Saturday, October 26, 2013

Is Google building a hulking floating data center in SF Bay?

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This large structure, which is likely being built by Google, could be a floating data center. It is located on a barge just off Treasure Island, between San Francisco and Oakland.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)
SAN FRANCISCO -- Something big and mysterious is rising from a floating barge at the end of Treasure Island, a former Navy base in the middle of San Francisco Bay. And Google's fingerprints are all over it.
It's unclear what's inside the structure, which stands about four stories high and was made with a series of modern cargo containers. The same goes for when it will be unveiled, but the big tease has already begun. Locals refer to it as the secret project.
Google did not respond to multiple requests for comment. But after going through lease agreements, tracking a contact tied to the project on LinkedIn, talking to locals on Treasure Island, and consulting with experts, it's all but certain that Google is the entity that is building the massive structure that's in plain sight, but behind tight security.
Could the structure be a sea-faring data center? One expert who was shown pictures of the structure thinks so, especially because being on a barge provides easy access to a source of cooling, as well as an inexpensive source of power -- the sea. And even more tellingly, Google was granted a patent in 2009 for a floating data center, and putting data centers inside shipping containers is already a well-established practice.
Whether the structure is in fact a floating data center is hard to say for sure, of course, since Google's not talking. But Google, understandably, has a history of putting data centers in places with cheap cooling, as well as undertaking odd and unexpected projects like trying to bring Internet access to developing nations via balloons and blimps.
Hangar 3
Sometime late last year, a company began a substantial project inside a cavernous building on Treasure Island known as Hangar 3.
Since then, Hangar 3 and the areas immediately adjacent have been under various stages of lock-down. Thanks to Google's own satellite imagery, though, it's possible to get a glimpse of the early stages of the project, and much of which was being worked on outside the building but shielded behind a long security fence.
Sometime after Hangar 3 was occupied, the building and much of the adjacent area was cordoned off behind security fencing, ensuring that no one could see in.
(Credit: Screenshot by CNET)
It's also possible to tell from that imagery and by visiting Treasure Island that whatever was under construction in the area outside Hangar 3 has since been moved to a floating barge alongside the pier adjacent to the property, which is off-limits to the public and guarded by private security.
The barge is 250 feet long, 72 feet wide, and 16 feet deep, and was built in 2011 in Belle Chasse, La., by C & C Marine and Repair. Its registration number is BAL 0010. Behind it is a perfect view of the new eastern span of the San Francisco Bay Bridge. On top is a four-story-tall modular building made from shipping containers and sporting 12 tall white spires that look like they could be anything from masts to flagpoles to antennas. The containers each have three narrow slits for windows, and there is a stairway on the northeast corner that goes from ground level to the top. There's also one container on that side that slants to the ground at a 45-degree angle. Wrapped mostly in dark netting, the structure doesn't reveal what's inside.
The shipping containers, before, in the parking lot outside Hangar 3 (inset), and now, as part of the large structure on the barge.
(Credit: Illustration by James Martin/CNET)
Joel Egan, the principal at Cargotecture, which designs custom cargo container buildings, said the structure looks like a data center. "The cutouts in the long walls of the containers, when they line up, they make hallways," Egan said. "You could put all sorts of mainframes into the containers...It doesn't have enough windows for an office building."
Egan also said that putting a data center on a barge would provide access to abundant water -- a key for cooling large numbers of servers.
Jonathan Koomey, a Stanford research fellow and expert on data centers, also said that floating data centers make sense. Although saltwater could be problematic as a cooling source, he said, it's a surmountable problem. He also said that companies like Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Sun Microsystems, and Microsoft have been installing specially built data centers in shipping containers for some time because they're easy to deploy. Google even has a patent for the concept. "It wouldn't surprise me at all," Koomey said, "if there were a bunch of containers, and it turned out to be a data center."
Perhaps more persuasive is that in 2009, Google was granted a patent for a "water-based data center," defined as a "system [that] includes a floating platform-mounted computer data center comprising a plurality of computing units, a sea-based electrical generator in electrical connection with the plurality of computing units, and one or more sea-water cooling units for providing cooling to the...computing units."
A diagram for a water-based data center from Google's 2009 patent.
(Credit: Google)
The patent further suggests that "the computing units are mounted in a plurality of crane-removable modules," that "the computer data center comprises a floating-platform mounted data center," and that "the modular data centers may be arranged in a two-dimensional or three-dimensional grid. For example...two rows that each contain two containers...Those modules could also be stacked two or more high."
The patent was granted to three men -- Jimmy Clidaras, David Stiver, and William Hamburgen, all of whom still work at Google. Only Clidaras replied to requests for interviews, although he wasn't immediately available to comment.
Time magazine, for one, thought so much of the concept that it named Google's idea one of its "best inventions" of 2008.
Why? Google's patent spelled out some of the most valuable advantages: Because the system is built from modular, standard-size shipping containers, it's easy to deploy, via ship or truck, to areas that are in most need of Internet infrastructure; there's little-to-no pollution created by wave-generated energy; and a floating data center could produce plenty of power via wave energy at a distance of 3 to 7 miles offshore, and in 50 to 70 meters of water.
