Archive for March, 2010

Virtualization tips total-cost scales for Linux

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

(Credit:
Gabriel Consulting Group)

Rather, it’s likely a matter of simplifying its famously Byzantine pricing, and making Windows Server licensing friendlier to virtualization. For example, Microsoft doesn’t allow migration of its products to a new physical server more than once every 90 days. This may ensure customers buy licenses with fewer restrictions, but it also appears to mean they simply buy fewer Microsoft licenses, period.

According to the survey, enterprises that predominantly use Linux virtualize roughly 30 percent more than those that prefer Windows, and heavier virtualization users do so much more aggressively on Linux systems than on Windows:

While the survey also lists the benefits of source code access to Linux administrators, I suspect that this is of minimal value to the big majority of Linux adopters. Very few will care to “get intimate with the code,” to use the report’s language, preferring instead to stick to the more tangible (and easily accessed) cost savings from Linux virtualization.

Microsoft has now jumped into the virtualization market with both feet, giving its Hyper-V product away for free…but not really. Indeed, it is the pricing strategy Microsoft has for its servers that may go furthest in explaining its lack of appeal to Windows users, as noted in Gabriel Consulting Group’s report:

Perhaps the primary reason is that Microsoft didn’t really start to promote virtualization until long after the Linux crowd. This isn’t surprising: Microsoft has much to lose from virtualization. The fewer Windows server licenses an enterprise has to buy, the worse it is for Microsoft.

While enterprises could realize even bigger cost savings by simply using free Linux versus paid Windows, most enterprises will buy commercial support for Linux through Red Hat, Novell, or Canonical. Even factoring in this cost, however, Linux seems to lend itself more readily to virtualization and, hence, to cost savings that result therefrom.

Linux vs. Windows: Virtualization Trends

Microsoft has it in its power to turn the tide relative to Linux’s superior virtualization TCO, and it probably has little to do with the cost of Windows Server, and certainly not with the cost of its Hyper-V virtualization technology, which is now $0.00.

Given that commercial Linux isn’t free, Microsoft doesn’t need to make Windows free to make its Hyper-V virtualization more competitive with Linux virtualization. Simplification, it seems, would go quite far toward the goal of making Windows virtualization more palatable.

It’s an interesting conclusion, but leads to an even more interesting question: why don’t Windows administrators take advantage of virtualization to the same extent as Linux administrators? The answer–licensing cost and complexity–is something that Microsoft has the ability, but not the interest, to change.

77 percent of survey respondents reported greater hardware utilization rates through Linux virtualization, versus 56 percent of Windows users. Those who standardize on Linux find Linux virtualization much more manageable (62 percent) than Windows administrators who standardize on Windows virtualization (48 percent). More telling, four times as many Windows standardizers (23 percent) find Windows virtualization hard to manage than the Linux standardizers, only 6 percent of whom find Linux virtualization hard to manage. Linux translates into higher server utilization and, hence, less power consumption and more physical space: 59 percent of Linux administrators disagreed with the “We are rapidly running out of data center electrical capacity” statement, compared to 38 percent of Windows administrators. When presented with the statement “We are rapidly running out of data center floor space”, 60 percent of Linux administrators disagreed versus 45 percent of Windows administrators.

Virtualization may offer a significant advantage to Linux in the decade-old debate over Linux vs. Windows total cost of ownership (TCO). A new Gabriel Consulting Group survey (PDF) of mostly mixed-environment (that is, Windows and Linux) enterprises reveals significantly higher adoption of virtualization technology, with all the cost savings that go with it: less money spent on hardware and licensing fees.

There are also licensing differences that bear directly on comparative costs. With Microsoft, users who don’t have volume agreements or who haven’t purchased the more expensive Enterprise or Datacenter editions will have to purchase licenses for every system and each of the virtual machines running on those systems. Linux, on the other hand, can be essentially free, meaning that companies can deploy it on multiple systems or in virtual machines at no cost.

There are other benefits to those who primarily adopt, or standardize on, Linux, as the report suggests:

The survey’s author reports that “Linux users have clearly both adopted virtualization at a greater rate and embraced it to a greater extent than customers who have standardized on Microsoft operating systems,” but why?

SunRun to expand financing for solar panels

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

With SunRun financing, the purchaser pays an up-front fee of $1,000 and then a fixed monthly charge. SunRun owns and maintains the solar panels so it benefits from financial incentives, such as tax credits.

