Archive for March, 2010

Some Yahoo email accounts hacked in China, Taiwan

March 31st, 2010

Beijing/ San Francisco: Yahoo email accounts of some journalists and other users whose work relates to China were compromised in an attack discovered this week, days after Google announced it would move its Chinese-language search services out of China due to censorship concerns.
Some journalists in China and Taiwan found they were unable to access their accounts beginning 25 March, among them Kathleen McLaughlin, a freelance journalist in Beijing. Her access was restored on Wednesday, she told Reuters.
Andrew Jacobs of the New York Times in Beijing said his Yahoo Plus account had been set, without his knowledge, to forward to another, unknown, account.
In late 2009 and early this year, several human rights activists and journalists whose work related to China had similarly discovered their Gmail accounts had been set to forward to unfamiliar addresses, without their knowledge.
Google cited the Gmail attacks in January, when it announced a hacking attack on it and more than 20 other firms. Google cited those attacks and censorship concerns in its decision to move its Chinese-language search services last week to Hong Kong.
Google said on 31 March it had identified cyber attacks aimed at silencing opposition to a Vietnamese government-led bauxite mining project involving a major Chinese firm. It said the attacks were similar to those at the heart of the company’s friction with Beijing.
Yahoo did not comment on the nature of the attacks on its accounts, or whether they were co-ordinated or isolated incidents.
“Yahoo! condemns all cyber attacks regardless of origin or purpose,” spokeswoman Dana Lengkeek said in an email response to a Reuters query.
“We are committed to protecting user security and privacy and we take appropriate action in the event of any kind of breach.”
Google’s announcement of the hacking attacks drew unprecendented outside attention to cyber-security and China’s Internet controls, used to limit discussion of topics deemed sensitive or threatening to “social stability”.
China’s control of the Internet and media has intensified under the current leadership and reflect a lack of understanding of the Chinese public, said Hao Xiaoming, a China media expert at Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information in Singapore.
“China is going back rather than going forward in terms of information and control. That reflects the lack of confidence in the (current) Chinese leaders,” Hao said.
“China’s Internet has become a controlled Internet, an internal Internet rather than linked internationally. It defeats the whole purpose.”
SPORADIC DISRUPTION
On Tuesday, Internet users in mainland China were sporadically unable to conduct searches through Google’s portal in Hong Kong, a disruption that Google attributed to changes in China’s Internet filtering configuration.
It said it did not know whether the stoppage was a technical glitch or a deliberate move in confrontations over Internet censorship.
China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology gave no immediately reply to a request for comment on the disruption.
Google said it was monitoring the situation but it appeared the access problem had been resolved. Access has been patchy since Google shifted to Hong Kong, underscoring the vulnerability of Google’s business in the world’s most populous country.
Very few of the other firms mentioned by Google in January as having been affected by the attack have identified themselves.
A source at the time told Reuters that Yahoo knew it had been a target of attacks and discussed them with Google before Google went public.
Yahoo said at the time that it was “aligned” with Google’s position, a statement that its Chinese partner, e-commerce giant Alibaba Group, called “reckless”.
Unlike Google, Yahoo keeps some of its email servers in China. It was criticed by the US Congress when it released to Chinese authorities information relating to the account of Shi Tao, a Chinese journalist who was then sentenced to 10 years in jail for revealing state secrets.

Courtesy: LiveMint

Free Cloud Alliance to push open source clouds

March 31st, 2010

IELO, Mandriva, and Nexedi this week joined forces and formed the Free Cloud Alliance, which will work to push open source products for cloud computing.

Courtesy: Infoworld News

Elan asks trade agency to ban Apple iPad imports

March 31st, 2010

A touchpad manufacturer that last year sued Apple for patent infringement filed a complaint Monday with the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC), asking it to ban imports of Apple products, including the iPad and iPhone.

Courtesy: Infoworld News

Obama Appoints Veteran IT Cconsolidator to DOD

March 31st, 2010

California CIO Teri Takai, who has a wealth of experience consolidating government IT operations, was named to the top Department of Defense IT job today by President Barack Obama.
Courtesy: CIO.in

Less Expensive Perks Cut Google CEO’s Compensation in Half

March 31st, 2010

Google paid $233,542 for CEO Eric Schmidt’s personal security in 2009. The year before, Schmidt’s security costs topped $400,000.
Courtesy: CIO.in

Atom smasher breaks high-energy records

March 31st, 2010

Geneva: Scientists smashed sub-atomic particles into each other with record energy on Tuesday, to recreate conditions just after the Big Bang that gave rise to the universe 13.7 billion years ago.
The experiment at the European Centre for Nuclear Research (CERN) drew applause from the 80 scientists in the tracking room at the sprawling research complex on the French-Swiss border.
Powering ahead: Scientists at the European Centre for Nuclear Research near Geneva celebrate after they collided protons at record power. AFP
Powering ahead: Scientists at the European Centre for Nuclear Research near Geneva celebrate after they collided protons at record power. AFP

“It just shows what we can do in pushing knowledge forward on where we came from, how the early universe evolved,” CERN director-general Rolf Heuer said.

