HP equips desktop PCs with SSDs for faster Windows 7 boots

Addressing complaints about slow Windows startup times, Hewlett-Packard Co. plans to introduce a new business desktop PC that comes with a solid-state disk drive (SSD) to speed up Windows 7 and other applications. Available on Oct. 22 - the same day Windows 7 is officially released - the 6005 Pro will also come with a larger conventional hard disk drive connected via SATA interface for storing data and documents, said Martha Rost, worldwide product manager for business PCs at HP. HP calls the combo drive configuration its RapidDrive technology. The 64GB SSD on the HP Compaq 6005 Pro will be used to store and run Windows and commonly-accessed applications. The AMD-based 6005 Pro with RapidDrive costs $774, about $200 more than the $550 starting cost of the 6000 Pro, which lacks an SSD. As for just how rapid the 6005 Pro is, "We didn't run explicit tests.

The SATA-connected PM800 can read data sequentially at a maximum rate of 225.4 MB per second, and write it sequentially at 160 MB per second, HP said. But it boots up pretty quickly," Rost said. "You'll definitely see a difference." She said that the RapidDrive uses the Samsung PM800 SSD based on multi-level cell (MLC) technology. Sequential data rates apply to large files such as movies or songs. However, the PM800's performance - especially when writing small chunks of data - is much less impressive. It is about twice as fast as the zippiest consumer (7,200 RPM) SATA hard disk drives.

When doing random reads and writes, the Samsung drive is rated at a maximum of 27.4 MB per second and 4.2 MB per second, respectively, which is far slower than conventional hard drives. And they inevitably get even slower over time. SSDs are slower than conventional hard drives when recycling old blocks of data and doing other "garbage collection" tasks. Roger Kay, an independent analyst with EndPoint Technology Associates Inc., said this isn't the first time hardware makers have tried technology aimed at speeding up Windows. Intel also introduced a technology called Robson that placed a flash memory cache on notebook motherboards. Samsung and Seagate both introduced hybrid drives for notebooks that combined a conventional spinning disk with a smaller flash SSD that would be used to run Windows and popular apps.

Such technologies haven't taken off, in large part because of lack of need. Microsoft has also tried to speed up Windows. Most laptops can quickly go into sleep or hibernate modes and waking up from suspended modes is much faster than booting a PC. Kay doesn't think RapidDrive, at least in its current form, will spread to laptops, since it requires two drives. A feature introduced in Vista called ReadyBoost allowed users to boot Windows off a flash drive. Microsoft has promised that Windows 7 will boot and run faster than Vista . But performance gains were small, users said.

FAA glitch shines spotlight on troubled telco project

The outage of a computer system used by airline pilots to file flight plans in the U.S will likely prompt a closer look at a $2.4 billion telecommunications system that has grappled with numerous problems in the past. But in a statement, the agency blamed a "software configuration problem" within the FAA Telecommunications Infrastructure (FTI) in Salt Lake City. The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) offered few details Thursday about the exact nature of the glitch, which caused major delays and flight cancellations in airports across the country.

That problem brought down a system used mainly for traffic flow and flight planning services for about four hours this morning. There was no indication that the disruption was the result of a cyberattack, the FAA said. The flight management system - it's called the National Airspace Data Interchange Network (NADIN) - was affected because it relies on FTI services to operate, the FAA said. FAA experts were investigating the outage and meeting with Harris Corp., the company that manages FTI to "discuss system corrections to prevent similar outages," the agency said. Safety and security is our highest priority," the company said.

In an e-mailed statement, a Harris spokesman said the company is working to "evaluate the interruption" to prevent future outages. "FTI has proven to be one of the most reliable and secure communications networks operating within the civilian government. A spokeswoman for the Professional Airways Systems Specialists (PASS) union, which represents more than 11,000 FAA employees, told Computerworld the problem arose when scheduled maintenance on FTI in Los Angeles corrupted a router in Salt Lake City. The $2.4 billion FTI program was introduced by the FAA in 2002 to replace seven FAA-owned and leased telecommunications networks. A back-up router that should have kicked-in when the primary router went down failed to do so, resulting in the widespread outage, she said. It provides a range of voice, data and video communication services for operations and mission support at more than 4,000 FAA and Defense Department facilities, according to Harris.

The report also noted several technical problems that had caused unscheduled outages to air traffic control operations. "In some cases, these outages have involved simultaneous loss of both primary and back-up FTI services, which not only disrupts air travel but also creates potential safety risks," the inspector general report warned, pointing to several incidents in recent years. The FTI network provides switching and routing services, as well as centralized infrastructure security monitoring services for the FAA. An audit of the program released by the FAA's Inspector General last September cited concerns over delays in the project's implementation and doubts about the promised cost-benefits the network was supposed to yield. On Sept. 25, 2007 for instance, all FTI services were lost at the Memphis Air Route Traffic Control Control Center (ARTCC), disrupting air traffic control for several hours and causing 566 flight delays, the report said. The FAA was vulnerable to the same issues at Atlanta and in Jacksonville. The problem stemmed from a "catastrophic failure" of an optical network ring that was supposed to offer built-in fault tolerance. Another incident occurred on Nov. 9, 2007, when all primary and alternate FTI services were lost at Jacksonville, resulting in 85 flight delays. "We also found that when FTI outages occur, the services are not always restored within contractual timeframes," the inspector general's report said.

Others have been critical of the program as well. In some cases, where services are supposed to be restored within three hours, Harris took twice as long to fix the problem. "Several areas remain critical watch items for decision makers as FAA moves forward with FTI," the report said. PASS, for instance, has in the past voiced concern over safety and efficiency issues related to FTI. PASS spokeswoman Kori Blalock Keller said the FAA needs to hold Harris accountable for the problems. "If they are going to provide service, we need to make sure they are reliable and they are quick" to respond to outages, she said. According to Keller, the incident will likely prompt Congress to ask the FAA Inspector General for another review of the system. Although several FAA technicians were on hand in Salt Lake City today, they couldn't do much to help out because the FTI system is managed by Harris, she said.

The National Air Traffic Controllers Association (NACTA) has also expressed frustration over FTI. After the failure in Memphis, the organization blasted the network as "unreliable [and] lacking suitable backup" and called it a source of "great frustration and deep concern" for FAA technicians and air traffic controllers. Bill Curtis chief scientist at CAST Software and co-author of the Capability Maturity Model used in software development today, said the outage highlights the havoc that can be created when something goes wrong in large, highly interconnected systems such as the FAA air traffic control system. "It's not just one system, but a system of systems," he said. "If one of them starts behaving in a funny way, it starts propagating out and causes problems in other systems," said Curtis.

VMware's Fusion 3.0 release leads to confusion

VMware Inc. is having trouble getting VMware Fusion 3.0 out its download door and is getting customer complaints about timeouts and licensing problems. The alert remained on the Web site early this morning. Shortly after the software was released Tuesday for download by customers, VMware issued a support alert about its upgrade portal, blaming "overwhelming demand" for the upgrade problems.

Fusion 3.0 is virtualization software that allows Windows, and other guest operating systems, to run on Intel-based Mac OS X. VMware Workstation 7 , also released Tuesday, is a virtual machine platform that supports multiple operating systems on a PC. Most of the VMware portal problems appear to be with Fusion. In a blog post , Pat Lee, director of VMware's personal desktop products, posted the 30-day free trial key as a workaround. "Because we've seen even more demand than anticipated, the VMware Fusion upgrade portal is having significant problems keeping up with the demand," wrote Lee, in a post Tuesday afternoon. "While we have already transacted thousands of upgrades today and many people are able to get the product, I apologize immensely to those of you who are anxious to get the product immediately and are running into issues." Responded one user, Miku, in a comment field: "I'm very happy that you posted a temporary serial for us to try it out, the license server problems were driving me insane, I was really thinking I was insane." Rob Enderle, an independent IT analyst in San Jose, said the demand for the product would imply that a lot of people suddenly want to run Windows on a Mac, "so many that it is crashing VMware's servers." "VMware is largely a server company and not really used to the kinds of numbers that can be generated by a popular desktop offering. One problem was difficulty in getting activation codes for the new products. You jump from 100s for a server application to millions for a popular desktop application under load and this looks like VMware wasn't ready for this jump," Enderle said. A VMware spokesman said the company wouldn't provide details beyond what was in the blog post.

The site issues may be an indication that Paul Maritz, VMware's CEO, who was appointed last year and is a longtime Microsoft veteran, may have assumed that the demand was anticipated by his staff, Enderle said. "This should be one hell of a wake-up call for him, not unusual for a new CEO, and it will remind him that he needs to test his assumptions, because what he assumes, and what turns out not to be true, can be very damaging," he said. The company was also addressing upgrade issue via a Twitter account, vmwarefusion .

Novell grabs for big role in virtualization security

Novell this week will lay out an ambitious plan to secure applications across heterogeneous virtualization platforms at customer sites and off-premises, an effort designed to play off Novell's strengths in network and identity management. Under the plan, workloads will maintain security and compliance policies, along with real-time reporting and monitoring capabilities, wherever they go. Novell's Intelligent Workload Management initiative will be designed for the creation of application workloads, described by the company as portable, self-contained units of work built through the integration of the operating system, middleware and application, to run on server virtualization products from VMware, Microsoft and Citrix, among others. The company says it will roll out eight products over the next year to support the plan. "It's somewhat revolutionary," said CEO Ron Hovsepian during an interview with Network World. "[In the core trends around virtualization and the cloud] what's bogging down the CIO? Security." Desktop virtualization cheat sheet  While Novell is taking an aggressive approach, other management vendors such as HP and IBM are also in the mix.

