Archive for the ‘Technology Related Articles’ Category

The rise of cloud computing

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Question: What is Cloud Computing? Answer: It’s the methodology of processing something over many machines spread across a network.

Boyan Tsolov
Sun

STOP, STOP, BLOCK, TELL.

Cloud Computing is the methodology of processing something over many machines spread across a network. The idea is that you ‘outsource’ the processing that your computer would normally do itself to another computer(s) on a network.

You do not necessarily know where this computer resides in the world or how many computers are being used. That is why it is called a ‘cloud.’

In short, the processing is outsourced to a third party and the result is returned to you.

Out of this “service” comes three ways to provide cloud computing:

SaaS: Software as a service

1 In this type of computing, the software is offered online

through a browser. It is hosted on the provider’s servers. The users do not need to install the software on their machines. The provider manages the servers that host the software, they update the software at their convenience and they fix bugs on it directly.

PaaS: Platform as a service:

2 In this type of computing, the provider has exposed a means for writing applications on their servers. This is possible because the third party company has provided their own APIs (Application Programming Interface) for you to program with. When the developer programs their components, these components then run on the servers, in the cloud. The developers don’t need to worry about hosting them on a website; the provider takes care of that.

IaaS: Infrastructure as a service

3 In this case, companies provide a means for their users to use an entire computer ‘in the cloud’ as if it is in your office. This means that you do not need to buy new machines and set them up with a network in your office. You can ‘create’ a new machine through the provider and then log into it using common software like remote desktop. If you feel that you need more machines to run your website, you can add more at the click of a button.

Benefits

– Maintenance: The provider maintains the computers, meaning the users need not know anything about computers–they just need a connection to the internet.

– Security: The providers are responsible for this, instead of the users if the software/website was on their own machines.

– Reliability: When something is in the cloud, it is usually very reliable in terms of up-time.

– Scalability: You can grow the computing power at an instant.

– Location: As you add more computing power, it can appear anywhere in the world. However, ideally you would like the location to be as close to you as possible.

– Cost: Since you are paying per machine or per resource (e. g. per CPU, per GB used, per software feature) it is cheaper to afford as much computing power as you need. Small businesses can use this to get started because they might not have money to buy big servers to place in their office from the get-go.

Drawbacks

– Data privacy: The provider has all of your data on their servers.

A hacker can get to it.

The company might go bankrupt.

Negligence on their part can lose your data.

You have less control of the software and the data.

– Security: Just as it is a pro because you don’t have to worry about it, if the provider is not careful they might expose a lot of your data.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Protecting yourself against the web

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Cassandra Alexopoulos
Sun

HELP KIDS BE SAFE

– Question: When you’re shopping online for the perfect Father’s Day gift, is your credit card information safe? When you’re accepting a friend invitation on Facebook from a person you’ve never heard of, are your personal data and pictures secure?

– Answer: Not necessarily. In fact, all it takes is one weak link for your information to be used or made public.

SHOWCASE

Cyber security battles against a spectrum of issues, both minor and severe, that we should all be aware of. Cyber security is breached when we become victims of something life-changing like identity theft. Or, we can be annoyed and inconvenienced by receiving spam mail every 15 minutes, even humiliated if an embarrassing video or photo has leaked.

“This is dangerous because the Internet is becoming less and less anonymous, meaning we are becoming accountable for what we say and post,” says Ashley Huffman, online communications manager at Kiwi Commons, creators of videos and editorials to build a line of communication between youths and adults when discussing Internet safety.

Bad publicity

The sad truth is that we are so comfortable with posting personal information for social and entertainment purposes, we remain unaware of the fundamentals of the Internet-that once it’s out there, it’s out there for good.

Be careful of the nature of photos you post on your social networking sites. Risky and embarrassing photos include those that contain alcohol or a person who is clearly under the influence of alcohol, provocative poses, and even TIP 3

wardrobe malfunctions!

Buyer beware

Online shopping has become a widespread activity with many obvious benefits: lower prices, more variety, and, best of all, convenience. However, if you’ve found that iPad for half the retail price on an unknown website, your information and money are both at risk. Chances are if it seems too good to be true, it probably is.

