The advertising system, called ‘Beacon’, was introduced less than two weeks ago and sought to share what online purchases its users had made with their friend network.
While Beacon displayed an “opt out” button when a user was making a purchase, large numbers of Facebook users were incensed. Others complained the ‘Opt Out’ feature was itself offensive, but were more bitter that the ‘Opt Out’ button was so well hidden.
Within nine days more than 50,000 users joined a “Facebook, Stop Invading My Privacy” group on Facebook itself, and signed a petition complaining about the intrusion.
Facebook has now announced adjustments under which users will have to the give explicit consent in the form of an ‘Opt In’ regime before any of their information is shared.
More than 40 web sites had embedded Beacon into their pages in order to track the transactions of Facebook users.
The privacy advocacy group MoveOn.org, which organised the petition campaign, welcomed the changes.
“If Facebook changes their policy so that no private purchases made on other websites are displayed publicly on Facebook without a user's explicit permission, that would be a huge step in the right direction – and would say a lot about the ability of everyday Internet users to band together to make a difference,” MoveOn.org Civic Action organiser Adam Green said.
For more e-Marketing news, click here.
The advertising system, called ‘Beacon’, was introduced less than two weeks ago and sought to share what online purchases its users had made with their friend network.
While Beacon displayed an “opt out” button when a user was making a purchase, large numbers of Facebook users were incensed. Others complained the ‘Opt Out’ feature was itself offensive, but were more bitter that the ‘Opt Out’ button was so well hidden.
Within nine days more than 50,000 users joined a “Facebook, Stop Invading My Privacy” group on Facebook itself, and signed a petition complaining about the intrusion.
Facebook has now announced adjustments under which users will have to the give explicit consent in the form of an ‘Opt In’ regime before any of their information is shared.
More than 40 web sites had embedded Beacon into their pages in order to track the transactions of Facebook users.
The privacy advocacy group MoveOn.org, which organised the petition campaign, welcomed the changes.
“If Facebook changes their policy so that no private purchases made on other websites are displayed publicly on Facebook without a user's explicit permission, that would be a huge step in the right direction – and would say a lot about the ability of everyday Internet users to band together to make a difference,” MoveOn.org Civic Action organiser Adam Green said.
For more e-Marketing news, click here.
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Adobe, Yahoo launch PDF advertising
ADOBE and Yahoo have launched a service that lets commercial publishers run dynamically generated advertising within PDF documents.
The companies say the service opens up a new frontier for the online advertising market, putting contextual advertising that matches the readers interests in PDFs.
Called ‘Ads for Adobe powered by Yahoo’, the service has been launched initially as a beta program.
“By partnering with Yahoo! on this innovative advertising service we are creating opportunities for publishers to build new businesses around unique content that previously was just given away or not available to a mass online audience,” said Adobe senior vice-president for Corporate Development, Rob Tarkoff.
“As advertisers look to touch new audiences, readers can look forward to some exciting Adobe PDF content coming their way.”
Yahoo! Publisher Network senior vice-president Todd Teresi said the partnership created a previously untapped opportunity for advertisers to connect with qualified audiences, while opening new revenue streams for publishers.
Particpants in the beta program include IDG InfoWorld, Wired, Pearson’s Education, Meredith Corporation and Reed Elsevier.
For more Digital Content news, click here.
The companies say the service opens up a new frontier for the online advertising market, putting contextual advertising that matches the readers interests in PDFs.
Called ‘Ads for Adobe powered by Yahoo’, the service has been launched initially as a beta program.
“By partnering with Yahoo! on this innovative advertising service we are creating opportunities for publishers to build new businesses around unique content that previously was just given away or not available to a mass online audience,” said Adobe senior vice-president for Corporate Development, Rob Tarkoff.
“As advertisers look to touch new audiences, readers can look forward to some exciting Adobe PDF content coming their way.”
Yahoo! Publisher Network senior vice-president Todd Teresi said the partnership created a previously untapped opportunity for advertisers to connect with qualified audiences, while opening new revenue streams for publishers.
Particpants in the beta program include IDG InfoWorld, Wired, Pearson’s Education, Meredith Corporation and Reed Elsevier.
For more Digital Content news, click here.
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Google confirms wireless spectrum bid
SEARCH leader Google has confirmed it will participate in the US Federal Communications Commission’s spectrum auction – underlining the company’s interest in entering the wireless voice and data device markets.
As part of the US’ mandated transition to digital television, the 700 MHz spectrum auction – which begins January 24, 2008 – will free up spectrum airwaves for more efficient wireless internet service for consumers.
Bidding for the spectrum will start at a reserve price of US$4.6 billion (A$5.2 billion). Google announced it will enter the auction without the assistance of a partner. Some industry observers had thought the company would partner with a telecommunications firm for the auction.
The auction stipulates that part of the spectrum be used for open access purposes – under which the winning bidder is compelled to give customers the right to download any application they want on their mobile device and the right to use any device they want on the network.
“We believe it's important to put our money where our principles are,” Google chairman and chief executive Eric Schmidt said. “Consumers deserve more competition and innovation than they have in today's wireless world.”
“No matter which bidder ultimately prevails, the real winners of this auction are American consumers who likely will see more choices than ever before in how they access the internet,” Mr Schmidt said.
The 700MHz spectrum is attractive to communications companies as it wavelength travels long distances and easily penetrates obstacles like concrete walls. This means the spectrum requires fewer communications towers and is therefore cheaper.
Regardless, a national wireless network would be expected to cost the owners an additional US$7 billion.
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
As part of the US’ mandated transition to digital television, the 700 MHz spectrum auction – which begins January 24, 2008 – will free up spectrum airwaves for more efficient wireless internet service for consumers.
Bidding for the spectrum will start at a reserve price of US$4.6 billion (A$5.2 billion). Google announced it will enter the auction without the assistance of a partner. Some industry observers had thought the company would partner with a telecommunications firm for the auction.
The auction stipulates that part of the spectrum be used for open access purposes – under which the winning bidder is compelled to give customers the right to download any application they want on their mobile device and the right to use any device they want on the network.
“We believe it's important to put our money where our principles are,” Google chairman and chief executive Eric Schmidt said. “Consumers deserve more competition and innovation than they have in today's wireless world.”
“No matter which bidder ultimately prevails, the real winners of this auction are American consumers who likely will see more choices than ever before in how they access the internet,” Mr Schmidt said.
The 700MHz spectrum is attractive to communications companies as it wavelength travels long distances and easily penetrates obstacles like concrete walls. This means the spectrum requires fewer communications towers and is therefore cheaper.
Regardless, a national wireless network would be expected to cost the owners an additional US$7 billion.
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
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Saturday, December 1, 2007
CeBIT Asia mission reports $29 million in sales
THE Victorian delegation to the CeBIT Asia business technology fair in Shanghai generated more than $29 million in projected business in China, the state’s technology agency Multimedia Victoria has reported.
The 29 Victorian companies participating in the October mission to CeBIT Asia found more than 30 reseller and distribution partners, and secured more than 100 serious business leads, the Multimedia Victoria mission report said.
In the wake of that success, Hannover Fairs Australia (HFA) has already confirmed it will again take a delegation of Australian companies to the CeBIT Asia next year. HFA, the organiser of the giant CeBIT Australia ICT fair, is the local unit of global exhibition group Deutsche Messe AG, which runs CeBIT events worldwide.
Victorian Information and Communications Technology Minister Theo Theophanous said China was an important and fast-growing market for Victorian ICT companies. The delegation was supported by the Brumby Government’s ICT Trade Events and Export Assistance Program.
