Getting back-to-school with Lexar

Lexar is adding some great incentives to get students excited about returning to school with a consumer promotion across all stores selling Lexar USB flash drives.
Anyone that purchases a Lexar JumpDrive USB flash drive or Lexar DRAM Netbook/Notebook module until the end of 28th February will be in the running to win a daily, weekly or monthly prize. Over $20,000 of prizes are on offer, including daily copies of Norton 360 Anti Virus ($129.95), weekly prizes of an HP Mini Atom Netbook ($699) and two monthly major prizes of a complete student office including student desk and chair, HP Touchsmart PC, HP Photosmart all-in-one printer, Microsoft Office 2007 and a Logitech desktop package ($6,785).
To enter, all customers need to do is simply SMS the last 6 digits of their Lexar product barcode plus their full name and state of residence to Tel: 1999 2653. Tear sheets of the offer are positioned beside the Lexar USB flash drive ranges in select store. A low res copy of the tear sheet is attached below for your reference. Full details of the promotion along with terms & conditions can be found on www.lexarbacktoschool.com.au
If you would like any more information about the back to school promotion from Lexar or the Lexar JumpDrive range or products please contact Kya de Rome on +61 2 9212 3848 or kya@kinetics.com.au.
computerword.com.au

Most Powerful Pico-ITX Board Ever Packs the VIA Nano Processor, Powers VIA AMOS-3001, Industry’s Most Compact & Fanless IPC