Offerings following that will include the SUSE Appliance Toolkit for deploying and maintaining Linux-based appliances in physical and virtual environments for update, access and configuration. For its part, Novell during the first quarter of next year plans to release a tool simply called Workshop that customers can use to build their workloads on Linux and Windows. Analysts say Novell's initiative is likely to first win adoption among the company's existing customers that are virtualizing their servers and already using products such as Novell's Identity Manager. You might shift it to New York, for instance, if your main usage is there, and traditional firewalling and identity management aren't enough anymore," says James Staten, principal analyst at Forrester. "You want something very lightweight that sets policy and identity in the application." Novell needs its Intelligent Workload Management effort to pay off in light of falling revenue and growing losses, even as the company's Linux-based products business is on the rise (the company last week posted a fourth fiscal quarter-over-quarter revenue dip of 12% and a loss of $256 million, which swelled in large part due to acquisition and other costs). The foundation components for security in Novell's Intelligent Workload Management initiative include capabilities available in Identity Manager 4 for real-time provisioning, reporting and management as well as the already announced Cloud Security Service, also expected to debut in 2010. Novell today offers management products under the brands PlateSpin Workload Management and Business Management, but the company will introduce new products that integrate and extend management capabilities to the cloud. But Novell's approach should catch the eye of non-Novell customers, too, industry watchers say. "Today, the workload is moving around. These will include PlateSpin "Atlantic," a self-service provisioning portal, PlateSpin "Bluestar" for physical server change and configuration management and monitoring, and ZENworks "Workbench," a master repository and change/control system for on-demand deployment of workloads.

Another new product is expected to be Compliance Automation to integrating Sentinel security information and event-monitoring with Business Service Manager for monitoring events. Other Novell products, including Business Service Manager, Business Experience Manager, myCMDB, Sentinel and Sentinel Log Manager, will also be tailored for service-level reporting of workloads across physical, virtual and cloud environments. While there are a lot of unknowns about how exactly the effort will play out, Forrester's Staten says Novell is bringing a strong argument to the table about managing workloads in a virtualized environment. Mary Johnston Turner, research director at IDC, says Novell is addressing a new set of requirements. "As we move into dynamic virtualization, you need to integrate and have a more policy-based approach," she says. He notes this has been a weighty topic for other vendors, including HP with its Orchestrator, though it's not oriented toward heterogeneous virtualization.

However, Turner notes that this approach presents challenges in that organizations have an installed base of management tools and are not set up to run the way that Novell envisions. In a recent survey of about 1,000 organizations, DiDio said almost 40% used multiple types of server virtualization. "They get VMware, Microsoft, Citrix, and a real surprise, Parallels for the Mac," she says. There is also the practical matter of seeing how well Novell delivers on its promises, though she gives the vendor "credit for being early to the game." Laura DiDio, principal analyst at Information Technology Intelligence Corp., points out there's a real need for a heterogeneous approach to container virtualization because companies often do use more than one type of server virtualization. DiDio says Novell's core identity and security technologies are widely regarded as "top-notch" and it makes complete sense to include them in the container approach outlined in the Intelligent Workload Management strategy. She also notes it will probably represent a huge opportunity for Novell to get its foot in the door to woo new customers. This will potentially enable Novell customers to "quickly and safely" go into public and private cloud computing "because it will minimize the risk" at deployment.

Google, Verizon issue joint statement on network neutrality

The following is a joint statement from Lowell McAdam, CEO Verizon Wireless and Eric Schmidt, CEO Google, regarding network neutrality.(Cross-posted on the Verizon Policy Blog and Google Public Policy blog.)Verizon and Google might seem unlikely bedfellows in the current debate around network neutrality, or an open Internet. For starters we both think it's essential that the Internet remains an unrestricted and open platform-where people can access any content (so long as it's legal), as well as the services and applications of their choice. And while it's true we do disagree quite strongly about certain aspects of government policy in this area-such as whether mobile networks should even be part of the discussion-there are many issues on which we agree.

There are two key factors driving innovation on the web today. It enables Macs to talk to PCs, Blackberry Storms to iPhones, the newest computers to the oldest hardware on the planet across any kind of network-cable, DSL, fiber, mobile, WiFi or even dial up. First is the programming language of the Internet, which was designed over forty years ago by engineers who wanted the freedom to communicate from any computer, anywhere in the world. Second, private investment is dramatically increasing broadband capacity and the intelligence of networks, creating the infrastructure to support ever more sophisticated applications. There is no central authority that can step in and prevent you from talking to someone else, or that imposes rules prescribing what services should be available.

Networking's greatest arguments: Network neutrality vs. tiered services As a result, however or wherever you access the Internet the people you want to connect with can receive your message. Transformative is an over-used word, especially in the tech sector. Consumers of all stripes can decide which services they want to use and the companies they trust to provide them. But the Internet has genuinely changed the world. In addition, if you're an entrepreneur with a big idea, you can launch your service online and instantly connect to an audience of billions.

At the same time, network providers are free to develop new applications, either on their own or in collaboration with others. You don't need advance permission to use the network. This kind of "innovation without permission" has changed the way we do business forever, fueling unprecedented collaboration, creativity and opportunity. So, in conjunction with the Federal Communications Commission's national plan to bring broadband to all Americans, we understand its decision to start a debate about how best to protect and promote the openness of the Internet. And because America has been at the forefront of most of these changes, we have disproportionately benefited in terms of economic growth and job creation.

FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski has promised a thoughtful, transparent decision-making process, and we look forward to taking part in the analysis and discussion that is to follow. First, it's obvious that users should continue to have the final say about their web experience, from the networks and software they use, to the hardware they plug in to the Internet and the services they access online. We believe this kind of process can work, because as the two of us have debated these issues we have found a number of basic concepts to agree on. The Internet revolution has been people powered from the very beginning, and should remain so. Second, advanced and open networks are essential to the future development of the Web.

The minute that anyone, whether from government or the private sector, starts to control how people use the Internet, it is the beginning of the end of the Net as we know it. Policies that continue to provide incentives for investment and innovation are a vital part of the debate we are now beginning. So we think it makes sense for the Commission to establish that these existing principles are enforceable, and implement them on a case-by-case basis. Third, the FCC's existing wireline broadband principles make clear that users are in charge of all aspects of their Internet experience-from access to apps and content. Fourth, we're in wild agreement that in this rapidly changing Internet ecosystem, flexibility in government policy is key.

This can have unintended consequences. Policymakers sometimes fall prey to the temptation to write overly detailed rules, attempting to predict every possible scenario and address every possible concern. Fifth, broadband network providers should have the flexibility to manage their networks to deal with issues like traffic congestion, spam, "malware" and denial of service attacks, as well as other threats that may emerge in the future-so long as they do it reasonably, consistent with their customers' preferences, and don't unreasonably discriminate in ways that either harm users or are anti-competitive. Finally, transparency is a must. They should also be free to offer managed network services, such as IP television.

Chairman Genachowski has proposed adding this principle to the FCC's guidelines, and we both support this step. Doubtless, there will be disagreements along the way. All providers of broadband access, services and applications should provide their customers with clear information about their offerings. While Verizon supports openness across its networks, it believes that there is no evidence of a problem today - especially for wireless - and no basis for new rules and that regulation in the US could have a detrimental effect globally. While Google supports light touch regulation, it believes that safeguards are needed to combat the incentives for carriers to pick winners and losers online.

MS won't punish users for switching to hosted software

Microsoft's licensing of internal versions of software vs. their online counterparts won't penalize users for buying on-premises licenses and then switching to online hosted software, according to CEO Steve Ballmer. Ballmer, in a meeting with Network World at the annual SharePoint Conference, said moving between enterprise applications like SharePoint and Exchange deployed internally to versions of that software operated in the cloud by Microsoft will be "seamless." "Customers are saying give me some credit here, this is more like an upgrade than it is like a new buy, give us a little credit,"he said. Ballmer says Sidekick episode 'not good,' but Microsoft ensuring that its online services won't make the same error. Users have been questioning whether they can move licenses online without having to take a credit and renegotiate with Microsoft on licensing terms. "I know it will take them time to get it straight; it is really complicated," said Guy Creese, an analyst with the Burton Group. "They claim software plus services as a mantra and if that is true they need to make it so these two environments [cloud and on-premises] are seamless [from a licensing perspective]." Ballmer said users need to break it down by separating Internet and intranet deployments from cloud and on-premises. "Internet stuff we do is all priced basically per application or per server and it will be priced that way whether it is offered in the cloud, as a service or on-premises," he said. "I think that is pretty clean and I think that is the way that people would like to see things licensed." He said intranet applications are essentially priced by the number of users and that fact is true whether it is in the cloud or on-premises. "So one is user-based and one is application based." But Ballmer said Microsoft will be flexible in the way the company prices cloud versus on-premises.