The structure built on the barge could easily be following just this concept. And it could well be the answer to this article, which pondered, "What Happened to Google's Floating Data Center?"
Hunting for the Google connection
Although Google has not confirmed any projects on Treasure Island, which is owned by the US Navy and subleased by the city of San Francisco, ample evidence suggests that the company is behind whatever is going on inside Hangar 3 and on the barge at the southeastern end of the island.
When asked by CNET, Treasure Island director of island operations Mirian Saez said that Google had not leased Hangar 3. She said that a company called By and Large LLC was the new major tenant of the building.
Hangar 3 on Treasure Island, alongside Pier 1, as seen in Apple Maps, and prior to the beginning of the project.
(Credit: Screenshot by CNET)
By and Large has a miniscule online profile, and no clear ties to Google. The lease, provided by Saez, identifies two men, Mike Darby and Kenneth Yi, as By and Large's official representatives, as well as a phone number for the Delaware-registered company. Darby told me he wasn't associated with By and Large. Yi, who is the signatory on the lease, couldn't be reached for comment.
Even so, a former Google employee who requested anonymity said it "makes perfect sense" that the tech giant would set up an innocuous LLC to officially run a big stealth project. Saez said that a man named Tim Brandon was the point of contact for By and Large, and provided a phone number. Punch in the digits provided by Saez and you'll hear, "Thank you for calling Google. The number you dialed is no longer in service." In addition, Brandon's LinkedIn profileidentified his current position as "Senior Transaction Manager, CBRE @ Google" and his top responsibility as "Lead and manage all acquisition and disposition activity for Google's Silicon Valley portfolio."
Until I contacted him, that is. After I messaged him through LinkedIn and sent him an e-mail earlier this week -- without getting a response -- Brandon's profile now lists his current position as just "CBRE" and his top responsibility as "Lead and manage all acquisition and disposition activity for Silicon Valley portfolio."
Tim Brandon's LinkedIn profile identified him as working with Google -- until he was contacted by CNET.
(Credit: Screenshot by CNET)
CBRE is short for CB Richard Ellis, which identifies itself as "the world's largest commercial real estate services firm serving owners, investors and occupiers." A CBRE spokesperson confirmed Brandon's employment but said the company doesn't talk about clients. The company routinely assigns its people full-time to clients for any number of tasks or services, he said. In such cases, those people's professional profiles would list them as "CBRE @" the specific client's name. CBRE's Website lists Brandon as located in Mountain View, Calif., home to Google headquarters and no CBRE offices.
By and Large is both the official Hangar 3 tenant and the owner of the barge. An online document showed that By and Large is the owner of the freight barge that holds the structure. A representative at C & C Marine and Repair, which built the barge, told me that a vessel like BAL 0010 is capable of going "anywhere the owner can take it," including into open water. That suggests that whatever is being built on the barge could well be intended for waters well beyond Treasure Island and San Francisco.
The giant structure was built on top of a barge registered as 'BAL 0010,' which is owned by By and Large, LLC, the same entity that leased Hangar 3.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)
Even without a formal link to Google, I did find less official but persuasive evidence. A woman who works at the Oasis Cafe, down the street from Hangar 3 said that she had frequently served people wearing Hangar 3 badges who paid with "Google credit cards." She also said that whatever has been going on inside the building and on the barge is very hush-hush on the island and that even the people she suspected are Google employees don't "know what they're working on."
As they walked around Hangar 3, a CNET reporter and CNET photographer were watched closely by these two people, one of them who had a large pair of binoculars.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)
When I met someone working in a section of Hangar 3 that's separate from the main part of the building and inquired what building it was, the man asked who I was looking for. I answered "Google," and without hesitating he said I needed to go to a main entrance a bit further down the side of the structure. That entrance was manned by a security guard and had two cameras mounted above the entryway. A security supervisor turned me away when I asked to visit Google or talk to Tim Brandon. Upon returning to Hangar 3 a couple of days later with a CNET photographer, we were watched closely by two people, including one with a big set of binoculars.
A sign on one entrance to Hangar 3 reads, "You are entering a secure building. Please prepare to surrender your smart phone, camera phone, camera, and or any other audio/visual devices."
A sign on the door to Hangar 3 made it clear that the tenant -- Google? -- doesn't want any recording done inside.
(Credit: Daniel Terdiman/CNET)
Chris Childers, a Treasure Island local, told me that although he had never seen the word "Google" anywhere in or around Hangar 3, people have been talking about Google being in the giant building, and working on the barge, for months.
In fact, Childers said, the tenant had taken over the Hangar 3 parking lot last December, and for months had very tight security around it. "I heard it was a Google project," Childers said. He also recalled the long security fence around the Hangar 3 property that is visible in Google satellite imagery, as did an artist who works close to Hangar 3.
Childers told me that a woman at a Treasure Island bus stop that he suspected was a Google employee had told him, about what was going on inside Hangar 3 and on the barge, "I can't tell you [what the project is, but you'll see it soon enough, and it'll be really cool." He also said that the woman told him that the massive project being built on the barge had likely been built piecemeal inside Hangar 3 and that "'I can't believe we built it all inside'" Hangar 3.
Larry and Sergey, and anyone else who might have knowledge of this project, we'd love to hear the full story.