The San Francisco-based start-up on Tuesday said that it has raised an additional $18 million, in a funding round led by venture capital firm Accel Partners. Accel is known for backing Facebook and BitTorrent.

Even though the performance of solar photovoltaic panels continues to improve, the installation cost for a typical homeowner remains a large barrier. Before state and federal incentives, rooftop solar panels and installation can cost $20,000 to $35,000.

This type of business model is being pursued by a handful of solar start-ups, including SolarCity, and utilities.

Likewise, municipalities are coming up with alternative ways of financing solar panels to cut the up-front investment. Berkeley, a forerunner in this area, has devised a way to allow homeowners to help pay for solar panels through property taxes.

SunRun is among those companies that believe the quickest way to get solar panels installed en masse is to eliminate the hefty up-front cost.

The money will be used for SunRun to expand its solar financing beyond California, Arizona, and Massachusetts, according to the company. SunRun has previously raised $12 million from Foundation Capital, which also participated in this round, and has secured $105 million from U.S. Bancorp for financing solar installations

Pizza workers strike over Internet porn

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Yet I am touched to hear that locals have come out in support of the workers. The Leader reports that they have delivered doughnuts to the picketing workers.

(Credit: CC Foodies/Flickr)

The Irish Congress of Trades Unions has granted approval for the plant to be picketed by naked women. Well, perhaps I am imagining the “naked women” part.

I am guessing that the e-mail did not contain pictures of rolling Irish hills. Or perhaps it did.

There are those who believe this is food porn.

Indeed, the mere fact that there exist plants to make pizza seems entirely unedifying to me.

According to the Belfast Telegraph, staff at the Green Isle Foods pizza-making plant in Naas, Ireland, will be calling for more strikers to protest the firing of their three frustrated colleagues.

“One of our members received an e-mail from outside the plant and was essentially dismissed for receiving an e-mail,” TEEU general secretary designate, Eamon Devoy told the Telegraph.

I cannot imagine how much fun it is to work at a pizza-making plant.

So I cannot help but feel a tinge of sympathy for three workers who were allegedly caught casting a furtive eye upon some material of a pornographic nature while pumping out pizza for the man.

Although a spokesman for the company told the Leinster Leader that this was “a cut and dried case of dismissal for people who seriously breached IT policy by accessing and e-mailing adult material of a serious nature.”

Oh, and pizza.

The Technical, Engineering and Electrical Union, representing the three men, is disputing the very facts surrounding their dismissal.

Simplify Photo for iPhone Remote photo-viewing

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

However, Simplify Photo is functional for existing Simplify Media users looking to view friends’ pictures, or their own, remotely.

The initial syncing will take a few minutes. After that, you’ll see a list of shared computers. Tap to see options and tap again to view photos by time line, places (geotagged images show on a Google map), folders, events, albums, and faces, when available. You can also search for a specific photo in a search field.

After logging in, Simplify Photo for iPhone ($0.99) talks to the Simplify Media application on your desktop (download for Windows | Mac | Ubuntu). So long as you have the newest version installed (2.5), and the photo-sharing element selected (configure in the Options menu), you’ll be able to view the photos in your network. Networked images can include pictures from your multiple computers, and those that friends on your Simplify network have given permission to see.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)

Simplify Photo’s media is view-only for now; though ideally the app would also add your iPhone photos to the network. You can swipe through images in the viewer or can play a slide show. As a perk, you can also save the picture locally to the iPhone. Unfortunately, and unlike the desktop viewer, Simplify Photo doesn’t yet rotate images by 90 degrees. The interface could also use some prettying up.

When you want to listen to music from your computer or your friends’ collections on your iPhone, Simplify Music is one solution. On Wednesday, Simplify Media introduced a similar iPhone application called Simplify Photo that provides the same service for pictures rather than songs.

Online tools for the eBay seller

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

ListingTicker will show all your recent listings.

Selling Manager lets you relist items quickly.

My top 3

Auctiva is quite powerful. You can create side-scrolling galleries with pictures you upload to the site (you’re allowed 1GB of storage), change the color of your listing page, and issue invoices. It won’t help you determine if you’re selling products that eBay users want, but it will help you easily manage your auctions. Admittedly, Auctiva is for active sellers, but at $9.95 per month for so many nice features, it’s an affordable offering.

3. ListingTicker: having the option of listing all your eBay auctions is quite convenient.

Vendio Vendio is an online shopping platform. If you want to sell products on your site, it will help you out. But Vendio’s real value is in its marketplace tools that help you improve your listings on eBay.