For example, if a user has a client access license for SharePoint running internally but decides he wants Microsoft to run SharePoint in the cloud, the customer only pays to have Microsoft operate the SharePoint service. "You don't need to convert [the license], you can use your on-premise license and just buy the service capability; that you can do." If you want to transition you can do that too but most of our customers say just let me use the license that I already bought and have you operate this thing for me." Follow John on Twitter: twitter.com/johnfontana He said users that want to come to the cloud can buy the service and use the license they own or they can start in the cloud and buy an integrated license that pays for both the service Microsoft operates and the license. "We designed it to be seamless, in a sense it looks more complicated now because you have two choices." "We have a big enough install base of people that bought licenses that say, 'Hey, when we buy your service we don't want to be re-buying what we have already paid you for in terms of software.' We have to recognize that our customers expect a transition step where we give them credit for the software that they already own," he said.

What's replacing P2P, BitTorrent as pirate hangouts?

Driven by increased crackdowns on BitTorrent sites such as The Pirate Bay, software pirates are fast-moving their warez to file-hosting Web sites. Hyperlinks to the software can then be distributed by pirates via Web sites, instant messages, or social media sites such as Twitter, said Vic DeMarines, CEO of anti-piracy software vendor V.I. Labs. "It's incredibly easy to use. Sites such as RapidShare, Megaupload, and Hotfile let anonymous users upload large files such as cracked software for free. And what you get is essentially your own private FTP server," DeMarines said.

These memberships, such as the 30-day premium access for $6.99 Euros at Rapidshare, let users download files immediately and without any caps on bandwidth. While sites such as RapidShare allow free downloads, they make their money by charging heavy downloaders for premium memberships. Trade in pirated digital goods , whether it is movies, music or e-books or software, is what drives the popularity and business model of firms like RapidShare. A spokeswoman for Cham, Switzerland-based Rapidshare declined to comment on the V.I. Labs report, saying she would need more information. The site told The New York Times earlier this year that it hosted 10 petabytes of data and up to 3 million downloaders at a time . The Association of American Publishers estimates that half of the pirated books found by its members were linked to Rapidshare. "There's a lot of money being made," said DeMarines. "Without hosting pirated goods, I'm not sure what their revenue model would be." According to a recent investigation by V.I. Labs into the availability of pirated software from a sample of 43 vendors, 100% were on RapidShare.

The site is already among the top twenty most popular in the world, according to Alexa. Though Rapidshare has faced lawsuits related to piracy, DeMarines says it and other file-hosting sites are tricky to prosecute legally becuase uploaders are not required to register or identify themselves. Uploads and downloads to Rapidshare account for 5% of all Internet traffic globally, says German networking vendor Ipoque. Also, Rapidshare tries to distance itself from any knowledge of the pirated goods by not filtering or monitoring the content on its servers. "For us, everything is just a file, no matter what," a spokeswoman told The Times in March. The company even grants certain organizations direct access into their service, so that they can go ahead and delete the hyperlinks and pirated files themselves, DeMarines said.

DeMarines said Rapidshare does comply with the Safe Harbor Provisions of the U.S.' Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) by quickly taking down pirated files when notified by the copyright holders. Peer-to-peer networking (P2P) does still remain the largest channel for distributing pirated software, movies and other digital content. The most popular network remains BitTorrent , which is used by six out of 10 P22 users, V.I. Labs said. Ipoque said it enables between 43% to 70% of piracy, depending on the region of the world. eDonkey is a distant second, with 20% share, despite hosting almost 900,000 users and 77 million files at any given time.

But file-hosting is growing much faster, Ipoque said, already enabling between 15% to 35% of digital piracy, depending on the region of the world. Once-popular Gnutella is ranked third, with a market-share in the single digits. DeMarines said he expects file-hosting sites to eventually supplant P2P. "P2P is on its way down. Other long-running methods for distributing warez are either stagnant or shrinking. They're too visible, and so the copyright organizations are going to take these BitTorrent tracker sites out," he said.

Usenet newsgroups, for instance, have lost popularity due to the large amount of pornography and malware mingled in with the warez, DeMarines said. Internet Relay Chat (IRC) is "not favored" as a way to transmit files, though announcements and links on IRC to warez hosted on file-hosting sites is growing, DeMarines said.

Elpida signs on another Taiwan DRAM maker

Elpida signed another Taiwanese DRAM maker, Winbond Electronics, to a manufacturing and technology partnership on Wednesday, putting an end to rumors that the company might join a rival alliance that uses technology from U.S.-based Micron Technology. Elpida will provide Winbond with advanced DRAM manufacturing and product technology as part of the deal. "The outsourcing agreement is the first step of a business partnership the companies intend to pursue further," the statement says. Winbond will begin producing GDDR3 (graphics double data rate, third generation) and GDDR5 for Elpida by the end of this year, the companies said in a joint statement.

Elpida has moved fast to shore up support for its technology in Taiwan, where over-building among DRAM makers led to a glut in DRAM chips and inability to repay loans early this year. Consolidation efforts have caused companies on the island to rally around two main foreign technology providers, Elpida and Micron. The Taiwan government stepped in to help companies delay loan repayments and worked to encourage consolidation among DRAM makers on the island. The agreement with Winbond puts four Taiwanese DRAM manufacturers in Elpida's camp, versus two for Micron. Elpida and Powerchip also operate a joint venture DRAM manufacturer in Taiwan, Rexchip Electronics. Winbond joins ProMOS Technologies, which inked an outsourcing deal with Elpida last week, and Powerchip Semiconductor, a long time Elpida partner.

Micron has signed up Nanya Technology, and together they operate joint venture Inotera Memories. Winbond began seeking a new technology partner early this year when Germany's Qimonda, which previously worked with Winbond, filed for bankruptcy.

Cisco extends security controls to 'dark Web'

Cisco is tackling the so-called "dark Web" of online content that's not easily indexed or categorized by adding new usage controls to its IronPort S-Series Web Security Appliances. The IronPort Web Usage Controls software has an engine that reads a Web page on the fly and analyzes the content to decide if it's objectionable or off limits according to corporate policy, says Vivek Bhandari, a product marketing manager at Cisco. The new technology is packaged as a software blade that works with Cisco's URL filtering database to make decisions about user Web surfing to enforce acceptable-use policies.

Simply categorizing Web sites into lists - such as sports, shopping, hate sites or porn - is no longer sufficient because the Internet is now filled with highly transient and often dangerous sites that comprise the dark Web. "These sites are coming up and down so fast," Bhandari says, noting that the proliferation of blogs and social networking sites, with Web 2.0 technology underpinnings, are also contributing to an explosion in Web content. Cisco's S-Series appliances can perform malware detection and blocking. The dark Web may constitute 80% of objectionable content, outside the 20% of Web sites that can still be put neatly into list form, Cisco says. The new Web Usage Controls software adds the ability to monitor, block or warn users about Web traffic based on a method that combines URL filtering lists with contextual heuristics for analyzing content and checking hidden tags. With the configuration Cisco is advising customers to use, about 90% of objectionable dark Web content violating policy will be detected via IronPort Web Usage Controls without causing the false positive rate to spike, Bhandari says. Cisco's URL filtering database includes 65 URL categories and is updated every 5 minutes through Cisco's security intelligence operations.

IronPort S-Series appliances with Web Usage Controls, available now, start at $8,500.

For sale: Cisco data center rival Brocade

Brocade has reportedly put itself up for sale, a development that portends significant consolidation within the data center IT industry. Likely suitors are HP and Oracle, among others, the WSJ reports. According to the Wall Street Journal, Brocade has enlisted Qatalyst Group to shop the company around. HP, Oracle and Brocade all declined comment for the WSJ story.

HP would be interested in Brocade to fill out its data center switching and storage-area network (SAN) portfolio as it battles former ally Cisco for next-generation data center buildouts. Brocade, which told Network World it does not comment on "rumor or speculation," has a market cap of $3 billion. HP resold Cisco routers and switches for years before ramping R&D in its own ProCurve line.   Slideshow: 2009's hottest tech M&A deals   Cisco countered by developing a data center blade server system to compete with HP's and IBM's offerings. Acquiring Brocade would fill out both its LAN and SAN switching portfolios for the data center, observers note. IBM is also a reseller of Cisco switches and routers but recently agreed to OEM Brocade's equipment, which it obtained from its acquisition of Cisco rival Foundry Networks.   HP resells Brocade FibreChannel and FibreChannel-over-Ethernet (FCoE) SAN switches under an OEM arrangement but is challenged in offering a complete data center switching line via its internally developed ProCurve brand.

Similarly, software giant Oracle would become a more complete player in the data center with a Brocade acquisition. But some analysts say Brocade would be a stretch for Oracle, and perhaps too disruptive near term for HP. "Much has to do with Oracle's long-term growth plans," states Oppenheimer & Co. analyst Ittai Kidron in a bulletin on the Brocade speculation. "If the company truly plans to become a systems company (one-stop shop software/hardware), then Brocade would be a nice fit, especially including Sun Microsystems with no overlap. Oracle is in the process of acquiring Sun Microsystems for more than $7 billion, which gives it server hardware and software; Brocade would give Oracle LAN and SAN switching hardware and make the company a powerful provider of hardware as well as software. We're a bit in the dark on strategy here. That said, there would be massive overlap with HP's ProCurve networking unit, which we believe would be disruptive.