The Victorian Minister for Information and Communication Technology, Theo Theophanous, said it is the second year that the Victorian Government has led an ICT delegation to China and reinforces the State’s enthusiasm to forge partnerships in this lucrative market.
“Victorian ICT companies specialising in areas such as mobile technology, digital media, web development, eLearning and content management stood out, presenting their ingenuity to a global audience,” Mr Theophanous said.
“China is one of the largest emerging ICT markets and this trade mission has provided home-grown Victorian companies fantastic opportunities to build on previously formed relationships, open up new supply chains, gain new clients and network for future export opportunities.”
Since 1999, the Victorian Government’s Export Assistance Program has helped 480 Victorian companies on trade missions to 40 countries, generating $1.7 billion in projected exports.
While CeBIT Asia in Shanghai was the centrepiece of the Multimedia Victoria trade mission to China, it also included meetings and networking events in the Chinese business centres of Chengdu, Kunming, Beijing and Hong Kong.
Hannover Fairs Australia managing director Jackie Taranto said the Victorian Government’s long term view of building business relationships in China was paying off. Six companies involved in CeBIT Asia with Multimedia Victoria had returned to the event for their second year, cementing the business ties established at the 2006 event.
“Establishing ongoing exports links with partners in China can take time and patience, and it was great to see those Victorian companies returning to CeBIT Asia for a second time doing so well,’’ Ms Taranto said.
“Multimedia Victorian has built enormous expertise in the China ICT sector, and they run targeted and superbly professional trade missions. The long term commitment to the China ICT market is showing clear results, not just by generating exports dollars, but attracting inward investment from Chinese companies as well,” she said
China the Victoria’s third largest export market (A$1.8 billion in 2004-05) and largest source of goods imports (A$6.3 billion). Some of China’s largest ICT companies are represented in Victoria, including communications giants Huawei Technologies and ZTE Corporation, as well as consumer electronics makers Changhong Electric and TCL.
The Multimedia Victoria pavilion at CeBIT Asia attracted a stream of political and business leaders, including the vice-chair of the Shanghai People’s Congress Zhou Yu Peng, one of the most influential figures in the region, and California Lieutenant Governor John Garamendi, who led a US trade mission to CeBIT Asia.
Victorian software firm Business Intelligence Technologies participated in the CeBIT Asia trade mission for the second year, and reports significantly extending its China business.
“The trip presented challenging and unique opportunities for our products and services, and we are seriously exploring setting up a China entity,” said Raghu Iyer, founder and chief executive of Business Intelligence Technologies. “Attending CeBIT Asia as part of a government delegation – going with Multimedia Victoria – is definitely a help because it helps build a network of contacts.”
The 29 Victorian companies participating in the October mission to CeBIT Asia found more than 30 reseller and distribution partners, and secured more than 100 serious business leads, the Multimedia Victoria mission report said.
In the wake of that success, Hannover Fairs Australia (HFA) has already confirmed it will again take a delegation of Australian companies to the CeBIT Asia next year. HFA, the organiser of the giant CeBIT Australia ICT fair, is the local unit of global exhibition group Deutsche Messe AG, which runs CeBIT events worldwide.
Victorian Information and Communications Technology Minister Theo Theophanous said China was an important and fast-growing market for Victorian ICT companies. The delegation was supported by the Brumby Government’s ICT Trade Events and Export Assistance Program.
The Victorian Minister for Information and Communication Technology, Theo Theophanous, said it is the second year that the Victorian Government has led an ICT delegation to China and reinforces the State’s enthusiasm to forge partnerships in this lucrative market.
“Victorian ICT companies specialising in areas such as mobile technology, digital media, web development, eLearning and content management stood out, presenting their ingenuity to a global audience,” Mr Theophanous said.
“China is one of the largest emerging ICT markets and this trade mission has provided home-grown Victorian companies fantastic opportunities to build on previously formed relationships, open up new supply chains, gain new clients and network for future export opportunities.”
Since 1999, the Victorian Government’s Export Assistance Program has helped 480 Victorian companies on trade missions to 40 countries, generating $1.7 billion in projected exports.
While CeBIT Asia in Shanghai was the centrepiece of the Multimedia Victoria trade mission to China, it also included meetings and networking events in the Chinese business centres of Chengdu, Kunming, Beijing and Hong Kong.
Hannover Fairs Australia managing director Jackie Taranto said the Victorian Government’s long term view of building business relationships in China was paying off. Six companies involved in CeBIT Asia with Multimedia Victoria had returned to the event for their second year, cementing the business ties established at the 2006 event.
“Establishing ongoing exports links with partners in China can take time and patience, and it was great to see those Victorian companies returning to CeBIT Asia for a second time doing so well,’’ Ms Taranto said.
“Multimedia Victorian has built enormous expertise in the China ICT sector, and they run targeted and superbly professional trade missions. The long term commitment to the China ICT market is showing clear results, not just by generating exports dollars, but attracting inward investment from Chinese companies as well,” she said
China the Victoria’s third largest export market (A$1.8 billion in 2004-05) and largest source of goods imports (A$6.3 billion). Some of China’s largest ICT companies are represented in Victoria, including communications giants Huawei Technologies and ZTE Corporation, as well as consumer electronics makers Changhong Electric and TCL.
The Multimedia Victoria pavilion at CeBIT Asia attracted a stream of political and business leaders, including the vice-chair of the Shanghai People’s Congress Zhou Yu Peng, one of the most influential figures in the region, and California Lieutenant Governor John Garamendi, who led a US trade mission to CeBIT Asia.
Victorian software firm Business Intelligence Technologies participated in the CeBIT Asia trade mission for the second year, and reports significantly extending its China business.
“The trip presented challenging and unique opportunities for our products and services, and we are seriously exploring setting up a China entity,” said Raghu Iyer, founder and chief executive of Business Intelligence Technologies. “Attending CeBIT Asia as part of a government delegation – going with Multimedia Victoria – is definitely a help because it helps build a network of contacts.”
Labels:
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Friday, November 30, 2007
CeBIT Australia Press Release
Dear Friends and Colleagues,
There is never a dull moment in this industry. But with the new regime in Canberra lifting the priority profile of ICT, it has just got more exciting.
Prime Minister-elect Kevin Rudd has named his Ministry, introducing some not-so-subtle changes of emphasis to portfolios that should be welcomed. Stephen Conroy has been appointed to the newly-named portfolio of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, while Kim Carr has been appointed Minister of the critical Innovation, Industry, Science and Research portfolio.
Importantly, Senator Conroy and Senator Carr are both in the Cabinet, giving the industry two voices at the most powerful table in the country. Add Mr Rudd, who has shown himself during the campaign to be personally engaged with the industry’s biggest issues – broadband infrastructure, skills, education and innovation – and you can see why this is an exciting time.
Senator Conroy has been a passionate advocate for the industry inside the Opposition party room. Labor’s national broadband pledge was incredibly ambitious. That the initiative was so big and announced so early in the campaign year had Senator Conroy’s fingerprints all over it.
The strength of some of Labor’s Industry initiatives announced by Senator Carr just days before the election took some of us by surprise, especially its welcome emphasis on fostering innovation and commercialisation – and in particular its plans focus on encouraging greater public and private research and development.
Lindsay Tanner’s appointment as Finance Minister in the Rudd Cabinet is also to be welcomed. Mr Tanner has been a Shadow Communications Minister and is very familiar with the industry. the Federal Government as a technology buyer wields tremendous influence. CeBIT Australia has had a long relationship with the Australian Government Information Management Office (AGIMO), which falls within the Department of Finance, and we look forward to working with Mr Tanner.
