Posts Tagged Kernel

Xoom 4G LTE upgrades boomerang back with Honeycomb update, microSD card support now a go

Posted by on Friday, 7 October, 2011

Xoom owners that hastily shipped off their slates for an LTE upgrade are in for a surprise. Turns out the newly equipped 4G tablets are not only being expediently returned, but also come with an upgrade to version 3.2.2 of Honeycomb. Details of just what’s been included in the new firmware are scant, but the main takeaway from Verizon’s overhaul is the now functional microSD slot. That’s right, unless you were privy to that non-U.S. Android 3.1 update or installed the Tiamat kernel, you’ll now finally be granted read/write access to your microSD card. It seems wishes do come true in Big Red land, you just have to practice extreme patience.

Xoom 4G LTE upgrades boomerang back with Honeycomb update, microSD card support now a go originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Oct 2011 03:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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VMware wants hypervisor hooked into Android kernel

Posted by on Tuesday, 27 September, 2011

Stephen Herrod - CTO, VMware at Mobilize 2011When VMware CTO sat down with our own Stacey Higginbotham at Mobilize this morning, he laid out a mobile plan that reeks of success on par with what VMware has achieved in server virtualization over the past decade. And the trick to accomplishing that might be VMware’s quest to make its mobile hypervisor technology a part of the core Android operating system kernel from Google.

Anyone following VMware is likely familiar with the mobile virtualization plans it laid out at its VMworld event last month. Essentially, the company wants to enable the consumerization trend by virtualizing mobile devices like its technology already does for servers and desktops, and then delivering applications designed to run natively on these new form factors such as tablets and smartphones. This effort falls under the product banner of Horizon Mobile, which Herrod describes at a high level as providing a dual persona for devices — one for personal use and one for corporate use.

A key component of VMware’s strategy is its partnership arrangement with both Samsung and LG to incorporate the hypervisor into the versions of the Android operating system that they’ve developed to run on their handsets. When the partnerships finally bear fruit, all of the manfacturers’ Android devices will come with this feature, meaning that an employee just needs to show to work with his device and let IT get the enterprise-centric virtual machine up and running. But, Herrod said today, VMware is also working with Google to get its virtualization hooks incorporated into the core Android that Google puts out and that manufacturers like Samsung, LG and others modify for their specific devices.

That could be a huge deal for VMware, as Android devices account for almost 50 percent of all devices, according to recent estimates. Getting its technology incorporated into the Android OS coming straight from Google would make VMware the de facto mobile virtualization option, and would save it the hassle of having to neccesarily strike deals with every single device maker. It’s difficult to gauge how many mobile devices VMware might find itself on compared with the number of servers it virtualizes in data centers, but Herrod himself provided some insight into the potential: he said he access five devices per day and had three on his person at the event.

The elephant in the room, though, is Apple’s iOS, which probably represents the most disruptive force in the consumerization of IT thanks to its presence on iPads and iPhones. VMware certainly could virtualize iOS devices, Herrod said, but one can imagine that Apple isn’t too keen on the idea of having Android apps running on its devices. Technologically, there aren’t many hurdles, but business issues still can jam the works. VMware isn’t about to lose out on the power of iOS altogether, though. Today, for example, it rolled out versions of its SlideRocket and Socialcast applications designed for iPads.

The result of all the technological wrangling, Herrod explained, is a litany of options around how users might go about managing their split-personality devices. You’ll have to watch a replay of Herrod’s discussion to get the whole story, but Herrod made it sound like the possibilities are almost endless in terms of intelligently separating business use from personal use.

Interestingly, Cisco’s Tom Gillis noted in an earlier Mobilize session that putting a hypervisor on the phone isn’t an ideal solution to consumerization security because it will result in too high a performance hit. VMware has claimed its technology minimally affects performance, and even that is mitigated to some degree by running apps specially designed to run in that environment.

Watch live streaming video from mobilize2011 at livestream.com

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Is journalism as we know it becoming obsolete?