Taipei, Taiwan, 5 January 2010 - VIA Technologies, Inc, a leading innovator of power efficient x86 processor platforms, today announced the VIA EPIA-P820, the first Pico-ITX form factor board to feature the high performance, 64-bit VIA Nano processor, bringing industry-leading digital multimedia performance and virtualization capabilities to the smallest of spaces with the VIA AMOS-3001 chassis system.
The choice of VIA Nano processor means that the VIA EPIA-P820 offers a range of advantages over competitor offerings, including full 64-bit software support, a high-performance superscalar architecture and full support of the latest virtualization technologies for next generation server and virtual machine applications. Paired with the VIA VX855 media system processor, the VIA EPIA-P820 is well equipped to handle smooth playback of the most demanding codecs at resolutions up to 1080p.
The VIA AMOS-3001 is an entirely fanless and thoroughly robust chassis system that is specially designed to work with the VIA EPIA-P820. Leveraging the digital prowess of the VIA EPIA-P820, the VIA AMOS-3001 offers a powerful, rugged and HD-ready industrial-class PC that combines all the benefits of high performance 64-bit computing and ruthless hardware acceleration of HD media across the latest display connectivity standards including native HDMI support.
“Never before have developers had the opportunity to harness full 64-bit, superscalar processing in spaces as small as the palm of your hand,” said Daniel Wu, Vice President, VIA Embedded Platform Division, VIA Technologies, Inc. “The VIA EPIA-P820 combines with the VIA AMOS-3001 to create a complete embedded system that takes the latest features and digital media standards to the very smallest of places.”
The VIA EPIA-P820: Small yet Powerful Measuring a mere 10cm x 7.2cm the ultra compact VIA EPIA-P820 supports 2GB of DDR2 system memory and leverages a power-efficient, high performance 1.2GHz U2500 VIA Nano processor to provide system developers with the most powerful Pico-ITX platform ever. The VIA EPIA-P820 features the highly integrated, all-in-one VIA VX855 Media System Processor, specially designed to provide flawless hardware acceleration for the latest HD video codecs including H.264, WMV, VC1 and MPEG 2/4 at high bitrates and display resolutions of up to 1080p with very low CPU utilization. The VIA Chrome9™ HCM 3D integrated graphics core boasts full DirectX 9.0 support and a 128-bit 2D engine with hardware rotation capability.
The VIA EPIA-P820 uses a specially designed I/O add-on-board which supplements the native HDMI port to add a VGA port, a Gigabit LAN port and two USB 2.0 ports. The VIA Vinyl HD audio codec provides 6 channel, DTS capable audio with S/PDIF support. Storage is provided in the shape of an onboard 44-pin IDE connector and one S-ATA port. On board pin headers provide support for an additional 4 x USB 2.0 ports, an LPC connector, SMBus connector, PS/2 support, audio jacks, LVDS, 4 pairs of DIO and two UART ports.
For more details about the VIA EPIA-P820 please visit: www.via.com.tw/en/products/embedded/ProductDetail.jsp?productLine=1&id=1050&tabs=1
For images of the VIA EPIA-P820 please go to: www.viagallery.com/index.php?option=com_flickr4j&Task=sets&Set=72157623017384357&Page=1
VIA AMOS-3001: Strong, Silent and Powerful The VIA AMOS-3001 is specially designed to support the VIA EPIA-P820 Pico-ITX board. Native HDMI is supported as well as an additional VGA port and USB ports through a daughter board. The VIA AMOS-3001 has a certified operating temperature of -20 to 70 degrees C, vibration tolerance of up to 7Grms and a shock tolerance of up to 70G. With dimensions of only 15.0 cm x 4.6cm x 10.8 cm, the VIA AMOS-3001 is approximately 20% more compact than the VIA AMOS-3000. The VIA AMOS-3001 is also available with the VIA EPIA-P720 featuring the fanless 1GHz VIA Eden ULV processor.
Storage is provided through a 44-pin IDE interface for Disk on Module Flash drive - an optional storage sub-system expansion chassis offers support for a standard 2.5" S-ATA drive. An onboard RJ45 connector provides Gigabit networking while the VIA VT1708B brings HD audio. Additional features include 4 USB 2.0 ports, on board GPIO port, COM port and programmable Watchdog Timer. System LED indicators are provided for power and HDD activity.
For more details about the VIA AMOS-3001 please visit: www.via.com.tw/en/products/embedded/ProductDetail.jsp?productLine=2&id=1051&tabs=1
For images of the VIA AMOS-3001 please go to: www.viagallery.com/index.php?option=com_flickr4j&Task=sets&Set=72157623017269959&Page=1
Samples of both the VIA EPIA-P820 Pico-ITX board and the VIA AMOS-3001 are available now to project developers upon request.
About VIA Technologies, Inc. VIA Technologies, Inc is the foremost fabless supplier of power efficient x86 processor platforms that are driving system innovation in the PC, client, ultra mobile and embedded markets. Combining energy-saving processors with digital media chipsets and advanced connectivity, multimedia and networking silicon enables a broad spectrum of computing and communication platforms, including its widely acclaimed ultra compact mainboards. Headquartered in Taipei, Taiwan, VIA’s global network links the high tech centers of the US, Europe and Asia, and its customer base includes the world’s top OEMs and system integrators. www.via.com.tw
VIA PR Contact
International: Richard Brown Phone: (886)-2-2218-5452 #6201 Fax: (886)-2-8218-6752 Email: RIBrown@via.com.tw
Note to reporters, editors and writers: VIA is written in ALL CAPS.
The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners.
computerword.com.au

