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Hey iPhone, Meet a Tiny Chip With Superpowers.

No comments September 8th, 2010 admin

I can distinctly remember the day when Intel Corp. launched the Pentium processor. It was the day the desktop computing changed for me and for a lot of others. It was also the day when Intel started to put a gap between itself and all its wannabe processor rivals. I bring up that day because I feel that we are about to see a similar shift in the world of mobile, thanks to ARM Holdings, a company that develops and licenses chip technologies to others like Texas Instruments, Samsung and Qualcomm.

ARM, today is introducing a new chip architecture called the Cortex-A15 MPCore. This architecture will form the underpinning of the newest (and perhaps the beefiest) members of the Cortex family of mobile chips that power our iPhones, Samsung Galaxys and the iPads. Thanks to this new architecture, companies such as TI and Samsung will make chips that will come in dual and quad core configurations and will run at clock speeds of up to 2.5 GHz. Don’t be surprised that by 2012 our tablets and smart phones on average be about five times as powerful, with no detrimental impact on power consumption.

And while Apple is nowhere to be found in official ARM’s literature, it goes without saying that many of its products are going to get a major boost because of the new generation of Cortex-A15 architecture-based chips. Why – because Apple is a major license of ARM’s technology.

The Power Principle

So why is this new new chip architecture  important? The answer is pretty simple. As we have often explained in the past, the computing is going through a transition akin to the shift from fixed line phones to telephones. Computing is becoming portable and pocketable. It is omnipresent and at our finger tips. It is making us rethink all current notions about the Internet. Mobile connectivity is also bringing the power of the cloud to our palms.

Soon we are going to have even faster networks at our disposal, thanks to the rise of next generation wireless broadband technologies such as Long-Term Evolution or LTE. These faster networks will bring data to our devices at much higher speeds, which mean we will need faster chips to process that information. Just as the growth of faster broadband sparked the sales of ever-more-powerful Pentium chips, a similar trend is going to take hold in the wireless world.

This new world needs a new kind of architecture – one that marries power with very little power consumption so as to give long battery life to our portable devices. “Even with a lot of bandwidth, we are still going to need processing power in the devices,” explained ARM’s director of marketing, Nandan Nayampally. Think of this chip as a heavyweight boxer with the stamina of a long distance runner.

Augmented Reality Gets a Boost

Playing games in 3-D, running work and home environments on the same machine, conducting videoconferences along with dozens of other activities are going to be a breeze for devices powered by this new chip technology. But that is not all since it will be able to equally at home inside a new generation of web servers and personal home devices that need beefy yet power efficient processors. The low power requirement eliminates the need for fans and makes these device cool and quiet. Running on these new chips are a slew of operating systems including the fast-growing Android, Ubuntu Linux and Symbian.

One of the mobile technologies that would likely to get a big boost from this new chip –- augmented reality. Sure you have heard of companies like Layar, but the fact is that AR is going to remain a curiosity unless the chips can take all the visual and other information and turn it into something magic instantly. We are not there yet, but a chip built on the Cortex-A15 architecture can help.

Intel’s Problem

The new ARM architecture is likely to cause further heartache for Intel which has been trying to position itself in the mobile world through various efforts including its low-power Atom processors, and more recently via a $ 1.4 billion acquisition of Infineon’s wireless chip business. The company has made some strides with its new mobile oriented chips, but the folks at ARM aren’t really sweating it for now.

Nayampally pointed out that slightly older Cortex-A8 chips are enough to take on net books and the newer Cortex-A9 chips are leaving Intel in the dust. Intel, he said is trying to focus on lowering power consumption, a problem ARM has licked. For now, he said the Cambridge, UK-based company is pretty comfortable with its Cortex roadmap. And why not –- more than 20 billion ARM-based processors have found way into our lives. And the company is only just getting started.

Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

As Devices Converge, Chip Vendors Girding for a Fight

For Phones, the Future Is Multiple Cores



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Google chip, iPhone, Meet, Superpowers., Tiny

Meet Angry Birds the Next Big Entertainment Franchise (Video)

No comments September 2nd, 2010 admin

It has taken me nearly four hours to write this post! Ironically, you can blame it on Angry Birds, the super addictive game that has become the top iPhone app in the world. I am a late comer to the bird bash — but in the last few days, it has become a massive time sink. I can hear birds squawking in my sleep. I am seeing the green pigs dance in front of my eyes. I am addicted to Angry Birds

I tweeted about my addiction and folks from Rovio Mobile, the Helsinki, Finland-based creator of the app got back to me. I ended up inviting CEO Mikael Hed and Peter Vesterbacka, who is cutely titled Mighty Eagle (a forthcoming character), to our offices and we talked about Angry Birds, which has been sold 7 million times and may turn into an entertainment franchise to rival SpongeBob. There are rumors of a movie. A line of soft toys is definitely in the works.