On HP, Kidron writes: "Brocade would add the missing data center switch architecture as well as a strong presence in the SAN switch market. Also, IBM and EMC are 10% customers for Brocade and could be lost as customers (along with HP's 10% business of Brocade)." If HP acquired Brocade, business from IBM and others could swing back to Cisco, according to UBS analysts Nikos Theodosopoulos. Speculation has it the company will flesh out its Project Stratus cloud computing strategy and/or announce a significant alliance or acquisition with a major IT player. A dark horse in the Brocade stakes would be Juniper, according to investment firm UBS. Juniper and IBM are tightly aligned in data center and cloud computing, and a Brocade acquisition would flesh out much of what's missing in the IBM/Juniper data center arsenal - specifically, an FCoE line of switches. "We believe Juniper may be another potential buyer of Brocade, although recent commentary from Juniper suggests it is not looking at large deals now," UBS analyst Theodosopoulos states in a bulletin on the prospects of a Brocade acquisition. "An acquisition of Brocade would make sense for Juniper, in our view, because it is the only other clear networking partner for IBM, while IBM is currently supporting Juniper's development of an FCoE switch, alleviating some of the R&D budgetary constraints on Juniper as it pursues both LTE & FCoE technologies." Juniper has a major announcement slated for Oct. 28 in New York. IBM may also be interested in Brocade but that would dash its Juniper partnership, kill HP and EMC as 10% revenue customers, and get IBM back in the network and SAN hardware business which may not appeal to the company, Kidron notes. Acquiring Brocade would give Dell, a maker of servers for the data center, more credibility in that market with minimal overlap, according to Kidron.

Another wild card is Dell. But Dell just acquired Perot Systems last month for $4 billion so the prospects of making another major acquisition so soon after is remote, Kidron states. No deal is imminent for Brocade and the company could still dash a potential deal, the WSJ reports. That doesn't necessarily rule them out though. "I think Dell could potentially make a play for them; I've heard through some of their channel that there is a big push for capturing some [data center] share," says Frost & Sullivan analyst Vanessa Alvarez. But proactively seeking out possible acquirers may give the company more control over the process and over its destiny, observers note.

New York Times tricked into serving scareware ad

Scammers tricked the New York Times' Digital Advertising department into placing a malicious ad for fake antivirus software on the NYTimes.com Web site over the weekend, the company confirmed Monday. According to the Times, the scammers initially claimed to be Internet phone provider Vonage, and had placed what appeared to be legitimate Vonage ads on the Web site. The newspaper had warned of the scam advertisement Sunday, after receiving about 100 e-mails from concerned readers.

However, sometime over the weekend, they switched these ads for aggressive pop-up advertisements that tried to trick victims into thinking that their computers were infected. When the complaints started pouring in, the Times first suspected that the ad had been unauthorized, and pulled third-party advertisements from the site. The point of the scam was to sell worried computer users a product called Personal Antivirus, a fake "scareware" product that bombards victims with popup ads until they either hand over their credit card information or somehow manage to remove the program. But on Monday spokeswoman Diane McNulty confirmed that the ad had been submitted directly to the company's online ad department. "The culprit masqueraded as a national advertiser and provided seemingly legitimate product advertising for a week," she said via email. "Over the weekend, the ad being served up was switched so that an intrusive message, claiming to be a virus warning from the reader's computer, appeared. " Technology executive Troy Davis was hit with the ad after he clicked on a Times story about Dubai on Saturday night. This gave the criminals a way to include embedded Web pages in their copy that could be hosted on a completely different server, outside of the control of the Times.

After his antivirus software warned him not to visit the article, he performed an analysis of the site and discovered that the Times was allowing advertisers to embed an HTML element known as an iframe into their advertisements. Apparently the scammers waited until the weekend, when it would be hardest for IT staff to respond, before switching the ad by inserting new JavaScript code into that iframe. It was, of course, all just a fake. That code redirected Davis's browser to the Web site that served a pop-up ad designed to look like a Windows system scan that had found security problems on his system.

Start-up unveils storage platform for large-scale Web applications

A storage company emerged from stealth mode this week with software designed to efficiently manage the file serving needs of Internet applications such as social networks, online ad serving and software-as-a-service.  Nine data storage companies to watch MaxiScale announced the Flex Software Platform, which is installed on commodity gear, such as a bank of Apache Web servers. Retrieving a small file with the MaxiScale system requires just one I/O operation, a feature that eliminates bottlenecks caused by systems that require multiple I/O operations for each small file retrieval, says IDC storage analyst Noemi Greyzdorf. "They built a very interesting file system that handles small files – files that are one megabyte or smaller – incredibly efficiently," Greyzdorf says Configurations start with as few as four nodes but can scale up to 50,000 servers, the company says. The goal is to improve performance and reduce cost, space and power requirements for Web companies that have to deal with large numbers of small files. "We think people deploying Web applications have been paying too much money and we're out to change that," says Gary Orenstein, vice president of marketing for MaxiScale.

Instead of using expensive storage boxes with interconnects like InfiniBand or Fibre Channel, MaxiScale recommends using Flex with 2TB SATA drives and says the Flex system relies on IP and Ethernet connections. "We're using standards-based, commodity hardware for everything," Orenstein says. Maxiscale's first publicly named customer is AdMob, a mobile advertising marketplace that has served more than 110 billion ad impressions in the last three years. Flex uses a patent-pending Peer Set architecture that replicates file data and metadata across SATA drives, allowing for load balancing and resiliency to multiple hardware failures. Based in Sunnyvale, Calif., and founded in 2007, MaxiScale has $17 million in venture financing from investors NEA, El Dorado Ventures and Silicon Valley Bank. Flex software is available now and pricing starts at $6,000 for four nodes allowing up to 32TB of storage.

MaxiScale was co-founded by CEO Gianluca Rattazzi, who previously founded Meridian Data, Parallan, P-Com and BlueArc; and CTO Francesco Lacapra, who previously held executive roles at Olivetti, Quantum and BlueArc. Follow Jon Brodkin on Twitter.

Why Microsoft kept Exchange 2007 SP2 off latest Windows Server

Microsoft, reacting to a slew of questions from end-users, says timing issues and technical considerations kept it from supporting Exchange 2007 SP2 on the new Windows Server 2008 R2. 5 things we love/hate about Win7/Windows Server 2008 R2Exchange 2010 beta sneak peek test On the Exchange team blog, Nino Bilic, a member of the Exchange product quality team at Microsoft, wrote that there are two primary technical considerations for not supporting the messaging server on the new server OS. Users have been peppering Microsoft with questions over the past few months and the vendor chose Monday to explain its decision as it prepares to put the final touches on Exchange 2010, which aligns with other new infrastructure, namely Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows 7 and Office 2010.  "Two primary technical points drove our decision to not support Windows Server 2008 R2," Bilic wrote. "First, Windows Server 2008 R2, while an incremental OS upgrade, creates significant testing requirements for Exchange 2007. Because the Exchange 2007 SP2 engineering preceded the Windows Server 2008 R2 RTM, Exchange 2007 SP2 would have had to be delayed significantly to align testing schedules." Bilic said the second point involves not supporting the upgrade of a server OS underneath an existing Exchange server. "The primary need is to support Windows Server 2008 R2 domain controllers in an existing Exchange 2007 deployment, which we have done." Exchange 2007 SP2 can work against those domain controllers because no part of the Exchange infrastructure is running on the domain controller. Exchange 2010 is expected to ship in November. "We felt that thoroughly validating the combination of Exchange 2010 on Windows Server 2008 R2 allowed us to focus on delivering great solutions which would be fully tested and would support the features of Windows Server 2008 R2," Bilic wrote. "This is a hard trade-off to make, but we believe it is the right one and a good balance between serving existing customers and driving innovation." The new Exchange 2010 server includes a number of new features, including high-availability and cross-domain integration using techniques such as pairing the server with Windows Server 2008 clustering technology and directory federation features. What users are missing is the ability to run any Exchange 2007 R2 components on the new server, including administrative tools on Windows Server 2008 R2. Bilic said the level of testing that would have been required to ensure only a "minimum level" of compatibility would have been significant and still denied users many of the features of the new server OS. In addition, he said the work likely would have altered the delivery schedule for Exchange 2010. Bilic said that fact drove Microsoft to conclude the best decision was to release Exchange 2010 as close as possible to Windows Server 2008 R2, which is now available. The server also includes new archiving features. "We recognize that there are some downstream impacts to this decision related to administration-only installs," Bilic wrote. "The technical problem for us is that an administration install of Exchange is almost identical to a full Exchange server installation." An administration install is when only the administrative interface, used to manage server properties and other features, is loaded on the server OS. Lee Dumas, the director of architecture at managed Exchange service provider Azaleos and a former Microsoft employee on the Exchange team, noted that Exchange 2007 SP2 contains the schema updates that are part of Exchange 2010. "So deploying SP2 prepares you for Exchange 2010. The earlier they can release SP2 the more customers will be prepared for 2010 so that might have had something to do with this as well," he said.

Follow John on Twitter. Dumas noted that releasing planned schema updates with a previous version of Exchange is something new for Microsoft.

Oracle breaks silence on Sun plans in ad

Oracle Corp. ended it silence Thursday on its post-merger plans for Sun Microsystems Inc.'s Unix systems in an advertisement aimed at Sun customers to keep them from leaving the Sparc and Solaris platforms. Ever since Oracle announced in April its plans to acquire Sun, its competitors - notably IBM and Hewlett-Packard Co. - have been relentlessly pursuing Sun's core customer base, its Sparc and Solaris users. Oracle's ad to "Sun customers," makes a number of promises that includes spending more "than Sun does now," on developing Sparc and Solaris, as well as boosting service and support by having "more than twice as many hardware specialists than Sun does now." Analysts see Oracle's ad as a defensive move that doesn't answer some of the big questions ahead of the $7.4 billion merger with Sun . In fact, there may be a lot of room for skepticism and parsing of Oracle's claims, despite their apparent black and white assertions. Among the top hardware makers, Sun registered the biggest decline in server revenue in the second quarter, offering evidence that this protracted merger may be eroding Sun's value.

