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Availability and the Cloud

Securing the Cloud

Breaking the Bottleneck

Six Mistakes Companies Are Making Today And How You Can Avoid Them

Responding Quickly to Changing Markets: Anticipate, Adapt, Excel

Business VoIP Comparison Guide

Why Small Businesses Should Look Beyond Big Brands When Choosing Antivirus

Phone Systems for Small, Medium & Enterprise Business: Which to Buy?

Get the facts: Pros & Cons of a Hosted PBX Phone System

Apple Aims for Deeper Enterprise Penetration with iPhone 4 and iOS 4

Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide

Top 10 Concerns of Buying a VoIP Business Phone System

Digital Copiers: Find The Best And Most Efficient System For Your Business

Building a Smarter IT Infrastructure for Local Government

Managing the Server Migration Process

Linux from Scratch

A Computer Geek’s Smart Productivity Guide

The Easy Guide To Computer Networks

A Newbie’s Getting Started Guide to Linux

Securing & Optimizing Linux: The Hacking Solution (v.3.0)

Climate Change: Challenges and Opportunities for Business

6 Essential Criteria when Choosing an Antispam Solution

Increasing Performance in Enterprise Anti-Malware Software

The JavaScript Anthology: 101 Essential Tips, Tricks & Hacks – Free 158 Page Preview

The GNU/Linux Advanced Administration

Introduction to Free Software

Scrappy Information Security

New Windows XP SP3 beta Available

(TheForceField.Net ) March 26, 2008 — Microsoft released a new Windows XP SP3 RC to the public yesterday. Dubbed Windows XP Service Pack 3, Release Candidate 2 Refresh, the new RC is the second to be released publicly and  may be the last before the official release of Windows XP SP3.

The release was announced on a Microsoft Technet forum yesterday by MSFT moderator Chris Keroack.  "The purpose of RC2 Refresh is to validate improvements to the Windows Update experience with Service Pack 3.", Keroack said in the post. "Therefore, this beta release will be available only on Windows Update, in English, German and Japanese. Beyond fixes for common Windows Update issues and the inclusion of support for HD Audio, there are no substantial differences between this beta release (build 5508) and XP SP3 RC2 (build 3311)"

Keroack said the application used to download RC2, the previous beta,  would also be used to download RC2 Refresh. The application is available from the Microsoft Download Center . He also said that if Windows XP SP3 RC1 or RC2 were previously installed it would first need to be removed before installing Windows XP SP3 RC 2 Refresh.

Keroack stressed that although it is a public beta, he recommend it for use by IT professionals, developers and other tech-savvy individuals and not for production use.

Microsoft indicated Windows XP Service Pack 3 would be released in the first half of 2008. Some industry analysts have predicted a release in mid-April.

More information on Windows XP Service Pack 3 Release Candidate 2 Refresh may be found on the Windows XP TechCenter

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Sun Awarded $44M DoD Contract to Develop Microchip Interconnect System

DARPA Project Advances Chip Communications Via Proximity and Optical Connections to Create Potential for Virtual Supercomputer From Network of Low-Cost Chips

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (Business Wire EON/PRWEB ) March 24, 2008 — Sun Microsystems, Inc. (NASDAQ:JAVA) today announced that the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has awarded Sun $44.29 million funding for a five and a half-year research project focused on microchip interconnectivity via on-chip optical networks enabled by Silicon photonics and proximity communication. Part of DARPA's Ultraperformance Nanophotonic Intrachip Communication program, the project commences with an incremental delivery of $8.1 million to Sun Microsystems' Microelectronics and Laboratories divisions. For more information on research projects at Sun, visit http://www.research.sun.com.

Building on research done under DARPA's High Productivity Computing Systems program, Sun's new project will accelerate the development of lower cost, high performance and high productivity systems. The project presents a unique opportunity to develop supercomputers through interconnecting an array of low-cost chips, with the potential to overcome the fundamental cost and performance limits of scaling up today's large computer systems. By providing unprecedented high bandwidth, low latency, and low power interconnections between the parallel computing chips in such an array, this research project will help enable a broad class of companies and organizations to utilize applications with high compute and communication requirements, such as energy exploration, biotechnology and weather modeling.