VIA Group Announces Industry’s Fastest USB 3.0 to SATA Controller

Taipei, Taiwan, 6 January 2010 - VIA Technologies, Inc., a leading innovator of power efficient x86 processor platforms, today launched the VIA VL700 USB 3.0-SATA Controller, a highly integrated single chip solution that allows users to connect SATA hard disk drive (HDD), solid state drive (SSD), and optical disc drive (ODD) devices to their PC via new USB 3.0 specification ports.
With data transfer rates of up to 5Gbps, USB 3.0 (also known as SuperSpeed USB) offers ten times the throughput available to USB 2.0 based devices, meaning large amounts of information stored on a SATA device can be effortlessly transferred to a PC in a fraction of the time it would usually take.
Developed by wholly owned subsidiary company VIA Labs, the VIA VL700 supports both SATA 3Gbps and 1.5Gbps data transfer rates and also Native Command Queuing (NCQ), which allows HDDs/SSDs to internally optimize the order in which received read and write commands are executed, thereby increasing performance. Additionally, data transfer to and from SATA-based DVD and Blu-ray Disc players is supported.
“As the storage capacity of hard drives increases, the need for better data transfer technology arises,” said Richard Brown, Vice President of Marketing, VIA Technologies, Inc. “SuperSpeed USB offers a big leap forward in transfer speeds and the VIA VL700 gives PC users a way to apply this performance advantage to their existing SATA storage devices.”
Attendees at the annual Lunch@Piero's media event, to be held during CES in Las Vegas on January 7th and 8th can view a demo of the new VIA VL700 USB 3.0-SATA Controller. More information on the Lunch@Piero's event can be found on the VIA website at: http://www.via.com.tw/en/company/events/ces2010/index.jsp
About VIA Labs, Inc. VIA Labs, Inc is the foremost supplier of USB 3.0 integrated chip controllers that are driving adoption of the new SuperSpeed USB data transfer specification. A wholly owned subsidiary of x86 processor platform provider, VIA Technologies, Inc., VIA Labs leverages its experience in high-speed serial link interfaces, in-house PHY design, and complete system integration to offer customers industry leading technology along with guaranteed high quality and implementation support.
About VIA Technologies, Inc. VIA Technologies, Inc is the foremost fabless supplier of power efficient x86 processor platforms that are driving system innovation in the PC, client, ultra mobile and embedded markets. Combining energy-saving processors with digital media chipsets and advanced connectivity, multimedia and networking silicon enables a broad spectrum of computing and communication platforms, including its widely acclaimed ultra compact mainboards. Headquartered in Taipei, Taiwan, VIA’s global network links the high tech centers of the US, Europe and Asia, and its customer base includes the world’s top OEMs and system integrators. www.via.com.tw
VIA PR Contact
International: Richard Brown Phone: (886)-2-2218-5452 #6201 Fax: (886)-2-8218-6752 Email: RIBrown@via.com.tw
The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners.
computerword.com.au

