Archive for RB

New Data Rate Speed Record

The BBC is reporting that researchers from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany have set a new data rate speed record. The new data rate speed record is 26 terabits per second down 50km of optical fiber. Professor Wolfgang Freude, a co-author of the paper in Nature Photonics told the BBC how they set the new speed record.

"fast Fourier transformThe trick is to use what is known as a “fast Fourier transform” which separates a single laser beam into 300 colors and encodes data in each different color. Professor Freude and his colleagues have instead worked out how to create comparable data rates using just one laser with exceedingly short pulses. Within these pulses are a number of discrete colors of light in what is known as a “frequency comb”.  When the pulses are sent into an optical fiber, the different colors can mix together and create 325 different colors in total, each of which can be encoded with its own data stream according to the article.

At the receiving end, the researchers implemented an optical fast Fourier transform to receive the data streams, based on the times that the different parts of the beam arrive, and at what intensity. The authors of the paper say the technique can be easily integrated into existing silicon photonics technology. The story says that stringing together all the data in the different colors turns into the simpler problem of organizing data that essentially arrive at different times.

LaserProfessor Freude told the BBC that the current design outperforms earlier approaches simply by moving all the time delays further apart and that it is a technology that could be integrated onto a silicon chip – making it a better candidate for scaling up to commercial use.

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So what does it mean to transfer 26 terabits per second over fiber optic cable? Reportedly the contents of nearly 1,000 high-definition DVDs could be transmitted down an optical fiber in a second – or the entire Library of Congress collections could be sent in 10 seconds. Since the LOC already has a home in Washington DC, more likely uses of these new technologies will be applications like cloud computing, virtual reality, and 3-D Hi-definition TV.

Just last year I wrote about Intel Corp’s. (INTC) efforts in this domain and noted that “1 terabit per second link could transfer the entire printed collection of the Library of Congress in 1.5 minutes.”

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

AOL Notes

AOL NotesAOL was once the leader in online service providers in the U.S.and around the world. In 1988 America Online (AOL) came alive and legendary CEO Steve Case took charge in 1991. In 1996, AOL reached 6 million subscribers and started offering a flat-rate monthly service fee of $19.95. In January of 2000, AOL decided to buy up Time Warner Inc. which was spun out again in 2009.

AOL Wasn’t Building Great Products

AOL Wasn't Building Great ProductsA report from BusinessInsider says that AOL (AOL) wants to refurbish its brand and boost its energy out west. They cite a Bloomberg BusinessWeek story, that AOL is attempting to rebuild its brand by:

* Re-painting its West Coast HQ.
* Opening a gym downstairs.
* Inviting startups to work at the office rent-free.
* Hiring 80 new engineers.
* Throwing ex-AOLers under the bus.

AOL wasn’t building great products, and the brand was reflecting that,” says AOL West Coast boss Brad Garlinghouse. “We have to expunge the ghosts of AOL and start fresh.

AOL To Buy GDGT? The Rumors Are Back

AOL To Buy GDGT? The Rumors Are BackThe BusinessInsider speculates now that the top two editors for AOL’s (AOL) powerhouse gadget site Engadget are headed out the door, lots of people think the next thing AOL will do is buy GDGT, the gadget-oriented social network started by Engadget alumni Peter Rojas and Ryan Block.

Through AOL Ventures, AOL already owns a piece of the startup. The buy would probably be one of those “acqui-hires” where GDGT investors are made whole and the founders get what amounts to a signing bonus. comScore tells BusinessInsider that GDGT has been fluctuating between 60,000 and 140,000 unique visitors over the past year.

An AOL/Engadget insider tells BI “that gdgt rumor comes and goes.

Update: GDGT co-founder Peter Rojas says, “I can’t comment, either way, you know the drill.

AOL Has Had Layoffs For 11 Straight Years

America Online (AOL) laid off around 900 people on 03 march 2011 and undoubtedly, it was brutal for those people, and for their friends at the online provider. Unfortunately, layoffs are a long-standing tradition at AOL. Chart of the Day plots the job butcher’s toll of 11 years of AOL layoffs. Sometimes the layoffs are big, sometimes they’re small, but they’re pretty much endless.

AOL Has Had Layoffs For 11 Straight Years

More Than $300 million on Distributing Free sign-up CDs

AOL Spent More Than $300 million on Distributing Free sign-up CDsAmerica Online (AOL) used to be king of the dial-up hill. At its peak, over 26.7 million households accessed the Internet via AOL, a figure that no American ISP has ever surpassed according to a report from AOL’s own DownloadSquad. That success came at a cost, though: those CDs (and floppy disks!) that arrived in your letterbox, often on a weekly basis, cost AOL over $300 million.

The data comes from Quora, a service that is fast becoming the go-to place for juicy, ‘insider’ information. Someone asked about AOL’s distribution costs, and in mere moments, both the CEO-at-the-time, Steve Case, and the former Chief Marketing Officer, Jan Brandt, had chimed in with authoritative responses. Mr. Case recalls, that in the heyday of the mid-1990s, AOL was quite content to spend $35 on obtaining a new subscriber. Brandt, responding a bit later, provided a total cost of “over $300 million,” for the distribution of the CDs. She went on to offer a shocking statistic: “At one point, 50% of the CDs produced worldwide had an AOL logo on it.” Shocking, but… sadly rather believable.