Changes of Government can be unsettling. But at CeBIT Australia we are very encouraged by today’s appointments, and we’re very optimistic about the industry’s future.
There is never a dull moment in this industry. But with the new regime in Canberra lifting the priority profile of ICT, it has just got more exciting.
Prime Minister-elect Kevin Rudd has named his Ministry, introducing some not-so-subtle changes of emphasis to portfolios that should be welcomed. Stephen Conroy has been appointed to the newly-named portfolio of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, while Kim Carr has been appointed Minister of the critical Innovation, Industry, Science and Research portfolio.
Importantly, Senator Conroy and Senator Carr are both in the Cabinet, giving the industry two voices at the most powerful table in the country. Add Mr Rudd, who has shown himself during the campaign to be personally engaged with the industry’s biggest issues – broadband infrastructure, skills, education and innovation – and you can see why this is an exciting time.
Senator Conroy has been a passionate advocate for the industry inside the Opposition party room. Labor’s national broadband pledge was incredibly ambitious. That the initiative was so big and announced so early in the campaign year had Senator Conroy’s fingerprints all over it.
The strength of some of Labor’s Industry initiatives announced by Senator Carr just days before the election took some of us by surprise, especially its welcome emphasis on fostering innovation and commercialisation – and in particular its plans focus on encouraging greater public and private research and development.
Lindsay Tanner’s appointment as Finance Minister in the Rudd Cabinet is also to be welcomed. Mr Tanner has been a Shadow Communications Minister and is very familiar with the industry. the Federal Government as a technology buyer wields tremendous influence. CeBIT Australia has had a long relationship with the Australian Government Information Management Office (AGIMO), which falls within the Department of Finance, and we look forward to working with Mr Tanner.
Changes of Government can be unsettling. But at CeBIT Australia we are very encouraged by today’s appointments, and we’re very optimistic about the industry’s future.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
IBM, Yahoo update free enterprise search tool
IBM and Yahoo! has unveiled an updated version of its enterprise search software, which lets companies customise and personalise searches of information within their organisations and across the web.
The so-called IBM OmniFind Yahoo! Edition software was launched a year ago to provide a no-cost, full-featured search product that eliminated financial and technology barriers to information access.
Since its launch, nearly 25,000 users have downloaded the software and global organisations of all sizes are using it to improve enterprise search. In addition, numerous independent software vendors (ISVs) and businesses have developed applications that integrate with or support the free IBM search platform.
“Last year, IBM and Yahoo! came together to change the rules of enterprise search, defining a new market standard for search as a core capability that should be ubiquitous and free,” Yahoo! Search Distribution senior director of product management Joff Redfern said.
“We're committed to helping enterprises – both large and small – get more value out of their information quickly and inexpensively, and providing them with an on-ramp to leveraging the power of all their information.”
The new version of IBM OmniFind Yahoo! Edition provides the ability to create a number of collections, each indexing a different set of documents. This allows the user to limit the search to only the documents from a specific source, providing more accurate results.
It also provides the ability to define additional custom fields in the index allowing field values to be mapped from HTML meta tags, extracted from the document's own metadata, or pushed in from the push API.
The OmniFind Yahoo Edition software is based on the open source Lucene project. The update includes the latest version of the Lucene core.
For more Web Applications news, click here.
The so-called IBM OmniFind Yahoo! Edition software was launched a year ago to provide a no-cost, full-featured search product that eliminated financial and technology barriers to information access.
Since its launch, nearly 25,000 users have downloaded the software and global organisations of all sizes are using it to improve enterprise search. In addition, numerous independent software vendors (ISVs) and businesses have developed applications that integrate with or support the free IBM search platform.
“Last year, IBM and Yahoo! came together to change the rules of enterprise search, defining a new market standard for search as a core capability that should be ubiquitous and free,” Yahoo! Search Distribution senior director of product management Joff Redfern said.
“We're committed to helping enterprises – both large and small – get more value out of their information quickly and inexpensively, and providing them with an on-ramp to leveraging the power of all their information.”
The new version of IBM OmniFind Yahoo! Edition provides the ability to create a number of collections, each indexing a different set of documents. This allows the user to limit the search to only the documents from a specific source, providing more accurate results.
It also provides the ability to define additional custom fields in the index allowing field values to be mapped from HTML meta tags, extracted from the document's own metadata, or pushed in from the push API.
The OmniFind Yahoo Edition software is based on the open source Lucene project. The update includes the latest version of the Lucene core.
For more Web Applications news, click here.
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Greenpeace dumps on Microsoft, Nintendo
GREENPEACE has slammed console makers Microsoft and Nintendo for their poor environmental credential in the latest edition of its quarterly Guide to Greener Electronics.
The latest Guide to Greener Electronics includes the environmental scoring of consol manufacturers for the first time.
Nintendo earned the dubious distinction of becoming the first company to score 0/10 while Microsoft did little better with a score of 2.7/10.
Heading the ranking, Sony Ericsson took over the number one spot from Nokia while Samsung and Sony surged ahead to occupy second and third positions. Nokia and Motorola had a penalty point deducted after a Greenpeace investigation found their claims of global takeback were not being matched by reality.
The Guide to Greener Electronics focuses on toxic chemicals and takeback policy because of the rapid growth in quantities of toxic e-waste being dumped in developing countries like China and India.
While Nintendo's Wii console appears to be more energy efficient compared to the Microsoft Xbox and Sony Playstation, energy use is not yet covered in the ranking.
Companies making the most progress with new products without the worst toxic chemicals are now ranking higher than companies who have only committed to remove them in the future. Toshiba has laptops free of toxic chemicals like vinyl plastic (PVC) and has reduced the use of brominated flame retardants (BFRs).
Apple's score improves slightly due to new iMacs reducing the use of PVC and BFRs. All new mobiles from Sony Ericsson and Nokia have been free of PVC since the end of 2006.
For more Future Parc news click here .
The latest Guide to Greener Electronics includes the environmental scoring of consol manufacturers for the first time.
Nintendo earned the dubious distinction of becoming the first company to score 0/10 while Microsoft did little better with a score of 2.7/10.
Heading the ranking, Sony Ericsson took over the number one spot from Nokia while Samsung and Sony surged ahead to occupy second and third positions. Nokia and Motorola had a penalty point deducted after a Greenpeace investigation found their claims of global takeback were not being matched by reality.
The Guide to Greener Electronics focuses on toxic chemicals and takeback policy because of the rapid growth in quantities of toxic e-waste being dumped in developing countries like China and India.
While Nintendo's Wii console appears to be more energy efficient compared to the Microsoft Xbox and Sony Playstation, energy use is not yet covered in the ranking.
Companies making the most progress with new products without the worst toxic chemicals are now ranking higher than companies who have only committed to remove them in the future. Toshiba has laptops free of toxic chemicals like vinyl plastic (PVC) and has reduced the use of brominated flame retardants (BFRs).
Apple's score improves slightly due to new iMacs reducing the use of PVC and BFRs. All new mobiles from Sony Ericsson and Nokia have been free of PVC since the end of 2006.
For more Future Parc news click here .
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Tuesday, November 27, 2007
AIIA welcomes change of Government
POLICY implemented in the next three to five years will largely determine how successfully the nation engages with the global information economy, according the Australian Information Industry Association (AIIA).
The top priority for the Rudd Labor government should be to give the ICT industry and the wider community “clear plans and a concrete timetable” for the nationwide broadband roll-out, AIIA chief executive Sheryle Moon said.
