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IT Infrastructure - News

February 21st, 2008
Biometrics will be used in the EU
Visitors to Europe will face biometric
screening and automated security checks under proposals for a shake-up of EU
border controls. Under plans to
strengthen checks at European borders laid out by the European Commission,
international travelers would also have their stay logged and monitored by an
electronic system, which could become operational by 2015.
The system would
alert authorities to persons overstaying the length of their visa. Biometric data would be submitted by travelers from outside
the EU when applying for a visa, while those not needing a permit would be
checked on arrival.
Automated border-control systems and guards would be
able to check visitors' identities using the biometric data, with EU and trusted
travelers from outside the EU able to speed up the process by using automated
gates. The Commission is also investigating the
possibility of requiring electronic authorization
for outside travelers as an alternative to
requiring a visa.
From 2009, all EU passports will feature a digital
fingerprint and photograph and, from
2011, non-EU citizens who apply for a visa will have to give their
biometric details. The measures would apply to
the 24 nations within the EUs Schengen zone for passport-free travel. All EU
states except Bulgaria, Cyprus, Ireland, Romania, and the U.K. are part of the border-free
area, to which non-EU members Norway and Iceland also belong. The U.K. is
believed to be studying whether to opt into the
arrangements.
The Commission is also looking at creating a European
border surveillance system to help prevent unauthorized border crossings, reduce
the number of illegal immigrants dying at sea, and reduce cross-border crime
within the EU. The Commission said the system
would use state-of-the-art technology for border-surveillance purposes and focus
first on the Mediterranean Sea, the Canary Islands, and the Black Sea before
being widened to the "whole maritime domain" of the EU.
Data gathered for the system would be protected by security regulations and would be kept for
no longer than five years. -
more info
February 15th, 2008
Unified Communications is a Hot Issue

Planning
unified communications requires focusing on making communications more
efficient, both within the company and with outsiders, but not everybody has to
be doing everything, says Art Rosenberg, principal analyst for the Unified-View
and an affiliate of UC Strategies. The first step is analysis of business
processes. That information will lead to identification of pilot programs that
target high-value applications and high-value end users. Once in the midst of
tests and trials, Rosenberg advises, do not be fooled into thinking that any one
vendor can provide every facet of what your company requires. Plan to work with
vendors at the network, server and client -
more info
February 11th, 2008
Understanding the full scope and interdependency of risk in
today's complex and distributed business environment is important for achieving
compliance with governmental mandates and industry regulations. However, many
companies have a limited perception of risk and still struggle making compliance
an enterprise-wide, integrated process. Because of the complexity and
sophistication of today's variety of security breeches, companies need a broader
information assurance approach, a more holistic framework that addresses
security, availability and compliance. -
more info
February 5th, 2008
Microsoft Focus on Mobile Market Drives Yahoo Bid
Gaining a bigger share of mobile advertising is a
big reason Microsoft Corp. is bidding $44.6 billion for Yahoo Inc., according to industry
observers.
Mobile advertising is part of
what Microsoft wants to get into, no doubt, said .an analyst at Gartner Inc.
Leadership in mobile advertising is still unclaimed, while Google is threatening
to do there what it did on the Internet, so Microsoft is being
preemptive.
Yahoo touches so many customers and there is so
much advertising potential in this deal, said .an independent
analyst.
Although Microsoft is a big, strong company, it can
still find it difficult to reach out to markets such as advertising, but Yahoo
has an estimated 500 million global monthly users of Internet access, he said.
It is the kind of world Microsoft loves. -
more info
January 30th, 2008
Smart Phones May Make Symantec Obsolete
The Symantec and McAfee approach of dumping a lot of
different security products into big packages may become less effective as a new
generation of specialized new devices such as smartphones, mostly find
themselves in crackers' cross hairs. This new reality may lead to more
acquisitions.
Symantec
recently purchased Altiris and Vontu. There is nothing new about entrepreneurial
firms in security (or elsewhere) being snapped up by bigger companies. Whether
and how consolidation proceeds is entirely dependent on the nature of threats.
That's why the first iPhone virus is important. In the short term, it will be
possible for Apple to figure out a way to protect its hip new device. In the
bigger picture, however, smart service providers and vendors no doubt took the
iPhone firmware 1.1.3 prep hack as a big yellow flag and will far more seriously
look for ways to protect smartphones. -
more info
January 27th, 2008
Vista Service Pack 1 to be released within two weeks
Microsoft has said the highly anticipated service
pack will be out in the first quarter of this year, but some say it could be
available in the next few weeks, more than a month before the quarter ends on
March 31.