Europe is allowing until mid-January to sort this out, which keeps the merger in limbo for another quarter. Oracle wanted the acquisition completed by now but the European Commission this month said it would delay its antitrust review because of "serious concerns" about its impact on the database market. Analysts point out that Oracle's plans to spend more "than Sun does now," may be a little hallow because Sun's spending on developing Sparc and Solaris is probably at a low. "The ad sounds convincing - but perhaps being a word nitpicker, the Sun does now' might not mean much if Sun has drastically cut back due to plummeting sales," Rich Partridge, an analyst at Ideas International Ltd., said in an e-mail. "I think someone at Oracle suddenly realized that Sun was bleeding so badly that what would be left when Oracle finally got control would be worth a small fraction of what they paid and no one would buy the hardware unit," Rob Enderle, an independent analyst, said in an e-mail. But Enderle said the ad's claims do not preclude Oracle from selling its hardware division, and says the company "will have to support the unit for a short time after taking control; during that short time they can easily outspend Sun's nearly non-existent budgets." Gordon Haff, an analyst at Illuminata Inc., said if it was Oracle's plan to start on day one of the merger to shop the Sparc processor around, "would they have put this ad out? Taken at face value, the ad seems to indicate that Oracle will keep Sun's hardware and microprocessor capability and not spin it off, as some analysts believe possible.

Probably not," he said. "Does it preclude Oracle from changing their mind? Indeed, Oracle's major competitive concern was indicated in the ad in a quote by Oracle CEO Larry Ellison: "IBM, we're looking forward to competing with you in the hardware business." No. Companies change their mind all the time." An erosion of Sun's customer also hurts Oracle, because a lot of Sun customers are also Oracle customers, and Oracle doesn't want its existing customer to go to IBM and move away from Oracle's platform, Haff said.

Week in Google: Wave makes splash, Gmail gets new threat

Here's a look back at a busy week in Google news stories:   IBM aims at Google, Microsoft with new Webmail  IBM introduced LotusLive iNotes, an on-demand e-mail, calendaring and contact management system meant to compete with the likes of Gmail and Microsoft Exchange. Similar to a bulletin board system, Google Wave, the brainchild of a pair of twins, lets users create shared, ongoing, real-time conversations called Waves. Pricing starts at $3 per user per month, undercutting Google Apps Premier Edition, which costs $50 per user per year.   Google Wave invite-only preview sets off Google Wave mania Google on Wednesday sent out more than 100,000 invitations to developers to preview Google Wave, a new communications and collaboration tool that Google plans to release next year. The application makes it easy for users to share videos, photos and maps.

Google removed the site's home page from its search results in response to a complaint it received under the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act. And big applications vendors like SAP and Salesforce.com are already rallying around it.   Google removes The Pirate Bay home page from search results File-sharing site The Pirate Bay was once again in the crosshairs of copyright owners. A search for "The Pirate Bay" Friday turned up a message at the bottom of the first search-results page that said: "In response to a complaint we received under the US Digital Millennium Copyright Act, we have removed 7 result(s) from this page. Textscape alleges Google is violating a patent that covers a method for managing a body of text on a computer that was granted to the company in 1998. Textscape says Google's Chrome's browser improperly uses the innovation.   Google celebrates 11th birthday PC World writes: "Google has come a long way in its eleven-year history, from its humble beginning as a Stanford University research project in 1998, to the global, multi-billion dollar online presence Google enjoys today."   Google eyeing Firefox with Chrome Frame plug-in? If you wish, you may read the DMCA complaint that caused the removal(s) at ChillingEffects.org."   Google, Adobe sued by Textscape over patents  Google and Adobe Systems have been sued by a New Jersey company for allegedly violating patents used for processing text, according to recent court filings.

Computerworld reports that Mozilla's chief engineer says Google might build a Chrome Frame plug-in for the Firefox browser. Features include an equations editor and a language translator. Separately, Computerworld reported that Mozilla officials said Chrome Frame for Microsoft IE could result in "browser soup."    Google Apps takes aim at students Google hired interns to help it figure out how to make Google Apps more appealing to young people, according to PC World. Google expands search control with new options Google is adding new functionality to a side panel that could provide quicker access to relevant search results. The side panel can be activated by clicking the "show options" button on the search results page.

The company is adding options to filter search results by blog and news items to the side panel accompanying search results. These options will provide users quick access to more relevant sources, said Nundu Janakiram, product manager for search at Google. IDG News Service, PC World and Computerworld contributed to this roundup For more on Google, visit Network World's Google Subnet, an independent Google community.

HP abandons EDS brand

HP Wednesday announced it would leave the EDS brand behind and rename its IT services provider business HP Enterprise Services. The name change comes a year after HP acquired the market-leading outsourcer for $13.9 billion in a deal that shot HP to the top of the IT services market, right behind its largest competitor IBM. HP is also renaming its Technology Solutions Group to HP Enterprise Business, a portfolio that includes servers, storage, software, networking and technology services. All eyes on HP-EDS integration plan FAQ: What does the HP-EDS deal really mean? The company reported the groups comprising the now HP Enterprise Business accounted for 47% of the HP's revenue and 60% of its non-GAAP operating profit in the third quarter of the company's fiscal 2009. According to HP executives, the brand changes reflect HP's technology strength going forward. "We are combining the strong services brand equity that EDS has built over the last 47 years with HP's technology leadership to become the leading IT services provider," said Joe Eazor, senior vice president and general manager of HP Enterprise Services.

While the name change was expected as a logical next step in HP's integration plans by industry watchers, Mayo says the event should still be viewed as marking the end of an era. HP still trails IBM in the services market, but the company's confidence in its own brand in part drove the decision to drop the EDS brand, analysts say. "This is a fairly significant bet for HP. They are continuing the integration plan to bring EDS into the HP culture but also taking a bet that the HP brand will be better at bringing in business than the legacy EDS name," says Mark Mayo, partner and president of global resources management at TPI, a global outsourcing industry research firm. "HP is betting this will be a positive move, and it's too hard to tell yet if it is a brilliant or a bad move to leave the EDS brand behind. EDS was founded in 1962 and in a sense established what became known as the IT services market, dominating for 25 years, Mayo explains, alongside IBM and CSC. Then in the late 1990s and early 2000s, global outsourcing emerged and players from India and Europe changed the IT services landscape. It's all an evolution, but EDS pretty much founded the outsourcing industry and that name is very well known. Now with companies such as Dell acquiring Perot Systems and other industry consolidation, Mayo says the EDS name change is "truly a watershed event." "If you take a step back and look at how the marketplace has changed, the loss of the EDS name is indicative of the whole global play that today's outsourcers must tackle," Mayo says. "The market is consolidating and Dell's news is part of that greater trend.

It's definitely a loss." Do you Tweet? Follow Denise Dubie on Twitter here. https://twitter.com/DDubie

MIT creates nanotube process that could shrink, speed chips

Researchers at MIT have found a way to grow the carbon nanotubes that manufacturers need to build smaller, faster computer chips. A key issue that must be resolved: dealing with the tiny copper wires that connect transistors in a processor. As chipmakers like Intel Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices inc. work endlessly to find ways to build smaller and smaller chips , they often run into a multitude of problems.

As the chips shrink in size, so do the wires, making it increasingly difficult for them to maintain the level of current needed to meet performance requirements. Using carbon nanotubes is an interesting idea." The question engineers have faced to date, he added, is "how do you do it?" Gilbert Nessim , a researcher at MIT, said that chip manufacturers have consistently run into trouble by trying to build the nanotubes on a metal surface, which is needed to ensure an electrical contact. That's where the nanotubes come into play. "When we shrink chip features, the interconnections between the transistors get smaller - just like everything else," said Jim McGregor, an analyst at In-Stat. "And when they shrink, the performance isn't the same. Efforts to build carbon nanotubes on metal can face significant problems due to the heat required in the manufacturing process. The MIT scientists used a combination of techniques to create a new process for using nanotubes.

The excess heat, for example, could cause the metals to form alloys that are not conducive to nanotube growth. The techniques included vaporizing the metals tantalum and iron, which settle in layers on a silicon wafer. The researchers also pump ethylene gas into the tube. Then they placed the coated wafer at one end of a quartz tube, which was inserted into a furnace. The gas decomposes at high temperatures and the iron on the wafer catalyzed the formation of carbon nanotubes. Intel, long looking to create the next generation of chips, is an underwriter of the MIT research.

Nessim noted that the technique is based on processes already commonly used in the semiconductor industry. which should make them eaasier - and cheaper - for manufacturers to adopt. Nessim said the semiconductor industry has been interested in finding ways to replace copper wires with nanotubes, but has been slowed by the effort to find a reasonable way to deal with the metal issues. "I hope this [research] may revise that enthusiasm to some point," he said. "At some point, they'll be stuck with copper that does not work and they'll have to find an alternative. He noted that the shift would would entail some reworking of the manufacturing process. "We won't go the way of carbon nanotubes until we've depleted current techniques," he said. "You don't go to something brand new and make a huge investment until you have to. We hope that our insights ... have eased a little bit of some fabrication issues and hope this will match the requirements that they have." Intel, in a statement responding to questions from Computerworld , said they hope such research breakthroughs can help the company switch copper wires to nanotubes by some time after 2015. McGregor suggested that a transition from copper to nanotubes could be some 15 years away. We don't move at revolutionary steps.

