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Chipmakers have been applying lessons learned in mobile computing to servers in an effort to increase efficiency by lowering power consumption. But a noted Google engineer threw some cold water on the approach on Monday, arguing the two styles of computing are too different.
“The data center is a different device than the key targets for mobile electronics, laptops, and mobile devices,” said Luis Barroso, a Google engineer who closely studies the company’s power consumption, speaking at the O’Reilly Velocity conference here.

And naturally, with at least hundreds of thousands of servers in operation and its data centers placed near power plants to cut electricity costs, Google is trying to get computing equipment makers more excited about efficiency.

“Maybe if you call this a land-held computer, perhaps they’ll help us,” he quipped, showing an aerial view of a sprawling Google data center.

The basic problem is that mobile devices and servers have different modes of activity.

Mobile devices have been improving through better exploitation of the fact that they spend a lot of time dormant with occasional bursts of activity. That lets processors and other electronics save power by spending most time in low-power sleep modes, then snapping awake for peak-power high-performance modes when necessary.

Google’s servers, though, have the opposite type of activity: they spend most of their time doing modest amounts of work, with frenzied moments of peak activity and complete lulls a rarity, Barroso said. The measurements are based on measurements of about 5,000 servers performing four different Google applications, he added.

The company’s servers simply can’t go to sleep, he said. Each machine is “rarely fully idle,” he said. “The fraction of time the servers are actually doing exactly nothing is very small.”

Thus, Google is urging electronics designers to create products that more gracefully reduce power demands as activity diminishes. Servers naturally consume peak power at peak activity, but what’s bad is that they still consume about half peak power when at zero activity.

Processors have gotten a bad rap for squandering ever more energy–indeed, Barroso himself, once a chip designer for Digital Equipment, has expressed such concerns. But chips actually are better than hard drives, memory, and network adapters at reducing power consumption during periods of moderate activity.

Some sophisticated hard drives, for example, can slow down their rotational speed to save power during periods of lower activity. However, “They need to bump to higher RPM to do something useful,” to read and write, he said, unlike processors, which can actually still process data when in low-activity modes.

Source: CNET News

And you thought a deal between Microsoft and Yahoo was over and done with?

Not so fast.

Microsoft has signaled that it is willing to sweeten its previous offer for a partial buyout of Yahoo’s search business, according to one major investor who has been in contact with both parties.

Neither Microsoft nor Yahoo had immediate comment.

After the termination of discussions with Microsoft less than two weeks ago, Yahoo’s board said in a statement that a sale leaving the company without an independent search business “would not be in the best interests of Yahoo stockholders.”

But the source noted that several of Yahoo’s nine board members, including its chairman, Roy Bostock, have since indicated a willingness to hold further discussions with Microsoft on a possible deal to sell the search operations.

“When Microsoft made its offer to acquire Yahoo’s search business, Yahoo rejected the offer outright. There was no negotiating beyond the ($9 billion offer) Microsoft was offering,” the source said.

After the Microsoft negotiations collapsed, Yahoo struck a search advertising outsourcing deal with Google. But that hasn’t impressed shareholders. Shares of Yahoo, which traded at $23.52 the day of the Google announcement, closed at $21.45 on Monday.

Meanwhile, rumors of an impending Yahoo reorganization–a big one that could come as early as this week–continue to swirl.

Investors clamoring for change have pointed to the approximately 35 percent decline in Yahoo’s share price since Microsoft’s $33 per share offer to acquire all of Yahoo. Microsoft withdrew that offer in May after failing to get a “yes” from Yahoo. Shares of Yahoo are now within hailing distance of the $19 per share trading level they hovered at prior to Microsoft’s unsolicited bid in February.

Meanwhile, the future of Yahoo’s CEO and co-founder, Jerry Yang, as well as a number of the company’s other directors, remains undecided. Yahoo has been stunned by a run of high-profile resignations in the last couple of weeks. But Yang has remained out of public since announcing the Google arrangement, feeding speculation about his future. The company’s annual shareholders meeting takes place on August 1.

The source questioned whether unrest about the stock price would force a change at the top as well. “A lot of Yahoo directors are fed up with the process of what’s been happening,” the source said.

Should Microsoft increase its buyout bid for just Yahoo’s search assets, and if the company’s investors find it appealing enough–even if Yahoo’s board does not–investor activist Carl Icahn may consider keeping with his initial game plan of running a dissident slate to win control the board.