The collisions, the high point so far of the 10 billion Swiss franc (about Rs42,400 crore) experiment, which will continue for years, marked a significant step forward for physics and could be seen as a giant leap for mankind, he said, speaking in a video relay from Tokyo.
CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the world’s biggest machine, slammed beams of particles together at a record collision energy of 7 tera-electron volts (TeV), or seven billion billion electron volts—three and a half times faster than previously achieved in a particle accelerator.
Data from the collisions over the coming years will be analysed by thousands of scientists around the world linked by a computer network known as the Grid to gain insights into the nature of matter and the origins of stars and planets.
“This is a step into the unknown…We hope we find things that are really new,” said CERN research director Sergio Bertolucci.
“There are known unknowns out there, like dark matter and new dimensions about which we hope to learn. But it is possible that we will find some unknown unknowns which could be hugely important for mankind. With the LHC, we have the tool that we need.”
The collisions took place at a nano-fraction of a second slower than the speed of light in the LHC’s 27km tunnel about 100m below ground.
CERN scientists expect the project to lift the veil on some of the mysteries of the cosmos—how matter was converted to mass after the fireball of the Big Bang and what is the dark, or invisible, matter that makes up an estimated 25% of the universe.
“In the course of 2010 and 2011 we will be compiling the data and we expect to make real discoveries,” said Oliver Buchmueller, one of the key figures in the experiment. “By the end of 2010 we think we will find evidence of dark material and confirmation that it is there and what it is.”
Buchmueller said he thought the experiment would only find the theoretical particle known as the Higgs boson after 2013, when the collider is boosted to collision energy of 14 TeV.
The Higgs boson, named after the Scottish physicist who proposed it three decades ago to explain the origin of mass in the universe, is believed to have made possible the emergence of stars, planets and eventually life from the matter spewed out of the Big Bang.
The experiment was delayed for a few hours by technical glitches with the power supply and an over-sensitive magnet safety system.
CERN officials were quick to dismiss any suggestion that it was a repeat of a major incident in September 2008 that had seriously damaged parts of the experiment and delayed the full launch of the project.
Satyaki Bhattacharya, who is part of a contingent of Indian scientists participating in experiments at CERN, said the collisions are expected to add to new information on the origin and structure of matter.
“We are already getting good data and this is expected to continue for the next 18 months. So we are on our way to realising the potential of these experiments.”
The accelerator will be shut after 18 months and undergo further modification to be able to smash particles at even higher energy levels.
Bhattacharya, a professor in Delhi University’s physics department, is part of the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment, a subsidiary experiment at CERN. At CMS, scientists are expected, among other things, to collect evidence of dark matter, believed to make up nearly 26% of the universe.
India, which has contributed $25 million worth of equipment, has representation from several of its institutions, including the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre and the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research.
Mint’s Jacob P. Koshy in New Delhi contributed to this story.

Courtesy: LiveMint

You’re overqualified for the position, but do you care?

March 31st, 2010

Of the many things the recession messed up — and I think we can all agree it really ruined a lot — plans were the biggest victim. Once the economy went kaput, your future suddenly became a little less certain. Could you afford to maintain your lifestyle? Was it the best time to switch jobs? Could you save enough for your upcoming wedding after pay cuts? The ramifications were endless.

In Sunday’s New York Times, writer Michael Luo touched on a phenomenon that is occurring throughout the country: overqualified workers who are satisfied just being employed. As Luo points out, many job postings give the basic requirements for candidates, but many applicants have experience and education that theoretically qualifies them for much higher positions. When these job seekers find themselves in these positions, they experience some insecurity but have some satisfaction that at least they’re working.

Academic research on the subject confirms that workers who perceive themselves as overqualified do, in fact, report lower job satisfaction and higher rates of turnover. But the studies also indicate that those workers tend to perform better. Moreover, there is evidence that many of the negatives that come with overqualified hires can be mitigated if they are given autonomy and made to feel valued and respected.

The new variable in all of this is the continuing grim economic climate. Many workers’ ambitions have evolved, after all, from climbing the ladder to simply holding on to a job, any job. Turnover would also seem to be less of a concern amid predictions that it could be years before unemployment returns to pre-recession levels.

As a result, Luo points out, many overqualified workers are struggling to accept their current situation without letting insecurity appear.

For his part, Mr. Carroll admitted that he had caught himself often trying to drop his credentials into conversations at his new workplace.

“Obviously that stems from maybe some embarrassment at the level that I’m at,” he said. “I do want people to know that, to some extent, this isn’t who I am.”

Have you found yourself in this situation in the last couple of years? How have you dealt with being overqualified? Some job seekers have said that “overqualified” is a useless term because all that matters is whether or not a person wants the job and is qualified for it. Do you agree? Let us know your thoughts.