A Taiwanese news
service yesterday reported that Vista SP1 will be released Feb. 15, but that
date is as good as any other, said an analyst at
Directions on Microsoft. For all we know, they could make it available
tomorrow.
Microsoft, through its public relations agency,
declined to comment on the Feb. 15 date beyond reiterating that the software
will be available in the first quarter. Still, several sources who work closely
with Microsoft said that a mid-February release is not unlikely and that they
expect the software to be out before the end of March. -
more info
January 25th, 2008
Open-source software has place but does not do everything
(Computerworld) -- Linux, Apache and
other open-source applications have long been used to power Web and file
servers. But when it comes to managing the data center, many companies have held
back. Now, though, some users have turned into big believers that open source
works here, too.
It is true that with open-source products, users generally
forfeit the security of professional support teams to help resolve their
problems quickly, says the chief technology officer at Sabre Holdings, a travel
marketing and distribution technology company in Southlake, Texas. But in our
environment, we almost always purchase support for our open-source products from
high-quality vendors. This, of course, reduces some of the cost advantages of
using open source, but the advantages are big enough that there is still
plenty left over, and the security we get from a service contract lets us sleep
better at night. 
The company uses enterprise system buses (ESB) for
message transformation, routing and other tasks. Sabre is implementing an
open-source-based ESB within multiple systems including its Supplier Side
Gateway product, which is used by all Sabre systems that need content from
external sources. Other open-source software in use at Sabre includes Subversion
and Concurrent Versions System (version control systems), Eclipse (a Java
development environment), JUnit (unit test), Hibernate (object/relational
mapping to abstract services from the underlying database calls) and Apache Ant,
a Java-based tool.
Sabre started using open-source products about six
years ago, as the quality and flexibility of open source began to increase,
mainly because of the lower cost. But for them, it had to be low cost and
high quality. Stability and high performance are the most important
requirements. -
more info
January 14th, 2008
What Impact Does Firmware Have on Your DRP
Storage system firmware updates are available as
major and minor releases. Companies like EMC Corp. typically provide a major
release for its Clariion storage systems about once
a year while minor releases come out about once a quarter. Major releases
include significant enhancements to storage system features while minor releases
provide bug fixes for any issues in the major release. The problems that surface
should a company fall behind in its firmware upgrades are increased operational
risks as well as delays if fixes are needed.
The need to keep firmware current stems from
interoperability problems that emerge when
companies change their Fibre Channel SANs. New operating systems, operating
system and database upgrades and new Fibre Channel SAN devices constantly
introduce new capabilities and features into the SAN. Though storage system
vendors typically test for these new features in these products before they are
publicly released, companies may need to apply a patch to use them.
Being down two or three major releases also gets
problematic. While vendors almost always support older major releases, new
patches are based on the last major release. If running an older release, a
company may need to wait while a special patch is prepared for them.
Planning firmware upgrades is an easy-to-overlook
component of system maintenance. But with many companies in lock-down at this
time of year and administrators likely having some free time, December is a good
time to plan for and then take the necessary steps to perform a firmware
upgrade. -
more info
January 14th, 2008
Security is the Focus of IT in 2008
Janco predicts that in 2008 we will see the first serious security exploit in
corporate VoIP networks?
If things go badly then network security breakdowns can cast a
pall on the upcoming presidential elections and the Olympic games?
Perhaps users Web 2.0 forays open the malware floodgates? Janco says security
concerns will dominate the network landscape in 2008 whether we like it or not.
But it will not be all gloom and doom. Faster wireless LANs are on the way,
enterprise-class open source applications are multiplying, and Google is
continuing to muscle its way into new markets -- raising the bar for competitors
along the way.
Enterprise IT teams can expect in the new year. Two high-profile events --
the 2008 Olympics in China and the U.S. presidential elections -- will trigger a
stream of exploits. Both of these events will have sites that will attact
many users and be a target for secutiy fraud. -
more info
December 30th, 2007
Companies
change or update the way they do business for one of three
reasons:
-
They are leading
their competition and want to continue to be in the front of their
industry.
-
They feel that
their competition is about to overtake them and they do not want that to
happen.
-
They are behind
their competition and need to change in order to survive and be
profitable.
