Saturday, November 3, 2012

A CTO On Upgrading To Windows 8 - Business Insider

Even though most companies won't bother with Windows 8 for at least another two years, we just heard from a CTO who is moving 4,000 PCs to Windows 8 as fast as he can.

He's buying thousands of Microsoft Surface PCs instead of iPads, too.

Windows 8 is just plain faster than Windows 7, he says. That's true even on old machines and with old software, he told Business Insider. (He asked not to be identified because his employer hasn't authorized him to speak about his company's technology strategy.)

In his tests, he said apps ran "15%-20%" faster on Windows 8 over Windows 7. That's a "noticeable" difference, he says.

"Any app that runs on Windows 7 runs better on Windows 8," he said, because Windows 8 needs less memory and boots faster. "It's a hell of a lot more responsive."

Because it's faster, he thinks many businesses will upgrade old Windows 7 machines to Windows 8, too, just to use Windows 7 apps in desktop mode. (We're not sure we agree. We tend to think that most companies won't move to Windows 8 until they buy new touch-enabled PCs, since Windows 8 feels clunk when used on non-touch PCs.)

Granted, this CTO also has about 1,000 Windows 7 machines and he's not going to upgrade them to Windows 8 right away, though he plans to do that eventually, too.

Over the next year, his team will first decommission about 4,000 old PCs and buy Microsoft Surface Pro tablets, which runs the full version of Windows 8, not the RT version. The Surface Pro PC hasn't been released yet but is expected to available by Februrary.

"For a large part of the executive team, we do need mobile devices and we were leaning towards the iPad," he said. "That's that's changed with the Surface."

"The big killer app for us is Office," he said. "We want to do Office natively" on the device because there's better compatibility when running old Office documents than using an iPad app like Apps To Go, he said.? Plus, the Surface runs Adobe software like Flash.

As for training users to figure out Windows 8, he says it will be no harder than making them switch to an iPad.

"Windows 8 drives you batty for exactly four hours ? seriously," he said. "Get yourself a Surface and it takes you a day to get used to keyboard and it takes about four hours to learn the touch interface."

We have to admit, this CTO makes a compelling case for Microsoft. If IT professionals like Widows 8?and evidence is mounting that they do?then the new OS will be a hit. They will buy it for large businesses, which are Microsoft's most important customers.

That doesn't mean Microsoft will convince the majority of its business customers to move to Windows 8 right away. Because of the big snafu that was Vista, coupled with the economic crash in 2009, most of them have only recently finished upgrading to Windows 7. They'll stick with that for a couple of years until their Windows 7 PCs are fully depreciated and off the books, typically three to five years.

But with nearly $67 billion of cash on hand, Microsoft can afford to wait.

Don't miss:?The 10 Best Free Windows 8 Apps For Work And Play >

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/cto-windows-8-upgrade-2012-11

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Friday, November 2, 2012

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Source: http://workathomeandmakemoney.org/make-fast-easy-money-online-payouts/

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MGM expects online gaming license, state compacts

Internet, Mobile & Sports Betting

MGM Resorts International Ltd's CEO expects his company to obtain an online from Nevada regulators this week, and said states are talking with each other to forge alliances to create a viable interactive gambling market.

(Reuters) - MGM Resorts International Ltd's CEO expects his company to obtain an online gaming license from Nevada regulators this week, and said states are talking with each other to forge alliances to create a viable interactive gambling market.

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Obtaining the Nevada license would move MGM one step closer to entering the online field, which is expected to reach $10 billion a year nationwide by 2017. The sector is seen attracting younger players and offering a new avenue for growth to traditional casino operators whose growth has been stagnating.

Nevada, Delaware and New Jersey are among the states that have moved or are moving toward interactive gaming after the U.S. Justice Department last year declared that only online betting on sporting contests was unlawful, allowing states to legalize some forms of online gambling, from lotteries to poker.

According to the American Gaming Association, about 85 countries have legalized online gambling and an estimated $35 billion is being bet worldwide online each year, including by millions of people in the United States.

"We are encouraged to know that states are talking to one another. They are crafting their own legislation and legal frameworks but are talking with other states in anticipation of compacting with multiple states," MGM CEO Jim Murren said in an interview.

