Monday, December 30, 2013

Robots invade kitchens in Portugal

Here's an interesting article about practical application of robotics in the home that's developing a strong demand and following in Portugal and Europe. Not available in the U.S. yet, but I think it will likely do well here, too.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Google solidly plants its stake in Robotics

Search may have sparked Google's beginning but it's now moving hard and fast into Robotics. With this week's acquisition of Boston Dynamics, and several earlier Robotics related acquisitions, Google is positioning itself as a major player in the field.

Scary? Perhaps. I find it somewhat anxiety-raising when one large company moves to put itself in the significant position to call the shots - hopefully they'll remember that motto, "Do no evil!"

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Removing old Ubuntu kernels easily

Ubuntu doesn't automatically remove old kernel packages, so over time the number of unused kernel packages will build up. On recent releases, you could manually use the graphical UI of the Synaptic Package Manager (SPM) to locate and remove the old packages, but as of the Ubuntu Saucy Salamander release the SPM is no longer available.

However, there's a neat way to do it directly from the command line or a shell script, too. See this Ubuntu Forum article for details.

Friday, December 6, 2013

Registering Oracle Java using alternatives on CentOS 6

If you want to add the Oracle JDK to a CentOS 6 box, one easy way is to download the JDK RPM package, and use the rpm(8) command to install it easily, like this:

$ sudo rpm -ivh jdk-7u45-linux-i586.rpm

But chances are the newly installed JDK will not be visible at the command line, especially if the openjdk is already present. How to fix this? You'll have to use the alternatives(8) command to manually register the Oracle JDK. See the instructions on the if-not-true-then-false site for details. I recommend following the "Use Java JDK latest version" example.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Microsoft Office jumps to the net

Remember when Google Docs came on the scene and some commentators said it was the beginning of the end for Microsoft Office? Well, it seems Office may have turned the tables. See here, too.

Things to come

The Open Innovation Forum shares some interesting perspectives on how technology is changing the human race and will continue to do so ahead.

Monday, October 14, 2013

Easy home theater option

Sound bars are a neat way to drop in home theater easily, provided you're not a high-end audiophile. There may be other limitations, too - but if you want an easy installation with few or no wires required - they're worth a look.

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Creepy robotics

This stuff is downright creepy to me. I guess I've read one too many Sci Fi stories about robots used for nefarious purposes. These surely give pause for concern - and unfortunately the trend is only likely to continue. It looks like drones are just the tip of the iceberg, folks.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

The Third Industrial Revolution

Here's a thought-provoking article that makes me wonder about what the near future will hold. Will we see an idealistic world of increased freedom from menial toil and labor, or a dystopian society where displaced workers and their families struggle to survive? Will the gap between rich and poor become so great that social upheaval and struggle is unavoidable? Or will we be able to provide opportunities for all to survive and prosper? As a society and culture, I think we must challenge ourselves to seek and shape the best possible outcome now.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Windows Sysinternals Tools

Windows Sysinternals is an incredibly useful tool suite for Windows devs, admins, and IT pros available for free from Microsoft Technet.

Monday, August 26, 2013

Using openssl to encrypt/decrypt text

Here's a simple example of using the Linux openssl command to encrypt typed text data into a file and then extract it back from the file afterwards. We'll use the AES-128 encryption algorithm for this example and ask openssl to base64 encode the encrypted data afterwards, so it can be happily stored in a text file.

First, let's encrypt a test string into the file /tmp/myEncryptedData.txt:

$ openssl enc -aes128 -a -out /tmp/myEncryptedData.txt
enter aes-128-cbc encryption password: your-desired-password-here
Verifying - enter aes-128-cbc encryption password: your-desired-password-here

This is the data I'm protecting ya know!


Note: To terminate the input type a couple of Ctrl-D characters.


Now, let's read the encrypted text from /tmp/myEncryptedData.txt and display the original string back:

$ openssl enc -d -a -aes128 -in /tmp/myEncryptedData.txt
enter aes-128-cbc decryption password: your-desired-password-here
This is the data I'm protecting ya know!