Welcoming the change, Ms Moon said the AIIA looked forward to working with the new government during what will be a “pivotal” three years.
“The leadership and policy delivered to the industry over the next three to five years will to a large degree define our future stake in the international information economy as well as our ability to successfully meet Australia’s most pressing domestic issues.” Ms Moon said.
In other areas the AIIA said that the government has presented strong policies addressing a number of significant industry concerns.
“In particular, we look forward to working with the new government to address ICT workforce pressures and reinvigorate the R&D sector,” said said.
However, more will be required if ICT is to maintain a viable contribution to the economy and wider issues affecting Australia.
“The ALP’s Innovation Future for Australian Industry … recognises many of the imperatives that must be addressed if the ICT industry is to maintain a vibrant contribution to Australia and its interests,” said Ms Moon.
“The challenges it identifies are significant, however, and the clock is ticking,” she said.
For more e-Government news, click here.
The top priority for the Rudd Labor government should be to give the ICT industry and the wider community “clear plans and a concrete timetable” for the nationwide broadband roll-out, AIIA chief executive Sheryle Moon said.
Welcoming the change, Ms Moon said the AIIA looked forward to working with the new government during what will be a “pivotal” three years.
“The leadership and policy delivered to the industry over the next three to five years will to a large degree define our future stake in the international information economy as well as our ability to successfully meet Australia’s most pressing domestic issues.” Ms Moon said.
In other areas the AIIA said that the government has presented strong policies addressing a number of significant industry concerns.
“In particular, we look forward to working with the new government to address ICT workforce pressures and reinvigorate the R&D sector,” said said.
However, more will be required if ICT is to maintain a viable contribution to the economy and wider issues affecting Australia.
“The ALP’s Innovation Future for Australian Industry … recognises many of the imperatives that must be addressed if the ICT industry is to maintain a vibrant contribution to Australia and its interests,” said Ms Moon.
“The challenges it identifies are significant, however, and the clock is ticking,” she said.
For more e-Government news, click here.
Internet capacity problems by 2010: Study
CONSUMER and corporate internet usage demands could outstrip global network capacity by 2010 if billions are not invested now, a new report reveals.
The findings of the Nemertes Research study indicate that by 2010, the Internet’s capacity will not likely accommodate user demand and users could increasingly encounter internet “brownouts” or interruptions to the applications they’ve become accustomed to using. It may take more than one attempt to confirm an online purchase or it longer to download the latest video from YouTube.
“The immediate impact of the inadequate infrastructure will be to slow the pace of innovation, Nemertes warned. The next Amazon, Google or YouTube might not arise – not from a lack of user demand, but because of insufficient infrastructure preventing applications and companies from emerging,” the report said.
The investment required to bridge the gap between growing demand and capacity was between US$42 billion (A$48 billion) and US$55 billion for the US market alone. And this required investment is above and beyond the US$72 billion that service providers are already planning to invest.
The new study, from Nemertes Research, found the required investment globally was estimated at US$137 billion. The research, titled to “The Internet Singularity, Delayed: Why Limits in Internet Capacity Will Stifle Innovation on the Web” indicates that Internet access infrastructure, specifically in North America, will cease to be adequate for supporting demand within the next three to five years.
“This groundbreaking analysis identifies a critical issue facing the Internet – that we must take the necessary steps to build out network capacity or potentially face Internet gridlock that could wreak havoc on Internet services,” said Internet Innovation Alliance co-chairman Larry Irving.
“It’s important to note that even if we make the investment necessary between now and 2010, we still might not be prepared for the next killer application or new internet-dependent business like Google or YouTube,” Mr Irving said.
Nemertes Research president and senior founding partner Johna Till Johnson said: “This is the first study to independently model both Internet capacity and demand.”
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
The findings of the Nemertes Research study indicate that by 2010, the Internet’s capacity will not likely accommodate user demand and users could increasingly encounter internet “brownouts” or interruptions to the applications they’ve become accustomed to using. It may take more than one attempt to confirm an online purchase or it longer to download the latest video from YouTube.
“The immediate impact of the inadequate infrastructure will be to slow the pace of innovation, Nemertes warned. The next Amazon, Google or YouTube might not arise – not from a lack of user demand, but because of insufficient infrastructure preventing applications and companies from emerging,” the report said.
The investment required to bridge the gap between growing demand and capacity was between US$42 billion (A$48 billion) and US$55 billion for the US market alone. And this required investment is above and beyond the US$72 billion that service providers are already planning to invest.
The new study, from Nemertes Research, found the required investment globally was estimated at US$137 billion. The research, titled to “The Internet Singularity, Delayed: Why Limits in Internet Capacity Will Stifle Innovation on the Web” indicates that Internet access infrastructure, specifically in North America, will cease to be adequate for supporting demand within the next three to five years.
“This groundbreaking analysis identifies a critical issue facing the Internet – that we must take the necessary steps to build out network capacity or potentially face Internet gridlock that could wreak havoc on Internet services,” said Internet Innovation Alliance co-chairman Larry Irving.
“It’s important to note that even if we make the investment necessary between now and 2010, we still might not be prepared for the next killer application or new internet-dependent business like Google or YouTube,” Mr Irving said.
Nemertes Research president and senior founding partner Johna Till Johnson said: “This is the first study to independently model both Internet capacity and demand.”
For more Telecommunications news, click here.
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Amazon kindles e-book device market
IN a bid to kick-start the e-book market, online retailer Amazon.com has launched a wireless reader device with “electronic paper” features for downloading books, blogs, newspapers and magazines.
Called the Amazon Kindle, the device has a high-resolution electronic paper display that looks and reads like paper – even in bright sunlight – and is priced at US$399 (A$452).
“Our top design objective was for Kindle to disappear in your hands – to get out of the way – so you can enjoy your reading,” Amazon.com founder and chief executive Jeff Bezos said.
“We also wanted to go beyond the physical book. Kindle is wireless, so whether you're lying in bed or riding a train, you can think of a book, and have it in less than 60 seconds,” Mr Bezos said.
“No computer is needed – you do your shopping directly from the device.”
Kindle is lighter and thinner than a typical paperback and fits in one hand. Its built-in memory stores more than 200 titles, and hundreds more can be stored with an optional SD memory card.
The Amazon wireless delivery model in the US uses the mobile phone network, and books can be downloaded in less than a minute, while newspapers and blogs are delivered automatically to subscribers.
Amazon pays for the wireless connectivity bills for Kindle, so there are no monthly wireless fees, data plans, or service commitments for customers.
For more Digital Content news, click here.
Called the Amazon Kindle, the device has a high-resolution electronic paper display that looks and reads like paper – even in bright sunlight – and is priced at US$399 (A$452).
“Our top design objective was for Kindle to disappear in your hands – to get out of the way – so you can enjoy your reading,” Amazon.com founder and chief executive Jeff Bezos said.
“We also wanted to go beyond the physical book. Kindle is wireless, so whether you're lying in bed or riding a train, you can think of a book, and have it in less than 60 seconds,” Mr Bezos said.
“No computer is needed – you do your shopping directly from the device.”
Kindle is lighter and thinner than a typical paperback and fits in one hand. Its built-in memory stores more than 200 titles, and hundreds more can be stored with an optional SD memory card.
The Amazon wireless delivery model in the US uses the mobile phone network, and books can be downloaded in less than a minute, while newspapers and blogs are delivered automatically to subscribers.
Amazon pays for the wireless connectivity bills for Kindle, so there are no monthly wireless fees, data plans, or service commitments for customers.