Replacing the transistors with nanotubes would be the next step along that line. "You won't replace the connections without looking to replace the transistors," he added. "The first step would be to replace the connections with nanotechnology. We move at evolutionary steps." But McGregor did say that he thinks replacing the copper connectors with nanotubes would just be the beginning for the technology in chipmaking. The second step is to replace the transistors." The transisto r, which acts as a switch, is the building block for the processor. It's even been called the most important invention in the 20th century.

Drudge, other sites flooded with malicious ads

Criminals flooded several online ad networks with malicious advertisements over the weekend, causing popular Web sites such as the Drudge Report, Horoscope.com and Lyrics.com to inadvertently attack their readers, a security company said Wednesday. The attack comes just a week after the New York Times Web site was tricked into displaying a deceptive 'scareware' advertisement for fake antivirus software from scammers pretending to be ad buyers with Vonage, an Internet telephony company. The trouble started on Saturday, when the criminals somehow placed the malicious ads on networks managed by Google's DoubleClick, as well as two others: YieldManager and ValueClick's Fastclick network, according to Mary Landesman, a senior security researcher with ScanSafe. Instead of trying to trick Web surfers into buying bogus software, these ads attacked.

Sometimes, the ads would also try to exploit a previously patched flaw in Microsoft's DirectShow software, Landesman said. "The user would have seen a very brief opening of a blank pdf window and it would be at the bottom portion of their screen," she said. They would pop up a nearly invisible window in the victim's browser that contained a maliciously encoded pdf document, which included attack code that placed a variant of the Win32/Alureon Trojan horse program on the victim's computer. The Alureon Trojan is known to download additional malware and often hijack victims' search results, she said. Between Saturday and Monday, the ads accounted for 11 percent of all Web pages blocked by ScanSafe's Web filtering software, a sign that many people were being presented with the malicious ads. The pdf attacks apparently only affected victims with out-of-date versions of Adobe's Reader or Acrobat software, she added. And because the pdf pages were modified slightly every time they were displayed, most antivirus products didn't detect them.

Earlier this year criminals placed similar ads on the home page of technology trade magazine eWeek, whose ads were managed by DoubleClick. In tests, ScanSafe found that only 3 out of 41 antivirus vendors detected the malware. "To be honest, they were pretty clever in the way they carried this out," Landesman said. "They managed to infiltrate sites that enjoy very good traffic and they were able to use a mechanism for creating this pdf that caused it to be nearly completely undetected." This is not the first time Google's DoubleClick has been associated with this type of malicious advertising.

New York Times tricked into serving scareware ad

Scammers tricked the New York Times' Digital Advertising department into placing a malicious ad for fake antivirus software on the NYTimes.com Web site over the weekend, the company confirmed Monday. According to the Times, the scammers initially claimed to be Internet phone provider Vonage, and had placed what appeared to be legitimate Vonage ads on the Web site. The newspaper had warned of the scam advertisement Sunday, after receiving about 100 e-mails from concerned readers.

However, sometime over the weekend, they switched these ads for aggressive pop-up advertisements that tried to trick victims into thinking that their computers were infected. When the complaints started pouring in, the Times first suspected that the ad had been unauthorized, and pulled third-party advertisements from the site. The point of the scam was to sell worried computer users a product called Personal Antivirus, a fake "scareware" product that bombards victims with popup ads until they either hand over their credit card information or somehow manage to remove the program. But on Monday spokeswoman Diane McNulty confirmed that the ad had been submitted directly to the company's online ad department. "The culprit masqueraded as a national advertiser and provided seemingly legitimate product advertising for a week," she said via email. "Over the weekend, the ad being served up was switched so that an intrusive message, claiming to be a virus warning from the reader's computer, appeared. " Technology executive Troy Davis was hit with the ad after he clicked on a Times story about Dubai on Saturday night. This gave the criminals a way to include embedded Web pages in their copy that could be hosted on a completely different server, outside of the control of the Times. After his antivirus software warned him not to visit the article, he performed an analysis of the site and discovered that the Times was allowing advertisers to embed an HTML element known as an iframe into their advertisements.

Apparently the scammers waited until the weekend, when it would be hardest for IT staff to respond, before switching the ad by inserting new JavaScript code into that iframe. It was, of course, all just a fake. That code redirected Davis's browser to the Web site that served a pop-up ad designed to look like a Windows system scan that had found security problems on his system.

It's hard to find anyone who likes audio conferences. Or play Facebook Scrabble and check e-mail until it's their turn to talk. Sure, worker bees can put themselves on mute to chat with fellow cube dwellers. Yes, for true lows in productivity, the fuzzy, disembodied, dial-in audio conference is hard to beat.

Office voice mail, cell phone voice mail, office e-mail, personal e-mail, texting, instant messaging, social media communiques. And what about all those mail and messaging systems anyway? Make it stop, you cry! At its most basic, UC makes real-time communication systems, such as instant messaging, share information with non-real-time systems, such as e-mail or voice mail, and runs them over the same network. Unified communications won't do that, but depending on which communications and messaging systems you integrate, UC could make it better. Ideally, there is one simple interface or dashboard for users to access these systems.

Using voice over IP to cut the traditional phone bill (the foundation for UC) doesn't hurt, nor does reducing travel costs as employees meet in video or audio chats rather than fly to faraway hotel conference rooms. With UC, CIOs aim to speed up communication and collaboration internally and perhaps raise customer satisfaction externally. About 31 percent of 466 organizations surveyed recently by Forrester have deployed some form of unified communications. In Forrester's survey, 42 percent of respondents who said they weren't investing in UC cited lack of money or the absence of clear business value to justify the investment. Half of those who haven't say they are investigating or piloting UC, up from 30 percent in 2007. Yet UC isn't on fire this year, as the recession continues to batter IT spending. To read more on this topic, see: How to Get the Most From Unified Communications and Video Conference Software Now Works with Other Apps. "Certainly it does make sense to connect voice mail, e-mail and mobile systems," says Jerry Hodge, senior director of information services at appliance distributor Hamilton Beach. "Unfortunately, the current economic situation has limited my aggressiveness in moving forward." The same is true at movie-rental chain Blockbuster and food and beverage maker Shaklee, their CIOs say.

The Original Social Networking UC has evolved from a back-room effort to simplify networking by, for example, running data and voice traffic on the same infrastructure, to applications that let employees share information no matter the device in front of them. Still, if you have money and want to move forward with UC, early adopters have advice about planning projects and measuring returns. Well, almost. But it's coming, predicts Steven John, CIO of manufacturing company H.B. Fuller. We're not quite at the point yet where a BlackBerry, say, can get you into any corporate system and connect you to any colleague.

The rise of consumer social networking platforms such as Facebook, Flikr and Twitter reinforce daily the desire among corporate employees to strip the friction from communicating at work, too, John says. Presence, meanwhile, is moving from a cool, gadgety technology to real corporate tool. He says he feels that heat and is studying potential UC systems, but he hasn't yet decided on any. That's when computer devices detect each other and indicate the fastest or preferred way to reach the person on the other end. One simpler UC move is to integrate voice mail and e-mail so that users can listen to e-mail or read voice mail.

It's like instant messaging for every kind of connection you might make to your corporate network or, if configured for it, the public Internet. Another is to allow instant messaging or document sharing during video conferences. Autodesk went whole hog into Cisco's TelePresence system, which involves super high-quality video conferencing that can connect up to 48 locations at once, along with on-screen, interactive data sharing. According to Autodesk VP of Strategic Initiatives Billy Hinners, the ultimate in video istelepresence technology. Cisco calls it an "immersive" experience-think Star Trek's Holodeck. Autodesk spent $350,000 to outfit its first six-person TelePresence room.

Of course, the price for such a system is steep. It runs 15 rooms now, ranging from two-person to 12-person sites, and spends about $10,000 per month on networking costs. "Cost savings was not a big driver for us," Hinners says. Subsequent installations have also been aimed at improving sales communications and efficiency as well as reducing travel and carbon emissions. Rather, the company initially wanted better collaboration between software designers and engineers in the United States and its 1,000-plus software engineers in Shanghai to pump out products faster at an improved quality. Employees embraced the technology right away, he says.

UC projects are some of the most technical ones that CIOs have to contend with today, integrating data and voice in ways that some IT groups have never done before. Time booked in the TelePresence rooms for regular video conferencing has become "a precious commodity." In fact, if there is any project for which success depends on users rather than IT guiding the planning and rollout, it's unified communications. But communicating is, by nature, a personal act. What you really want are users who push for a UC project, says Michael McTigue, CIO of Saint Barnabas Medical Center. Foisting upon people unwanted changes to how they talk and type to each other makes people uncomfortable, says Don Lewis, president of consultancy Strategic Intersect. "You think all you're doing is taking away someone's phone and giving them another one but you're not," says Lewis. "Changing the button they push to forward a call to someone is hugely disruptive." Is There a Doctor on the Device? The hospital group-which provides cardiac services, burn treatment and organ transplant among its offerings-wanted to speed up the time for doctors, nurses and technicians to reach each other.