Don’t be afraid to take a few minutes and read reviews that users have posted on online shopping sites. These will usually help you determine the legitimacy of the site.

This isn’t to say that online shopping, along with creating a Facebook account or sending pictures to your friends via e-mail, can’t ever be safe. The main thing to remember is: trusted friends only. Shop with famous and reputable websites, accept friend invitations from people you recognize, and open e-mails from e-mail hosting services you are familiar with.

Continue to enjoy the Internet for all that it has to offer, but don’t ignore those red flags.

– – –

FACTS

– Court orders to remove embarrassing photos from the Internet do not mean that the photos won;t still be circulating the web remaining accessible to all, including your family members and current or future employers.

– Identity theft can occur by obtaining information as simple as your full name and location. Your information could be used for obtaining passports, accessing the funds in your bank account, and applying for new credit cards.

– Someone has their identity stolen every four seconds in the United States and affects thousands every year in Canada.

Read more on the web:

www.kiwicommons.com

www.media-awareness.ca

www.safeonlineoutreach.com

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

How to talk to your kids about internet safety

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Cassandra Alexopoulos
Sun

We’ve come a long way since 60s’ parenting scare tactic “It’s 10:00 pm. Do you know where your children are?”

The reality is that you’re probably quite trusting of your children if they have their own computer with the ability to post videos on YouTube or photos of the party they attended Saturday night on Facebook.

While the Internet has its obvious benefits of being educational and entertaining, there are also a lot of troublesome situations your children could encounter online.

Firstly, remind your children that anything they put up on the Internet is public and could have serious consequences in the near and far future, potentially costing them their dream job or an athletic sponsorship.

Ashley Huffman of Kiwi Commons says, “More and more employers are using social media profiles as part of their decision process when hiring (sites like Facebook, Myspace, Linkedin).” These sites are also a convenient gateway for online predators to communicate with children under a pseudonym.

Cyber bullying

Another online concern is cyber bullying. Children have the opportunity to anonymously embarrass or threaten a classmate on the Internet. If you find out that your child is a victim of a cyber bully, tell him or her to keep a record of everything that was said, because it could be helpful when the child feels comfortable enough to speak to an adult about it.

Parents should also ensure that they “don’t overreact if their children have a negative experience online (research has shown that youth often don’t report being the victims of cyber bullying because they’re afraid their parents will cut off their Internet access),” says Matthew Johnson, media education specialist at Media Awareness Network.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Phishing, pharming and bots

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Sun

MALWARE

“Lions and tigers and bears–oh my!” Dorothy and her companions chant to ward off their fears in The Wizard of Oz. Internet users might try, “Trojans and rootkits and bots!”

Dorothy’s fears were mostly imaginary, but the threats online are all too real–and growing. Malware, malicious software, has become a leading online scourge, evolving in a short decade from so-called worms and viruses conceived principally to vandalize, to sophisticated spyware and crimeware designed to steal– money, information and identities.

Kaspersky Lab, a security firm specializing in combating malware, collected nearly 34 million malicious programs by year-end of 2009–including some 15 million each in 2008 and 2009. In its Security Bulletin 2009, the company says “programs became significantly more complex in 2009 and targeted new platforms such as mobile operating systems.”

Symantec, a leading online security company, says on its web site, “The threat landscape once dominated by the worms and viruses unleashed by irresponsible hackers is now ruled by a new breed of cybercriminals.”

Malware has long been delivered hiding inside trojans–innocent-appearing emails or software. In an irony only a cyber criminal could appreciate, 2009 saw big increases in rogue antivirus software used as malware delivery vehicles, according to Kaspersky. Once launched, rootkit programs keep the invasive software concealed.

Phishing is a favorite technique

Emails that use fear or enticement to encourage recipients to click on a link or visit a web site that steals or corrupts their data. Pharming programs are even more insidious–they redirect unsuspecting users to fraudulent web sites, even if the user types in a correct URL. The bad guy’s goal is installation of spyware on your computer or network–programs that log your keystrokes, steal usernames and passwords, or enable access of your bank or credit card accounts.

Yet another set of applications can turn your computer into a zombie or bot–essentially a dedicated slave used by cyber criminals to launch anonymous spam assaults or distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks against the online presence of a company, organization or entire nation. Estonia, Georgia, South Korea and the United States have been targets of DDoS attacks in recent years.