Source: news.Cnet.com
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Friday, October 25, 2013

9 Features kicked out of Windows 8.1 by Microsoft

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Forget about the desktop improvements and Bing Smart Search: Windows 8.1’s biggest draw may be the sheer volume of new and hidden features. Seriously—it’s jam-packed.
But apparently Microsoft needed to clear room for all the fresh ideas. Windows 8.1 shaves away many of Windows 8’s auxiliary features. Some of the removals are blatant once they’re pointed out, while others are more obscure, but all are off the table in Windows 8.1.

1. Messaging app

We’ll miss you, buddy. Maybe.
Windows 8’s IM capabilities were handled by the aptly named Messaging, one of the core apps shining front and center on the live-tiled Start screen. No more: Microsoft has kicked Messaging to the curb less than a year after the app’s arrival, replacing the Windows 8 native with Skype.
As high-profile as the swap is, it’s no great loss. Messaging was pretty lackluster and largely overlapped Skype’s core functionality. Meanwhile, Skype’s communication services are also being baked into the Xbox One and Outlook.com (but not Windows Phone). One bummer: Messaging supported Facebook Chat, while Skype does not.

2. Windows Experience Index

Ever since the Vista days, Windows provided a “Windows Experience Index” score in your My Computer properties. The WEI score was supposed to be a numerical indicator of your PC’s brawn. Powerful PCs received higher scores, and so on.
Unfortunately, the WEI’s scoring criteria weren’t well known, and it placed odd, seemingly artificial caps on the highest possible scores. (Windows 7’s cap was 7.9, while Vista’s was 5.9.) Whether for these or other reasons, the WEI never seemed to catch on, and it’s nowhere to be found in Windows 8.1.

3. Facebook and Flickr in the Photos app

Windows 8’s gorgeous Photos app. Note the Facebook and Flickr integration. (Click to enlarge.)
Regrettably, Windows 8.1’s Photos app no longer supports Facebook and Flickr image integration.
“In Windows 8, we wanted to provide a way for folks to view their photos on other services, knowing there would be few (if any) apps in the store at launch that would do so,” a Microsoft representative said. “Now there are many apps in the store that offer ways to view photos on other services.”
Windows 8.1’s Photos app is far more lackluster in both aesthetics and capabilities. (Click to enlarge.)
A Facebook app launched in the Windows Store the same day as Windows 8.1, but its image-management and sharing capabilities aren’t as flexible as those in Windows 8’s Photos app. And despite Flickr’s sudden disappearance from the Photos app, an official app for that service has yet to appear in the Windows Store.

4. Libraries?

Your Documents, Music, Pictures, and Videos libraries aren’t visible by default in Windows 8.1—but that doesn’t mean they’re not there. Activating them is easy, as shown in the single screenshot below.
Click View > Navigation Pane > Show Libraries in the desktop file explorer. Boom! Done.
Some websites are reporting, though, that Windows 8.1’s libraries ditch Public folders. Our experiences are a bit more hit-and-miss: Public folders appeared in my Windows 8.1 libraries after I upgraded from Windows 8, but they were a no-show in the libraries of another PCWorld editor.
Don’t let that bring you down! After reenabling libraries using the method outlined above, just right-click a library and select Properties > Add… to toss additional folders into the mix.