Google's mobile hopes go beyond Nexus One

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.--Forget about the Google Phone already: the Nexus One is merely a blip on Google's long-term strategy for the rise of mobile computing.
One could be forgiven for assuming Google was about to knock over the smartphone market--two and a half years after Apple did just that--with one quick blow going into Tuesday's Android event with a phone designed by Google and sold at retail by Google. After all, that's what the Internet said would happen leading up to the event.
Phones like the Nexus One are more sexy than mobile distribution strategies.
(Credit: Josh Lowensohn/CNET)
But what actually emerged from Building 43 on Tuesday is just another Android phone: a nice one, to be sure, but one featuring hardware designed completely by smartphone maker HTC and software features that will soon be available to other Android phones with advanced hardware, like the Droid. The real story is perhaps less sexy than a sleek iPhone killer that so many techies would love to see compete with Apple, but it's a sign that Google CEO Eric Schmidt has learned his lessons about competition over a lifetime in the tech industry.
What Google is trying to do is gradually reel in Apple over a period of years by emphasizing open phones with open application stores sold through a variety of channels running an open-source operating system. And, for good measure, it's also trying to do nothing less than reinvent the way mobile phones are sold in the U.S.
In order to do that, Google is going to have to do two things. It will need to show that consumers are willing to embrace a distribution channel for smartphones that is not controlled by wireless carriers, who will never give up their gatekeeper role over access and pricing of these phones if they are not forced to do so by customer demand. And it will have to continue to create compelling mobile software that serves as a check on the iPhone.
Google is certainly proud of the Nexus One. But it didn't build the phone, which, in any event, is at best a modest improvement on the current generation of Android phones.
According to a source familiar with the process, the Nexus One was designed by employees of One & Co., a San Francisco design firm acquired in 2008 by HTC. Andy Rubin, vice president of engineering for Android at Google and leader of the project, later told GigaOm that "there are no hardware or industrial designers on my team." Leading up to Tuesday's event, widespread reports claimed that Google had designed the Nexus One by itself, and while the company may have specified hardware requirements to go with its software, that's not the same as designing the phone.
So while Google is not making its own hardware, as Rubin maintained back in October, it will eventually be doing the second thing he claimed Google wasn't doing that day: competing with companies it formerly considered customers.
Google's Andy Rubin, head of Android development
(Credit: Josh Lowensohn/CNET)
With T-Mobile and Verizon on board for the Nexus One launch, all appears rosy between Google and those partners, who even though Android was a free product were essentially the end customers of that software up to this point. But make no mistake: Google's ultimate goal is to create a business plan where top-notch Android phones are created by companies like Motorola and HTC and then sold through a virtual mall of sorts where carriers like T-Mobile and Verizon have to compete for your business.
Indeed, in the same report referenced above, Om Malik's sources claim that behind the scenes, Motorola and Verizon are annoyed as they were expected to be leading up to the launch of the Nexus One. That's because Google's plans for the Nexus One and future Nexus One phones involve cutting out the heart of the smartphone market.
At the moment, the carriers cut three-way deals with the phone makers and operating system vendors to sell phones exclusively on their network, hoping to get the best phones on the market as to entice as many people as possible to sign up for two-year contracts with data service. What Google is proposing is a business model in which you pick a phone and then separately pick a carrier, all without having to leave your house.
In other words, it would be like buying a PC. Comcast doesn't have an exclusive deal with Dell where if you want one of their PCs, you have to get it from Comcast and lock yourself into a two-year cable modem package. It means wireless carriers would have to compete on pricing and the quality of their networks rather than exclusive deals for hot phones.
Google argues this is what caused the PC-based Internet to flourish, and if the mobile Internet is to do the same thing, it needs someone to break the logjam of carriers, phone makers, and software providers.
But will it work? In a way, Google is currently doing exactly what it decries: it's offering an excellent phone through an exclusive channel tied to a single carrier. Later this spring the Nexus One will be available on Verizon's network, but it's harder to sell unlocked CDMA phones (Verizon's technology) because they don't use removable SIM cards found in phones based on the GSM family of standards. So that phone might well be tied to a two-year Verizon contract, and Verizon confirmed Tuesday that it won't be sold anywhere other than Google's store.
But Rubin said during a question-and-answer session following Tuesday's event that Google has to be in the game before it can start shaking up the market. He linked the potential for this type of strategy to the same revolution that took place in retailing, with companies like Amazon.com proving that people were willing to buy products over the Internet without checking them out in stores first. That allowed companies like Amazon to eliminate the overhead associated with maintaining a physical retail store and consumers to have more flexibility with their spending.
In a way, the strategy behind the Nexus One is very Googly: launch early and iterate constantly. Schmidt's previous gigs at Novell and Sun Microsystems showed him what could happen when innovative companies were slowly subsumed by determined competitors with deep pockets (Novell versus Microsoft) and open software married to cheap hardware (Sun versus Linux). This time, he's marrying both in an attempt to remake mobile computing in Google's image by taking on Apple and the wireless carriers.
Don't expect Google to sell a ton of Nexus One phones in 2010. Rubin told GigaOm he thinks the company can sell 150,000 this year, which is a fraction of the 1.8 billion smartphones that Pyramid Research recently said it expects will be sold over the next five years.
The upside for Google is that even if this strategy doesn't work, the mobile Internet will still carry advertising.
cnet

Windows 7 has lots of 'GodModes' (exclusive)

