Teak Technologies

Your Guide Through the Tech World

  • Do you want to future-proof your children?...

    Do you remember when you used a computer first time? Did it influence your career choice? And what about your children? Maybe you should give them a comfort level with IT products and services at a younger age. There are things which will beneficial for them in the next 5 to 10 years. Many things are changing at fast-paced world of today that none of us will see coming. So, let’s talk about future-proofing. 1. Create a Google account for your child with easy to remember names. Almost everyone uses one or more Google services, while email and search engine are ...

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  • Is Green IT ready for primetime?...

    Green IT continues to be one of the hottest topics this year, with virtualization and cloud computing. Tech savvy guys are well aware that some of these things are nothing new. When old things come back with new names, however, it usually means they are ready for launch, but not always. While a number of IT specialists, who have already integrated Green IT systems in their overall strategy, is growing, the exact status of Green IT adoption is unclear. This is partly the continuing evolution of Green IT with digital archiving, the reduction of hazardous substances and virtualization. Although the overall ...

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  • Cloud computing is a viable technical paradigm today...

    CIOs and IT executives have a lot of trends to discuss. What is the latest technology? What is temporary or promising? When should I invest in technology? How can it help my business to succeed? IT technologies are not just about running the business, they are also creating a more competitive differentiator, which affects business performance. A frequent topic of discussion among CIOs today is related to cloud services. Practices on the cloud constantly evolve and its adoption as a viable technical paradigm is still a work in progress, although we have made tremendous progress in the quality of services. The ...

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  • A survey: teens don’t need emails, they prefer SMS messaging...

    Year after year, surveys after survey, teens are found to be texting at an increasing rate. According to the latest statistics, American teenagers are talking on landlines and cell phone not too much, using more smartphones, and are on average 60 texts a day, against 50 three years ago. Of course, teens are avid communicators, because during childhood and adulthood, they frequently communicate with a variety of important people in their lives. There are friends and peers, family, teachers, coaches, advisers, and a sea of other adults. More than 1000 teenagers aged between 12 and 19 were interviewed for the latest ...

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HTC One, two months on…

Posted by Jackson Walton On May - 15 - 2013 NO Comment

By Alex Dobie  | May 12 2013 | 12:03 pm  |

How has HTCs latest flagship fared after two months in the hands of an AC editor?

It’s been just over two months since I first got my hands on the HTC One — first, a pre-production demo unit, then a final European retail model. For most of that time, HTC’s impressive 2013 flagship has been my daily driver — the phone I use every day, and take with me just about everywhere I go. In that time it’s seen plenty of normal use, and ten days or so of not-so-normal use in New York City for our Galaxy S4 and #TM13 coverage

But the HTC One was in in short supply when it first launched in Europe and it’s only recently hit the U.S. market, so

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EMC for now is quiet about the details of its planned restructuring of its channel program, but it is clear on one thing: It will be a comprehensive program that will bring partners together not only on its products but also on its core big data, cloud and trust.

Gregg Ambulos, Senior Vice President, Global Channel Sales, and Terry Breen, Senior Vice President, Strategic Sales, Alliances and Service Providers, EMC, used the EMC World conference to introduce the EMC Business Partner initiative, which is scheduled to replace the decade-old EMC Velocity channel program starting January 1, 2014.

Ambulos said that the EMC Business Partner program is still in an exploratory phase, and so the company is hesitant to release details at this point. Find more…

Tags: Program

The Office of the Information Commissioner has urged APRA to heed Australian privacy law as it develops its data protection guide for the finance sector.

In a draft guide released in December, APRA noted that it had become easier for banks and insurers to move their data to outsourcers, whether in Australia or offshore.

Just two years ago, companies kept their cloud usage quiet, largely due to APRA’s November 2010 warning that cloud computing was a form of outsourcing that needed its tick of approval.

But recent deals inked by the Commonwealth Bank, Bank of Queensland and CGU with Salesforce.com – a cloud-based CRM vendor with no Australian data centre – indicate that APRA’s data location requirements are not prohibitive.

The Office of the Information Commissioner referred APRA to Australia’s National Privacy Principle 9 and its upcoming replacement APP 8, which define when organisations may transfer Australians’ personal information to an offshore provider.