Posted by on Saturday, 3 September, 2011

There have been plenty of obituaries written for the newspaper business, most of which have a kernel of truth to them — but is journalism as we know it at risk as well? Dave Winer, a programming guru and visiting scholar at the New York University school of journalism, says it is. In a blog post on Friday, Winer argued that “journalism itself is becoming obsolete” because now anyone can do it. Is he right? In some ways, yes. One thing is for sure: Journalism is being transformed by the web and by real-time publishing networks and what Om calls the “democracy of distribution.” Whether that’s good or bad depends on your point of view.

Winer’s post was actually about the recent kerfuffle over TechCrunch founder Mike Arrington’s launch of a venture-capital fund, a topic that has received more than enough coverage already elsewhere. But in the process of talking about that issue — and how Arrington has never made any claims to be a journalist — Winer said that as far as he is concerned, journalism as we know it is becoming obsolete, in part because non-journalists can do it just as easily as journalists can. The bottom line, he says, is that journalism itself was “a response to publishing being expensive.”

It cost a lot of money to push bits around the net before there was a net. They had to have huge capital-intensive printing plants, fleets of trucks and delivery boys with paper routes. Now we can hear directly from the sources and build our own news networks. It’s still early days for this… but in a generation or two we won’t be employing people to gather news for us. It’ll work differently.

If it’s important, the news will find me

Winer is certainly right about the fact that the way we consume “news,” and even where that news comes from, has changed dramatically in just the last few years. For many people, as we’ve described before at GigaOM, news now comes from their social graph via Facebook, or through a Twitter stream — possibly read in a news-curation app like Flipboard or Zite, or through an aggregator like Techmeme or Memeorandum, which collects news hits published on blogs by people who may or may not even see themselves as journalists.

But is it right to say that journalism was a response to the fact that publishing was expensive? Not really. Newspapers and their whole business model, which involved becoming a mass medium in order to aggregate eyeballs and then sell them to advertisers, was a response to publishing being expensive. And many of the things that are most criticized about the newspaper approach to journalism — including what NYU journalism professor Jay Rosen calls the “view from nowhere,” and the omniscient tone that many journalists take — are definitely an outgrowth of that model.

But none of those things are really journalism, which is why media theorist Clay Shirky says that rather than focus on saving newspapers, he would prefer to focus on saving journalism. And what is journalism? Everyone has their own definition, but I think it’s fundamentally about a spirit of inquiry, of curiosity, of wanting to make sense of things. It’s something like the spirit of scientific inquiry, as Matt Thompson noted recently in a post at the Poynter Institute. It has very little to do with specific tools or specific methods of publishing.

Random acts of journalism

Winer is right about journalism changing because anyone can do it, however, as we’ve also described a number of times. That trend, which has turned sources of news into publishers (allowing them to “go direct” as Winer likes to say) began with blogs and has continued with Twitter and Facebook and other tools. Andy Carvin, who has become a one-man newswire by curating news about the Arab Spring on Twitter, says he prefers to think of journalism as an act rather than a profession. So people like Sohaib Athar, a Pakistan resident who live-tweeted the raid on Osama bin Laden as it was happening, engaged in what Carvin calls a “random act of journalism.”

Instead of saying journalism is obsolete, I would rather say it as evolving and expanding — and I happen to believe that’s a good thing. What does it consist of now? Most of the things it used to, as well as some new ones: building connections with your reader community is a journalistic skill, and curation of the type Carvin does (and the NYT is experimenting with via its @NYTlive Twitter account) certainly is. And we still need people to confirm facts and ferret out misinformation when news is breaking, which is what makes Snopes one of my favorite non-journalistic journalism sites.

We need people who can interview other people and make sense of what they say — which is why Reddit has some aspects of journalism to it, and Quora does too (Winer recently asked why a newspaper like the New York Times hasn’t adopted an approach like Quora). All these skills and more are required — and the ability to aggregate things in a smart way, and the ability to understand and make sense of large amounts of data.

Will journalism as a whole suffer because some people engage in conflicts of interest or abuse anonymous sources or break any of the other so-called rules of journalism? Not really. Most of the popular newspapers and media outlets of the last 50 years have done all that and worse (yes, even worse than News Corp.’s phone hacking). Newspapers may come and go and bloggers may rise and fall, but journalism continues — not so much as an institution, but as a state of mind and a series of beliefs, and a way of behaving. There are just more ways to do it now, rightly or wrongly.