The complexity and sophistication of cyber crime grows quickly, but–fortunately–some of the best defenses remain straightforward and based in common sense. Don’t open (and do delete) unsolicited emails. Don’t click on unfamiliar links, even if sent by someone you know (their computer could be being used as a bot). Don’t download software from a strange web site (no matter how enticing the deal)! Scan all emails and files with a recognized antivirus security program. Keep all security patches up-to-date.

Online threats are real. You need more than a catchy chant to protect yourself.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

SanDisk CEO Eli Harari proves he’s no flash in the pan

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Jon Swartz
USA Today

“Ideas are a dime a dozen,” Sandisk CEO Eli Harari says. “It’s what you do with a great idea, to create big markets, that matters.” – Sandisk

LOS ANGELES — At 43, Eli Harari was at a career crossroads — some might argue, nadir.

He was freshly ousted from Waferscale Integration, the computer-memory start-up he’d founded three years earlier, after a dispute with the board over strategy and direction. “It was an unmitigated disaster. I was an also-ran,” says Harari, now 65.

That’s hardly the self-assessment you’d expect from a CEO who nurtured his next start-up —SanDisk into a $3.6 billion enterprise whose storage devices are used in thousands of products from iPods to digital cameras and smartphones. Along the way, he helped redefine an entire product category — flash memory — that fomented the digital photography revolution.

On a cool June morning here, he’s introduced as one of the most successful executives in the world at The Israel Conference. Harari is a featured speaker at the conference, which brings together American companies looking for sources of technological innovation and Israeli companies looking for partnerships and greater knowledge of global markets.

“Now, as always, is the best of times to start your company,” Harari tells the audience. Highlighting his point, he explains what is inscribed on SanDisk’s business plan. It’s a quote from Jewish religious leader Hillel: “And if not now, when?”

Harari used his disappointing experience at Waferscale as entrepreneurial fuel, striking out on his own with SanDisk and creating the multibillion-dollar flash-memory industry from scratch. He has navigated recessions and reinvented the company repeatedly during his 22-year tenure. The Israeli immigrant is a prototypical Silicon Valley pioneer, combining expertise in physics, marketing moxie and persistence. What sets him apart is his unassuming nature.

“It’s amazing what you can achieve if you don’t mind that somebody else gets the credit,” he says.

Harari is one of a handful of people in Silicon Valley still in charge of the company they founded. He declined to comment on his long-term plans at SanDisk, but he says constant change has kept him at the company since Ronald Reagan was president.

“As a physicist, I love (the concept) that the pace of change is accelerating — often exponentially,” he says.

“I think I’m probably the least-stressed person here,” he says. “Not because I’m a slave driver, but because I want balance in my life.”

Harari has thrived in a cutthroat industry while more-famous peers pursued other goals, such as the California governorship (former eBay CEO Meg Whitman) and philanthropy (former Microsoft CEO Bill Gates); were jettisoned (Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz); or had extended hiatuses (Apple CEO Steve Jobs).

“He’s low-key, a gentleman,” says Randhir Thakur, a former SanDisk executive who is now at Applied Materials. “Eli is comfortable in his own skin.”

Humble origins

Exhibit A of Harari’s tireless persistence is SanDisk, which he helped nurse from a 2,000-square-foot office in Santa Clara, Calif., to a global operation of 3,300 employees in eight countries.

Last year, SanDisk was tops in the flash-memory-card market, with $2.8 billion in revenue, good for 37% market share, according to market researcher Gartner. Toshiba was second, with $1 billion, or 14%. (Samsung had 38% market share for the larger-flash-memory market, compared with SanDisk’s 34%, according to investment bank Deutsche Bank.)

Harari’s contributions to technology — he holds more than 100 U.S. and international patents in non-volatile semiconductor devices — landed him a job at Intel. But Intel’s tepid interest in flash prompted Harari to start Waferscale and, three years later, SanDisk. (Waferscale was sold to semiconductor company STMicroelectronics in 2000.)