Desperate to Hook Up With HuffPost

AOL Was So Desperate to Hook Up With Huffington PostWhen America Online’s (AOL) CEO Tim Armstrong announced the $315-million acquisition of The Huffington Post he made the deal sound like a strategic add-on for the former web portal’s content business however, GigaOm says that AOL had to buy Huffington Post. GigaOm says that AOL traffic has been plummeting and losses increasing at most of its major media properties. GigaOm’s Mathew Ingram cites an Advertising Age report that unique visitors in February 2011 were down by more than 40 percent compared with the same month a year ago.

AOL has tried to reinvent itself as a content company, using the cash its Internet access business continues to produce (which I wrote about here) to buy assets like TechCrunch and video service 5Min Media, and The Huffington Post. GigaOm reports AOL has also spent $100 million on building out its Patch.com hyperlocal news operation with another $120 million this year. GigaOm’s Ingram says AOL is feverishly trying to build new businesses that can replace the ones that are disintegrating, before the cash from its legacy businesses runs out and the company collapses.

Assets like DailyFinance and PoliticsDaily were supposed to be part of the recipe for boosting traffic and advertising but that doesn’t seem to be happening. Mr. Armstrong is quoted in Paid Content that the news and finance sites were losing $20 million a year for the company and advertising revenue reportedly dropped by almost 30 percent in the latest quarter.

At The Huffington Post, meanwhile, both traffic and revenues have climbed. Mr. Ingram concludes that the HuffPost acquisition brings two things to AOL that it desperately needs: an understanding of how much social networks and social features matter to new media, and a sense of personality and brand awareness that AOL sites have failed to generate. Now all Arianna Huffington has to do is somehow graft all of that into AOL.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Google, Facebook and Yahoo Test IPv6

Google, Facebook and Yahoo Test IPv6A global trial of IPv6 is scheduled for June 8th 2011. Google (GOOG), Facebook, Yahoo (YHOO), and Akamai (AKAM) will reportedly take part in the IPv6 “test flight.” The Internet Society, a non-profit group that educates people and companies about net issues is coordinating World IPv6 Day. Those who sign up for the test will make their pages available via IPv6 for 24 hours to help iron out problems created by the switch to the new addressing scheme.

IPv6 good news

Internet Society logo“By providing an opportunity for the internet industry to collaborate to test IPv6 readiness we expect to lay the groundwork for large-scale IPv6 adoption and help make IPv6 ready for prime time,” said Leslie Daigle, chief Internet technology officer at the Internet Society in a statement.

“The good news is that internet users don’t need to do anything special to prepare for World IPv6 Day,” said Lorenzo Colitti, a network engineer at Google in a blog post. “Our current measurements suggest that the majority (99.95%) of users will be unaffected. However, in rare cases, users may experience connectivity problems, often due to misconfigured or misbehaving home network devices.”

According to Google, Vint Cerf, the program manager for the ARPA Internet research project chose a 32-bit address format for an experiment in packet network interconnection in 1977. For more than 30 years, 32-bit addresses have served us well, but now the Internet is running out of space. IPv6 is the only long-term solution, but it has not yet been widely deployed.  In November 2010 Mr. Cerf, one of the driving forces behind Google’s IPv6 efforts warned that the net faced “turbulent times” if it did not move quickly to adopt IPv6.

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Vint Cerf wants you t use IPv6It will be interesting to see the number of participants. This all may just blow over the top because not enough of the right people in organizations see the need. I spoke to my Boss about this a while ago and I think one phone call has been made to our upstream ISP to see what they are doing. We probably won’t deal with it until there is a need for a point-to-point IP video conference with China or something and when it won’t work, then it is a crisis that gets addressed.

Does your organization have a plan for IPv6 migration?

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

LinkedIn Accounts can be Hijacked

Help Net Security has a report that users of the newly minted public LinkedIn (LNKD) are in danger of having their account hijacked. The Linkedin accounts can be hacked when accessing them over insecure Wi-Fi networks or public computers. Independent security researcher Rishi Narang told Help Net Security that the risk is due to two reasons. First, the LinkedIn session and authentication cookies have an unnaturally long lifespan. Secondly, LinkedIn does not remove the cookies once the user logs out.

LinkedInThe article says the cookies in question are JSESSIONID and LEO_AUTH_TOKEN, and are available even after the session initiated by the user has been terminated. The cookies are also set to expire only after one solid year, and this fact allowed the researcher to get access to a number of active accounts of various people from all over the world during a period of many months. “They would have login/logged out many times in these months but their cookie was still valid,” Mr.Narnag writes on his blog.

In addition to all of that, those two cookies and the others that the welcome page stores are transmitted in clear text over HTTP, because they don’t have a secure flag set. “If the secure flag is set on a cookie, then browsers will not submit the cookie in any requests that use an unencrypted HTTP connection, thereby preventing the cookie from being trivially intercepted by an attacker monitoring network traffic,” explains Mr. Narang.

According to the researcher, until LinkedIn makes some changes, the only way to “expire” the cookies is for the users to change their password and then authenticate themselves with the new credentials. This could be a stopgap measure if you know that someone has stolen those cookies and is accessing your account, but won’t new cookies be created after the password change and authentication?

Help Net Security says that the only solution to this problem is for LinkedIn to effect some changes, and according to Reuters, they are planning to offer “opt-in” SSL support for the entire site in the coming months (and that would encrypt the cookies in questions), but have not commented on the cookies have such a long lifespan.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Memorial Day 2011

Thanks

Memorial Day 2011

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.