Those intrigued by the "GodMode" in Windows 7 may be interested to know that there are many other similar shortcuts hidden within the operating system.
Intended for developers as a shortcut to various internal settings, such features have been around since Vista and even before, according to the head of Microsoft's Windows division, who tells CNET that the so-called GodMode settings folder uncovered by bloggers is just one of many undocumented developer features included in Windows.
In an e-mail interview, Steven Sinofsky, Windows division president, said several similar undocumented features provide direct access to all kinds of settings, from choosing a location to managing power settings to identifying biometric sensors.
As with the all-encompassing GodMode uncovered by bloggers, these other settings can be accessed directly by creating a new folder with any name (GodMode or otherwise) and then including a certain text string. Sinofsky noted more than a dozen strings create particular settings folders, in addition to the overarching GodMode folder option.
Sinofsky and others say the term GodMode was coined by bloggers; it was not something the company used internally to refer to the settings folders. Although Microsoft maintains many such undocumented developer commands to access such settings, all are replicated by the operating system's Control Panel settings.
Such undocumented means of accessing various settings have occurred in previous versions of Windows, and the GodMode identified by bloggers was also present in Windows Vista. Some users of the 64-bit version of Vista, however, say invoking the GodMode folder caused their machines to crash. Microsoft says it has yet to reproduce that problem, though several readers have said they have encountered problems.
It seems that the folks in Redmond have gotten a kick out of all the attention that the Godmode has gotten and have decided to have fun with it. Sinofsky sent a list of other commands that also create special folders (see list below).
Given the Vista issues, though, I would try these only on a Windows 7 machine, ideally a test machine. To make it work, create a new folder with any name, then a period, then one of the text strings below.
For example, the first one could be a folder named "thankscnet.{00C6D95F-329C-409a-81D7-C46C66EA7F33}" (use everything inside quotes--but not the quotes themselves).
Here's the list of strings:
{00C6D95F-329C-409a-81D7-C46C66EA7F33}
{0142e4d0-fb7a-11dc-ba4a-000ffe7ab428}
{025A5937-A6BE-4686-A844-36FE4BEC8B6D}
{05d7b0f4-2121-4eff-bf6b-ed3f69b894d9}
{1206F5F1-0569-412C-8FEC-3204630DFB70}
{15eae92e-f17a-4431-9f28-805e482dafd4}
{17cd9488-1228-4b2f-88ce-4298e93e0966}
{1D2680C9-0E2A-469d-B787-065558BC7D43}
{1FA9085F-25A2-489B-85D4-86326EEDCD87}
{208D2C60-3AEA-1069-A2D7-08002B30309D}
{20D04FE0-3AEA-1069-A2D8-08002B30309D}
{2227A280-3AEA-1069-A2DE-08002B30309D}
{241D7C96-F8BF-4F85-B01F-E2B043341A4B}
{4026492F-2F69-46B8-B9BF-5654FC07E423}
{62D8ED13-C9D0-4CE8-A914-47DD628FB1B0}
{78F3955E-3B90-4184-BD14-5397C15F1EFC}
And, as a reminder, to create the Godmode folder itself, use this string:
{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C}

CES: Microsoft promises Natal for 2010

LAS VEGAS--It's what gamers had expected, but Microsoft is officially confirming that it plans to release its Project Natal Xbox add-on later this year.
Natal, which that lets people play games using their bodies as a controller, was shown at last year's E3 trade show. There were indications that it was planned for a holiday 2010 release, but Microsoft had not officially said so.
The software maker had hoped that the news would come on stage later Wednesday, as part of CEO Steve Ballmer's keynote speech, but word leaked out after Microsoft briefly posted a video with Robbie Bach to its Channel 9 developer site.
In the video, Bach also mentions another new Xbox feature: Game Room. Game Room is a feature of Xbox Live that lets users create their own arcade. In addition to playing classic games, such as those written for Atari or Intellivision, users can organize the machines and allow their avatars and those of friends to move throughout the virtual arcade.
Through Xbox Live users will be able to invite friends to their personal arcade to show off and try out their collection. Microsoft plans to launch new games each week, with the aim of giving users a choice of more than 1,000 games during the next three years.
We'll have live coverage of everything else Ballmer and Bach have to say, starting at 6:30 p.m. PST. For a preview of the highlights of what's expected, check out this story I did earlier this week.
To get a better sense of Natal, here's a video from when I got to try it out myself last year.