News Image Optical communications could be a truly game-changing technology an elegant way to continue impressive performance gains while completely changing the economics of large-scale silicon production," said Greg Papadopoulos, chief technology officer and executive vice president of research and development for Sun. Congratulations to Sun Labs and Microelectronics teams for their constructive creativity and for driving innovation into the semiconductor marketplace."

Sun's program combines optical signaling with Proximity Communication, its key chip-to-chip I/O technology, to construct arrays of low-cost chips in a single virtual macrochip. Such an aggregation of inexpensive chips looks and performs like a single chip of enormous size, thus extending Moore's Law; it also avoids soldered chip connections to enable lower total system cost. Long connections across the macrochip leverage the low latency, high bandwidth, and low power of silicon optics, and through this program Sun and DARPA will research technologies to dramatically further reduce the cost of these optical connections. The result is a virtual supercomputer.

DARPAs UNIC (Ultraperformance Nanophotonic Intrachip Communications) program will demonstrate high performance photonic technology for high bandwidth, on-chip, photonic communications networks for advanced ( 10 trillion operations/second) microprocessors. By restoring the balance between computation and communications, the program will significantly enhance DoDs capabilities for applications such as Image Processing, Autonomous Operations, Synthetic Aperture Radar, as well as supercomputing, said Dr. Jag Shah, program manager in DARPA's Microsystems Technology Office.

Accelerating Innovation to Extend Moore's Law

The historic accuracy of Moore's Law, which predicts a periodic doubling of the number of transistors that can cost-effectively build on a single chip, is partly behind the impressive growth of microprocessor performance over the last 30 years. Today, though, continued improvements are slowing down, as power and size constraints limit the growth of chip clock frequencies. Boosting computer performance by accumulating hundreds or thousands of cores per chip allows users to exploit massively parallel execution, but it also requires large increases in the number of transistors on a chip, and hence an unconstrained continuation of Moore's Law. However, as Dr. Gordon Moore himself predicted long ago, economic limits on the global financial investment in semiconductors are now slowing down Moore's Law.

About Sun Microsystems, Inc.

Sun Microsystems develops the technologies that power the global marketplace. Guided by a singular vision — "The Network is the Computer" — Sun drives network participation through shared innovation, community development and open source leadership. Sun can be found in more than 100 countries and on the Web at http://sun.com.

Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo and The Network Is The Computer are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries.

Episode 17 – Selling Linux – Part 1

This week, we will talk with a provider who specializes in Linux and Linux based solutions and find out how we can provide open source solutions to our customers as well. Part 1 of a 3 part series.

TechPodcasts Promo Tag :10
Intro 1:17
Billboard 4:26

News and Comment segment 4:57
Intel Corp. announced that it plans to release a six core processor before the end of 2008. The Force Field is conducting a Trivia Contest during the month of March.

If you are a regular listener of The Force Field podcast, you now have the chance to take your knowledge of the show and win prizes! All you have to do is listen to the podcast, log into The Force Field web site at theforcefield.net, click on The Force Field Podcast Trivia Contest link on the right sidebar and answer the ten trivia questions. If you answer all ten questions correctly you will be entered into a drawing to win a 1GB USB flash drive or an Nvidia partnerForce T-shirt! Enter The Force Field podcast Trivia Contest today and win! Contest ends March 31, 2008.

The idea for the Force Field Trivia Contest came from Genoagirl, one of the Administrators of TheForceField.Net. We needed to meet with the other administrators to plan the details of the contest, and a physical meeting was out of the question. So we used GoToMeeting. Try GotoMeeting free for 30 days! For this special offer, visit www.gotomeeting.com/techpodcasts.

Microsoft notified users of its popular Excel spreadsheet program that a patch released Tuesday causes the application to return erroneous results in calculations. The patch was for Microsoft Security Bulletin MS08-014, a vulnerability in Excel that allows remote code execution. The patch was listed as critical and effects Microsoft Office Excel 2000, XP, 2003 and 2007 as well as Microsoft Office 2004 and 2008 for Mac. The bug causes certain calculations performed in Microsoft Excel to return a value of – zero.

Commercial Break :53
Geekazine Podcast Promo :30

The Mike Tech Show Podcast promo :23

Intro to Interview 2:16
Most IT Solution Providers are used to selling and supporting hardware and software in a Microsoft Windows environment and many hold Microsoft certifications or are experienced Windows users themselves. For the vast majority of these professionals, it is a Windows world and those who want to be profitable in the IT industry must know and support Microsoft Windows and other Windows based solutions.

