UPDATE FIXES VERIZON IPHONE 5 DATA GLITCH; CUSTOMERS WON'T BE CHARGED FOR OVERAGES

Verizon iPhone 5 customers may have noticed an issue wherein their phones gobbled up extra cellular data when they were theoretically connected to Wi-Fi networks. Those customers now have two bits of good news: There’s a special software update that fixes the problem, and they won’t be responsible for unexpected charges related to unintended network overages related to the issue that spurred the carrier update in the first place.

10 HOT IT SKILLS FOR 2013

The number of companies planning to hire tech professionals continues to grow, with 33% of the 334 IT executives who responded to Computerworld's 2013 Forecast survey saying they plan to increase head count in the next 12 months..

APPLE WARNS ICLOUD USERS OF LOOMING STORAGE LOSS

Apple on Monday began reminding some iCloud users that they will soon lose the 20GB of free storage they'd received when they migrated from MobileMe.

Nook Video set for fall premier

Barnes and Noble Tuesday announced that Nook Video will premiere this fall in the U.S. and UK. The service will offer access to movies and TV shows for streaming and download.

Eight simple steps to make the upgrade to iPhone 5 easier

A little planning can save time - and voice messages - when you upgrade to the new iPhone 5

Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

AMD to sell ARM-based server chips in 2014



Advanced Micro Devices has announced it will sell ARM-based server processors in 2014, ending its exclusive commitment to the x86 architecture and adding a new dimension to its decades-old battle with Intel.
AMD will license a 64-bit processor design from ARM and combine it with the Freedom Fabric interconnect technology it acquired when it bought SeaMicro earlier this year, AMD said Monday.
The result will be a new line of system-on-chip Opteron processors that AMD said will be ideal for the type of massive, web-scale workloads running in giant data centers like those operated by Facebook and Amazon.
AMD Rory Read announces his company’s
ARM move Monday.
AMD CEO Rory Read called the announcement a “seminal moment” and compared it to AMD’s introduction of the first 64-bit x86 processors in 2003. AMD beat Intel to the punch with that move, and it hopes to gain a similar advantage by embracing ARM.
It’s not clear yet if ARM-based CPUs will be successful in servers, but one industry analyst said the move by AMD will help. “I really think this raises ARM’s server credibility, and the credibility of microservers as a segment,” said Patrick Moorhead, president of Moor Insights and Strategy.
Server chips based on the x86 architecture will continue to be the mainstay of AMD’s server business, Read said, but he thinks the ARM-based chips will open up new markets for the company. And while AMD is focused initially on servers, he didn’t rule out the possibility that it will eventually make ARM processors for client devices such as tablets as well.
AMD hopes to sell the new server chips to vendors such as Dell and Hewlett-Packard, and will also sell them in its own servers under the SeaMicro brand. Today those systems are based on x86 processors.
AMD was joined at the event by representatives from Red Hat, Dell, Facebook and (by video) Amazon, a sign of the interest ARM-based server chips are generating.
The timing of Monday’s announcement was a bit awkward, since ARM has yet to unveil the 64-bit processor design that AMD plans to license. It’s likely to be a design code-named Atlas that ARM is expected to unveil at its TechCon conference Tuesday, though neither company would confirm that Monday.
The timing was also bad because hurricane Sandy prevented ARM CEO Warren East from flying in from the UK in time to attend the event. He appeared in a video that was hastily shot in the back of a taxi at Heathrow airport, endorsing the partnership with AMD.
ARM-based servers make sense for the new computing requirements created by services such as social networks and online gaming, said Lisa Su, an AMD senior vice president and general manager. Those workloads need a processor that can efficiently handle very large volumes of small transactions.
“The data center is being inundated with massive amounts of data and there has to be a way to do it more efficiently in a smaller space with a lower cost point,” she said.
ARM architectures are considered more energy-efficient for some workloads because they were originally designed for mobile phones and consume less power. That has attracted several vendors to the space, including Calxeda, Applied Micro and Marvell, all of whom are developing ARM-based chips for servers.
AMD hopes to distinguish itself with two SeaMicro technologies — a custom chip that integrates many components from a traditional server board onto one chip, allowing for dense server designs; and its Freedom Fabric, which can connect thousands of servers in a cluster with low latency and at relatively low cost.
“The fabric technology is the secret sauce; this is what will make AMD’s server solution different from other vendors,” Su said.
Intel has said it won’t make ARM-based processors, in part because it doesn’t want to pay ARM a royalty on each chip. But it has been working hard to reduce the power consumption of its own server chips and said it is confident of its technology roadmap.
The company is due to release a low-power server chip in the second half of the year code-named Centerton, and will follow that up next year with a part dubbed Avoton.
“We have what is required by customers — low powered CPUs, support for key server features, and software compatibility to allow use of current workloads and not force any migration,” Intel spokesman Radek Walczyk said via email.
That still doesn’t give it an equivalent to AMD’s Freedom Fabric, however.
“Think of the chip as half the battle,” said Moorhead, the industry analyst. “The part of the battle [Intel] hasn’t discussed yet is the fabric that makes hundreds or thousands of these parts talk to each other. That’s the magic that guys like Calxeda and AMD are bringing to the table.”