Meet the fastest, most powerful iPhone yet. iPhone 3GS features video recording, Voice Control, up to 32GB of storage, and more.

Images of the iPhone 3GS video recording interface, the Voice Control screen, and the built-in digital compass.

Introducing iPhone 3GS

Meet the fastest, most powerful iPhone yet. iPhone 3GS features video recording, Voice Control, up to 32GB of storage, and more.
New to iPhone? Find out why you’ll love it
Watch the
Guided Tour
The National Geographic site on iPhone 3GS, with a 2x faster badge.

The Fastest iPhone Ever

The first thing you’ll notice about iPhone 3GS is how quickly you can launch applications. Web pages render in a fraction of the time, and you can view email attachments faster. Improved performance and updated 3D graphics deliver an incredible gaming experience, too. In fact, everything you do on iPhone 3GS is up to 2x faster and more responsive than iPhone 3G.

Video

Images of the iPhone 3GS camera's tap to focus feature and the video camera interface.
Now you can shoot video, edit it, and share it — all on your iPhone 3GS. Shoot high-quality VGA video in portrait or landscape. Trim your footage by adjusting start and end points. Then share your video in an email, post it to your MobileMe gallery, publish it on YouTube, or sync it back to your Mac or PC using iTunes.
Learn more about video recording

3-Megapixel Camera

The new 3-megapixel camera takes great still photos, too, thanks to built-in autofocus and a handy new feature that lets you tap the display to focus on anything (or anyone) you want.
Learn more about the camera
The Voice Control screen and a call screen.

Voice Control

Voice Control recognizes the names in your Contacts and knows the music on your iPod. So if you want to place a call or play a song, all you have to do is ask.
Learn more about Voice Control
A map on iPhone 3GS rotated to show the correct direction and the Compass application.

Compass

With a built-in digital compass, iPhone 3GS can point the way. Use the new Compass app, or watch as it automatically reorients maps to match the direction you’re facing.1
Learn more about Maps + Compass
The iPhone 3GS keyboard and the Cut, Copy, and Paste interface.

Cut, Copy & Paste

Cut, copy, and paste words and photos, even between applications. Copy and paste images and content from the web, too.
Learn more about Cut, Copy & Paste

Landscape Keyboard

Want more room to type on the intelligent software keyboard? Rotate iPhone to landscape to use a larger keyboard in Mail, Messages, Notes, and Safari.
Learn more about the keyboard
Images showing the accessibility settings screen, the White on Black feature, and the Zoom settings screen.

Accessibility

iPhone 3GS offers accessibility features to assist users who are visually or hearing impaired. These features include the VoiceOver screen reader, a Zoom feature, White on Black display options, Mono Audio, and more.
Learn more about accessibility
A laptop connected to an iPhone 3GS with Internet tethering active.

Internet Tethering

Surf the web from practically anywhere. Now you can share the 3G connection on your iPhone with your Mac notebook or PC laptop. Tethering is not currently offered in the U.S. and some other countries. See your carrier for availability.
Learn more about Internet tethering
The Voice Memos application.

Voice Memos

Capture and share a thought, a memo, a meeting, or any audio recording on the go with the new Voice Memos application.
Learn more about Voice Memos
The Nike Plus iPod interface.

Nike + iPod

iPhone includes built-in Nike + iPod support. Just slip the Nike + iPod Sensor (available separately) into your Nike+ shoe and start your workout.
The Stocks application in landscape with a chart tracking stock peformance.

Stocks

Stocks on iPhone shows you charts, financial details, and headline news for any stock you choose. Rotate iPhone to see even more detailed information.
The YouTube application playing a video of a surfing dog.