For more Digital Content news, click here.
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HP unveils automated services tools
US tech giant HP has bolstered its service offerings with a suite of new software and services to help customers transform their IT operations and automate the management of business operations.
The HP Automated Operations 1.0 offering is a set of products that automates IT operations, eliminating labor-intensive tasks and ad hoc, error-prone manual processes. The company says the product dramatically lowers the day-to-day cost of IT operations.
The HP Automated Operations 1.0 software suite is composed of IT Service Management, Business Service Management and Business Service Automation solutions.
It also launched its HP Business Service Automation software, a single platform to automate all IT processes and drive change across applications, servers, networks, storage and clients.
“We have been aggressively expanding our software portfolio in the last two years to broaden and deepen our capabilities to help customers improve their top and bottom lines,” HP’s Software senior vice-president Tom Hogan said.
IDC Enterprise Management Service research director Stephen Elliot said business service automation was an opportunity for IT organisations to more closely align with business objectives such as compliance, security, and cost reduction, and the delivery of innovative products.
“The legacy manner in which many IT organisations execute enterprise infrastructure management processes is quickly becoming obsolete as they are too static, take too long to execute and lengthen time to market cycles,” Mr Elliot said.
“IT organisations must mature toward processes and technologies that enable a more dynamic, business-driven impact.”
For more IT Services news, click here.
The HP Automated Operations 1.0 offering is a set of products that automates IT operations, eliminating labor-intensive tasks and ad hoc, error-prone manual processes. The company says the product dramatically lowers the day-to-day cost of IT operations.
The HP Automated Operations 1.0 software suite is composed of IT Service Management, Business Service Management and Business Service Automation solutions.
It also launched its HP Business Service Automation software, a single platform to automate all IT processes and drive change across applications, servers, networks, storage and clients.
“We have been aggressively expanding our software portfolio in the last two years to broaden and deepen our capabilities to help customers improve their top and bottom lines,” HP’s Software senior vice-president Tom Hogan said.
IDC Enterprise Management Service research director Stephen Elliot said business service automation was an opportunity for IT organisations to more closely align with business objectives such as compliance, security, and cost reduction, and the delivery of innovative products.
“The legacy manner in which many IT organisations execute enterprise infrastructure management processes is quickly becoming obsolete as they are too static, take too long to execute and lengthen time to market cycles,” Mr Elliot said.
“IT organisations must mature toward processes and technologies that enable a more dynamic, business-driven impact.”
For more IT Services news, click here.
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Hostworks calls for strengthened backbone
THE Federal election ‘last mile’ broadband debate missed a more fundamental point, according to the region’s largest hosting and managed services provider: Australia does not have adequate backbone capacity.
Hostworks managing director Marty Gauvin warned the incoming Rudd Labor Government that Australia’s ability to compete internationally was being hindered by capacity problems in backbone infrastructure.
If fact, Mr Gauvin said if Labor successfully implements its ambitious ‘last mile’ plans, “it will create a massive online gridlock.”
“The critical issue is not how fast it goes into people’s houses: It is how fast it runs across the country and the speed of backbone data links for commercial service providers like Hostworks,” Mr Gauvin said.
Hostworks is one of the largest enterprise application outsourcing firms in the region, providing hosting and managed services to corporate customers like Network Ten, SBS, News Digital Media, ninemsn, realestate.com.au, SEEK, Ticketek.
“If Australia wants to succeed internationally as the online economy evolves, we need to start thinking much more innovatively. As well as building the infrastructure to support the online population we want, we need strategies to aggregate our online content to make it much more accessible and compelling,” he said.
Mr. Gauvin said the “choke points” created by broadband infrastructure represented a failure of market forces to deliver the best outcome for the country. “If we leave solving this problem to market forces, then Australia will just go backwards,” he said.
“The new government has an opportunity here to demonstrate real leadership. While the bulk of what online consumers want is overseas, Australia will continue to be diminished in its ability to have a content industry based here.
For more IT Services news, click here.
Hostworks managing director Marty Gauvin warned the incoming Rudd Labor Government that Australia’s ability to compete internationally was being hindered by capacity problems in backbone infrastructure.
If fact, Mr Gauvin said if Labor successfully implements its ambitious ‘last mile’ plans, “it will create a massive online gridlock.”
“The critical issue is not how fast it goes into people’s houses: It is how fast it runs across the country and the speed of backbone data links for commercial service providers like Hostworks,” Mr Gauvin said.
Hostworks is one of the largest enterprise application outsourcing firms in the region, providing hosting and managed services to corporate customers like Network Ten, SBS, News Digital Media, ninemsn, realestate.com.au, SEEK, Ticketek.
“If Australia wants to succeed internationally as the online economy evolves, we need to start thinking much more innovatively. As well as building the infrastructure to support the online population we want, we need strategies to aggregate our online content to make it much more accessible and compelling,” he said.
Mr. Gauvin said the “choke points” created by broadband infrastructure represented a failure of market forces to deliver the best outcome for the country. “If we leave solving this problem to market forces, then Australia will just go backwards,” he said.
“The new government has an opportunity here to demonstrate real leadership. While the bulk of what online consumers want is overseas, Australia will continue to be diminished in its ability to have a content industry based here.
For more IT Services news, click here.
Monday, November 26, 2007
ACS elects Parakala as new President
THE Australian Computer Society has elected the chairman of its NSW branch – Kumar Parakala – as National President for 2008-09 to replace its outgoing president Philip Argy.
Mr Parakala, who is chief operating officer of KPMG’s Global IT Advisory Practice, said he would continue the society’s campaigning on issues like skills, higher education and industry collaboration. He would also focus on Green issues, he said.
Mr Parakala was elected by the society’s peak decision-making body, the ACS Council, at a meeting last week.
“I will also focus on promoting the relevance of ICT to business professionals. This includes understanding the ubiquitous nature of ICT and highlighting ICT’s changing and enabling role across all professions,” Mr Parakala said.
“As ACS National President, I intend to drive relevant national ICT strategic matters that are critical to ICT professionals such as skills gap, ICT higher education, green issues, industry collaboration and accreditation,” he said.
Current ACS President, Philip Argy, welcomed the result and congratulated Kumar Parakala on his election.
“It’s an exciting time for our industry – ICT is now firmly positioned on Australia’s political agenda and is recognised as key driver of the nation’s economic prosperity.” Mr Argy said.
“I am delighted to announce the new ACS President and I am confident that the ACS will enjoy continued growth under his presidency and that ICT industry will continue to prosper.”
For more e-Government news, click here.
Mr Parakala, who is chief operating officer of KPMG’s Global IT Advisory Practice, said he would continue the society’s campaigning on issues like skills, higher education and industry collaboration. He would also focus on Green issues, he said.
Mr Parakala was elected by the society’s peak decision-making body, the ACS Council, at a meeting last week.
“I will also focus on promoting the relevance of ICT to business professionals. This includes understanding the ubiquitous nature of ICT and highlighting ICT’s changing and enabling role across all professions,” Mr Parakala said.
“As ACS National President, I intend to drive relevant national ICT strategic matters that are critical to ICT professionals such as skills gap, ICT higher education, green issues, industry collaboration and accreditation,” he said.
Current ACS President, Philip Argy, welcomed the result and congratulated Kumar Parakala on his election.
“It’s an exciting time for our industry – ICT is now firmly positioned on Australia’s political agenda and is recognised as key driver of the nation’s economic prosperity.” Mr Argy said.