After you sign up for the site and choose a membership (it costs $24.95 per month or $197.95 per year), you can immediately start searching through the app’s listings of eBay products. When you find the product you’re looking to sell, it provides you with information on the item’s average bid, how much the average listing makes, and how page design affected profits. The app even provides you with information on which day is best to list the product and end your auction. It’s a powerful tool.

eBay Market Researcher provides you with a variety of research tools.

Auctiva helps you add inventory and track it on the site.

Photoblat Photoblat is a neat utility if you want to save some money on adding photos to your eBay listings. The site allows you to upload photos to the service. From there, you can add those photos to your eBay listings page through tools like eBay’s Blackthorne Pro. All the photos are hosted on the Photoblat site. Photoblat charges $3.99 per month for access to its service.

HammerTap features the number of listings and the keywords matching your query.

HammerTap is a useful tool, but beware that it costs $19.95 per month after a 10-day free trial.

1. Auctiva: with so many options and a relatively affordable price, Auctiva takes the top spot.

Toolhaus Toolhaus is a service that allows you to see the reliability of an eBay user. It lists all the feedback the user has received, including both positive and negative reviews. It’s not the most useful app in this roundup, since it basically lists information you’ll find on eBay, but it does come in handy when you want to quickly determine if you can trust users.

eBay tools

ListingTicker ListingTicker is a simple tool that helps you post all your listings on your blog or Web site. The site asks you to input your eBay user ID. It then creates a widget to be placed on your site. It shows all your auctions that will be ending soon. It also provides your site’s visitors with a search box in case they want to find something else.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

(Credit:
Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Vendio lets you create a store in no time.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

After Amazon experienced some difficulties last week with its selling options in the Amazon Marketplace, it made me wonder if anyone decided to start selling some of their merchandise on eBay. If so, they would join thousands of others who are using the online auction site to make a few extra bucks. If that’s your goal, check out some of these services for eBay sellers.

Photoblat allows you to upload images in no time.

eBay Market Researcher Terapeek’s eBay Market Researcher tool is a fine way to determine how to get the most out of your listing.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

(Credit:
Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

(Credit:
Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Selling Manager eBay’s Selling Manager app is installed into the My eBay section of a seller’s listing page. The app allows you to manage all your listings in one place. You can also create customized e-mail templates to send to buyers who won your auction. If the buyer doesn’t pay, it automatically relists your item. If you want all these options, you’ll be forced to pay $15.99 per month. The free version of the Web-based app will let you create a professional listing and edit your listings in bulk.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Toolhaus displays how users view you.

2. Vendio: Vendio has some offerings that should appeal to you.

HammerTap HammerTap is another eBay market research tool that provides basic information, like the number of active item’s listings, how many times a product has sold, and the average sales price of those auctions. One of the app’s nicest features is its “will it sell?” offering, which displays a scale, showing the percentage chance of the product selling on eBay.

Auctiva Auctiva is a full-featured product that allows you to use a variety of templates and modules to help you sell products more effectively on eBay.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Vendio’s listing-creation tool lets you display images, set up promotions, and track all the items that were sold on eBay. The site also tracks customers, displaying their name, the last time they purchased products from you, when they bought those products, and more. Vendio is free to use, but it takes up to 1.95 percent of your sales that are generated through the service.

Google could be adding mortgage info soon

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

(Credit:
Screenshot by Tom Krazit/CNET)

Google played it coy, telling the Times that “we are currently working on a small ad unit test that will run against a limited number of mortgage-related search queries in the U.S.”

The New York Times noticed a lawsuit pending between LendingTree, an online mortgage quote service, and a company called Mortech, which helps LendingTree run its site. The connection to Google is that apparently, Mortech is gearing up to sell that technology to Google, which LendingTree thinks is a breach of the deal between Mortech and LendingTree.

Could Google be adding mortgage information to its real-estate search pages?

Add Google Mortgage to the list of potential services that might soon appear on Google’s Web site.

LendingTree believes that Google is planning to launch the service in late August or early September–basically now–according to the complaint. Google is supposedly going to offer mortgage information and even quotes for home loans. You can already search for home listings on Google Maps, so this would perhaps make an interesting addition.

Regretful upgrade Snow Leopard incompatibilities

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

(Credit:
Apple)

Necessary disclaimer: Apple and third-party developers deserve much credit for ensuring that so many major apps work well in Snow Leopard, since it is such a major under-the-hood upgrade.

iStat Menus, a Mac system monitor, does not work. Developer Marc Edwards said he’s been working on the 2.0 version of the product, but that Apple’s timing derailed his plans. “We expected that version 2 would have been ready before 10.6 was out,” he wrote to me, “but the early release meant that wasn’t possible.”

