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Thursday, May 26, 2016

Microsoft, Facebook to lay massive undersea cable


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SAN FRANCISCO — A 4,000 mile undersea cable deal announced Thursday by Microsoft and Facebook is just the latest of a dozen high capacity trans-oceanic cables being built by tech companies to deal with their insatiable demand for bandwidth.
The two companies plan to build a cable that will run from Virginia Beach, Va. to a data hub in Bilbao, Spain.
The cable will join a cat's cradle of cables that criss-cross the ocean floor, an increasing number of which are owned or funded by large tech companies.
Google began the trend in 2010 when it invested in a cable across the Pacific between the United States and Japan called Unity.
Today, Google either has or plans to invest in five undersea cables, Microsoft four, Facebook two and Amazon one, said Alan Mauldin, research director with telecommunications research firm TeleGeography.
And those are only the public deals. “There are others that aren’t public,” he said.
Currently, two-thirds of all traffic on undersea Atlantic cables is from private networks and not telecommunications companies, up from 20% in 2010, according to TeleGeography data.
Driven by data demands
In the past five years, demand for bandwidth has shifted from traditional telecom companies to large content providers. Their need for bandwidth is growing so rapidly that it makes economic sense for them to invest in their own infrastructure, said Gartner analyst David Smith.
“Rather than pay a telco, they’re going to build their own,” he said.
The Microsoft/Facebook cable will be called "Marea," which means "tide" in Spanish. The companies are collaborating in order to accelerate the development of the next-generation of Internet infrastructure and support the explosion of data consumption and rapid growth of each company’s respective cloud and online services, Microsoft said in a statement to USA TODAY.
While the cable's actual width is about the size of an ordinary garden hose, its capacity is "massive," able to transmit 160 terabytes per second, said Mauldin.
Currently there are about 337 terabytes of potential capacity across the Atlantic. When the Marea cable comes online in 2017 with 140 terabytes per second of capacity, “this one cable will be able to do almost half of what all the cables do,” he said.
Marea will be operated and managed by Telxius, a telecommunications infrastructure company  owned by Telefónica, a large, Spanish telecommunications company with a significant presence in Europe and Latin America.
The cable will also provide redundancy for companies increasingly dependent on information being instantly transmittable worldwide. Marea will be the first southern European cable route.
No one wants to have their capacity dependent on just one cable, "because if it breaks, you’re in trouble,” said Mauldin.
Being physically separate from these other cables helps ensure more resilient and reliable connections for both companies' customers in the United States, Europe, and beyond, Microsoft said in a statement.
While many still imagine that traffic between the continents runs via satellites, they’re neither fast nor good enough. “There a huge delay with satellites,” said Smith.
Cables are almost instantaneous, more robust and cheaper. As tech companies increasingly become international, "the cloud is under the ocean," he said.
The cable will help the companies meet growing customer demand for high speed, reliable connections for cloud and online services, Microsoft said in a post on its website.
Microsoft said it needed the increased bandwidth to it could provide high speed, reliable connections for customers using Microsoft cloud services, which include its search engine Bing, Office 365, Skype, Xbox Live, and Microsoft’s cloud computing platform Azure.
MAREA will be the highest-capacity subsea cable yet laid across the Atlantic, It will feature eight fiber pairs and have an initial estimated capacity of 160Tbps.

Google defeats Oracle, jury decides Android is fair use

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SAN FRANCISCO — Google's Android operating system does not infringe on Oracle copyrights, a jury ruled Thursday.
The jury reached the verdict after three days of deliberation in the two-week trial in federal court in San Francisco.
Oracle was seeking billions of dollars, claiming Android violated its copyright on parts of the Java programming language. Google argued the fair-use provision of copyright law allowed it to use Java without paying a fee.
"Today's verdict that Android makes fair use of Java APIs represents a win for the Android ecosystem, for the Java programming community, and for software developers who rely on open and free programming languages to build innovative consumer products," Google said in an emailed statement.
The verdict is the latest development in the six-year legal skirmish over software copyrights with billions of dollars in damages at stake.
Oracle pledged it would appeal the verdict.
"We strongly believe that Google developed Android by illegally copying core Java technology to rush into the mobile device market. Oracle brought this lawsuit to put a stop to Google’s illegal behavior. We believe there are numerous grounds for appeal," Oracle's general counsel Dorian Daley said in an emailed statement

New laptops and a VR-ready desktop come to HP's Omen gaming line

HP is streamlining its PC gaming offerings, putting new and revamped products under the Omen brand umbrella. New 15-inch and 17-inch laptops are joining a rebranded VR-ready desktop formerly known as the Envy Phoenix, and future gaming products will also be part of the Omen brand.

A pair of new laptops

The Omen line has, since its 2014 launch, consisted of a single high-end 15-inch gaming laptop. That system has remained one of our favorites for slim, attractive PC gaming rigs, and it's being joined by two new systems, with similar or better specs, but lower prices.
The company calls these both simply Omen laptops, and the 15-inch and 17-inch versions have nearly all-black bodies with red accents. There's a subtle pattern, which HP calls "shadow mesh," and the keyboard is backlit not in simple red, but in "Dragon Red" (lest you think "Game of Thrones" has a lock on all things dragon-related at the moment).
The available graphics options run from the Nvidia GeForce 950M to the newer 965M, which is a couple of steps down from the current top of the line, but still good enough for any contemporary game at mid-to-high detail levels. Both 1080 and 4K display options will be available, along with an option for Intel's depth-sensing RealSense camera.
Like most other current HP systems, the audio carries a Bang & Olufsen logo, which means the famed audio company tuned and signed off on the sound, although it didn't actually design or make the speakers.
The 15-inch model is under 25mm thick, while the 17-inch model is less than 30mm thick. To help keep heat under control in these relatively slim (for a gaming laptop) bodies, the internal battery has been pushed toward the front, allowing the dual fans to push hot air out from the rear more efficiently.
Both new laptops are coming to HP.com and Best Buy on July 10, starting at $899 for the 15-inch and $979 for the 17-inch in the US. International price and availability details were not yet available