“I am delighted to announce the new ACS President and I am confident that the ACS will enjoy continued growth under his presidency and that ICT industry will continue to prosper.”
For more e-Government news, click here.
Hotmail pioneer embraces SaaS office
THE internet pioneer who founded and built the Hotmail service before selling it to Microsoft has launched a suite of online personal productivity products that will compete with the powerful MS Office franchise.
The Live Documents service was launched last week by Bangalore-based Instant Collaboration Software Technologies (InstaColl), a start-up founded by Sabeer Bhatia – a co-founder of the phenomenally successful Hotmail services.
Mr Bhatia rose to international prominence in the industry when in 1997 he sold Hotmail to Microsoft for US$400 million.
Live Documents is a full-featured suite of online Office productivity applications offering functionality equivalent to Word, Excel and PowerPoint that can be used through any computer with a browser.
The Live Documents service also allows online collaboration and sharing of documents. The hybrid online-offline service lets users work on documents offline on any PC that runs Flash software, regardless of the operating system.
“Live Documents offers a unique perspective on Office productivity and collaboration that merges the best of two worlds - the richness and familiarity of desktop software with the collaborative capabilities of the web,” InstaColl chairman Sabeer Bhatia.
“It provides a reliable bridge between the online and offline worlds that consumers and businesses can count on, he said.”
“Live Documents is the new productivity suite for the internet generation providing flexibility lacking in traditional software while retaining that which is important from the past and extending it with unique collaborative capabilities.
“I believe that Live Documents does for documents what Hotmail did for e-mail,” Mr Bhatia said.
For more Web Applications news, click here.
The Live Documents service was launched last week by Bangalore-based Instant Collaboration Software Technologies (InstaColl), a start-up founded by Sabeer Bhatia – a co-founder of the phenomenally successful Hotmail services.
Mr Bhatia rose to international prominence in the industry when in 1997 he sold Hotmail to Microsoft for US$400 million.
Live Documents is a full-featured suite of online Office productivity applications offering functionality equivalent to Word, Excel and PowerPoint that can be used through any computer with a browser.
The Live Documents service also allows online collaboration and sharing of documents. The hybrid online-offline service lets users work on documents offline on any PC that runs Flash software, regardless of the operating system.
“Live Documents offers a unique perspective on Office productivity and collaboration that merges the best of two worlds - the richness and familiarity of desktop software with the collaborative capabilities of the web,” InstaColl chairman Sabeer Bhatia.
“It provides a reliable bridge between the online and offline worlds that consumers and businesses can count on, he said.”
“Live Documents is the new productivity suite for the internet generation providing flexibility lacking in traditional software while retaining that which is important from the past and extending it with unique collaborative capabilities.
“I believe that Live Documents does for documents what Hotmail did for e-mail,” Mr Bhatia said.
For more Web Applications news, click here.
Symantec launches SmartPhone protection
US-based tech security specialist has rolled out a suite of consumer mobile security products that provides anti-virus, firewall and anti-spam protection for Windows Mobile and Symbian OS phone operating systems.
Symantec’s Norton Smartphone Security aims to give mobile device users the same level of security that has become standard for laptops and other computing devices.
“Smartphones are expanding consumer freedom to communicate and access important information anytime, anywhere,” said Symantec Consumer Business Unit senior vice-president Rowan Trollope said.
“However, unsecure public WiFi or network connections can put users at risk. In addition, web and e-mail viruses can directly infect smartphones, enabling hackers to remotely control the device, access sensitive information or disable applications,” he said.
“Norton Smartphone Security runs discreetly in the background, providing the confidence and peace of mind to engage in everyday activities like e-mailing, Web browsing or banking online from these handheld devices.”
As more users transact using their mobile devices, the financial incentives for virus writers and mobile hackers increase, Symantec says.
In a U.S. survey of smartphone users conducted by Applied Research, 34 per cent of respondents said they access their bank accounts via their mobile device and 54 per cent of respondents said they access web sites that require a password.
For more IT Security news, click here.
Symantec’s Norton Smartphone Security aims to give mobile device users the same level of security that has become standard for laptops and other computing devices.
“Smartphones are expanding consumer freedom to communicate and access important information anytime, anywhere,” said Symantec Consumer Business Unit senior vice-president Rowan Trollope said.
“However, unsecure public WiFi or network connections can put users at risk. In addition, web and e-mail viruses can directly infect smartphones, enabling hackers to remotely control the device, access sensitive information or disable applications,” he said.
“Norton Smartphone Security runs discreetly in the background, providing the confidence and peace of mind to engage in everyday activities like e-mailing, Web browsing or banking online from these handheld devices.”
As more users transact using their mobile devices, the financial incentives for virus writers and mobile hackers increase, Symantec says.
In a U.S. survey of smartphone users conducted by Applied Research, 34 per cent of respondents said they access their bank accounts via their mobile device and 54 per cent of respondents said they access web sites that require a password.
For more IT Security news, click here.
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Friday, November 23, 2007
Mozilla release Firefox 3 beta
OPEN source software specialist Mozilla has launched the first beta release of its next-generation Firefox 3 browser, highlighting better security, ease of use, and personalisation features.
The organisation said the beta was still “a bit rough”, but would let developers preview features and functions, and to get feedback before the project proceeds into its next phase.
“Much of the work leading up to this first beta has been around developing the infrastructure to support a bunch of exciting new features,” Mozilla said in its release notes.
“With this first beta, you'll get a taste of what's coming in Firefox 3, but there's still more to come, and much of what you'll see is still a bit rough around the edges.”
Rough edges include the fact that Firefox add-ons don't work properly with the beta version.
Those add-ons include applications such as ad blockers, search engines, and dictionaries in other languages. Mozilla did not offer a final release date, noting only that the final version will be launched “when we qualify the product as fully ready for our users.”
Mozilla has set out to make the Firefox 3 browser more personal, with a star button that lets you add bookmarks from the location bar with a single click. A “smart places” folder lets you access recently bookmarked and tagged pages, as well as more frequently visited pages.
New security features in Firefox 3 include malware protection, more informative SSL information, and a one-click function to identify who owns a site.
Firefox 3 automatically checks add-ons and will disable older, insecure versions. The browser even will inform anti-virus software when downloading executables, and it respects the Windows Vista parental control setting for disabling file downloads.
For more Web Applications news, click here.
The organisation said the beta was still “a bit rough”, but would let developers preview features and functions, and to get feedback before the project proceeds into its next phase.
“Much of the work leading up to this first beta has been around developing the infrastructure to support a bunch of exciting new features,” Mozilla said in its release notes.
“With this first beta, you'll get a taste of what's coming in Firefox 3, but there's still more to come, and much of what you'll see is still a bit rough around the edges.”
Rough edges include the fact that Firefox add-ons don't work properly with the beta version.
Those add-ons include applications such as ad blockers, search engines, and dictionaries in other languages. Mozilla did not offer a final release date, noting only that the final version will be launched “when we qualify the product as fully ready for our users.”
Mozilla has set out to make the Firefox 3 browser more personal, with a star button that lets you add bookmarks from the location bar with a single click. A “smart places” folder lets you access recently bookmarked and tagged pages, as well as more frequently visited pages.
New security features in Firefox 3 include malware protection, more informative SSL information, and a one-click function to identify who owns a site.
Firefox 3 automatically checks add-ons and will disable older, insecure versions. The browser even will inform anti-virus software when downloading executables, and it respects the Windows Vista parental control setting for disabling file downloads.
For more Web Applications news, click here.
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Parties fail privacy test
PRIVACY advocates in Australia have been underwhelmed by the privacy commitments of the two major parties, giving both sides of politics a failing grade for privacy protections.