YouTube

Watch YouTube videos wherever you are. Log in to your YouTube account to save and sync bookmarks and rate your favorites.
iPhone showing Important Message
Safari showing the mobileme site, find my iphone section

Find My iPhone
and Remote Wipe

If you misplace your iPhone, Apple’s MobileMe service can help you find it. Log on to me.com to view a map that shows the approximate location of your iPhone. If it’s nearby, have it play an alert sound to help you find it. If it’s not, you can display a custom message, remotely lock it with a passcode, or initiate a remote wipe and restore it to factory settings. Learn more at the MobileMe site

Everything you love about iPhone.

Phone, iPod, and Internet device in one, iPhone 3GS offers desktop-class email, an amazing Maps application, and Safari — the world’s most advanced mobile web browser. And your iPhone does even more when you add apps from the App Store.
Images of the iPhone 3GS Home screen, call screen, iPod now playing screen featuring The Killers, Safai featuring the New York Times, and the Facebook application.

Hacking industry heads top five data security threats for 2010s, warns Imperva


Sydney, December 29, 2009: Hacking will become a more potent threat over the new decade as criminals evolve illegally accessing computers into an industry, according to Imperva, the Data Security leader.
Imperva predicts five key security trends for the 2010s:
• The industrialisation of hacking, with clear definition of roles developing within the hacking community forming a supply chain that starkly resembles that of drug cartels. The weapons of choice will be automated tools such as malware distributed via botnets. • A move from application to data security as cyber-criminals look for new ways to bypass existing application security measures and focus on obtaining the valuable data itself via insider. The fast growth in the number of applications that access enterprise data pools will make application security approaches much less cost effective than a security approach that is data centric.
• Increasing attacks on social network sites where vulnerable and less technically savvy groups are susceptible to phishing attacks and malware.
• An increase in password theft/grabbing attacks as it is perceived that by obtaining credentials for one application - like an email account - these will also apply to other applications such as online banking and Paypal accounts.
• A move from reactive to pro-active security as organisations move from sitting back and waiting to be breached, to actively seeking holes and plugging them.
Amichai Shulman, Imperva’s Chief Technology Officer, advises application owners to tackle these trends head on. He says: “Organisations that are serious about protecting data will require a mind change to taking action at the source, utilising a number of technologies including a data-based firewall combined with data and file activity monitoring. Plus the next generation of DLP products are heading in a promising direction.
“I see automation as a major issue and technical measures will be needed to combat this trend. Organisations must look to integrate their protection tools with pro-active security measures, admittedly not readily available today. The security community is currently developing solutions that will become widely available over the next few years. The next decade must see the IT security industry rise up and stand shoulder to shoulder if it is to win the fight against cyber-criminals.”
About Imperva
Imperva, the Data Security leader, enables a complete security lifecycle for business databases and the applications that use them. Over 4,500 of the world’s leading enterprises, government organisations, and managed service providers rely on Imperva to prevent sensitive data theft, protect against data breaches, secure applications, and ensure data confidentiality. The award-winning Imperva SecureSphere is the only solution that delivers full activity monitoring from the database to the accountable application user and is recognised for its overall ease of management and deployment. For more information, visit www.imperva.com.
Media queries Grenadine Lau Imperva Phone: +65.6749 4482 Mobile: +65.9666 1886 Email: Grenadine.Lau@Imperva.com
David Frost PR Deadlines Pty Ltd, for Imperva Phone: +61.2.4341 5021 Mobile: +61 (0) 408 408 210 Email: davidf@prdeadlines.com.au
computerword.com.au

2009: The year of the smartphone




From the Palm Pre to the iPhone 3GS to a slew of new Google Android Phones, like the Motorola Droid, smartphones were all the rage in wireless in 2009.
In February, analysts were already talking up the potential of the smartphone market. And now many believe sales of the advanced devices that connect to the Internet and offer a platform for different applications will soon overtake sales of regular cell phones.