5. Windows 7 File Recovery, kind of

Ominous portents swirled when the Windows 8.1 Preview pushed out without the ‘Windows 7 File Recovery’ image-backup option found in Windows 8, especially since Microsoft has clearly stated that the tool is being deprecated in favor of Windows 8’s File History. And yes, it’s still missing in Windows 8.1.
A system image utility by any other name...
But fear not! Though Windows 7 File Recovery is dead in name, it lives on in spirit as ‘System Image Backup’. Just head to Control Panel > System & Security > File History, and then look in the lower-left corner.

6. Apps splashed on the Start screen

In Windows 8, all newly installed apps and desktop programs automatically received a tile on the modern Start screen. That isn’t the case in Windows 8.1: Now, you have to dive into the All Apps screen and manually pin new software to the Start screen.
A Start screen cluttered by Windows 8’s default tile creation. The feature will not be missed in Windows 8.1—at least not by me.
That’s a big win in my book, since installing desktop programs often plopped tiles for dozens of auxiliary executables, languages, and other options on the Start screen alongside the link to the base program, resulting in a distressing amount of clutter. Less-seasoned computer users may become confused when installed apps fail to appear on the Start screen by default, however—especially since the returned Start button’s behavior trains you to consider the Start screen as a “modern”-day Start-menu replacement. Steel yourself for the support calls from family and friends.

7. My Computer

Yes, the nearly 20-year-old ‘My Computer’ moniker has retired, giving way to the more cloud- and cross-platform-friendly ‘This PC’. Desktop fallout from the focus on “One Microsoft” continues—though this is an admittedly trivial change.

8. SkyDrive desktop program

Keen-eyed SkyDrive users will note that jumping to Windows 8.1 erases the discrete (and optional) SkyDrive desktop software that served to keep local files in sync with the cloud. And that makes sense: Microsoft’s cloud service weaves itself tightly into Windows 8.1, and the desktop program’s functionality has largely been replaced by the update’s native SkyDrive support.

9. SkyDrive desktop-program functionality

Continuing with that theme, some of the more obscure yet helpful functions of the SkyDrive desktop program haven’t been replicated by Windows 8.1’s native features. For one thing, upgrading to Windows 8.1 kills SkyDrive’s remote Fetch feature.
Also be aware that unlike the desktop program, SkyDrive in Windows 8.1 relies on symbolic links to point to cloud-stored files in File Explorer, even though everything appears to be saved locally at first glance. This “smart files” functionality can save a lot of space on tablets and other storage-restricted devices, but if you’d like to keep local copies of your stuff, right-click the SkyDrive icon in File Explorer and select Make available offline.
Your SkyDrive-stored files aren’t fully saved locally by default in Windows 8.1. Here’s how to fix that.
You can also right-click individual files and folders and choose to make them online-only or available offline.

Still worth the upgrade

Don’t let these little omissions dissuade you: Windows 8.1 is superior to Windows 8 in virtually every way. It represents a much less jarring version of Microsoft’s grand vision of a cross-platform future—though it still won’t win over folks whose lips instinctively curl at the merest mention of the word “Metro.” Check out PCWorld’s definitive review of Windows 8.1for all the juicy details. (And if you’re one of those desktop diehards, you might want to check out our guide to banishing the modern UI from your Windows 8.1 PC.)
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Firefox OS - Have you ever heard of it?

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An app screen on the ZTE Open with Firefox OS.
The ZTE Open is one of the lower-end phones that will bring Firefox OS to developing markets later this year.
(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET)
BARCELONA, Spain--Firefox OS is real, and it works.
Mozilla's browser-based phone technology is a credible option for the emerging markets where it'll first arrive starting in the second quarter. The nonprofit debuted the first version of the software at the Mobile World Congress show in front of 700 people curious to see how well it works.
For that mobile-savvy audience, the answer is this: not well enough. For wealthier customers, Firefox OS will have a hard time standing up to the two powerhouses of the mobile market, Google's Android and Apple's iOS.
With Firefox OS, Mozilla is in a race to improve its software and attract developers and partners faster than its rivals spread to the low-end smartphone market. Major allies like Telefonica, Deutsche Telekom, Telenor, and China Mobile will help spread Firefox OS around the world to markets where feature phones still rule.
Firefox OS looks familiar to anyone who's used Android and iOS: when you turn it on, you're faced with the familiar grid of apps. Swiping left and right slides in other pages of apps. And across the bottom of each page is a fixed set of four apps: the phone dialer, a text-messaging app, the Firefox browser, and the camera app.