Related posts:

  1. Mature Workers Expanding Job Search Today’s job market has thrown workers of all ages for…
  2. Ask The Work Buzz! Handling Age and an Employment Gap Steve Shoemaker comes to us with a double dilemma: I…
  3. Half of workers who were laid off in the last three months have found jobs! The economy’s not improving as fast as any of us…

Courtesy: The Work Buzz

Server vendors focus on memory in Nehalem-EX servers

March 31st, 2010

Orthodox server designs are receiving a face-lift with Intel’s Nehalem-EX processor, with vendors implementing new memory features to boost application performance.

Courtesy: Infoworld News

Red Hat focuses new RHEL 5.5 on multicore

March 31st, 2010

Open-source enterprise software company Red Hat has updated its flagship operating system, RHEL (Red Hat Enterprise Linux), to take full advantage of the latest spoils from the heated microprocessor battle between Advanced Micro Devices and Intel.

RHEL version 5.5, released Wednesday, has been reconfigured for Intel’s just-released eight-core Nehalem-EX and AMD’s almost-as-recently released 12-core “Magny-Cours” Opteron 6100 Series processors, said Tim Burke, Red Hat vice president for platform engineering.

Courtesy: Infoworld News

Atom smasher breaks high-energy records

March 30th, 2010

Geneva: Scientists smashed sub-atomic particles into each other with record energy on Tuesday, to recreate conditions just after the Big Bang that gave rise to the universe 13.7 billion years ago.
The experiment at the European Centre for Nuclear Research (CERN) drew applause from the 80 scientists in the tracking room at the sprawling research complex on the French-Swiss border.
“It just shows what we can do in pushing knowledge forward on where we came from, how the early universe evolved,” CERN director-general Rolf Heuer said.
The collisions, the high point so far of the 10 billion Swiss franc (about Rs42,400 crore) experiment, which will continue for years, marked a significant step forward for physics and could be seen as a giant leap for mankind, he said, speaking in a video relay from Tokyo.
Powering ahead: Scientists at the European Centre for Nuclear Research near Geneva celebrate after they collided protons at record power.AFP
Powering ahead: Scientists at the European Centre for Nuclear Research near Geneva celebrate after they collided protons at record power.AFP

CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the world’s biggest machine, slammed beams of particles together at a record collision energy of 7 tera-electron volts (TeV), or seven billion billion electron volts—three and a half times faster than previously achieved in a particle accelerator.

Data from the collisions over the coming years will be analysed by thousands of scientists around the world linked by a computer network known as the Grid to gain insights into the nature of matter and the origins of stars and planets.
“This is a step into the unknown…We hope we find things that are really new,” said CERN research director Sergio Bertolucci.
“There are known unknowns out there, like dark matter and new dimensions about which we hope to learn. But it is possible that we will find some unknown unknowns which could be hugely important for mankind. With the LHC, we have the tool that we need.”
The collisions took place at a nano-fraction of a second slower than the speed of light in the LHC’s 27km tunnel about 100m below ground.
CERN scientists expect the project to lift the veil on some of the mysteries of the cosmos—how matter was converted to mass after the fireball of the Big Bang and what is the dark, or invisible, matter that makes up an estimated 25% of the universe.
“In the course of 2010 and 2011 we will be compiling the data and we expect to make real discoveries,” said Oliver Buchmueller, one of the key figures in the experiment. “By the end of 2010 we think we will find evidence of dark material and confirmation that it is there and what it is.”
Buchmueller said he thought the experiment would only find the theoretical particle known as the Higgs boson after 2013, when the collider is boosted to collision energy of 14 TeV.
The Higgs boson, named after the Scottish physicist who proposed it three decades ago to explain the origin of mass in the universe, is believed to have made possible the emergence of stars, planets and eventually life from the matter spewed out of the Big Bang.
The experiment was delayed for a few hours by technical glitches with the power supply and an over-sensitive magnet safety system.
CERN officials were quick to dismiss any suggestion that it was a repeat of a major incident in September 2008 that had seriously damaged parts of the experiment and delayed the full launch of the project.
Satyaki Bhattacharya, who is part of a contingent of Indian scientists participating in experiments at CERN, said the collisions are expected to add to new information on the origin and structure of matter.
“We are already getting good data and this is expected to continue for the next 18 months. So we are on our way to realising the potential of these experiments.”
The accelerator will be shut after 18 months and undergo further modification to be able to smash particles at even higher energy levels.
Bhattacharya, a professor in Delhi University’s physics department, is part of the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment, a subsidiary experiment at CERN. At CMS, scientists are expected, among other things, to collect evidence of dark matter, believed to make up nearly 26% of the universe.
India, which has contributed $25 million worth of equipment, has representation from several of its institutions, including the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre and the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research.
Mint’s Jacob P. Koshy in New Delhi contributed to this story.
feedback@livemint.com

Courtesy: LiveMint