Wireless
Palm was the first to get the hype machine whirring at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January with its new Palm Pre.
When Palm finally launched the Pre in early June exclusively on Sprint Nextel's network, loyal Palm fans lined up for the device. Initial sales were decent, but the Palm Pre didn't even come close to creating the sales momentum experienced by Apple's iconic iPhone when it was first launched in 2007.
Still, the Pre launch was a turning point for the industry, and more manufacturers and wireless service providers continue to flood the market with new devices.
The latter half of 2009 saw the rapid expansion of Google Android phones. Google's open development operating system was launched in 2007, and as of the beginning of 2009, there was only one Android device on the market--the G1 sold by T-Mobile.
In June, T-Mobile USA and HTC introduced the second Android handset into the U.S. market, the MyTouch. And just before Android's second birthday, the much-anticipated flood of Android device announcements began. Manufacturers such as Samsung, Motorola, LG, and HTC all announced multiple Google Android devices.
The most noteworthy Android device hit the market in early November. Verizon Wireless launched the Motorola Droid amid a $100 million marketing campaign. The aggressive advertising push seems to be working; analysts estimate that Verizon and Motorola will sell at least 1 million devices by the end of the year.
Apple didn't sit still either in 2009. In June, the company started selling the iPhone 3GS. AT&T agreed to subsidize the older iPhone 3G even more, and consumers were suddenly able to buy an iPhone for $99.
A faster processor and more functionality on the iPhone 3GS sent sales through the roof for iPhones during 2009. And Apple reported that it sold 1 million devices worldwide the first weekend it was on the market.
Apple's iTunes-based App Store for the iPhone and iPod Touch had a good year as well. As of November, the App Store had more than 100,000 applications and more than 2 billion application downloads.
Apple's competitors also launched their own app stores in an effort to capitalize on the mobile app frenzy. Google launched the Android Market, which today has more than 20,000 applications. Research In Motion, which makes BlackBerry devices, launched the BlackBerry App World. Nokia launched its Ovi Store in some markets this year, though the store is still not available in the U.S. And Microsoft launched its Windows Marketplace for Mobile in October.
The rapid growth of the mobile app market has not been without consequences. Heavy mobile data users are starting to put a strain on wireless networks. Most notably, iPhone users, who tend to consume six to seven times more wireless data than other cell phone users, have been complaining of poor 3G wireless service on AT&T's network throughout the country, particularly in urban areas such as New York and San Francisco.
AT&T admits that it's a victim of its own iPhone success, but executives say it's only a small percentage of customers who are putting much of the strain on the network. And AT&T is already thinking of ways to help curb some usage.
At an investor conference in New York earlier this month, Ralph de la Vega, AT&T's head of wireless, said the wireless operator is considering incentives to get consumers to reduce their data usage. De la Vega said 3 percent of smartphone users are consuming 40 percent of the network capacity.
The comments stirred quite a bit of backlash, which coupled with poor network performance, might hurt AT&T's reputation in the long run, some experts say.
As smartphones hit the mainstream and more networks look constrained, many carriers are talking about the next generation of wireless networks. Clearwire, which has partnered with Sprint Nextel and has accepted funding from Google and Intel as well as the cable operators Comcast and Time Warner Cable, is already well on its way to building a nationwide 4G wireless network using a technology called WiMax. The company, which raised more money this year from some investors, is steadily announcing new cities where its new 4G WiMax wireless broadband service is available.
Verizon Wireless was also talking up its 4G wireless plans in 2009. Early in the year, at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, the company's CTO announced its roadmap for deploying 4G wireless service using LTE. The network is already being built and will be commercially launched in some markets starting in 2010.
Other carriers will also soon be discussing plans for their next-generation networks. But new networks will likely need more wireless spectrum, and the new Federal Communications Commission is already looking at ways to free up new spectrum, including taking some unused spectrum from TV broadcasters.
The excitement in the wireless market will likely continue in 2010 as more Android devices are expected to come on the market. Even Google is expected to launch its own branded phone. The next year will also likely be filled with more 4G wireless network news, and the ongoing battle for more spectrum will probably intensify. And of course, everyone will be waiting to see when and if Verizon Wireless finally gets the iPhone. Could 2010 be the year for a Verizon iPhone? Stay tuned to find out.
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