For some of them it is all they know and is considered their only option, but there are a few service providers who carve their niche in the industry by specializing in alternative solutions.

One of those Providers is Todd Hughes. Todd is a Linux guru and writes articles and tutorials on Linux related topics at The Force Field.net. His most recent article is called Selling Open Source. The article touches on selling open source applications to your customers as effective alternatives to commercial programs.

This week we’re going to talk to Todd and find out how he began selling Linux, where the market for Linux is now and how we can sell open source solutions to our customers at great profit in part 1 of our three part series on Selling Linux.

Todd Hughes Interview 12:47

Wrap up and Close :46

©2008 Savoia Computer. All rights reserved.

Episode 17 – Selling Linux – Part 1

This week, we will talk with a provider who specializes in Linux and Linux based solutions and find out how we can provide open source solutions to our customers as well. Part 1 of a 3 part series.

TechPodcasts Promo Tag :10
Intro 1:17
Billboard 4:26

News and Comment segment 4:57
Intel Corp. announced that it plans to release a six core processor before the end of 2008. The Force Field is conducting a Trivia Contest during the month of March.

If you are a regular listener of The Force Field podcast, you now have the chance to take your knowledge of the show and win prizes! All you have to do is listen to the podcast, log into The Force Field web site at theforcefield.net, click on The Force Field Podcast Trivia Contest link on the right sidebar and answer the ten trivia questions. If you answer all ten questions correctly you will be entered into a drawing to win a 1GB USB flash drive or an Nvidia partnerForce T-shirt! Enter The Force Field podcast Trivia Contest today and win! Contest ends March 31, 2008.

The idea for the Force Field Trivia Contest came from Genoagirl, one of the Administrators of TheForceField.Net. We needed to meet with the other administrators to plan the details of the contest, and a physical meeting was out of the question. So we used GoToMeeting. Try GotoMeeting free for 30 days! For this special offer, visit www.gotomeeting.com/techpodcasts.

Microsoft notified users of its popular Excel spreadsheet program that a patch released Tuesday causes the application to return erroneous results in calculations. The patch was for Microsoft Security Bulletin MS08-014, a vulnerability in Excel that allows remote code execution. The patch was listed as critical and effects Microsoft Office Excel 2000, XP, 2003 and 2007 as well as Microsoft Office 2004 and 2008 for Mac. The bug causes certain calculations performed in Microsoft Excel to return a value of – zero.

Commercial Break :53
Geekazine Podcast Promo :30

The Mike Tech Show Podcast promo :23

Intro to Interview 2:16
Most IT Solution Providers are used to selling and supporting hardware and software in a Microsoft Windows environment and many hold Microsoft certifications or are experienced Windows users themselves. For the vast majority of these professionals, it is a Windows world and those who want to be profitable in the IT industry must know and support Microsoft Windows and other Windows based solutions.

For some of them it is all they know and is considered their only option, but there are a few service providers who carve their niche in the industry by specializing in alternative solutions.

One of those Providers is Todd Hughes. Todd is a Linux guru and writes articles and tutorials on Linux related topics at The Force Field.net. His most recent article is called Selling Open Source. The article touches on selling open source applications to your customers as effective alternatives to commercial programs.

This week we're going to talk to Todd and find out how he began selling Linux, where the market for Linux is now and how we can sell open source solutions to our customers at great profit in part 1 of our three part series on Selling Linux.

Todd Hughes Interview 12:47

Wrap up and Close :46

©2008 Savoia Computer. All rights reserved.

Read more

Sony Offers to Remove Bloatware From Its Laptops – For an Extra $50

(TheForceField.Net ) March 21, 2008 — Sony Corp. now offers to scrub its new laptops clean of bloatware they install – for a fee.

Fresh Start™, a software optimization service offered to customers on Sony's web site, is available as a customization option when purchasing selected Sony TZ series laptops. The service is aimed specifically at business users and is available for purchase only with an upgrade to Microsoft Windows Vista Business, which is costs an additional $100. Fresh Start costs an additional $49.99 and is not available to home users at this time.