He’s also a tinkerer who has dabbled in prototypes for new fishing rods, flea collars and screwdrivers. If not for his wife, Britt, Eli says, he might have ended up pursuing the next pocket fisherman gadget instead of SanDisk.

“Ideas are a dime a dozen,” Harari says, repeating a favorite line of his. “It’s what you do with a great idea, to create big markets, that matters.”

Harari’s greatest inspiration — for the founding of SanDisk in 1988 — was hatched with Sanjay Mehrotra, a former Intel colleague of Harari’s, and Jack Yuan, a Hughes Microelectronics veteran.

The trio struck upon the idea during meetings in Silicon Valley over several months. But when they came up with the notion of new flash-memory chips as a small, rugged, low-power alternative to hard disk drives, some investors balked.

Still, with early funding from venture capitalists, AT&T and Western Digital, SanDisk developed its first 4-megabyte flash chips and outbid Intel and Texas Instruments to nab IBM as its first customer. By 1995, SanDisk was working with Kodak, Polaroid and Canon to develop specifications for a succession of removable flash-card standards.

SanDisk has survived five economic downturns and steadily grabbed market share.

“We thrive on chaos,” Harari says. “Mobile is the new wave, yet we started a team called emerging markets for mobile seven years ago.”

Harari’s conviction was underscored when he rejected rival Samsung’s $5.85 billion hostile takeover bid in 2008 as too low, prompting flak from SanDisk shareholders. “He believed flash has huge potential, and he was determined to see his vision through,” says Kevin Cassidy, an analyst at investment bank Thomas Weisel.

‘Extended family’

Flash storage may be “disruptive technology” — as Harari likes to say — but one would be hard-pressed to find a more accommodating CEO. Possessing a warm smile, Harari is SanDisk’s kindly uncle, engendering fierce loyalty. “Our motto is ‘Be nice,’ ” the soft-spoken Harari says. “But we never, ever give up.”

“The company is his extended family. He loves it, and you see it,” says SanDisk general counsel Jim Brelsford, noting the company’s low turnover rate, especially among engineers.

At an all-hands meeting in late April, Harari hugged and slapped the backs of employees celebrating 10-, 15- and 20-year anniversaries. “If you are doing well, Eli will hug you,” Thakur says.

Such compassion showed after Brelsford’s college-age niece, Christa Brelsford, was severely injured during the Haitian earthquake. (She is now recuperating.)

Harari, who was overseas on an important business trip, saw a TV report on Brelsford — whom he had never met — and wrote her a heartfelt note.

The family vibe was on further display this month at SanDisk’s 11th annual international day, a food-and-music festival that celebrates the heritage of its workers, who hail from 36 countries.

Sometimes, the loyalty runs too deep. Harari shakes his head recalling a recent hospital visit to see a longtime engineer battling a brain tumor. The engineer wanted a laptop in order to do some work, which Harari quickly scotched.

“It blew me away,” Harari says.

While “most guys are over the hill” at his age, as Harari jokes, he’s driven by anticipating the future. Sort of like a Hall of Fame hockey player who had an uncanny ability to anticipate the flow of a game.

“We do what Wayne Gretzsky used to do: We skate to a spot before the puck gets there,” he says.

In a 1999 presentation to investors, Harari accurately predicted that the market for flash memory would be as big as that for hard disk drives. “I was convinced the mobile market was the (computing) platform for the coming decade,” he says now.

The prediction looks good today. Total flash sales were roughly $20 billion last year, and industry analysts are forecasting more than 30% annual growth over the next few years, says the Semiconductor Industry Association. Sales of hard disk drives, by comparison, were $30 billion in 2009 but are growing just 10% annually.

Thinking in the air

Harari, who does a fair bit of traveling to SanDisk’s operations worldwide, does most of his best thinking on overseas flights. On such excursions, he’s conjured new flash-memory-cell architecture and production innovations, Mehrotra says.

“He is a believer in his vision, his principles,” says Harari’s longtime friend, Levy Gerzberg, CEO of Zoran, a developer of chips for DVD players and cameras. “He never gives up and is not afraid to take risks,” he says. “You have to, to become an industry leader.”

Gerzberg, who founded Zoran in 1983, has known Harari as long as anyone: 30 years. They met when Gerzberg was doing research at Stanford in the integrated-circuit laboratory. Harari was working at Hughes at the time.