Letterbox, a Mail.app plug-in that gives you a three-pane view, doesn’t work. The developer missed his own deadline for getting it fixed by Snow Leopard release, likely because Apple changed its release date, but presumably it’ll arrive shortly.

XMarks, the bookmark and password sync app for browsers, doesn’t work on Safari under Snow Leopard. CEO James Joaquin told me that an open beta will be made available via the XMarks blog this week, with a production version probably shortly after Labor Day. On why XMarks missed the bus on Safari in Snow Leopard, he said that the company’s lead Safari developer had left and the new one had to be brought up to speed. He added that XMarks is “committed to supporting Safari,” but that 90 percent of the company’s 3.5 million users are on Firefox.

Most incompatibilities will be fixed, of course. Apple released Snow Leopard earlier than expected, and developers are scrambling to update their apps. But even some of the big developers have fallen behind the cycle here — Microsoft’s Live Mesh sync and backup product doesn’t yet work, for example.

Apple's early release of Snow Leopard caught developers off guard.

But many little things don’t work, and the niggles are frustrating. Dealing with them makes the Mac experience very un-Mac-like. For some users who have spent time tweaking their Mac setup, the operating-system upgrade means a step backward in the pleasure and smoothness of using the platform. They feel a hit in productivity. For people like me, it’s the little hacks that make the Mac experience uniquely personal and help me paper over some of the Jobsian UI dictums of which I’d rather not be reminded.

Apple’s $29 operating-system upgrade, Snow Leopard, is for most users a straightforward and worthwhile upgrade. But some are regretting their haste in upgrading to Mac OS X 10.6. Little incompatibilities with existing apps are causing headaches and slowing down work flow.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Rafe Needleman/CNET)

I like Snow Leopard’s improvements and new-found speed, and CNET appropriately recommends it to people who use their Macs off the rack, as it were. But I advise tweakers and geeks to hold off on this upgrade until more developers can catch up to it.

It’s not the current versions of the big apps that don’t work, of course. The latest version of Photoshop still runs. Even the current versions of the close-to-the-metal virtualization applications Parallels and VMware Fusion work in Snow Leopard. Apple’s own apps–Mail, Calendar, and iTunes–all work great. And Firefox runs fine, even though Apple has its own competing browser, Safari.

Microsoft’s cross-platform file synchronization tools, Live Mesh and Windows Live Sync, don’t work in Snow Leopard. Microsoft says, “Live Mesh customers will gain support for Snow Leopard in a future release of Windows Live,” but would not be more specific as to when that would be. The company is also “investigating an incompatibility” with Live Sync. Alternatives include DropBox and SugarSync, but they’re paid apps, and the Microsoft utilities were free.

Finally, there’s SynergyKM, an open-source, cross-platform utility that lets you share a keyboard and mouse among multiple machines on your desktop. It works, but the icon and drop-down menu in the OS X navigation bar don’t appear. The app was last updated in 2006. A few people in the open-source community are working on a fix for Snow Leopard.

It is unreasonable to expect that every single app and utility that a user is running will survive an operating system upgrade, no matter which company is behind it. And as iStat developer Edwards says, “Many [developers] probably wanted to wait for the final, shipping OS version before releasing updates so they could make sure things worked with the public release.” Still, it does appear that Apple made things more difficult for developers by moving the release date for the product up a month from when people had been expecting it. It may have looked like a great marketing move, but it left developers, especially the smallest, more resource-constrained, unable to hop on board.

The preferences pane for Growl, the universal-app pop-up notifier, doesn’t work. The developers say they will update the app as soon as they can.

Cooliris, a slick image viewer plug-in for Firefox, needs an update. Michelle Turner, vice president of product at CoolIris, told me they were caught by surprise when Apple moved up the release of Snow Leopard by about a month from previous expectations. I pressed Turner to compare Apple’s developer relations with Microsoft’s, and she said, “Microsoft has a more laid-out release plan.” Still, Cooliris for Firefox should be out in a day or two. The Safari version is trickier (since that browser is a 64-bit app) and Cooliris is “still evaluating options” for developing its product for it. You can sign up for update notifications.

You can see a big list of Snow Leopard compatibility issues at the famous Snow Leopard Wikidot page. For the record, here are some of the small incompatibilities that are driving people where I work up a tree:

ThunderBrowse gets Postbox support

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

ThunderBrowse now offers tab support in Thunderbird.