The service removes trial versions of software and other "bloatware" from the laptop that is initially installed during the build. According to Sony "your VAIO PC will undergo a system optimization service where specific VAIO applications, trial software and games are removed from your unit prior to shipment. Fresh Start™ safely scrubs your PC to free up valuable hard drive space and conserve memory and processing power while maximizing overall system performance right from the start."

OEM system builders such as Dell, HP and Sony typically load their new PCs with trial or "crippleware" versions of popular software titles, most of which are little more than paid product endorsements that nag consumers to buy the full versions.  The presence of such software takes up valuable hard drive space and consumes resources, thereby slowing down performance of the computer, hence the name bloatware.

Consumers often complain about the unwanted bloatware and it is a serious  issue for businesseses, particularly those that upgrade systems to improve speed, performance and productivity. For many consumers, purchasing a new computer means one two hours removing the bloatware once they open the box and turn it on the PC for the first time. Some opt to take it to a local shop and pay a technician $65 or more to have the bloatware removed.

Sony will remove it during their Configure-To-Order customization process.

Selling Open Source

There are many open source alternatives to the proprietary/licensed versions of common commercial software applications. For those of us who serve the small business customer, these alternatives can provide a means to increase our income and drive sales by providing solutions for our customers that they might not otherwise be able to afford.    
   
     A good example of this is a small company with about 15 users that wants the benefits of a groupware server (mail, shared calendering and documents, etc.) but cannot realistically afford Microsoft's SBS or Exchange. Enter Zimbra, an open source collaboration suite. Zimbra offers everything that Exchange does in an easy to install and manage package: mail server (POP & IMAP), shared calendering, shared documents, and a host of other goodies. Users access their mail and other features via a web browser (ala OWA) making remote access available to the users even when they are at home or on the road.    

    Take a look at the screen shot below, does it look familiar? No, that's not OWA, it's Zimbra! Setup and administration is done via the web interface but there are also several command line tools available to perform various functions such as importing mail from an existing mail server, batch creation of user accounts, etc. User authentication can be done locally or Zimbra can be tied into an existing Active Directory environment for authentication.  As a service provider, you can enable inbound port 22 and port 7071 traffic through the customer's firewall (from your IP address at the shop only!) and have secure remote access to configuration files and the administrative interface to help your customers with any problems that they may have.

 

Zimbra

Zimbra is installed on top of a basic Linux operating system. I built mine on top of Ubuntu server.  Download the iso image   for Ubuntu Server 6.06.1 LTS and install the operating system. You can accept defaults during the install with the exception of the IP address; if it grabs a DHCP address just use the “back” button and manually assign the proper information. Next, install the Zimbra suite. A good how-to can be found here .

    Setup of Zimbra (including a quick start guide) can be found in the documentation at the Zimbra web site .   

    So, procure a decent server (nothing fancy, P4 2+Ghz, 512Mb RAM, 150-200 GB HD), install Ubuntu/Zimbra, and offer it to your clients as an “open source Exchange” server. Mark up the hardware to include a nice profit and cover your time building the server, charge them a few bucks for installation, offer support at maybe $500.00/yr, and start making some money on open source!

    Keep in mind that Zimbra is just the tip of the iceberg. There's Ebox (an SBS like clone), Snort/BASE (IDS), IPCop (Sonicwall like firewall), MySQL/MyPHP Admin (database and frontend), Ntop (network and bandwidth utilization),  Apache (web server), Nagios (networking monitoring and alerting), PacketFence (NAC), Zenoss (an HP OpenView/What'sUp Gold like clone), Squid/SquidGuard (a Websense/SurfControl like clone), many different versions of the Linux desktop, etc, etc. Start getting familiar with Linux and open source and you will find that you have something to offer your customers that the “other guys” don't.

    As always, if you have any questions, comments, problems, or want to name your first born after me, please feel free to contact me at thughes@fwpm.com.

Copyright 2007 Todd Hughes

 

Intel To Ship Six Core Processor This Year

(TheForceField.Net ) March 18, 2008 —  Intel Corp. announced yesterday that it plans to release a six core processor before the end of 2008.

Intel, a leading manufacturer of processors and microchip technology, disclosed features of the chip architecture in a press briefing yesterday. In the briefing, Pat Gelsinger, Intel Vice Senior President and General Manager, Digital Enterprise Group, discussed several processors including the Dunnington mutli-core processor for servers, the next-generation Itanium processor known as Tukwila and Nehalem, which Intel says is scalable from two to eight cores.