They have much in common. Both were born in Israel in 1945 and moved to the U.S. to complete their academic studies. Doting grandfathers, they frequently travel to their homeland on business, where they share laughs and reflect on “how we grew from nothing to (building multimillion-dollar) companies,” Gerzberg says.

“You never know what life will deal you,” he says.

Copyright 2010 USA TODAY

A hand-held TV studio

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Man’s invention was inspired by burning pants, and now the market is ‘kind of exploding’

Gillian Shaw
Sun

VeriCorder Technology president and CEO Gary Symons shows his company’s software that allows the iPhone to be used for electronic news gathering, supplanting more traditional, heavy and expensive equipment. CHRIS STANFORD/ SPECIAL TO THE VANCOUVER SUN

Gary Symons’s launch as a tech entrepreneur probably dates back to the day his pants caught fire.

Symons, then a mobile journalist at a time when the term hardly existed, was covering a forest fire in the Interior.

Laden down with a laptop, a video camera and all the paraphernalia necessary to file a broadcast story, Symons caught a strap on a tree and fell over backwards, tumbling 20 metres down the hill.

His equipment scattered.

As he scrambled among the burning underbrush to collect his lost gear, his pants caught fire.

“That was my eureka day,” said Symons. “I learned, one, that I needed fireproof pants and, two, I needed a better mobile kit.”

It was the latter that spurred the creation of VeriCorder Technology Inc., a Kelowna-based startup that has been working for two years on the development of a system that can put a TV studio in the palm of your hand.

While VeriCorder has put out some iPhone apps, it was the release in May of MIMS (Mobile Integration Management System) AutoMagic that tipped this tiny company onto the world stage. The system allows media organizations to create, collect and broadcast video content from mobile sources anywhere in the world.

A media outlet could have its own reporters edit and file on-the-spot video stories or it could tap into Veri-Corder’s user base to find freelancers and citizen journalists for video content. The users’ database is due to go online this fall.

“Let’s say a plane goes down somewhere in the B.C. Interior, say Williams Lake,” said Symons. “You at The Sun would be able to look at a map or at a listing and see that there are four people with 1st Video [app] on their iPhones or Android phones who are close to the crash.

“You could contract with them to take a video.”

Rather than complicated passwords and formulas for feeding the video to a newsroom system, VeriCorder’s software delivers an eight-digit code for the videographer at the other end.

“You approve them and five seconds later they are integrated into your newsroom system,” said Symons. VeriCorder’s system, which also allows for live streaming video, launched to pent-up demand.

“When we released that around May 1, that’s when things went nuts,” said Symons, who has just hired the 16th employee for the fledgling company that had six people this time last year. And he’s off to Australia, where a media company has engaged Veri-Corder to deliver its system across its print and web media properties.

“The market is kind of exploding,” said Symons.

The company’s 1st Video app, for iPhones and Android phones, puts audio and video editing capabilities into smartphones and that output can be linked straight to a newsroom or broadcast centre, using VeriCorder’s customized corporate software.

“We’re a systems company, not an app company,” he said.

The arrival of Apple’s iPhone 4 with high-definition video is also proving a timely boost for the company that raised an initial $1 million in private placements, another $250,000 from the National Research Council’s Industrial Research Assistance Program, $50,000 for Android porting work so the mobile app would work on Android phones and $1 million through B.C.’s Southern Interior Development Initiative Trust.

As a former broadcast and print journalist (he was once a freelance contributor to The Vancouver Sun among other gigs), Symons is acutely aware of the pressure on traditional journalism outlets to deliver up-to-the-minute news.

“There are now 400 million people in the world putting video to the Web on a regular basis, everyone from You-Tube to individuals are monetizing that,” said Symons. “The reason I got into this business a couple of years ago was that I knew unless newspapers and media chains could lower the cost of production to the same as that of individual bloggers, they cannot win that race.”

While mobile journalism is Veri-Corder’s initial focus for its technology, the system has been picked up by universities and other corporate users, like the real estate company that is plugging into the mobile system to deliver instant video content for potential buyers.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Ford SYNC, Stay connected while keeping your hands on the wheel

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Melissa Guillergan
Sun

The Ford SYNC allows you to place or receive a call, or request a song, with the touch of a button on the steering wheel.