Source: pcworld.com


Friday, October 26, 2012

Tumblr takes a tumble, stumbles back to life

Tumblr is back online after an hours-long outage Friday morning.
Just a week following its last outage, Tumblr on its Twitter account said it was “experiencing network problems” due to an issue with one of the site’s uplink providers.
According to service monitoring site Down Right Now, the outage began shortly after 8 a.m. EDT on Friday.
hortly after 2 p.m. EDT, Tumblr tweeted that the site was back online and a “full postmortem regarding today’s service interruption will follow.” No explanation has yet been posted.
The Internet is having a rough week. Amazon Web Services Monday experienced an outage that took down Netflix, Pinterest, Reddit, Airbnb, and Flipboard, among others hosted on the service.
Dropbox and Google App Engine were down for some but operational for others on Friday morning, and some users reported issues with YouTube as well. Even Apple had issues this week with its iMessage service. iOS users reported a Thursday afternoon outage, though Apple didn’t confirm or clarify the reasons behind the glitch.
Internet Traffic Report documented significant packet loss and a steep dip in Web traffic across North America on Friday morning, though it’s unclear what caused the anomalies, and it seems things are back to normal.
The outages have thus far been unrelated. Tumblr’s outage last week was due to issues with its Dashboard, while Amazon Web Services had server trouble at its Virginia data center.

Why do outages freak some users?

The response to these outages, some of which last for less than an hour, may say more about the always-on nature of the Internet than about the sites themselves. Tumblr users took to Twitter to mourn the site’s absence in either snarky (“I can’t post my new ‘tumblr-is-down’ gif because tumblr is down”) or plaintive (“tumblr is still down why am I breathing”) tones.
The pitfalls of living in a constantly connected culture have been well documented. Speaking in a March TED talk, Professor Sherry Turkle of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology said people turn to social networking platforms to feel connected and understood.
“That feeling that ‘no one is listening to me’ makes us want to spend time with machines that seem to care about us,” said Turkle, who studies the way technology is changing the way humans interact with each other.
When Tumblr and Pinterest are unavailable, when iMessages stop working for a few hours, stream of connections are severed, even if only briefly.
Source: pcworld.com

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Google, Microsoft and Yahoo fix serious email weakness

Use of weak DKIM signing keys could allow spoofed email messages to look legitimate, US-CERT warned

Google, Microsoft and Yahoo have remedied a cryptographic weakness in their email systems that could allow an attacker to create a spoofed message that passes a mathematical security verification.

The weakness affects DKIM, or DomainKeys Identified Mail, a security system used by major email senders. DKIM wraps a cryptographic signature around an email that verifies the domain name through which the message was sent, which helps more easily filter out spoofed messages from legitimate ones.

The problem lies with signing keys that are less than 1,024 bits, which can be factored due to increasing computer power. US-CERT said in an advisoryissued Wednesday that signing keys less than 1,024 bits are weak, and that keys up to RSA-768 bits have been factored.

The issue came to light after Florida-based mathematician Zachary Harris was sent an email from a Google recruiter that used only a 512-bit key, according to a report published Wednesday by Wired magazine.

Thinking it might be some clever test by Google, he factored the key, then used it to send a spoofed message from Sergey Brin to Larry Page, Google's founders.

It wasn't a test but in fact a serious problem, one in which emails that could be bogus would be trusted. According to the DKIM standard, email messages that have keys shorter that 1,024 bits are not necessarily rejected.

Harris found the problem wasn't limited to Google, but also Microsoft and Yahoo, all of whom appeared to have fixed the issue as of two days ago, according to US-CERT. Harris told Wired he found either 512-bit or 768-bit keys in use at PayPal, Yahoo, Amazon, eBay, Apple, Dell, LinkedIn, Twitter, SBCGlobal, US Bank, HP, Match.com and HSBC.

Weak signing keys are a boon for cybercriminals. They selectively target people with emails containing malicious links in an attempt to exploit a computer's software and install malware, a style of attack known as spear phishing. If an email contains the correct DKIM signature, it's more likely to end up in a recipient's inbox.

US-CERT also warned of another problem. The DKIM specification allows a sender to flag that it is testing DKIM in messages. Some recipients will "accept DKIM messages in testing mode when the messages should be treated as if they were not DKIM signed," US-CERT said.


Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Amazon Web Services outage takes out popular websites again

Just five months after storms took down Amazon-powered sites such as Instagram, Pinterest and Netflix, issues at Amazon’s Northern Virginia datacenter gave Amazon Web Services customers fits on Monday.
The outage started around 2:11pm Eastern Time, and affects “a small number” of instances in Amazon Web Services’s US-EAST-1 Region.
According to AWS’ Service Help Dashboard, the Northern Virginia data center is experiencing “Degraded EBS performance in a single Availability Zone” that appeared to take down or severely degrade performance of sites including Reddit, Flipboard, Airbnb, and Github.
To be fair, Monday’s downtime appears to be from actual issues with the servers themselves. June’s disruption and an August 2011 incident at the same datacenter were due to power outages.
As of Monday night, Amazon said it restored normal performance to about half of the instances affected, although it did not say how long it would be before service was fully restored.
These downtime periods aren’t just frustrating for companies providing the affected Web-based services; increasingly, it’s becoming an issue for Internet users. A third of us now access a site that uses Amazon Web Services as its backend at least once a day, according to a recent DeepField Networks survey.

Source: pcworld.com