But according to an institutional investor advisory services source, Icahn would still likely stand a better chance just running a partial slate of dissident directors for minority representation on the board–even if Microsoft makes a public statement of a sweetened offer to buy only Yahoo’s search business.

“If Microsoft would make a public statement, it would make a difference to a certain extent,” said the institutional investor advisory services source. “But, unless it was official like a tender offer, or unless shareholders could see the details and specific terms of the partial offer, it’s hard for shareholders to know how it will benefit them.”

This source noted that a mere press release saying the offer has been increased to a certain level will have even less effect, or meaning to shareholders: “I don’t think Microsoft publicly announcing even the terms of a sweetened bid would be enough for Carl Icahn to run a full slate, or motivate shareholders to replace the whole board.”

Source : CNET News

It’s hard to believe no-one has thought of this before. A new mobile app turns your Nokia Series 60 phone a WiFi modem/router, removing the need for finnicky Bluetooth or clunky USB cable connections to laptops.

Finnish software development company Joikusoft has released a free software application that lets Symbian Series 60 mobile phone users turn their handsets into Wi-Fi hot spots.

Called JoikuSpot, the software allows the phone’s 3G mobile connection to be shared via its inbuilt Wi-Fi antenna. As well as doing away with the need for a cable or BlueTooth connection, it also means a single 3G handset can provide high-speed internet access to groups of people.

It conjures up images of groups sharing wireless data access in coffee shops or families happily connecting multiple PCs to a mobile data service.

Naturally this will not be a great idea unless you also have a large mobile data allowance, as the traffic generated by multiple users could land you all too quickly in the bankruptcy courts.

When the application is running on the handset, other Wi-Fi enabled devices can discover it in the same way as any conventional hot spot.

As well as notebook PCs, it could be used by anything from cameras to other smartphones. Even Apple iPod touch users could get around their device’s lack of phone capability by piggy backing on a Series 60 device.

The developers believe the application will be appealing because a wireless LAN connection is many times faster than BlueTooth, meaning any devices connecting via JoikuSpot will enjoy faster data speeds.

“Internet should be easily and cost-efficiently accessible everywhere, and Joikusoft aims to enable that with the JoikuSpot innovation,” said Joikusoft founder and CEO Lasse Maki at this week’s launch of the software.

Series 60 handsets include Nokia’s N and E series models as well as offerings from companies such as LG and Samsung.

JoikuSpot can be downloaded from http://www.joiku.com/

Source :  APCMag.com

What do you get if you cross YouTube with BitTorrent?
(A) A nifty search aggregator for locating torrents?
(B) A huge legal headache?
(C) Another hugely popular web site with no possible commercial potential
(D) All of the above?

Whether you chose (D) as the correct answer or not, you might want to join the masses flocking to YouTorrent.com http://www.youtorrent.com, a torrent search engine which claims to have attracted more than 150,000 searches a day in its first three days of operation.

YouTorrent aggregates results from a dozen separate torrent search sites, including the Big Two of the torrent-swapping world: Mininova and The Pirate Bay, and lists results in a sortable format including date of origin, number of seeds and number of peers.

The interface features the usual swish Web 2.0 touches, including a list of recent searches which largely demonstrate that piracy addicts aren’t big on spell-checking. Fortunately, for people too dumb to add a P to ‘The Simsons Movie’, the site also offers a list of related searches that includes obvious spelling corrections.

YouTorrent sports a hefty legal disclaimer which argues that the site shouldn’t be used for copyright violations, and bravely if futilely claims that as an aggregator, it’s not obliged to block access to potentially copyright-violating torrents. (Let’s face it, there’d be nothing left to aggregate if that happened.)

Anonymity for the developers seems to be at a premium. The domain (and its twin YouTorrent.org) are registered via Moniker Online Services, and the site appears to be hosted in New Jersey. Doubtless mindful of the legal letters that are probably being prepared even as you read this, the About Us section of the site remains effectively blank.

The “we’re not responsible for the content people access” argument hasn’t proved particularly successful in the past — just ask the team behind Kazaa — so just how long the site will continue remains debatable.

Even assuming it manages to dodge the legal bombshells, turning it into a money-making proposition could be tricky. As user numbers go up, bandwidth and server costs will also inevitably expand. Selling advertising is the route that’s been pursued by similar sites such as The Pirate Bay, but the latter has relied on complex arguments about Scandinavian law. YouTorrent isn’t sporting any obvious fjords, so if you find the site useful, it might be best to get in before the whole thing is shut down.