The Ford SYNC system is improving the conversation you have with your car.

For those looking for an integrated in-car communications and infotainment system, the next generation of the award-winning SYNC is now new and improved.

Its design is sleek, clean and integrates nicely into the interior. Smartphones connect to it with ease using the phone’s Bluetooth. An option for downloading the address book enables identification of incoming calls on the screen by full name, not just by phone number.

Also, iPod connectivity is simple with a dedicated AUX connection located in the centre console.

“With SYNC you can place or receive a call, or request a song from your digital media player with the touch of a button on your steering wheel and simple voice commands,” said Genevieve Auclair from Ford of Canada.

“Not only is it easy but, most importantly, it helps to keep your hands on the wheel and your eyes on the road.”

Answering an incoming call using the steering wheel controls is a great hands-free feature.

One-word voice commands allow you to easily make calls as well.

Features such as viewing call logs, placing a call on hold and browsing your phone book are all possible.

Another great hands-free feature is the SYNC’s ability to read incoming text messages to you. It even translates popular text message phrases like “LOL” and :). Text to voice has long been a popular application on BlackBerrys and iPhones. It is great to see it as a feature built into a car’s communication system.

The built-in satellite radio is perfect for music lovers.

“We are thrilled to offer new Ford owners SIRIUS Satellite Radio, which is a standard feature in most of our vehicles, along with a six-month subscription. This feature allows our customers to surf up to 120 channels including 100 per cent commercial-free music, plus, the best sports, news, talk and entertainment across Canada,” said Gonzalo Contreras from Ford of Canada.

If an incoming call is answered while listening to either SIRIUS or an MP3/CD, the music automatically turns off and then resumes immediately once the call ends. Specific tracks can be selected through voice commands, such as “Play [Artist]” or “Play [Song Title].” Music through an iPod or MP3 player can also be selected through the steering wheel controls.

Overall, the best feature is SYNC’s ease of use in the integration of smartphones and iPods.

The upgraded version, launched just this year, is great for those looking for a complete in-car communications system that allows you to do activities safely that are normally impossible to do hands-free. So go ahead and talk to your Mustang, even more than you already do.

For more information, visit www.FordVehicles.com/SYNC.

Melissa Guillergan works for the Laura Ballance Media Group and loves looking for those Missing Parts that manufacturers fail to install in your ride. [email protected]

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

BC Hydro new “Smart” Electricity meters can turn your lights on & off remotely

Friday, June 18th, 2010

$930-million program upgrades B.C. power grid and offers users options like turning off lights remotely via a laptop or web-enabled phone

Scott Simpson
Sun

Fiona Taylor, BC Hydro smart metering and infrastructure acting director, holds a new smart meter (left) and an old meter. The new system will allow Hydro to supply power at a level very close to actual demand. Photograph by: Bill Keay, PNG, Vancouver Sun

A new in-home program that will show household power usage and other information. Photograph by: Bill Keay, PNG, Vancouver Sun

Photograph by: Bill Keay, PNG, Vancouver Sun

BC Hydro is making room for both technophiles and technophobes on the $930-million smart meter network it will introduce in 2012.

Hydro expects to recoup all of its investment within about eight years — and then net about $500 million in subsequent savings — even if its 1.8 million customers in British Columbia don’t adopt the suite of new, interactive features that the high-tech electricity meters can provide.

About 150 jurisdictions worldwide are adopting the technology, which represents the first significant upgrade of meter technology since the 1950s — “since we had rotary phones,” according to Hydro smart metering and infrastructure acting director Fiona Taylor.

“It really is a technology-rich infrastructure initiative that is part of a whole program to modernize the grid,” Taylor said Thursday during a tour of Hydro’s smart meter research and development facility in Burnaby.

“We’ve designed it in a way that is very focused on customer choice and control. It has an extremely positive business case.”

Adds Cindy Verschoor, communications leader for the program, “It allows us to reach into the system in a way we’ve never been able to before and take advantage of capacity and energy savings that are there — but we haven’t been able to get to [previously], because the system was old.”