“NPP 9 generally prohibits an organisation from disclosing personal information to someone in a foreign country who is not subject to a comparable information privacy scheme,” the OAIC wrote in its submission to APRA.

“The scheme may be a law of that country regulating personal information-handling, a treaty or other instrument, or a contract.

“The OAIC recommends that the Draft Practice Guide expressly refer to the obligations regarding the handling of personal information set out in the Privacy Act.”

NPP 9 allows data to be offshored only with the individual’s consent, if the transfer is necessary for the organisation to provide a pre-contracted service provision, or if the transfer is “for the benefit of the individual” and likely to gain the consent of the individual.

APP8 , which comes into effect next March, is more prescriptive about how individuals’ consent is obtained, and makes organisations accountable for any data breaches their third party partners suffer.

Risk-based approach

To date, APRA has assessed financial institutions’ cloud computing plans on a case-by-case basis.

Its official position on cloud computing is outlined in its November 2010 letter and October 2006 prudential practice guide on outsourcing .

In the case of insurer CGU, only a subset of data is stored in the Salesforce.com cloud, including sales figures and account renewals.

That data is also replicated in CGU’s internal databases and displayed alongside locally hosted data via an integrated user interface.

Commonwealth Bank chief information officer Michael Harte said the regulator had been supportive of it moving applications – including its Commbank.com.au website – to Amazon Web Services.

“All they want is risk-weighted calculus on what you’re doing, [and] consultation on what you’re doing,” Harte told iTnews on the sidelines of an AIIA luncheon last week.

“Everytime we’ve taken something to them they’ve been very, very supportive and they’ve been helpful, telling us how we might even improve it. So yeah, we have a great relationship in that reg

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Summary:

The flamboyant entrepreneur, who is facing extradition from New Zealand to the U.S. over copyright infringement allegations, plans to launch easy-to-use yet secure communications services.

Not content with sticking two fingers up at the authorities with his Mega secure cloud storage service, larger-than-life entrepreneur Kim Dotcom is planning to release further privacy-centric services. And interestingly, in a Q&A session with the New Zealand Herald late last night, Dotcom said he intended the secure email and instant messaging services to be both military-grade and so easy to use that the user wouldnt have to do anything to benefit from this security.

This is always the issue with security – if it requires much thought on the users part, it will generally fail. D

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High End Case Roundup: In Win, Lian-Li, & SilverStone

Posted by Brodie Boyce On May - 2 - 2013 NO Comment

If you love building computers, you probably appreciate a good case or chassis. While there are plenty of excellent products available for a song, there’s also an upper echelon of models that cost quite a bit and offer all the premiere features you could hope for. While it seems as though there’s a lot of similarity between low-end and midrange cases, once you get to a certain price point, various companies take things in very different directions. The three premium chassis we’re looking at in this roundup certainly bear that out.

In Win, Lian Li, and SilverStone all make some beautiful cases. And when we asked them to send us one of their top of the line products, they all responded in kind: In Win with the unique H-Frame, Lian Li with the tall, all-black PC-X2000FN, and Silverstone with the Fortress FT02. (Regular readers w Find more…

“We wanted to explore these perceptions of veteran programmers as being out of step with emerging technologies and see if we could determine whether older programmers are actually keeping up with changes in the field,” says Dr. Emerson Murphy-Hill, an assistant professor of computer science at NC State and co-author of a paper on the research. “And we found that, in some cases, veteran programmers even have a slight edge.”

The researchers looked at the profiles of more than 80,000 programmers on a site called StackOverflow, which is an online community that allows users to ask and answer programming questions. The site also allows users to rate the usefulness of other users’ questions and answers.

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We’re almost exactly a year on from our first hands-on with the Nokia 808 PureView, hailed by me, somewhat tongue in cheek, as Nokia’s custom design for me, from my own personal checklist. Insane camera, Xenon flash, replaceable battery, FM transmitter, large OLED screen, deafening speaker, and so on. All present and correct. One year on and, thanks to a brace of updates and third party additions, I find myself just as in love with the 808 now as when I first popped my microSIM card in… 

When the Nokia 808 PureView was first unleashed upon the world, it’s fair to say that some parts of its software loadout were missing in action.

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