The Australian Privacy Foundation set an election challenge last July asking that the parties declare their positions on eight critical privacy issues.
“The government and the alternative government continue to score very badly on privacy”, APF chairman Roger Clarke said.
The privacy foundation gave the Coaltion just 1.5 out of ten for its privacy policies, while Labor also failed with 4.5 out of ten.
“For its total disregard of privacy issues, we need look no further than the recent law introduced by the Government – the new Anti-Money Laundering and Counter Terrorism Financial (AML-CTF) Law,” Mr Clarke said.
“Thousands of small businesses are required to collect much more information from customers, and dob them in for anything suspicious.”
“This isn’t just more red-tape for small business; it destroys the trust within Australian society. Alarm bells should be raised merely from the fact that the Government is trying not to draw attention to this new law before the election.”
The Coalition simply ignored key privacy issues. It did not rule out a further attempt to bring in a de facto ID card via the Access Card proposal, and it did not rule out the use of biometrics and RFID tagging of humans.
The Greens and the Democrats faired much better, rating eight and nine out of ten respectively.
The Democrats strong showing “perhaps a reflection of Senator Natasha Stott- Despoja’s commitment to privacy issues over many years” said Clarke.
The Greens high rating was due to the Party’s opposition to the Access Card proposal and its campaign against the excessive elements in the counter terrorism laws.
For more e-Marketing news, click here.
The Australian Privacy Foundation set an election challenge last July asking that the parties declare their positions on eight critical privacy issues.
“The government and the alternative government continue to score very badly on privacy”, APF chairman Roger Clarke said.
The privacy foundation gave the Coaltion just 1.5 out of ten for its privacy policies, while Labor also failed with 4.5 out of ten.
“For its total disregard of privacy issues, we need look no further than the recent law introduced by the Government – the new Anti-Money Laundering and Counter Terrorism Financial (AML-CTF) Law,” Mr Clarke said.
“Thousands of small businesses are required to collect much more information from customers, and dob them in for anything suspicious.”
“This isn’t just more red-tape for small business; it destroys the trust within Australian society. Alarm bells should be raised merely from the fact that the Government is trying not to draw attention to this new law before the election.”
The Coalition simply ignored key privacy issues. It did not rule out a further attempt to bring in a de facto ID card via the Access Card proposal, and it did not rule out the use of biometrics and RFID tagging of humans.
The Greens and the Democrats faired much better, rating eight and nine out of ten respectively.
The Democrats strong showing “perhaps a reflection of Senator Natasha Stott- Despoja’s commitment to privacy issues over many years” said Clarke.
The Greens high rating was due to the Party’s opposition to the Access Card proposal and its campaign against the excessive elements in the counter terrorism laws.
For more e-Marketing news, click here.
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Facebook enrages privacy groups
SOCIAL networking phenomena Facebook is under fire from privacy groups over an advertising scheme that publishes the online purchasing habits of its users without their permission.
And a group of privacy advocates are so hot under the collar about it that they are using the networking capabilities of Facebook to organise opposition to the policy.
The group MoveOn.Org has established a Facebook group aimed at generating petition signatories against the policy. Just days old, it now has nearly 9,000 members.
The group highlights the example of Matt, from New York, who found out what his girlfriend was planning to give him for Christmas.
“Why? Because a new Facebook feature automatically shares books, movies, or gifts you buy online with everyone you know on Facebook,” the group says. “Without your consent, it pops up in your News Feed – a huge invasion of privacy.”
The group encourages companies to “get word-of-mouth promotion” for their business to “millions” of users.
The concerns are related to a free tool called Beacon, that businesses are can embed in their sites. When a Facebook user purchases something from that site, it is published on their news feed.
The aim of Beacon is to promote sales through the electronic word-of-mouth provided by social networking. If someone sees their friends making a purchase, they may be encouraged to make the purchase themselves.
Beacon is an opt-out system. When a purchase is made, a small opt-out icon appears at the top of the screen that reportedly disappears after about 20 seconds.
The privacy groups complain that not only is the icon easily missed, but that the scheme should be opt-IN, not opt-out.
Though Facebook built a reputation for strong privacy in its early days, that reputation has taken a battering more recently. When the news-feed was introduced in 2005, users were outraged until the company changed its policies and allowed the feed to be turned off.
For more e-Marketing news, click here.
And a group of privacy advocates are so hot under the collar about it that they are using the networking capabilities of Facebook to organise opposition to the policy.
The group MoveOn.Org has established a Facebook group aimed at generating petition signatories against the policy. Just days old, it now has nearly 9,000 members.
The group highlights the example of Matt, from New York, who found out what his girlfriend was planning to give him for Christmas.
“Why? Because a new Facebook feature automatically shares books, movies, or gifts you buy online with everyone you know on Facebook,” the group says. “Without your consent, it pops up in your News Feed – a huge invasion of privacy.”
The group encourages companies to “get word-of-mouth promotion” for their business to “millions” of users.
The concerns are related to a free tool called Beacon, that businesses are can embed in their sites. When a Facebook user purchases something from that site, it is published on their news feed.
The aim of Beacon is to promote sales through the electronic word-of-mouth provided by social networking. If someone sees their friends making a purchase, they may be encouraged to make the purchase themselves.
Beacon is an opt-out system. When a purchase is made, a small opt-out icon appears at the top of the screen that reportedly disappears after about 20 seconds.
The privacy groups complain that not only is the icon easily missed, but that the scheme should be opt-IN, not opt-out.
Though Facebook built a reputation for strong privacy in its early days, that reputation has taken a battering more recently. When the news-feed was introduced in 2005, users were outraged until the company changed its policies and allowed the feed to be turned off.
For more e-Marketing news, click here.
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Apple settles Burst patent dispute
APPLE has signed an agreement to end two years of litigation with audio software specialist Burst.com, saying it will pay Burst.com a one-time payment of US$10 million (A$11.4 million.)
The one-time payment will give Apple non-exclusive license to Burst’s patent portfolio, except four specified DVR technologies.
The $10 million patent license provides Apple with the right to use Burst’s intellectual property in its own technology and products, without further consideration. Burst, however, retains the right to enforce its patent portfolio against others.
Court costs, expenses and attorney’s fees in connection with the settlement of the litigation with Apple will reduce proceeds to the Company to approximately $4.6 million.
The Apple litigation related to audio compression software used in iPod players, iTunes, iLife and QuickTime.
Burst settled a similar dispute for US$50 million last year.
“Burst plans to continue identifying and evaluating companies who represent licensing opportunities and intends to diligently pursue those likely to yield suitable returns,” the company said in a statement.
“Burst does not plan to announce specific names of suspected infringing products or companies in advance of negotiating with them or filing litigation to enforce its patent rights.”
For more Digital Content news, click here.
The one-time payment will give Apple non-exclusive license to Burst’s patent portfolio, except four specified DVR technologies.
The $10 million patent license provides Apple with the right to use Burst’s intellectual property in its own technology and products, without further consideration. Burst, however, retains the right to enforce its patent portfolio against others.
Court costs, expenses and attorney’s fees in connection with the settlement of the litigation with Apple will reduce proceeds to the Company to approximately $4.6 million.
The Apple litigation related to audio compression software used in iPod players, iTunes, iLife and QuickTime.
Burst settled a similar dispute for US$50 million last year.
“Burst plans to continue identifying and evaluating companies who represent licensing opportunities and intends to diligently pursue those likely to yield suitable returns,” the company said in a statement.