As with iOS, swiping to the leftmost screen launches a search app. But unlike iOS, this search app is wired not just to your own apps but also to the Firefox Marketplace and to the Web at large -- remember, this is a browser-based OS. If you find an app you like in the search results, you can pin it to one of your screens for easy future access.
The operating system runs apps with Firefox's browser engine, an approach that Mozilla promises will be able to wring more performance out of lower-end phone hardware than Android with its intermediate Java-like layer. Mozilla's favorite demo was a Web version of Zepto Labs' Cut the Rope, which does indeed work at a reasonably fluid frame rate despite having to push pixels around the screen while paying attention to the player's touch.
Firefox OS has a number of extra features so programmers can tell their Web apps to tap into phone services such as an accelerometer, battery level monitor, camera, network strength indicator, and phone dialers. At a higher level, Firefox OS app programmers can use Canvas for graphics today and WebGL for higher performance tomorrow, Mozilla promises.
The gallery app on Firefox OS presents photos as an array of thumbnails that scrolls vertically.
The gallery app on Firefox OS presents photos as an array of thumbnails that scrolls vertically.
(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET)
On the lower-end Firefox OS phones I tried -- the Geeksphone Keon and ZTE Open -- touch operations were somewhat sluggish, and accurate typing was difficult. It's not clear how much of this was because of the hardware and how much because of the software, but they are low-budget phones, though. On the higher-end Geeksphone Peak, swiping and scrolling and typing worked better.
Firefox OS comes with a range of built-in apps such as Facebook and Wikipedia, and Nokia's Here provides mapping services. A long-press on the home button invokes a task switcher so you can juggle among open apps.
A contacts app lets you open up a screen full of information about people you know. It serves as a hub to phone them, send e-mail or text messages, or check their Facebook walls. Facebook integration also lets people import their contacts; Mozilla plans to add import mechanisms for services like Gmail, Yahoo Mail, and Hotmail -- something it knows how to do by virtue of its Thunderbird e-mail software for PCs.
A camera app, which also is accessible from the lock screen, has tabs for taking photos or videos, and it's got a link to the built-in gallery app. That app lets you crop photos, apply some basic color filters, adjust contrast, and take actions like sharing photos on Facebook or by Bluetooth wireless networking.
Firefox OS's gallery app lets you crop photos, apply some basic color filters, and adjust contrast.
Firefox OS's gallery app lets you crop photos, apply some basic color filters, and adjust contrast.
(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET)
Using Firefox OS reminded me of early versions of Android: somewhat clunky and rough around the edges, with missing features and apps. It's improving, and it'll benefit from hardware advances, and Mozilla has some advantages to offset its major challenges.
It's definitely good, though, that Firefox OS can get a running start in the app ecosystem by mobilizing the vast army of Web programmers -- programmers who might well be happy they can reach Firefox OS customers without having to jump through nearly as many hoops as the Apple App Store or Google Play present.
Mozilla has rounded up many allies that will be essential to bring Firefox OS to market, but they're starting in developing markets where Android and iOS today are unaffordable luxuries. Those first phones will arrive in the second quarter of 2013; expect higher-end Firefox OS devices to hit the United States in 2014.
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How to get more Traffic from targeted Country?

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Hello Friends!!
This article is particularly for bloggers or website developers,who wants to get more traffic from targeted countries. What is need of this ?I have explained it in this article. This will help you if you have add Google adsense or  any other pay per click site like infolinks or chitika etc. It increases the CPC: Cost Per Click value.

First of all:

What is the need of targeting traffic from particular Country?

Many of bloggers wants more traffic from USA or CANADA.This is only because CPC value is much higher for that countries.Indian public generally don’t buy anything from online shopping websites,which is much higher in USA or CANADA.This is one of big reason for low CPC for Asian blogger. So you can get more dollars per click if you are targeting USA or CANADIAN traffic.

I think now you are interested to add USA or CANADA as targeted country in your website or blog.

For Website developers:Before displaying steps Few things you must have done is Your site must be verified by Google.If not you can do it in “Google webmaster tools“.

Steps to add target visitors country..

Step 1)
Add your Blog or website to targeted countries directory so that people will know about your Blog and see your site.

Step 2)
Set Geographic target for your blog using Google Webmaster Tools.

Step 3)
Now Login to your Webmaster account and choose your site and then simply click on small circle like gear optionand click on Site settings as shown in image below.
set-geographic-target-blog

Step 4)
Now select or Tick the option target users in.You can select any country.

set-geographic-target-blog1


Step 5)
Now click on Save you will have more traffic from that country.
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