If they make
changes for reasons other than those they should re-evaluate why and what
they are doing. -
more info
December 4th, 2007
Vista piracy rate is half that of XP
Microsoft said Monday that it's seeing piracy rates
for Windows Vista that are half those of Windows XP.
Now cynical me wanted to write this up as "even pirates prefer
XP two to one over Vista," but that wouldn't be fair. In reality, the decline in
piracy rates is largely due to the fact that Vista is much tougher to fake than
XP.
"Piracy rates are lower because it's harder," Microsoft Vice
President Mike Sievert said in an interview Monday.
There are a variety of reasons for that, including the fact that
businesses no longer have volume license keys that can be used to activate an
unlimited number of machines. Another is the fact that Vista machines that
aren't properly activated pretty quickly become basically unusable once they
enter "reduced functionality mode." -
more info
November 27th, 2007
Does your enterprise have a succession plan in place for your CIO?
What
is the process that you have in place for succession planning for your
CIO?
You must build an excellent succession plan or refine your current
one using the practices. Which include:
- Setting
Corporate Succession Priorities - Align your succession plan with
corporate values and strategy. Your plan must support leadership development
and mentoring programs, drive diversity goals, and strengthen rewards and
recognition.
- Identifying
Key Competencies - Competency models for key positions are the backbone
of any succession planning initiative. Your plan must identify and communicate
key competencies and design tools to complement the enterprise's needs.
- Designing
the Succession Plan - Document a detailed succession plan. Use methods to
create a balanced succession planning design team which is
detailed
-
more info
November 15th, 2007
Politicians Call for a National CTO
Would a National Chief Technology Officer
Help or Hurt IT in the US?
Speaking at a Town Hall meeting at the Google Mountain View,
Calif., headquarters, Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama said he
would appoint a national chief technology officer to ensure that every
government agency is meeting 21st century standards.
Obama talked about his plan to connect Americans
through technology. Google invited the candidates to hear their views on some of the
issues that affect their company as well as the technology industry in general.
Obama was the seventh presidential hopeful to participate.
Other presidential candidates who have talked to
Googlers are Republicans Ron Paul and John McCain and Democrats Hillary Rodham
Clinton, Bill Richardson, John Edwards and Mike Gravel.
Dell Inc. also has
invited the candidates to its
campus. -
more info
November 8th, 2007
(CIO Insight) What is the essence of the CIOs role? It is an important question
because the definition of the CIO is morphing and fracturing. Our surveys say
fewer than half of CIOs report to CEOs while more report to CFOs. Does that mean
the CIO role has been downgraded, or that Sarbanes-Oxley is changing the CFOs
role? In our April 2007 CIO Role
survey, three quarters of CIOs say helping set
their companys strategy will be one of their most important responsibilities in
the future, yet just one-third say their role is creating business
strategy.
Defining the CIOs role has never been
simple.
- The Cyclical CIO When a CEO
believes the IT organization needs a shakeup, he or she hires a CIO who
thrives on radical visions and changes. When the shakeup is over, out goes the
visionary and in comes a chief information offier with a more operational
bent. Repeat ad infinitum
- The Band-Aid CIO Sometimes job No. 1
is fixing what your predecessor broke. Couldn't deliver projects on time? Get
a project manager. IT out of alignment? Put in someone with more business
experience.
- The Rotational CIO Some companies
believe potential CEOs need to be well rounded. The CIO job can be just a stop
on the Grand Tour.
- The Multitasking CIO CIOs frequently
run other functions besides IT, such as strategy, administration and
e-commerce. What a mish-mash. Try making a Myers Briggs-style categorization
scheme out of this and you'll wind up with scores of possible
roles.
-
more info
November 5th, 2007
PCI Standard to be Expanded in 2008
PCI Security Standards Council, which represents Visa,
MasterCard, American Express and Discover, anticipates expanding requirements to
cover wireless and web based transactions.
This standard could be defined in 2008 and many small merchants could be
faced with compliance issues. That
will be a problem because many of the merchants do not comply with the PCI-DSS
version 1.1 standard.
The Councils general manager was quoted in Network
World say that the organization is devising new standards for how to design and
evaluate any Web-facing business applications for credit-card processing as well
as security rules for wireless. But a final decision is still pending, he said,
since there is a growing resistance to new requirements for payment-card
holders, many of whom are not yet achieving official compliance with the
existing PCI standards yet. -
more info
November 2nd, 2007
Many Employees Violate Security Policies
Security Violations Are Common Amoung
Employees
(Computerworld) As many as 35% of workers have knowingly violated their
corporate IT policies at least once, according to results of a study released
this week.