Hed, Vesterbacka I talked about how the seven-year-old company became an overnight success and he offered tips to become a top iPhone developer. While you watch the video, I’m going back to playing level 6!

Video edited and produced by Chris Albrecht.

Related GigaOM Pro Content:

  • Needed: A Neiman Marcus for Mobile Apps
  • Will Killer Apps Affect Which Handsets Consumers Buy?



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GigaOM

Google Angry, Birds, Entertainment, Franchise, Meet, next, Video

Meet The All-New Structure Blog

No comments August 16th, 2010 admin

The big web infrastructure makeover, which includes the rise of cloud computing, has been an area of much focus for us. From our coverage of the industry to our industry-leading Structure conference, we have been trying to cover what our dear friend and well-known author Nick Carr calls – the big shift.

Over past few months, there has been a substantial interest in web infrastructure and cloud computing. It means it’s time for us to build a dedicated space for the sector, and for that purpose we are launching The Structure Blog, which will follow the industry closely. It resides at Cloud.GigaOM.Com. (As GigaOM reader, nothing really changes for you.)

On the blog, we’re not only covering some of the daily developments in the industry, we’re also looking to profile people behind many of these companies, as well as look deeply into how startups can use cloud computing to their benefit. As part of this effort, we have invited folks like Jon Boutelle, chief technology officer of SlideShare, to share the lessons learned from building a startup by using Amazon’s Web Services.

We will also be featuring videos and presentations on this blog. I recommend you watch this video of Amazon CTO Werner Vogels giving a State of the Cloud speech at our conference. We’ll be surfacing more videos from our conference(s), along with new videos we continue to record in our studio. You can subscribe just to the Structure Blog feed, or get all the articles as part of the full GigaOM feed. All story headlines will be sent to you via the GigaOM Twitter account if that’s how you like to get your GigaOM fix. Of course, you can follow us on Twitter @StructureBlog.

I look forward to working closely with you!



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Google AllNew, Blog, Meet, Structure

Meet The 2600hz Project, The New Sound of Open Source Telephony

No comments August 3rd, 2010 admin

Some of the core developers behind FreePBX, a well known open-source phone system have teamed up and started The 2600hz Project, a commercial entity that is promoting a collection of open-source telephony applications and libraries. Today, they are releasing blue.box, a reworked version of open source FreePBX. The new venture is co-founded by Darren Schreiber and is also a subsidiary of newly formed VoIP Inc. The 2600hz Project also received $ 250,000 in funding from an unnamed investor.

2600 Hz is the frequency that the phone companies used back in the day and was hacked by those seeking to make free long distance phone calls. In order to do so, one needed a device that generate the 2600 Hz tone and it was called the blue box. The new venture is an homage to that heritage.

From what I understand, the new company has formed after some disagreements within the FreePBX developers and the original backers of the project. FreePBX is a graphical user interface that sits on top of open-source telephony software such as Asterisk. FreePBX was promoted by Bandwidth.com.

Apparently the disagreements emerged when the forthcoming FreePBX v3 project announced support for FreeSwitch, a competitor to Asterisk. FreePBX was formerly known as Asterisk Management Portal. Frustrated by the pace of development and lack of resources, some of the core developers of the FreePBX, especially those working on the new version of the software decided to break away from Bandwidth.com’s version of FreePBX. In an email, Schreiber outlined:

In 2010, I got together with the core developers of the FreePBX v3 project and we collectively decided we would be better served operating independently. Together, we launched the 2600hz project – a collection of open-source Telephony Applications and Libraries that we expect to grow dramatically over the coming months. The project is designed to be an open-source foundation, focusing specifically on telephony projects. We are even exploring ideas around legal status as a non-profit foundation.