Post and thumbnail photos courtesy of Flickr users ShironekoEuro and Zarko Drincic

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Posted by on Tuesday, 14 June, 2011

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LG Optimus One Particular P500 – Cost Effective Touchscreen Cellphone

Posted by on Monday, 11 April, 2011

Introducing, the LG GD910 Games P500. This really is one from the most awaited cellular mobile phone and now it’s finally right here in the united kingdom. Accessible in inexpensive cellular cellphone line rental bargains and provides, this Smartphone is definitely an excellent cellular phone that performs well. It’s got fantastic functions that only charges nearly appropriate. Let us take a look at what the LG Optimus A single P500 packs inside of its gorgeous casing style.

The LG Optimus A single P500 mobile phone is a mid assortment cellular phone. LG brings finest usability, quality and functions into this easy hunting touchscreen mobile telephone. Getting to weigh only 129 grams and actions 113.five x 59 x thirteen.3 mm, the LG Optimus One particular P500 is surely an easy to carry LG KS500 Games thinking about the functions it holds inside of. This great hunting mobile phone includes a very straight forward design and not flashy, to be short very straightforward looking touchscreen mobile mobile phone. However, if you have a look at what it retains you would possibly be shocked.

Like most most up-to-date technology equipped phones, the LG P500 has 3G Technologies for fulfilling face-to-face calls. The LG Optimus One P500 has 3G HSDPA creating your video calling rapidly and smooth. Enjoyed all over the place on earth and excellent for traveling mobile phone as a result of its Quad Band network.

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The LG Optimus One P500 builds a lot of power in usability and practicality. The three.one Megapixel Digital camera

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Announcing OpenIndiana – The Community Replacement for OpenSolaris

Posted by on Saturday, 13 November, 2010

OpenSolaris – Sun’s project to provide an open source Solaris – was a great success. OpenSolaris was helpful to sysadmins and developers, because with access to the same source code that Solaris used, they could quickly debug issues with production systems, and work around unexpected behaviour.

After Oracle purchased Sun, contribution to OpenSolaris dried up. Previously helpful and involved developers from Sun where blocked by Oracle policy from being open and sharing information with the community. Promised OpenSolaris distributions didn’t be delivered, in spite of assurances from Oracle that there were on their way.

The OpenSolaris Governing Board were left with zip to rule – no project to point, no responsive seller to work with. With nowhere left to turn, they resigned, and OpenSolaris as a distribution ended. OpenSolaris the project continued, with code being released and updates making their ways into the assorted source code repositories.

The final blow from Oracle came from a leaked internal memo, which laid out Oracle’s future plans for the project. A return to commercial-only distributions was planned, with source code only being released some time after each update to Solaris. OpenSolaris as a project was dead – and this impacted a large number of folks that had built up business around the strong and feature-rich OpenSolaris code base.

These events spurred the creation of 2 new projects from the community. First, Illumos – an entirely open implementation of the OS / Net consolidation – the kernel and core of Solaris. Secondly, OpenIndiana – a full distribution, made from the updated OpenSolaris code base. Although OpenIndiana at first uses the last release ON consolidation from Oracle, the plan is to swiftly move to the Illumos ON and have a fully open distribution.

OpenIndiana gives a smooth upgrade from the OpenSolaris 2009.06 distribution. All the powerful OpenSolaris technologies are there, working in the same way they did before – but with nearly a year’s worth of updates, bug fixes, and enhancements. Improvements to ZFS, Zones, dtrace, configuration, management – all have been built and rolled into the first OpenIndiana release.

In addition, as OpenIndiana continues the goals of OpenSolaris – to introduce new features but remain binary compatible with the commercial Solaris O. S – existing Solaris applications that work with Solaris ten will run with OpenIndiana.

The OpenIndiana project has been hugely successful in bringing a feature rich, dynamic, and usable inheritor to OpenSolaris. In doing hence the OpenIndiana team has continued to supply a dynamic, open source UNIX environment for developers, start ups, and sysadmins everywhere.