MARC Research polled 301 U.S. based workers in
businesses with at least 100 employees about their corporate computer
usage.
The Information Systems Audit and Control
Association, a Rolling Meadows, Ill.-based professional association that
represents some 65,000 IT professionals who are responsible for auditing
computer systems, commissioned the study.
The survey also found that while 84% of respondents
are comfortable with workplace computer security measures, 64% said their home
computers are not adequately protected.
Despite warnings about security threats posed by
peer-to-peer file-sharing systems, 15% of respondents admitted logging onto such
networks from work computers. And 74% of respondents said they don't believe
that downloading unauthorized content or software to work PCs is a business
risk.
The survey also found that 73% of respondents are not
worried about sending sensitive or confidential company information from work
PCs to home systems via e-mail. Further, 68% said they regularly work on
business documents that were sent from business systems to home
PCs. -
more info
October 30th, 2007
Congress Approves 7 year extension of Internet Tax Ban
Internet to be Tax-Free for seven more years
(Bloomberg)
-- The U.S. House of Representatives approved a bill to bar states from levying
taxes on Internet access through 2014, clearing the way for President George W.
Bush to sign the measure into law before an existing ban expires.
The unanimous House vote today resolved a dispute
with the Senate, which last week called for the longest-ever Internet-tax ban by
passing the seven-year moratorium. The House had voted Oct. 16 to prohibit the
taxes for four years. The current ban ends Nov. 1, 2007
Since 1998, a federal law has prohibited cities and
states from taxing most forms of Internet access, including cable-modem and
digital subscriber-line service. The moratorium was last extended in 2004.
Groups representing state and local officials had pushed for a four-year ban.
High-speed Internet providers AT&T Inc., Verizon
Communications Inc. and Comcast Corp., as well as Web companies such as Google
Inc., had sought a permanent ban. Still, they welcomed the seven-year
renewal. -
more info
October 23rd, 2007
Top 10 CIO & CTO Management Concerns
Top
management concerns are:
-
IT and business alignment
-
Building business skills in IT
-
Reducing the cost of doing business
-
Improving IT quality.
-
Security and privacy.
-
Managing change.
-
IT strategic planning.
-
Making better use of information.
-
Evolving CIO leadership role. -
more info
October 22nd, 2007
Most Technology Based Cities in the US Identified
(Computerworld) -- The
highest concentration of IT professionals in the U.S. is in Silicon Valley. But
naming the No. 2 spot is not as easy, and the answer might surprise you.
The
runner-up is not a well-known tech center like Boston or Seattle/Redmond;
it is the Washington metro area.
Data
for 2006 from the U.S. Census Bureaus annual American Community Survey (ACS), released just last month,
reveal what could be called a metropolitan areas TQ (technology quotient) -- how
techie a regions overall workforce is, based on the number of self-reported
computer professionals.
Roughly
6% of the D.C. metro area workforce is made up of computer specialists, compared
with 8.3% in Silicon Valley. The third-highest concentration of IT workers is in
Raleigh/Cary, N.C., at 5.3% of the workforce, followed closely by Boulder,
Colo., and Huntsville, Ala., each at 5.2%. The remainder of the top 10
technology worker areas is rounded out, in order, by Bloomington/Normal, Ill.;
Trenton-Ewing, N.J.; Austin-Round Rock, Texas; Manchester-Nashua, N.H.; and
Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, Wash. -
more info
October 17th, 2007
Improving opportunities for innovation are the key to IT Infrastructure
Are Your Policies & Procedures Stifling
Innovation?
IT Infrastructure is the key to value
added processes that aid in creating situations that encourage innovation and
improved customer service.
Dealing with pressure can lead managers toward the temptation of
taking complete control. However, implementing a strict set of policies and
procedures across all customer-facing functions often stifles the one element
that enables companies to break away from the pack and grow profitably and
consistently employee-driven innovation.
In many situations, an empowered, engaged employee is a more productive
and profitable one. Customer relationship management solutions must enable these
types of ad hoc, collaborative interactions to better serve customers, while
also automating the process-driven, transactional interactions that serve the
needs of the organization. -
more info
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