Right now, the system runs sort of like a car with no gas gauge — Hydro can make educated guesses about how much electricity its customers are using, but it is obliged, in essence, to keep the system topped up in order to avoid a brownout.

Nor does Hydro find out about a local blackout until a customer phones to tell them about it. And Hydro linemen cannot determine if they’ve restored power until they see someone’s porch light blink back on.

The new system will report that information automatically, and will allow Hydro to supply power at a level very close to actual demand. Hydro expects it will be able to conserve power as a result, saving money that will eventually be passed back to its customers.

“Today’s grid is old, and it’s blind,” Taylor said. “With our project, as more eyes to the system, we have the ability to determine where the power is going, where we are losing it.”

Hydro has been studying a half-dozen different meter designs, but has yet to announce a deal with a manufacturer. There are 25 million smart meters on back order in North America at present.

David Deyagher, solutions architect for the program, said the corporation is still working to determine if a single meter design will suit all of B.C., or if the province’s rugged geography will force a more patchwork approach to keeping all Hydro ratepayers connected.

It takes about five minutes to install a new meter along the side of a home, or in the utility room of an apartment or condo complex. While the meters have digital readouts instead of a series of spinning gears to track electricity consumption, they don’t really look much different from the 20th-century glass-dome devices they will replace.

The meters eliminate the need for meter readers to go house to house collecting data, (an issue that has raised alarm among labour leaders in jurisdictions such as California and British Columbia.)

The devices will have the capacity for wireless communication with Hydro, giving the utility near-instant updates on

Technology architect David Deyagher shows the various consumer devices that can be used with this new system.

electricity consumption — and the capacity for more sophisticated management of electricity supply across a region, even the entire province.

If you’re comfortable with the technology, you’ll be able to add to the functionality of the meter by adding in-home devices — everything from BlackBerry-sized digital readout panels

Today’s grid is old, and it’s blind. With our project, as more eyes to the system, we have the ability to determine where the power is going, where we are losing it.

Fiona Taylor Hydro smart metering

you can Velcro to a wall, to a “smart” clothes dryer or other large appliance that respond to “price signals” from Hydro.

Customers will be able to program the digital readout panel to make animal noises to remind their kids to turn out the lights when they leave their bedrooms.

You’ll be able to turn lights off and on in your home through a new Hydro smart meter web portal you can access from anywhere, via a laptop or phone with web capability.

You’ll also be able to contract with Hydro to put you into a special electricity rate class that charges you so-called “market” prices for electricity — which can significantly rise or fall in a matter of minutes on the North American power trading market in which Hydro is an active participant.

Some jurisdictions, such as Ontario, are forcing all their customers into multi-tiered rate programs that virtually demand sophisticated programming choices and in-home devices to interact with the outdoor meters.

Hydro’s approach is much less aggressive.

You can stay with the existing two-tier rate if you wish, and never give the new system another thought.

If you want to take a more hands-on approach to managing consumption, you will have to buy from a third party — such as a hardware or electronics store — the in-home device that interacts wirelessly on a Wi-Fi bandwidth with the smart meter outside your home.

A recent U.S. smart meter pilot study in the Pacific Northwest found that utility customers who participated in an interactive power management programs cut their power bills by 30 to 40 per cent.

Hydro is estimating savings of between $145 and $450 per year for customers who adopt the technology.                     

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Industry ramps up for surge of interest in 3-D television

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

New 24-hour channel among providers to offer content for ‘immersive’ medium

Steve Makris
Sun

Vision Electronics floor manager Shaq Ahmed shows off a Samsung LED 3-D TV and the required glasses. Sales are surprisingly brisk for the new technology, he says.

There’s no doubt: 3-D TV is spectacular. It has such depth and realism it magically transforms the TV screen into a world you can almost touch.

But before you join the early adopters and head for the stores, be aware there are cost and content issues to consider.

Not only are the televisions coming on stream at premium prices, they require extras such as 3-D glasses (some TVs come with two sets; you’ll need more for family and friends) and a 3-D Blu-ray Disc player.

Nor is there much 3-D material to watch at the moment, but you can expect several dozen Blu-ray movies to be available by the next holiday season.