Gelsinger said Dunnington is the first Intel Architecture 45nm processor with six cores and is socket compatible with the Caneland platform. Gelsinger indicated the processor would be available in the second half of 2008.

Tukwila is a four core Itanium processor with a 30MB cache, dual integrated memory controller and RAS. It is the world's first processor with two billion transisters, according to Intel.

Nehalem will include simultaneous multi-threading with four to sixteen threads, up to 8MB level-3 cache, QUickpath interconnects at speeds up to 25.6GB/sec integrated memory controller and optional integrated graphics. Nehalem is designed to scale from servers to notebooks and will be scalable up to eight cores.

Details of Intel's Multicore ArchitectureBriefing are available on their web site.

Microsoft Patches and Breaks Excel

(TheForceField.Net ) March 15, 2008 — Microsoft notified users of its popular Excel spreadsheet program that a patch released Tuesday causes the application to return erroneous results in calculations.

In a message posted March 14 on The Microsoft Security Response Center site (MSRC) Bill Sisk, Microsoft Security Response Communication Manager, wrote "I wanted to let you know that we have updated bulletin MS08-014 to provide additional information on a newly identified issue that causes Microsoft Excel 2003 calculations to return an incorrect result when a Real Time Data source is used."

The patch was for Microsoft Security Bulletin MS08-014, a vulnerability in Excel that allows remote code execution. The patch was listed as critical and effects Microsoft Office Excel 2000, XP, 2003 and 2007 as well as Microsoft Office 2004 and 2008 for Mac.

"Our teams are testing a fix and will release it once it meets our quality bar for broad distribution.", Sisk wrote.

 

AVG Nightmare: The Risks of Reselling Software

(TheForceField.Net) March 15, 2008 — Steven Young has a story to tell, and it’s pretty scary. It is a story about how a trusted vendor can easily put a reseller on a limb and possibly out of business at a moment’s notice. His experience is a good lesson for all of us, not just when selling software but when we do any type of consulting or migration with any software purchased.
 
Young, an IT reseller and member of computerbusiness@yahoogroups, posted about the incident early yesterday morning in the newsgroup. It is repost by permission in its entirety in The Force Field forums .

Young had registered as an AVG reseller and had been migrating his clients away from Norton and to AVG Network Edition. He recently sold one of his clients 100 user licenses of Network Edition 7.5. It hadn’t been an quick sell. Young had to meet with his client, a charity, numerous times to get approval for the purchase and migration. The client approved the purchase, but there was a problem.

 “Between board meetings to approve the software purchase and further meetings to approve the installation labor, AVG version 8 was released.”, Young wrote.  “I’ve been pretty deep in proposals writing and other work and didn’t pay much attention to the 8 release. I was planning to try it out but not to use it until the bugs get worked out – since most software companies release first versions when they should still be in beta these days.”

Young attempted to order licenses for version 7.5 but it was no longer for sale. The problem was, version 8 .0 was almost double the price and the client had already given Young a check.  Fortunately, once Young called the reseller support line they agreed to sell him version 8.0 for the same price as  version 7.5.

But when Young downloaded the trial version of 8.0 he found it too resource intensive. It also caused issues with FireFox. The software company offered a downgrade license to 7.5 so he decided to take advantage of it.

After a round of e-mails with Grisoft he finally reached someone who was willing to provide the downgrade, with a catch. To his surprise Young was told that AVG 7.5 updates would cease after December 31, 2008. After that date all installations were required to upgrade to version 8.0.

Young was miffed. “I asked who was paying me to upgrade 100+ computers from 7.5 to 8.0 only 9 months after paying me to install 7.5 on a 2 year license. She tried to comfort me by saying ‘there will be a button the user can click to upgrade to 8.0’!”, he fumed. Then he added, “I’m done with them.”

“You have been warned. Wish I had been!” Young said.

 
In an e-mail to The Force Field Young said he spoke to AVG Channel Operations Manager Jeff Zinnert. According to Young, Zinnert confirmed that version 7.5 would no longer update after December 31st.  “They are reviewing this due to outcry from other resellers though and it may change.. Hopefully!” Young said.
 
Reselling software is a risky business.
 
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