Tomorrow, we will release the first project under the 2600hz umbrella. Our first release will be blue.box – a significantly reworked version of FreePBX v3. For the record, this is now an independent project that has not been endorsed nor sponsored by bandwidth.com. Some of the original code from the FreePBX v3 project is still there, but much of it has been replaced. Bandwidth.com still owns the FreePBX name, but FreePBX v3 never made it out of beta. We expect to incrementally improve (and effectively replace) the entire stack, at which point we will transfer rights of the code to the open-source foundation/organization.

The blue.box is essentially a free, open-source system works with any SIP-compliant device or service, including desk and mobile phones, and supports a multitude of features such as auto-configuring of phone services, unlimited free conference calling and auto-attendants. It has been released under the Mozilla Public License. “We still hope to utilize, promote and work with Bandwidth.com, as they have one of the largest nationwide telephony networks out there,” Schreiber said.



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GigaOM

Google 2600hz, Meet, Open, Project, Sound, Source, Telephony

Meet Big Data equivalent of the LAMP Stack

No comments August 1st, 2010 admin

Many Fortune 500 and mid-size enterprises are funding Hadoop test/dev projects for Big Data analytics, but question how to integrate Hadoop into their standard enterprise architecture. For example, Joe Cunningham, head of technology strategy and innovation at credit card giant Visa, told the audience at last year’s Hadoop World that he would like to see Hadoop evolve from an alpha/beta environment into mainstream use for transaction analysis, but has concerns about integration and operations management.

What’s been missing for Big Data analytics has been a LAMP (Linux, Apache HTTP Server, MySQL and PHP) equivalent. Fortunately, there’s an emerging LAMP-like stack for Big Data aggregation, processing and analytics that includes:

  • Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS) for storage
  • MapReduce for distributed processing of large data sets on compute clusters
  • HBase for fast read/write access to tabular data
  • Hive for SQL-like queries on large data sets as well as a columnar storage layout using RCFile
  • Flume for log file and streaming data collection, along with Sqoop for database imports
  • JDBC and ODBC drivers to allow tools written for relational databases to access data stored in Hive
  • Hue for user interfaces
  • Pig for dataflow and parallel computations
  • Oozie for workflow
  • Avro for serialization
  • Zookeeper for coordinated service for distributed applications

While that’s still a lot of moving parts for an enterprise to install and manage, we’re almost to a point where there’s an end-to-end “hello world” for analytical data management. If you download Cloudera’s CDH3b2, you can import data with Flume, write it into HDFS, and then run queries using Cloudera’s Beeswax Hive user interface.

With the benefit of this emerging analytical platform, data science is becoming more integral to businesses, and less a quirky, separate function. As an industry, we’ve come a long way since, industry visionary Jim Gray was famously thrown out of the IBM Scientific Center in Los Angeles for failure to adhere to IBM’s dress code.

Adobe’s  infrastructure services team has scaled HBase implementations to handle several billion records with access times under 50 milliseconds. Their “Hstack” integrates HDFS, HBase and Zookeeper with a Puppet configuration management tool. Adobe can now automatically deploy a complete analytical data stack across a cluster.

Working with Hive, Facebook created a web-based tool, HiPal, that enables non-engineers to run queries on large data sets, view reports, and test hypotheses using familiar web browser interfaces.

For Hadoop to realize its potential for widespread enterprise adoption, it needs to be as easy to install and use as Lotus 1-2-3 or its successor Microsoft Excel. When Lotus introduced 1-2-3 in 1983, they chose the name to represent the tight integration of three capabilities: a spreadsheet, charting/graphing and simple database operations. As a high school student, I used it to manage the reseller database for a storage startup, Maynard Electronics. Even as a 15 year old, I found Lotus 1-2-3 easy to use. More recently, with Microsoft Excel 2010 and SQL Server 2008 R2, I can click on Excel ribbon buttons to load and prepare PowerPivot data, create charts and graphs using out-of-the-box templates, and publish on SharePoint for collaboration with colleagues.

The Fourth Paradigm quotes Jim Gray as saying “We have to do better producing tools to support the whole research cycle – from data capture and data curation to data analysis and data visualization.” As the Hadoop data stack becomes more LAMP-like, we get closer to realizing Jim’s vision and giving enterprises an end-to-end analytics platform to unlock the power of their Big Data with the ease of use of a Lotus 1-2-3 or Microsoft Excel spreadsheet.

Brett Sheppard is an executive director at Zettaforce.

Related Post from GigaOM PRO (Sub Required): The Incredible, Growing, Commercial Hadoop Market



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Google data, equivalent, LAMP, Meet, Stack
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