A desktop built for virtual reality

If this gaming desktop looks familiar, that's because it's a revamped version of the HP Envy Phoenix. That system was built with VR in mind, and designed in collaboration with HTC for use with the HTC Vive virtual-reality headset.
This new version, simply called the Omen by HP desktop, keeps the vertical light-up strip that runs down the front of the chassis. That light can be set to reflect system performance or temperature, using multiple colors and patterns.
Again, the main focus is the HTC Vive, and HP says the Omen is specifically tuned for a great out-of-the-box experience with that VR headset, but there's nothing stopping it from working with the Oculus Rift or just playing standard 2D PC games.
CPUs go up to the overclockable Intel Core i7-6700K, and the graphics cards will include the just-announced Nvidia 1080 series of desktop GPUs, as well as AMD R9 Fury X options. Liquid cooling is also an available option. As VR headsets require a lot of ports and connections to operate, the Omen has plenty, including six USB ports (two 3.0, four 2.0), USB-C and dual HDMI outputs.

HP is also offering a new 32-inch monitor as a perfect pairing with this desktop. The Omen by HP display has two HDMI inputs, plus DisplayPort and a built-in USB hub, and it supports AMD's FreeSync technology, which (with the right hardware) can sync GPU output with the display's refresh rate for smoother gameplay. The resolution on the display is 2,560x1,440.

Razer Turret review: Keyboard and mouse combo for sofa-based PC gamers


Not designed to be a pure gaming keyboard, the Razer Turret is a lap-board best used on the couch with your PC or streaming device hooked up to a big screen. At $170, AU$280 or £150, it's globally available on Razer's online store.

The Turret consists of a "gaming grade" keyboard and a 3,500 dots-per-inch mouse. The higher the dots-per-inch, the more accurately the mouse registers movement -- giving the Turret more than enough precision for all but the most competitive of gamers.
According to Razer, the big innovation here is the integrated magnetic mouse mat. The mat connects to the keyboard via a foldable hinge and prevents the included mouse from sliding away. Thankfully, the mat's magnetic pull isn't too strong, so picking up the mouse when I needed to was never an issue. And while the mat's surface area is a little small for my taste, it's perfectly apt for more casual gaming sessions.
The device is light, so using it on your lap for long periods of time wasn't an issue for me. Build quality, usually an issue with lap-boards, is surprisingly decent. The keyboard has a nice amount of give and typing is as good as you can expect on a keyboard sitting on your lap -- though it's not at the level of a laptop, which has the advantage of extra weight and stability.
A great touch with the Turret is its sleek included dock, which plays double duty as charger and organiser. It allows the Turret to look at home amongst even the most impressive home entertainment consoles.
While the Turret is great to use for web surfing and casual gaming, it's hampered on the gaming front by its natural habitat...the lap. Games like Call of Duty and League of Legends, while perfectly playable, force you to constantly keep an eye out for the position of the keyboard on your lap, as any minor adjustment could spoil muscle memory. If you favour more mouse-intensive genres, or are a particularly competitive gamer, it's best to look elsewhere.

THE GOOD  The Razer Turret's mouse magnetization is a nice touch, and the lap-board is great for web surfing and light gaming sessions.
THE BAD  Not apt for intense, competitive gaming sessions, considerably more expensive than similar (though less stylish) options.
THE BOTTOM LINE If you like to play single player content then the Turret is a more usable piece of tech, but it's just not stable enough for anything competitive.
7.7OVERALL
  • DESIGN9.0
  • FEATURES7.0
  • PERFORMANCE7.0

Salesforce signs $400 million deal with Amazon cloud service

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SAN FRANCISCO – Amazon’s AWS cloud division has scored another win with an announcement thatSalesforce will use it to expand services internationally.
Wednesday’s announcement signals that Salesforce is further strengthening its ties with Amazon.
"We are excited to expand our strategic relationship with Amazon as our preferred public cloud infrastructure provider," Marc Benioff, chairman and CEO, Salesforce, said in a statement.
The four-year deal appears to be valued at $400 million, based on a Salesforce filings with the SEC about a deal with an unnamed infrastructure services company.
Salesforce (CRM) has generally run on its own data centers but has been branching out, especially with its app development platform Heroku and some of its Internet of Things services.
Cloud computing allows businesses to rent space and computing power on other company's systems, saving infrastructure and upkeep costs. Amazon (AMZN) is by far the leader in the growing field.
Amazon's AWS (Amazon Web Services) division had 31% of the cloud market in 2015, compared with 9% for Microsoft, 7% for IBM, 4% for Google and 4% for Salesforce, according to Synergy Research Group.
This will be the first time Salesforce will use AWS for its core services such as Sales Cloud, Service Cloud, App Cloud, Community Cloud, Analytics Cloud as part of the company's planned international infrastructure expansion, Salesforce said.
"Leading enterprises and ISVs around the world are migrating their business-critical applications to the AWS Cloud to be more agile and efficient," said Andy Jassy, CEO of AWS.