http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=hzPEPfJHfKU
Saturday, 24 September 2011
Social Media FB lets you know who 'unfriended' you
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg shows off the new Timeline as he delivers a keynote address during the Facebook f8 conference on September 22, 2011 in San Francisco, California. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg kicked off the conference introducing a Timeline feature to the popular social network.
A quirk in Facebook's latest redesign has now made it easy for the users to see who has removed them from their friend list. Previously, the only way to tell someone had 'unfriended' you were to go to their page and notice that you have lost access to their personal details. But the social networking giant's newly introduced Timeline, that shows all activities of a user in chronological order, enables users to see which friend 'unfriended' them, Fox News reports.
A quirk in Facebook's latest redesign has now made it easy for the users to see who has removed them from their friend list. Previously, the only way to tell someone had 'unfriended' you were to go to their page and notice that you have lost access to their personal details. But
According to the technology blog Buzz Feed, the new design doesn't go live until September 29th, but people have figured out a simple means for enabling the beta version.
Step-by-step guides have popped on various blog showing how to get the timeline up and running in just a few minutes, the report said.
According to the report, the timeline is easily enabled, and discovering a list revealing who has decided to de-friended you can be easily uncovered in few minutes.Tuesday, 20 September 2011
iON is more than a cloud software
V.Ramaswamy, Global Head iON, TCS explains how iON can be useful for SMB players in NCR region
iON is considered as a latest in scalable cloud computing technology in the 3rd generation service model to SMBs. Can you please elaborate ?
One may call it 3rd general not merely for it is on cloud. iON is more than just cloud software. It started with what we call IT as a Service, where entire computing need from hardware to specialized software it provided as a single service.
Our services are offered in six layers. Bottom most is hardware, even including specialized devices like point of sale required in retail. We then integrate those into a network service, which may stretch across many sites. On top of these stand a set of utility and collaboration software like website hosting, messaging & document management.
As we move upward from here, we have a set of business applications. First comes the horizontal business applications needed in all sectors – like finance and accounting, payroll and CRM. Then we provide the ERP applications made to each sector we cater to – Manufacturing, Education, Retail and Wellness. Above these applications are a host of platforms and a business reporting engine. Now, all these come integrated. To the customer, it is one piece of multi-function software sharing common data.
What is iON's configuration ? What is the uniqueness about it ?
Configuration is the very building block in cloud solutions. Let me explain how.
Let us look back into how iON evolved. Firstly, we consciously adopted the perpetual beta way to enhance applications – which means we don’t roll out versions or upgrades. Rather, the software is enhanced over the live instance. It is done by developing snippets of code and transferring it to the live software. To the user, it is a new feature added without any noticeable upgrade and data migration. Now, one could imagine that this methodology requires a different sort of architecture.
The other aspect of iON is that the applications were initially built for few chosen customers, who represent our target sectors well. This helped us in defining software requirements best suitable for the vertical and the SME. We also gained good amount of best practices knowledge from the initial customers. Now, the key factor in this approach was translating custom customer requirements into configurable parameters. This then makes iON change functionally for every new customer without changing the code. A customer gets his share of uniqueness on standard software. For instance, in manufacturing, a firm may have the policy to ship only against a prerecorded order, while another firm may ship in batches. Options like these are what we call configurations. iON is built on these.
What are the various security measures undertaken for SMBs so far as iON is concerned?
We have taken number of measures to ensure that iON is highly secure and clients are comfortable trusting us with their sensitive data. The multi-tenant platform of iON ensures that data of each SMB is stored in isolation and is secure from other customers. Access is being provided by ‘Single Sigh On’ and role based allocation, which provides high level of user security. We also have a mirror data centre at remote location to instantly take over in case of natural disasters.
How secure is cloud from attacks?
Arguable there are technical vulnerabilities is all forms of computing. For instance, insider pilferage data are often the most common form of security breaches in traditional form of computing. SMEs are most susceptible to this since they may not have sophisticated access management processes in their firm. People may find cloud more secure from that point of view, especially when data us guarded by a competent system and off-premise. At iON we have taken several measures. Our datacenter security is guided by the TCS policies that have managed sensitive datacenters for global businesses, from banking to healthcare. Our datacenters are planted with intrusion detection systems that avert threats. I am sure this is more secured than any on premise software.
People say that a cloud is the future - but will it also not take large storage space, and just shift the onus of storage from the client to the software companies?
It is true that the storage cost if shifted to the cloud provider. But then, it does not cost as much to the provider. Cloud storage works on virtualized and multi-tenant systems, which means idle capacity is shared dynamically across users. It cuts down average storage per user dramatically. Such technologies are highly secured by putting logical partitions to isolated one user’s data from another, while they reside in common physical capacities. Cloud changes the economics of storage in way that cost is reduced and clients pay less for IT.
According to a recent report, Indian SMBs and SMEs are quite apprehensive about cloud computing. What is your opinion about it ? How can we make more people aware of the cloud?
Cloud is a natural phase in computing, and people will choose it by convenience. The awareness is growing is rapid pace. It is no more a matter curiosity. The perception too is changing rapidly. For example, two years back we faced growing questions about data security. Today, we see many customers finding data safer on cloud if by a reliable provider.
What is the specific reason for launching iON for SMBs from NCR region?
There are three reasons. The most obvious one is that it is amongst the top commercial markets in the country. Secondly, some of the niche industries in the region are the segments where iON has significant competency. For instance, the automotive industries or retail companies here would find iON quite friendly and powerful. I may talk about education institutions is NCR where we already have sizeable presence. Finally, the launch was overdue when we found that many of the initial customers who helped us build iON were from this region. We just needed to tell that we are committed for this region.
More on iON is more than a cloud software
Sunday, 18 September 2011
- While many consumers are worried about the privacy implications of facial-recognition technology, for undercover law-enforcement officials, tools like Facebook could be deadly. In many police operations, officers immerse themselves in communities for months and even years. If a simple search reveals an officer’s identity, careful work and lives could be lost.
At the Security 2011 Conference in Sydney, Australian Federal Police commissioner Mick Keelty warned of the dangers of facial recognition to law-enforcement officials. In a survey of Australian Federal Police recruits and New South Wales Police recruits, Keelty found that nearly everyone under 26 had uploaded a personal photo to the Internet. Eighty-five percent of the recruits use a major social-networking site, and nearly half of them use social-networking tools daily. Facebook was the most popular among recruits, with Twitter a close second.
This combination of posted photos and the use of social networks with facial recognition presents a potential problem. According to Keelty, the problem is worsened by the fact that many young people now upload their photos to the Internet. If a teenager eventually decides to become a police officer, old photographs could reveal his or her identity.
“It's too late because once it's uploaded, it's there forever," said Keelty. "If you have someone in the service who is trying to remain anonymous for whatever reason, it is still possible through other relationships to find them." For example, even if police officers have never put their own images online, it’s likely that they have appeared in someone else’s albums. Up to 85 percent of those surveyed have had their picture uploaded by someone else.
With facial recognition and other forms of biometric identification becoming more common, these types of technology will put various other groups, such as crime witnesses, at increasing risks. While stricter privacy and information settings might help, new methods of protecting these groups will be needed as social networking continues to grow.
Social Networks Put Police Officers in Danger
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