Cool, huh?

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Privacy in the digital age

A favorite author of mine has posted an interesting perspective on privacy that's worth a read. The topic's been on my mind, too. I'll be adding some discussion about it ahead, too.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

I'm so happy someone else wonders about these things, too

It's occurred to me on multiple occasions that if a hacker or agent can spoof software update processes, they can easily gain complete control of an end user system. So far, no such exploits have been seen to my knowledge, though.

Anyway, here's a serious yet ultimately humorous discussion of potential software update system exploitation - and how it might perceptually relate to cloud computing.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Functional Programming

Saw a great presentation by one of our interns today on Functional Programming (ala. Haskell). How practical will it prove to be and in which scenarios will it prove compelling? Hard to tell right now, but I'm pretty sure an impact will occur. There sure are a lot of related languages out there including OCaml, Haskell, Scala, F# and maybe more.

Monday, June 10, 2013

eTextbooks - Who's working on what

Interesting recap of eTextbook players and directions in the Sri Lankan Sunday Times. Much more going on in this area than meets the eye.

Friday, May 3, 2013

Industries experiencing disruptive change

Locating disruptive change is a big deal when investing for growth; it's become a catch-phrase for investors and a holy grail of sorts for the shrewd. From my perspective, I see a number of industries undergoing disruptive change and with the spread of technology, there will be others, too.

Some to watch right now:
  • Learning - What it means to get an education, how it happens, availability to learning resources, and cost are all factors ramping up disruptive change in the learning industry. MOOCs (massively open on-line courses) are gaining traction (Coursera, Khan Academy, and Udacity). Helping students connect to colleges, learning resources, experiences, and each other is another area to watch (Chegg, AfterCollege, Zinch, Facebook, etc). Publishers and distribution networks (No Starch Press, Packt Publishers, O'Reilly, Amazon, Apple, etc) are experiencing and injecting change, too.
  • Ticketing and Entertainment - the high cost tickets and events is another area ripe for change; new players such as Brown Paper Tickets are taking a fresh approach, which will inject change in this marketplace.
  • Nanotechnology and Materials - There are so many emerging possibilities that it's hard to appreciate them all. The implications to the medical field (diagnostics, treatments, prostheses, augmentation) and industrial fields (electronics, batteries, sensors, solenoids, monitoring devices, 3D printing) are staggering, not to mention what will happen as small amounts of intelligence get added, too; enabling devices to report, confer, and decide.
  • Food production, distribution, and nutrition - Initiatives to buy and eat locally (farm to fork), to take control of preparation, to use fresh and simple ingredients, etc are all introducing positive changes. New styles of farming (smaller scale, organic, specialized, and strategic) are making a difference, too. Some examples: Farm Fresh to You, Polyface Farms, Full Circle, Jacobs / Del Cabo, local farmer's markets, etc.
  • Software Development and Computing - How it happens and the tools to make it efficient, productive, inherently secure, and sustainable continues to evolve. The Agile Manifesto started a revolution that's still in progress, as it requires dedicating significant resources (an organization must maintain a continuous integration / delivery process, implying significant computing and staff resources, although I suspect virtual machines and cloud computing are lowering cost barriers, too). The tooling now available to software developers is amazing (Eclipse and other IDEs, build management, defect tracking and database systems, testing frameworks, native language presentation and translation technologies, and multi-platform support). Where I think growth is needed is seamless support for multiple displays (web, mobile, and tablet) and efficient and affordable team management tools.

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Netflix rates ISPs for their streaming speeds

Netflix now provides on-line info about how well ISPs perform with streaming media - organized by country, check it out.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Java 7 vulnerability

Here's the U.S. DHS advisory concerning the Java 7 security issue, along with the steps to take to address it. Interestingly, this basic information has been missing from most of the media reporting I've seen.