However, for users who haven’t checked out or updated ThunderBrowse in awhile, there’s a lot to play with. Through the expansive options menu, you can configure links to open in new tabs. This allows your original e-mail to stay open in one tab, while the link has been opened in a new one. Unfortunately, in the Thunderbird 3 betas, this does not open a new Thunderbird tab–you’ll only get a new ThunderBrowse tab in your message pane. Even if the pane is maximized or the message has been open in a new tab, you’ll find a slightly cumbersome new tab bar opening beneath the URL bar.

One of the better Mozilla Thunderbird extensions is ThunderBrowse, which allows users to quickly open e-mailed links in a browser window built into the e-mail client itself. The latest version introduces support for the Thunderbird-derived Postbox, as well as compatibility fixes for the Thunderbird 3 beta builds and a new click engine.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)

Other new or recently added options in ThunderBrowse include customizing
an external browser to open e-mailed links that’s different from your
system’s default browser, greater control over behavior after left-clicking and scroll wheel-clicking links, and enhanced user security through permission control for JavaScript, images, plug-ins, and cookies. There’s also a new auto-complete feature and the ability to move the ThunderBrowse URL bar to the bottom of the pane.

Polaris cell phone bot predicts your behavior

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Flower Robotics says the device can collect data and pool it in a “Life Log.” It gathers info such as kilometers walked daily, online transactions, and e-mails sent and received. It then starts to predict user behavior and display relevant “advice and other information” on a user’s TV.

Polaris consists of a robot sphere and the phone itself. The sphere can autonomously dock with its charging unit. The phone gathers information about user behavior and sends it to the sphere, which displays the information on a TV screen. The phone can also serve as a TV remote control.

The company, which is headed by designer and architect Tatsuya Matsui, isn’t too clear on what such advice would consist of. Presumably nuggets like, “You really shouldn’t kick me. Don’t kick me, OK?”

(Via Pink Tentacle)

Japanese design firm Flower Robotics has unveiled a new concept robot cell phone that moves around on two wheels and learns from user behavior.

The lithium ion battery-powered sphere has infrared, image, and obstacle sensors, with a motion range of about 10 yards. At 6.6 pounds and 5 inches across, it’s designed to fit right next to a TV.

Flower teamed up with telecom KDDI and its Iida line of products to create the device, dubbed Polaris. In the Japanese video below it looks like a cousin of the Sony Rolly MP3 player, but Polaris is more than just a pair of wheels and electronics.

Flower hopes to commercialize Polaris sometime next year, but there’s no word on a possible price.

“Polaris ‘grows on you’ not only because of its physical charm but also because of the way its daily data collection causes it to develop its own personality, creating unique movements, sounds and light patterns,” the firm says.

(Credit:
Flower Robotics)

Wi-Fi takes off with travelers

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

According to a study published this week by Wakefield Research for the Wi-Fi Alliance, about 75 percent of frequent business travelers surveyed said they’d choose an airline based on whether the flight has Wi-Fi or not. Half of respondents said they’d even consider moving their reservation by a day to get on a flight that offered Wi-Fi. And more than 70 percent of those surveyed said they’d rather have Wi-Fi access on board a flight than a meal provided by the airline.

The survey included 480 frequent business travelers, of whom 150 had used in-flight Wi-Fi in early August. About 95 percent of respondents said Wi-Fi access on a flight would make them more productive. And about half of those responding said they had often taken red-eye flights so they could be reached during business hours.

Since last year, several airlines have been adding Wi-Fi to their planes. Delta, American Airlines, Virgin America, Alaska Airlines, and AirTran are just a few that have already begun to offer the service. Southwest Airlines announced earlier this month that it plans to offer Wi-Fi on its planes starting in the first quarter of next year.

But the Wi-Fi Alliance emphasized that in-flight Wi-Fi is not just for business travelers. Other travelers also use the service. About 72 percent of those surveyed say they use it to check personal e-mail. About 49 percent say they use the in-flight Wi-Fi to surf the Web. And about 35 percent use it to stream video or music.

(Credit:
American Airlines)

Typically, these services cost about $12 or $13 per flight. The survey did not take into account the cost of the service. But given the popularity of Wi-Fi hotspots in airports and in various restaurants and cafes, the price doesn’t appear to be a major barrier.

Wi-Fi Internet access could help airlines win over customers who are looking to stay connected while en route, a recent survey concludes.