An interstate compact is an agreement between two or more states for the purpose of improving some shared resource, and generally requires the consent of Congress.

To be sure, Murren and other industry leaders favor federal legislation because it would provide a larger, more uniform market. Conversely, state-by-state legislation could lead to a patchwork of regulations and different tax rates and inadequate liquidity in some states.

But the likelihood of federal legislation passing this year is decreasing with each day. A proposed federal online gaming measure backed by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, and U.S. Sen. Jon Kyl, an Arizona Republican, would require quick action during the post-election congressional session to pass.

On Wednesday, the Massachusetts treasurer blasted the bill backed by Reid, saying the proposed federal law threatened the Massachusetts lottery that last year yielded nearly $1 billion in profit.

"We feel strongly that if it is in fact state by state, the states themselves need to compact with one another to create a more viable business model," Murren said. "Any one state going on its own presents an economic challenge, particularly in a small state like Nevada."

Earlier on Wednesday, MGM Resorts posted a larger loss, missing analysts' expectations, because of a steep drop in tax benefits, soft demand in Las Vegas and disappointing margins in Macau. Its shares closed 2.6 percent lower at $10.31.

TIPPING POINT

Murren said officials from New Jersey and Nevada are among those who have had discussions. A representative for Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval was not immediately available, while the office of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie was closed in the aftermath of storm Sandy.

MGM spokesman Alan Feldman said at least a dozen states are talking.

Brick and mortar casinos like MGM are teaming up with online game developers and putting in place safeguards that would combat fraud, money laundering, underage and compulsive gambling, and players falsifying their location.

And Murren and others said these safeguards could easily be implemented for broader markets if states reached compacts.

MGM has partnered with Bwin.party Digital Entertainment Plc, a UK-based online gaming company, and U.S.-based Boyd Gaming Corp to offer real money online poker in the United States.

"Absent a federal law permitting online poker or gaming, I would urge that states ... come up with uniform regulations and uniform technical requirements to the extent that they can because that will make it much easier for the industry to bring the product to your jurisdiction," said John McManus, executive vice president and general counsel for MGM at a recent gaming conference.

"At the end of the day the industry has to make money ... At some point you will get to the tipping point where it won't be profitable and nobody will pursue it," he said.

Slot machine makers International Game Technology and Bally Technologies Inc in June were granted online gaming licenses in Nevada, allowing them to partner with Nevada's casinos to provide online poker and interactive games.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/31/us-mgm-gaming-online-idUSBRE89U1SA20121031

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Source: http://www.publicgaming.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=12165:mgm-expects-online-gaming-license-state-compacts&catid=34:internet-mobile-a-other-gaming-news&Itemid=66

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Twi-Fight Saga Bites Into Elite Eight Short A Few Cullens

Renesmee, Rosalie, Emmett and Carlisle all took a tumble during the Sweet 16 round of our 'Twilight' bracket.
By Amy Wilkinson


Kristen Stewart and Mackenzie Foy in "Breaking Dawn - Part 2"
Photo: Summit

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1696567/twilight-saga-breaking-dawn-tournament-twifight-elite-eight.jhtml

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

A better way to store media on Microsoft Surface RT: SD cards, junction points and the command prompt


A better way to store media on Microsoft Surface RT SD cards, junction points and the command prompt

Expandable storage is a wonderful thing, but its implementation can sometimes leave something to be desired. Take Windows 8, for instance -- its photo, movie and music apps leverage Windows libraries to access users' media collections, but won't allow users to include removable storage in the app-accessed party of indexed folders. Sure, you can keep all your media on one device, but half it will need to be accessed in a slightly roundabout way. This simply wasn't good enough for Toni Fowlie, who wanted all of her media -- from both her Surface's local storage and its microSD card -- to appear in the same library. She used an old NTFS feature to trick Windows into thinking her microSD was part of her device's local storage, and her efforts are worth sharing.

Continue reading A better way to store media on Microsoft Surface RT: SD cards, junction points and the command prompt

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A better way to store media on Microsoft Surface RT: SD cards, junction points and the command prompt originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Nov 2012 07:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/z63iFl9k-CQ/

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Dust's warming counters half of its cooling effect

ScienceDaily (Oct. 31, 2012) ? Dust that routinely rises above the world's deserts causes a more significant localized warming effect than previously thought, a new study based on NASA field research shows.