Discovery Communications, Sony Corp. and Imax Corp. have partnered to produce a 24-hour 3-D channel, and satellite television provider DirecTV is also introducing a 3-D channel this year.

Bell TV’s vice-president of products and residential services Shawn Omstead says 3-D will be more challenging to adopt than HDTV was several years ago. “The TV manufacturers want to make this work with subsidization of content and hardware. It’s a risk for us providers, but we want to be there for the early phase.”

That early phase includes Discovery Channel’s plan to have 4,000 hours of fresh 3-D content available by November.

There is still debate about how to harness the possibilities of the medium. Douglas Berquist, a Calgary-based director and producer, said at the recent National Association of Broadcasters conference in Las Vegas the industry needs a different mindset when shooting 3-D.

“Gone are frequent cuts and fast-paced scenes that told a story for viewers on 2-D shows,” he said. “The eye can’t keep up with fast cuts in 3-D, so we have to think fewer cameras, longer scenes, and let the viewer take in their own personal experience.”

Berquist, whose credits include Death in the Family and The War Bride, thinks good 3-D should give viewers the best seat in the house.

“No surprise, 3-D opera is a big hit in Europe,” he said.

Gaming and sports fans will likely be early 3-D adopters, most experts agree. Sony’s PlayStation 3 will be 3-D upgradeable with game content.

“Gamers don’t mind putting stuff on their heads for that immersive experience,” said LG Electronics Canada marketing team leader Tim Barnes.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Cisco’s Webex – Networking & Video Conferencing are replacing business travel

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

‘Anyone can dial in from any location’

Denise DeVeau
Sun

Software-based Web-conferencing tools won’t leave you stranded when volcanic ash grounds your flight Photograph by: Cisco Canada Handout, Cisco Canada Handout

Roger Pierce, co-founder of BizLaunch, cut his training costs by 75%. That’s impressive, given that a good part of his day-to-day work is coaching small business owners.

He credits Web conferencing with completely turning his company’s business model upside down. “We used to give seminars across North America. Now we give webinars. It’s a lot more convenient and can be delivered any time,” says Mr. Pierce, who also uses the techology for internal collaboration and new-client prospecting.

“We have less than 10 employees and 30 trainers across the country. Before we adopted Web conferencing everything we did was by telephone or face-to-face. Now we can reach more people, anywhere, anytime,” he says.

The latest Web-conferencing technologies are vastly superior to the tools of the past, Mr. Pierce says. “WebEx, for example, really makes it easy to jump on, set up events and send invites and confirmations. Anyone can dial in from any location and join a seminar or conference.”

He estimates that his current subscription costs approximately $1,400 a month for five users — a big reduction from the travel budgets that were once the norm for BizLaunch.

Web conferencing is critical for maintaining communications with key people throughout Europe, the United States and Canada, says Michael Ball, chief executive of Victoria-based GenoLogics, a software developer for pharmaceutical firms. “We use WebEx for internal sales meetings and product updates, as well as with customers for software presentations and training,” he says. “We don’t have to fly around the world.”

Mr. Ball estimates the company uses WebEx solution 15 to 20 times a day. “That can be anything from a conference call, to sharing components on screen and video views. You just sign on with your password and you’re good to go.”

Another advantage of Web conferencing is you can save the session for posterity and email a link to interested parties for later viewing, he says. “The recording feature is great, especially for people who want to go back and replay software or training information.”

It’s really about the collaboration experience, says Todd Madgett, director for small and medium-sized enterprise at Cisco Canada in Toronto. “Web conferencing is a great productivity and cost-saving tool for a business of any size. And because it’s software based, if something like a volcanic eruption leaves you stranded in Europe, you can still connect with customers, suppliers and business owners in a virtualized environment.”

WebEx can be used across multiple platforms, including handheld devices. Subscriptions are based on the number of users. To download the software, you simply register on the WebEx site.

Demand for Web conferencing is growing strong in the wake of the recession, Mr. Madgett says. “The first thing a lot of businesses cut was travel costs by turning to collaboration tools.”

“Entrepreneurs need ways to reduce costs and collaborate,” Mr. Pierce says. “Web conferencing makes it easy to do that.”

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