Indeed, the archaic process of dialing a beeper, hoping the page goes through, waiting for the recipient to get it and call back slowed communications, and therefore reaction time during critical situations, McTigue says. The time-honored pager method was no longer good enough. Fifteen minutes might pass before a physician could reach someone in the telemetry group to order machines to monitor a given patient's heart rate, blood pressure and breathing. "Everyone was looking for a communications vehicle that would give better turnaround time," he says. In March 2007, Saint Barnabas launched a pilot of Vocera Communication's badge devices. Walkie-talkies, while quick, didn't pan out because the crackly speakers made the hallways noisier and they ran through a lot of batteries.

The 2-ounce rectangles are worn on a lanyard around the neck or clipped to a collar or pocket. A nurse might press the activation button and speak into it the name of a physician who is needed to check a medication order. They allow hands-free voice communication. Via a wireless network, the device pings a database to look up the doctor's name and relay the call. Saint Barnabas spent $500,000 for devices and software for 450 concurrent users, starting with the telemetry group. The doctor taps his button and speaks to respond.

That 15-minute wait time plunged-responses now take nine to 15 seconds, McTigue says. Within nine months, the hospital spent $250,000 to add another 300 concurrent users, giving 2,700 employees access to the system. Such dramatic results convinced the hospital to get as many of its 3,000 employees on the system as quickly as possible. IBM managed the initial training, helping new users enunciate and speak directly into the Vocera device. The training helped get Saint Barnabas to a high rate of calls recognized and completed on the first try: 83 percent.

In the emergency room, where there's more noise than in other parts of a hospital, the staff uses headsets rather than dangling the device at chest level. Seventy percent is more typical, McTigue says proudly. They had to fiddle with wireless access point configurations to get all areas hot. "If you don't have tight infrastructure, the application will get a bad name," he warns. Along the way, the hospital worked with IBM, Cisco and Vocera to identify and fix wireless dead spots in stairwells, elevators and the lead-walled radiology area. The system works only on campus but the hospital is testing a Vocera smart phone with the same capabilities for off-campus use. The hospital expects to connect 1.5 million to 2 million calls through the system, eliminating the need for one full-time switchboard operator, according to McTigue.

Yearly operating costs are $75,000 to $85,000, mainly for Vocera software maintenance, he says. The hospital has saved another $70,000 by getting rid of its backup phone system used during power outages. Payback from UC projects doesn't typically come from savings on networking equipment because those prices are low already, says Lewis of Strategic Intersect. The wireless Vocera system replaces a traditional dedicated circuit for that old emergency system. But hard returns can be calculated: Obviously, meeting virtually can cut travel costs. Softer results, Lewis says, can also be important: By merging voice mail, e-mail and BlackBerry messages, your sales organization may save 30 minutes every day.

Setting up call center staff to work from home, but access integrated voice, e-mail and document capabilities frees up physical room at the company for other uses. How valuable is that in productivity and morale? The more people on the system, the faster and more frictionless their communication. Try It, They'll Like It As the experience at Saint Barnabas shows, unifying the communications for lots of people at a company can be more beneficial than unifying communications for only some people. In a hospital, that can save lives. Woods Bagot, an architectural design firm with offices in Dubai, Hong Kong and London, among other cities, has built elaborate buildings worldwide.

At a corporation, that can make money. Recent projects include the oval dish-shaped campus of the United Arab Emirates University, a mixed residential and commercial district in Shenzhen, China, and the Cesaria beach resort in the Cape Verde islands. Exchanging drawings is key for an architecture firm, of course. In 2007, the board at Woods Bagot decided that it wanted the company to operate like one big studio no matter where its clients, engineers and architects lived. But the people who work at Woods Bagot are visual thinkers, so any new communications tools would have to let them see each other, not just share data and documents, says CIO Nectarios Lazaris. "Being a design firm, we don't sit in a boardroom and look at Excel spreadsheets," he says. "We walk around and interact with people." Not to mention swap 3-D visualization files that are a couple of gigabytes unto themselves.

Same with Polycom's Web conferencing product, he says. He tried at least five products, including Microsoft Live Meeting, whose video quality users found poor. Lazaris chose Microsoft Office Communicatorfor desktop video conferencing and collaboration, products from Tandberg for boardroom video conferencing and Blue Coat's software for secure Web connections. The first test came when a week after the video system went live, the Woods Bagot board opted to try the new toy instead of meeting in person. "It was a nervous time for us," he says, noting that Blue Coat had people on-site to troubleshoot should something go wrong during the pivotal meeting. He was impressed that Blue Coat sent engineers-not salespeople-to Woods Bagot during the decision phase and let them stay as long as needed during and after launch.

The company saved $450,000 by not flying the 12 board members to Sydney or providing their accommodations for that meeting as well as the remaining ones planned that year, Lazaris says. The technology lets Woods Bagot work with cream-of-the-crop designers and architects residing anywhere in the world, according to Lazaris, which is a point the firm makes in presentations to potential clients. But it was the experience that sold the board. "When they see their investment in play, that's a bigger win than trying to show them a PowerPoint that says, 'I saved you $450,000,'" he says. He says it's gotten the firm work it might not otherwise have won. "This is not follow-the-sun like in outsourcing. Volvo Group wanted a better way to work across time zones with colleagues who don't necessarily respond to e-mail-however red-hot urgent it's marked, says Magnus Holmqvist, director for the IT innovation center at the company. We're not handing over projects but collaborating in a live environment," he says. "It's comforting to them." How UC Helps IT The mere thought of coordinating a global supply chain project will send many IT managers quivering under their project management software and spreadsheets.

Volvo Group makes Mac trucks and Volvo busses and construction equipment; Ford now makes the famously rectangular cars. Previously, various team members would meet every 12 weeks to test versions of the new SAP and Red Prairie applications they are building. An IT team of 70 people around the world are working on a project to streamline Volvo's spare-parts supply chain, which reaches 60,000 mechanics in 180 countries. Early this spring, Volvo started virtual test rooms online, using Microsoft Office Communicator and Hewlett-Packard's TestDirector quality-check tool running over VoIP. So far, half of the in-person meetings have been eliminated, but plane trips have been reduced by more than half because the technology is so good, Holmqvist says. He declines to say how much money Volvo has saved in travel costs but says the system has cut carbon dioxide emissions by 630 tons-about the equivalent of taking 250 cars off the road for a year.

Even people in the same city sometimes opt to attend meetings virtually rather than trek across town. Don't underestimate the mileage, so to speak, that you may get from promoting the green ROIof cutting travel, Homqvist says. "People don't feel too good about flying across the Atlantic when we know we have climate change going on. Linking that idea to cost-cutting has helped IT get the new technology more eagerly accepted across the company, he adds. "That is real." Homqvist predicts work quality and productivity will rise because employees will spend less time planning meeting logistics and traveling. "Our perception is that we're already earlier on these test-suite sessions. But people feel much better about eliminating those kinds of meetings," he says. Instead of a 12-week cycle, we may reduce the cycle." Defining the ROI Some organizations, however, aren't seeing the returns they expected on UC projects.

The softer benefits of smoother collaboration are hard to quantify and therefore, Dewing says, hard to justify. Or rather, they don't know how to tie a dollar figure to them, says Henry Dewing, a principal analyst at Forrester Research. Especially now. It's hard to pin down the dollars generated or saved by faster project completion or product launches, Dewing says. Twenty-four percent of the telecommunications and networking managers surveyed by Forrester say they aren't getting all the benefits they expected from UC. Another 11 percent said they didn't know whether they were or not.

John, the H.B. Fuller CIO, isn't sure yet what mix of tools will produce the best return. The adhesives company does business in 100 countries, with offices in 36. The pressure is on John to find technological ways to overcome such geographic diversity, he says. As a $1.5 billion company, Fuller's revenues aren't huge but its global footprint is. But he doesn't want to jump too quickly. But standardizing hardware is something Fuller has only recently started to do.

For example, it's easier to unify communications when PCs and laptops are standardized, in part because tweaking the configurations takes less time. He doesn't want to buy more products than he needs. How about accessing your computer calendar by voice, over the phone? Say a Fuller engineer in China views a document created by a U.S. counterpart and can hover over his colleague's name with his mouse to automatically dial that person for a PC-based call. That's the kind of razzle dazzle UC application vendors pitch that isn't available in, say, SharePoint, Microsoft's document sharing and collaboration system. "It's fun, fancy, very sexy but is it needed? One part of the calculation, he says, will be trying to predict how much bandwidth different combinations of UC technologies would eat and whether the network costs will be worth the UC benefits.

Would that be a competitive advantage?" John wonders. He hasn't reached any conclusions yet, but a product like SharePoint might provide enough collaboration for Fuller employees so that a big UC investment isn't necessary. "That's what we're debating." Loomis, the armored car company, has been installing UC components for two years, expecting to cut telecommunications costs and make some business processes more efficient. Wayne Sadin, Loomis' CIO, began contemplating UC a few years ago, when the company was outgrowing its existing phone systems. But first, the company had to lay some infrastructure. Loomis had acquired several smaller armored car companies along with their mix of different PBXes.

Loomis replaced those PBX systems at headquarters and, so far, a little more than 10 percent of its 200 branches with Cisco VoIP. Now those tasks can be done by Loomis' own IT staff, centrally. "You just call the help desk. If a branch's voice mail needed reprogramming, they had to call local providers who would drive over to do the work for $100 to $200 an hour, Sadin recalls. It's 10 minutes of work or even one minute of work," he says. In 2007, Loomis finished putting its Microsoft Exchange e-mail system on VoIP. Meanwhile, Microsoft Office Communicator supplies video conferencing, instant messaging and presence, including a BlackBerry IM client. Not paying PBX vendors for move, add or change orders is a big part of Loomis' ROI, he adds.