In April 2008, atmospheric scientists set up camp in Zhangye, a semi-arid region between China's Taklimakan and Gobi deserts. They sorted and prepared cargo that included two mobile laboratories housed in trailers, and an array of upward-looking instruments for measuring airborne dust particles. Then, the team waited for favorable conditions -- for either of the two neighboring deserts to send clouds of dust blowing over camp before fieldwork wrapped up a few months later in June.

The wait paid off. By early May, a heavy dust episode darkened the skies over camp as scientists and instruments looked on.

The mineral properties of the aerosol particles and the wavelength distribution of incident light combine to determine whether a dust particle reflects radiation and cools the local atmosphere, absorbs radiation and warms the local atmosphere, or both. While scientists have a good handle on dust's primary effect of reflecting and cooling at the visible wavelengths, the smaller influence of absorbing and warming at the longer infrared wavelengths has remained more of an uncertainty -- and most climate models either underestimate it or do not include it at all.

When the field work concluded, Richard Hansell of the University of Maryland, College Park, and NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., and colleagues combined data collected from the ground-based sensors with computer models to quantify the interaction of visible and infrared light energy.

The analysis showed that over half of dust's cooling effect is compensated for by its warming effect. The finding, published in the Journal of Geophysical Research, Atmospheres, could clarify scientists' understanding of how dust influences moisture fluctuations in the atmosphere and surface temperatures around the planet.

The dust dilemma

Dust is just one, but important, type of tiny airborne particle collectively known as aerosols. And while dust has a notable impact on health and visibility, it is also known to have an effect on climate. The question remains: How much of an effect?

As the 2007 assessment report by the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change shows, the magnitude of aerosols' influence on climate is not well understood. That's where ground-based work like Hansell's can help. The team's interest was not in the global coverage of the dust -- events frequently observed by satellites -- but rather in the individual flecks of dust and their physical and chemical properties.

"Looking at dust from space, the spatial extent is awesome," Hansell said. "You can see large dust clouds that get stirred up over the desert and transported globally. But I'm looking from the ground-based perspective, collecting a very large volume of data to analyze dust and to look specifically at how it interacts with radiation, in my case with infrared -- the longer wavelengths."

How dust interacts with these longer wavelengths has long perplexed scientists -- it's not an easy thing to study. But with an array of instruments and growing volumes of data from NASA's Surface-based Mobile Atmospheric Research & Testbed Laboratories (SMARTLabs), scientists are making progress.

The long and short of it

Sunlight is composed primarily of energy at the shorter visible wavelengths known as shortwave. When shortwave radiation arrives to Earth's atmosphere and encounters dust particles, some of the energy is reflected back to space. Cooling results because Earth's surface doesn't receive as much radiation had the dust not been there; an effect that's relatively straightforward to observe.

The challenge stems from the much weaker signal of the longwave radiation -- the invisible, low-energy radiation emitted by the earth, atmosphere, clouds and anything else with a temperature. Dust can absorb this type of radiation and thus contribute to warming. But the process depends on the particles' size, composition, optical properties, and how those parameters affect the transfer of energy between the particles and the atmosphere.

Compared to small-sized aerosols such as smoke, larger particles including dust are more efficient at absorbing longwave radiation. In addition to size, dust particle composition also matters. Minerals such as silicates and clays are better than others at absorbing longwave radiation.

To determine the warming influence of dust, Hansell and colleagues started by characterizing dust size and composition as measured by instruments in the NASA mobile lab at Zhangye, in addition to data collected from previous field studies there. At the same time, the team in Zhangye used an interferometer to describe changes in the spectral intensity of the longwave radiation.

Combining the measured parameters in a computer model, the researchers calculated the longwave energy at Earth's surface with and without dust aerosols present to determine the Direct Aerosol Radiative Effect (DARE), a parameter that describes how aerosols modulate the energetics of the atmosphere.

The warming influence

The team found that dust's radiative impact, and hence its warming influence, conservatively ranges from 2.3 to 20 watts per square meter of radiation at the surface in Zhangye. Collectively, dust's longwave warming effect counters more than half of dust's shortwave cooling effect.