“Burst does not plan to announce specific names of suspected infringing products or companies in advance of negotiating with them or filing litigation to enforce its patent rights.”
For more Digital Content news, click here.
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Fujitsu Oz invests $15 million in services
FUJITSU Australia has announced plans to invest $15 million over the next 12 months on a business transformation program to improve its delivery of IT services to customers.
The intitial $15 million investment aimed to consolidate its “industrialisation of IT services” based on the company’s Triole processes.
The “industrialising” of IT aimed to reduce cost, reduce complexity, and improve delivery of IT services by using standard components in IT service offerings wherever possible.
“This investment represents a tangible commitment to deliver on our vision to lead the industry with a new standard for IT service delivery by industrialising our offerings and processes,” said Fujitsu Australia-New Zealand chief executive Rod Vawdrey.
“We are now engaged in a program that will embed this approach at the heart of everything we do, a strategy to which we are fully committed because we believe it will deliver tremendous value for our customers,” said Mr Vawdrey.
Fujitsu’s Triole is modelled on the highly successful industrialisation of the Japanese car industry. Manufacturers like Toyota standardise on 80 per cent of a motor vehicle’s components, allowing customers to specify their options for the 20 per cent of the car that reflects their unique needs.
“Like motor vehicles, IT solutions share about 80 per cent functionality in common, providing an opportunity for us to save our clients time and money by standardising on those components, our methodologies and delivery processes,” said Fujitsu’s Infrastructure Services Division executive general manager Peter McFarlane.
Fujitsu plans to focus its initial business transformation efforts on Infrastructure Services since this area offers the greatest potential for immediate benefits for customers.
“Through an intensive program of continual enhancement and testing, we will be able to guarantee superior performance and reliability to reduce the risk associated with projects adopting an industrialised approach.
“At the same time we will free up resources to focus our innovation capabilities on the 20 per cent of a solution that represents a client’s unique business requirements and the key opportunity for differentiation,” Mr McFarlane said.
For more IT Services news, click here.
The intitial $15 million investment aimed to consolidate its “industrialisation of IT services” based on the company’s Triole processes.
The “industrialising” of IT aimed to reduce cost, reduce complexity, and improve delivery of IT services by using standard components in IT service offerings wherever possible.
“This investment represents a tangible commitment to deliver on our vision to lead the industry with a new standard for IT service delivery by industrialising our offerings and processes,” said Fujitsu Australia-New Zealand chief executive Rod Vawdrey.
“We are now engaged in a program that will embed this approach at the heart of everything we do, a strategy to which we are fully committed because we believe it will deliver tremendous value for our customers,” said Mr Vawdrey.
Fujitsu’s Triole is modelled on the highly successful industrialisation of the Japanese car industry. Manufacturers like Toyota standardise on 80 per cent of a motor vehicle’s components, allowing customers to specify their options for the 20 per cent of the car that reflects their unique needs.
“Like motor vehicles, IT solutions share about 80 per cent functionality in common, providing an opportunity for us to save our clients time and money by standardising on those components, our methodologies and delivery processes,” said Fujitsu’s Infrastructure Services Division executive general manager Peter McFarlane.
Fujitsu plans to focus its initial business transformation efforts on Infrastructure Services since this area offers the greatest potential for immediate benefits for customers.
“Through an intensive program of continual enhancement and testing, we will be able to guarantee superior performance and reliability to reduce the risk associated with projects adopting an industrialised approach.
“At the same time we will free up resources to focus our innovation capabilities on the 20 per cent of a solution that represents a client’s unique business requirements and the key opportunity for differentiation,” Mr McFarlane said.
For more IT Services news, click here.
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Aussie chief for CSC Asia
TECH services giant Computer Sciences Corporation (CSC) has re-arranged it senior management in the region, with its Australian chief promoted to head the CSC Asia Group.
Mike Shove had been president of the CSC Australia Group since 2003 before being promoted to the regional role this week. He will be based at CSC Asia headquarters in Singapore and responsible for the company's operations and clients in China, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore and Vietnam.
Prior to running the Australian operation, Mr Shove had been vice-president for the Enterprise Business Solutions group in Australia
Mr Shove will be replaced by Nick Wilkinson, who is currently vice-president of Chemicals, Energy and Natural Resources for CSC’s Global Outsourcing Services organisation.
Both men will report directly to CSC chairman, president and chief executive, Michael Laphen.
“Mike has proven his ability to grow revenue, enhance profitability, increase customer satisfaction and grow our client base through significant local wins," Mr Laphen said in a statement.
“His experience and track record make him ideally suited to take on an expanded role in Asia.”
For more IT Services news, click here.
Mike Shove had been president of the CSC Australia Group since 2003 before being promoted to the regional role this week. He will be based at CSC Asia headquarters in Singapore and responsible for the company's operations and clients in China, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore and Vietnam.
Prior to running the Australian operation, Mr Shove had been vice-president for the Enterprise Business Solutions group in Australia
Mr Shove will be replaced by Nick Wilkinson, who is currently vice-president of Chemicals, Energy and Natural Resources for CSC’s Global Outsourcing Services organisation.
Both men will report directly to CSC chairman, president and chief executive, Michael Laphen.
“Mike has proven his ability to grow revenue, enhance profitability, increase customer satisfaction and grow our client base through significant local wins," Mr Laphen said in a statement.
“His experience and track record make him ideally suited to take on an expanded role in Asia.”
For more IT Services news, click here.
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Rudd pushes Green export opportunities
GREEN and clean technologies present excellent export opportunities for Australian innovators, according to Kevin Rudd.
The Labor government would make supporting the development of clean technologies for export markets a priority, Mr Rudd told the National Press Club in Canberra.
As part of that plan, Labor will spend $15 million on a Energy Export Strategy, and $20 million setting up a Clean Energy Innovation Centre.
“Responding to climate change and global warming is not just an environmental imperative; it is an important economic opportunity,” Mr Rudd said.
“Both carbon trading and renewable energy technology provide opportunities for the export of goods and services,” he said.
Australia would become a clean energy hub for the Asia-Pacific, Mr Rudd said, making clean energy central to Australia’s economic and environmental future.
“Labor will harness clean energy research, innovation and enterprise, so that Australia can build a low carbon economy and export climate change solutions to the world,” he said.
The Clean Energy Export Strategy will provide critical capacity in Austrade to promote Australian clean energy exports of products, technologies and services. Austrade liaison officers will work with individual clean energy firms to match their strengths with opportunities in clean energy growth markets such as China, India, Japan and the United States.
For more Export Alley news, click here.
The Labor government would make supporting the development of clean technologies for export markets a priority, Mr Rudd told the National Press Club in Canberra.
As part of that plan, Labor will spend $15 million on a Energy Export Strategy, and $20 million setting up a Clean Energy Innovation Centre.
“Responding to climate change and global warming is not just an environmental imperative; it is an important economic opportunity,” Mr Rudd said.
“Both carbon trading and renewable energy technology provide opportunities for the export of goods and services,” he said.
Australia would become a clean energy hub for the Asia-Pacific, Mr Rudd said, making clean energy central to Australia’s economic and environmental future.
“Labor will harness clean energy research, innovation and enterprise, so that Australia can build a low carbon economy and export climate change solutions to the world,” he said.
The Clean Energy Export Strategy will provide critical capacity in Austrade to promote Australian clean energy exports of products, technologies and services. Austrade liaison officers will work with individual clean energy firms to match their strengths with opportunities in clean energy growth markets such as China, India, Japan and the United States.
For more Export Alley news, click here.
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