Employees can forward voice mails as if they were e-mail and they don't have to log in to separate voice mail, e-mail and BlackBerry messaging systems, Sadin says. When Pacific Medical Centers put in VoIP to let data and voice traffic run unified on its network, it had to rearrange some job responsibilities, says consultant Lewis, who was the hospital's CIO at the time. A Unified Mind-Set Melding all of these capabilities takes some forethought and, perhaps, changes to how the IT group works together and with outside vendors. Network administrators, for example, had to learn to plan for spikes in traffic during peak application usage times as well as for telecommunications. But as UC takes root, CIOs and IT staff must make sure those different vendors coordinate their work, he says.

For many companies, separate vendors supply networking gear, servers and software. For example, Loomis planned to upgrade Cisco's Call Manager administrative suite last spring, in part to more fully integrate Cisco phone handsets with Microsoft's Office Communications Server. But the morning of the scheduled upgrade, the teams discovered that the need for a schema change to Microsoft's Active Directory got overlooked. Loomis' network and server teams planned and tested the upgrade with a local VoIP consultant for two to three months. The upgrade was aborted.

Do you Tweet. Loomis tried again in late August, after the Active Directory tweak was tested and rolled out. "I guess the phone-oriented vendor didn't realize how carefully our server team guards Active Directory from untested changes," he says. "The hardest thing about integrating communications is integrating people's mind-sets." Senior Editor Kim S. Nash can be reached at knash@cio.com. Follow me on Twitter @knash99. Follow everything from CIO Magazine @CIOMagazine.

Report: eBay to sell Skype to group of private investors

EBay plans to announce a deal to sell its Skype voice-over-IP service to a group of private investors, The New York Times reported on its Web site, citing people briefed on the company's plans.

The deal could be announced as early as Tuesday, the report said.

Several investment groups are likely involved in the purchase, including Andreessen Horowitz, Index Ventures and Silver Lake Partners, the report said. Andreessen Horowitz is run by partners Marc Andreessen, co-founder of Netscape, and Ben Horowitz. Andreessen is also a member of eBay's board of directors.

Ebay has reportedly been seeking around US$2 billion for Skype. The company paid $2.6 billion for Skype in October 2005, saying it would enhance communication between merchants and buyers on eBay, but that never panned out. Two years after the acquisition, eBay wrote down Skype's value by $1.4 billion.

Still, Skype continues to be the most popular VoIP service in the world. Its revenue grew 25 percent year-on-year to $170 million in the second quarter, according to eBay, and it added 37.3 million new registered users at the same time, ending June with over 480.5 million registered users.

Ebay has said it planned to sell Skype in an initial public stock offering. Several groups have reportedly been in talks with the company for the communications company, including Skype's founders, Janus Friis and Niklas Zennstrom.

One question that looms over any sale of Skype is access to the peer-to-peer technology that underpins the service. In July, eBay said it was developing an alternative to the technology currently used by Skype because licensing talks with the owner of the technology had broken down.

When eBay bought Skype, the deal didn't include the technology used to run the VoIP service. That technology is owned by a company called Joltid, which licenses the technology to Skype.

Skype brought Joltid to a U.K. court earlier this year in a bid to resolve the licensing dispute, which led Joltid to terminate the licensing agreement.

"Joltid has alleged that Skype should not possess, use or modify certain software source code and that, by doing so, and by disclosing such code in certain U.S. patent cases pursuant to orders from U.S. courts, Skype has breached the license agreement," Ebay said in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing in July.

Skype responded to Joltid's move to terminate the license by asking the court to declare the termination was invalid. The court case is due to be heard in June 2010.

Four tech spats that could be settled over a beer with Obama

If sitting down with the President of the United States and quaffing a few brewskis can really help tamp down controversy over a highly-charged race issue then perhaps the President could pull up a bar stool and settle some far less vital disagreements plaguing the tech industry. Here we go:

Amazon v. Justin Gawronski: This might be a very short meeting as Justin Gawronski is a 17-year-old Michigan high school senior and the drinking age is 21. Nevertheless, the student's contingent of lawyers could have a beer whilst the President served Gawronski some lemonade and heard his tale of woe, which involves his claim that Amazon deleted a copy of George Orwell's "Nineteen Eighty-Four" from Gawronski's Kindle and with it deleted the notes he had taken on the device for his homework.

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Amazon has since refunded the purchase price of Orwell books to people whose copies it deleted, has already said it would not do it again. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos has also apologized for the action, calling it "stupid, thoughtless, and painfully out of line with our principles."

Maybe the President can get Bezos to give Gawronski free Kindle books for life.

Microsoft/Yahoo v. rest of world: Ok, this one isn't really a dispute as much as a way to get Steve Ballmer drinking. Since inking a deal with Microsoft this week Yahoo's stock has pretty much stunk up the joint. With the deal, Microsoft Bing, will become Yahoo's search platform. Widely panned however, the two companies have been trying to quell the tension over the deal between stakeholders and the financial community. But Ballmer didn't help much this week when he told analysts: "Nobody gets it…."

So this Presidential sit-down might actually turn into quite the beer-fest with Ballmer on one side and a few financial analysts on the other. They might even get into the tequila on this one. In the end not much would be settled, though certainly it would be entertaining for the rest of us to watch.

Horizon v. Twitter: The President should take keen interest in this one as it is being played out in his hometown of Chicago. Here we have the Horizon Group Management LLC which has filed a libel lawsuit against former tenant Amanda Bonnen, claiming one of her alleged Twitter posts "maliciously and wrongfully" slammed her apartment at 4242 N. Sheridan and the company managing it.

Judging from some of the snarky comments made by the Horizon folk, such as "We're a sue-first, ask-questions-later kind of an organization," one would hope the President might discuss with Horizon the need not to burden our already overwrought court system with frivolous lawsuits. He then might just refuse beer to the Horizon folks and ask them to just leave.

Ebay v. Skype: This one would likely be the most boring of the beer-battles as it has to do with licensing agreements and such. The story goes that Ebay has begun developing an alternative to the P2P technology used by Skype but a licensing dispute drags on and threatens to close the popular IP telephony service.

The bartender-in-chief might bring up free markets and might even be able to get into the P2P technology a bit, after all he is supposed to be somewhat computer-savvy. But in the end he might just force these two to sit at the picnic table drinking Bud till they can agree on something.

Dell looking to grow through acquisitions

Dell executives on Tuesday said the company was looking to stimulate growth through acquisition as it moves its focus from client hardware to enterprise products.

The company is looking to shift its product portfolio to include offerings that could help improve the profitability in the near and long term, said Michael Dell, Dell's CEO, during an analyst conference in Austin, Texas. Dell pointed to its enterprise business as a high-margin area where the company could seek acquisitions. Dell's offerings in the enterprise space include servers, storage and services.

The acquisition of storage company EqualLogic in 2007 was a key test for Dell to offer products that deliver high margins, and the purchase worked out well, he said. The acquisition had an instant impact on Dell's revenue, and EqualLogic offerings fit into the company's server products as storage requirements increased. EqualLogic also offered the intellectual properties that helped Dell optimize its offerings as data centers shifted to virtualized environments, Dell said.

Driving more storage into data centers continues to be a growing opportunity, Dell said. Server virtualization will continue to grow as data infrastructures move to virtualized environments. The opportunity may drive down server purchases, but it offers the opportunity to be more of a consultant, which could generate more storage revenue. That helps Dell get a larger chunk of revenue from overall data center spending by companies.

Dell is also looking to expand in the managed services area as customers build out server and storage infrastructures. These offerings provide reasonable margins, but also help generate sales of hardware attached to services while keeping the company close to customers, said Steve Schuckenbrock, president of large enterprise at Dell, during the analyst conference.

The company has already made acquisitions in the managed services area over the last two years, including companies like Everdream, which offers on-demand software and managed services SilverBack and MessageOne.

The cloud-computing market is also a fast growing opportunity where Dell may seek acquisitions, company executives said. Dell could provide cloud services to push more hardware and storage products into server infrastructures, while building up its consulting services.

Dell is more focused on acquiring healthy companies with products that can offer quick returns, so it may not seek acquisitions in the low-margin areas like client hardware, said Brian Gladden, Dell's chief financial officer, during the conference. Client hardware makes up a majority of Dell's business, but the company wants to focus its growth and products and services that deliver profitability, he said.

The company has built up its financial reserves as it prepares to acquire companies. Dell had US$9.7 billion in cash and equivalents at the end of its fiscal first quarter of 2010 that ended on May 1. Dell saw overall revenue fall but EqualLogic storage products revenue increased 71 percent year-over-year during the first fiscal quarter.

A lot of companies have been also been attached to Dell's acquisition efforts. It has been rumored that Dell would acquire Palm to expand its presence in the mobile market. Palm would provide smartphones to Dell's portfolio of products, something Dell doesn't offer yet. Dell's mobility currently efforts revolve around netbooks and laptops, and has been rumored to be developing a smartphone for a long time, though no product has materialized yet. Palm's acquisition would also help Dell compete with Apple, which offers the popular iPhone.

Some observers also speculated that Dell would acquire Acer in order to expand its PC market share. However the acquisition wasn't considered a match as there would be product overlap, with both companies offering PCs for similar audiences.