For perspective, the warming influence of 20 watts per square meter is comparable to the low end of longwave radiation's effect on clouds, which measures about 30 watts per square meter. Warming by greenhouse gases measures about 2 watts per square meter, although the warming occurs globally whereas the warming influence of dust and clouds is regional.

"The influence of dust on longwave radiation is a lot bigger than we expected," Hansell said.

The magnitude of that influence, however, can vary from one location to another. "Compared to our previous study of Saharan dust measured at Sal Island Cape Verde, the longwave effects of dust at Zhangye were found to be about a factor of two larger, owing to differences in the dust absorptive properties and proximity to the desert sources, he said.

Still, with dust holding on to more heat than previously thought, scientists can begin to reassess dust's role in changes observed near Earth's surface, such as air temperature and the moisture budget. For example, dust's warming effect on the atmosphere could be an underestimated factor driving evaporation, and atmospheric convection and stability.

"We're now at point where I see trying to link what we're measuring into work being done by the modeling community, to improve climate predictions and to better understand the dynamical consequences of these radiative effects," Hansell said.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center. The original article was written by Kathryn Hansen, NASA's Earth Science News Team.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Richard A. Hansell, Si-Chee Tsay, N. Christina Hsu, Qiang Ji, Shaun W. Bell, Brent N. Holben, Ellsworth J. Welton, Ted L. Roush, W. Zhang, J. Huang, Zhanqing Li, H. Chen. An assessment of the surface longwave direct radiative effect of airborne dust in Zhangye, China, during the Asian Monsoon Years field experiment (2008). Journal of Geophysical Research, 2012; 117 DOI: 10.1029/2011JD017370

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/SS2G-P0N-_4/121031214248.htm

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Markets volatile as trading resumes on Wall Street

LONDON (AP) ? Financial markets were volatile on Wednesday as trading resumed on Wall Street following a two-day suspension due to superstorm Sandy.

The New York Stock Exchange had closed Monday and Tuesday as the storm hit the city, leaving scores dead and a massive cleanup operation.

With the New York subway still down and a backlog of corporate earnings to digest from the likes of General Motors and Mastercard, trading was erratic as it resumed. That volatility was fueled by the fact that many investors were closing out positions and try to improve their accounts on the last day of the month.

"There's little doubt that markets are in for a wild ride," said Alex Koustas, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets.

After opening solidly higher, U.S. stocks gave up their gains, and that weighed on European markets, too.

In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average was down 0.3 percent at 13,063 while the broader S&P 500 index fell by the same rate to 1,407.

Apple, the world's largest company by market capitalization, was weighing on U.S. indexes, particularly the Nasdaq on which it is listed. Apple saw its share price fall around 2 percent after a surprise shakeup of its management team. The company's share price is on course for its worst monthly performance since 2008.

In Europe, Germany's DAX dropped 0.3 percent to close at 7,260.63 while the CAC-40 in France fell 0.9 percent to 3,429.27. Britain's FTSE 100 shed 1.2 percent at 5,782.70.

Investors will keep an eye on a raft of U.S. economic news to be released over the next few days, culminating in Friday's nonfarm payrolls data, which often sets the market tone for a week or two. This month's figures may have a more notable impact, coming ahead of Tuesday's closely-fought U.S. presidential election.

In the currency markets, the euro lost much of its earlier gains as sentiment in the markets soured. When the appetite for risk among investors diminishes, as evident in the fall of stock markets, traders often sell the euro and buy the dollar.

By late afternoon London time, the euro was only 0.1 percent higher at $1.2969.

Earlier, Europe's single currency had pushed up as high as $1.3020 despite figures showing that unemployment in the 17-country eurozone climbed to a record 11.6 percent in September.

Oil prices were steady, with the benchmark New York rate up 59 cents at $86.27 a barrel.

Earlier in Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 stock index closed 0.1 percent lower at 8,928.29 while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index rose 1 percent to 21,641.82. Mainland China's main index in Shanghai close 0.4 percent higher at 2068.88.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/markets-volatile-trading-resumes-wall-street-163549888--finance.html

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