Regardless of its mortality, the launch of YouTorrent.com demonstrates that the process of making torrent access easier continues unabated. While downloading illegal TV shows is still a damn site more difficult than (say) purchasing a legitimate piece of music online, it’s a hell of a lot simpler than it used to be. What this means for the future of entertainment remains, as ever, anyone’s guess.

YouTorrent: Use at your own peril, of course...
YouTorrent: Use at your own peril, of course…

Source : APCMag.com

Want to speak to someone overseas but can’t speak their language? Google has added the world’s first live translation system to its instant messaging network, truly delivering on the science-fiction promise of the “babelfish”.

Google’s IM network is available via the downloadable Google Talk software, on the web using the Google Talk Gadget, or through any software that supports the open-source Jabber chat protocol. It’s also available via the left hand side bar in the Gmail window.

Today Google improved on Talk by adding on-the-fly language translation via ‘bots’ that you add to your Google Talk friends list.

Do you speak French? Or Arabic? Now you do with new Google language 'bots'
Do you speak French? Or Arabic? Now you do with new Google language ‘bots’

Translating using iChat and Jabber
Translating using iChat and Jabber

To use the translation tools you’ll need to add each individual language-to-language bot as a friend in your G Talk buddy list.

There are currently 24 supported bots and adding them is easy as long as you know the two languages you want to translate between.

You’ll also need to append ‘@bot.talk.google.com’ to the end of the two languages. I fired up Google Chat and used it to translate between English and French and English and Arabic and the response is almost instant.

For a complete list of language codes see here . If you add them and nothing happens it means that Google doesn’t support it yet.

There’s also another feature that I hadn’t noticed before called Group Chat – this lets you invite multiple people into a chat, and can be used in conjunction with the languages bots to help a translation between you and your foreign friend. However, it’s worth noting that both Group Chat and language translations are only available within G Talk and not to your AIM buddies unfortunately.

If you’re not a fan of web-based IM clients then any Jabber compatible client (iChat included) should let you sign on to G Talk and add buddies locally.

Now, the only thing Google has to do now is add language translation to the voice call side of Google Talk ;-)

Source : APCMag.com

In case you missed it, Firefox 3 Beta 1 went live in late November. As a regular Firefox user I’ve been using it and have been extremely impressed with the speed and reliability of the latest release. So impressed in fact, that I deleted Firefox 2 from my Mac today.

Before we get on to the version 3 enhancements, I have to say that on my Mac running Leopard, Firefox 3 is much more stable than version 2 ever was. For instance, when using version 2 I used to have to force-quit at least once a day, with version 3 I’ve had to force-quit about once a week.

Firefox 3 looks much more 'Mac' like now, without the use of skins
Firefox 3 looks much more ‘Mac’ like now, without the use of skins

Like all other Firefox installations getting Firefox 3 up and running was a cinch. Simply grab a copy from here, and drag it to your applications folder. If you do want to keep an older version just create a folder within your Applications folder called ‘Firefox Old’ and copy the old version in to the folder before installing the new version. I’d also recommend backing up your preferences folder (On a Mac located in /User/Library/Application Support/Firefox and on a PC at C:\Documents and Settings\[User Name]\Application Data\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\).

Apart from stability, Firefox 3 offers a raft of other improvements according to Mozilla including:

  • Improved security features such as: better presentation of website identity and security, malware protection, stricter SSL error pages, anti-virus integration in the download manager, and version checking for insecure plugins.
  • Improved ease of use through: better password management, easier add-on installation, new download manager with resumable downloading, full page zoom, animated tab strip, and better integration with Windows Vista and Mac OS X.
  • Richer personalization through: one-click bookmarking, smart search bookmark folders, direct typing in location bar searches your history and bookmarks for URLs and page titles, ability to register web applications as protocol handlers, and better customization of download actions for file types.
  • Improved platform features such as: new graphics and font rendering architecture, native web page form controls, colour profile management, and offline application support.
  • Performance improvements such as: better data reliability for user profiles, architectural improvements to speed up page rendering, over 300 memory leak fixes, and a new XPCOM cycle collector to reduce entire classes of leaks.

Mozilla is recommending Firefox 3 Beta 1 for developers and testers only however in my experience I’m using it as my main browser, and having great success. That said, if you use a lot of Firefox add-ons, most of them are not yet compatible with Firefox 3 yet, so you may want to hold off until the initial release.

Source : APCMag.com