industryterm:computing

  • A superposition of quantum physicists
    https://hackernoon.com/a-superposition-of-quantum-physicists-cae39a69ab21?source=rss----3a8144e

    An example of the future of quantum computers, created out of their past.Many people have contributed to quantum physics over the last century. Through their work, we now have an immense understanding of the quantum realm. And we can control it to make new and better technology.One emerging example is quantum computing. Prototype devices are getting ever bigger and more powerful. And they are even available on the cloud for anyone to experiment with.I decided to use one of these cloud based quantum computers to celebrate the giants on whose shoulders we stand. I took images of 16 Nobel prize winning quantum physicists, and I combined them.I did this using quantum superposition. This is a phenomenon which effectively allows a quantum system to be doing multiple things at once. (...)

    #quantum-physicist #science #quantum-superposition #physicists-superposition #quantum-computing

  • Akash, A Blockchain-Based Cloud Platform, Is Disrupting Data Centers All Over The World
    https://hackernoon.com/akash-a-blockchain-based-cloud-platform-is-disrupting-data-centers-all-o

    This Paid Story is brought to you by AkashFor as massive as the Internet has become, it might surprise you to know that 85% of the world’s computing capacity remains unused — in data centers, large-scale tech companies, and more.This is because supply and demand when it comes to data in the cloud is constantly changing. Data centers need to have hardware on-hand to ensure that requests for deployments and workloads can be immediately satisfied, which means there is a fluctuating in what is currently being processed and what the company is anticipating to process in the near future. As a result, a lot of hardware sits around, idle.When you start to add up the idle computing power of one, two, twenty, all of the data centers and large-scale technology companies, you find both a massive pain (...)

    #disruptive-startup #data-center #blockchain-startup #paid-story #cloud-computing

  • #serverless observability, what can you use out of the box?
    https://hackernoon.com/serverless-observability-what-can-you-use-out-of-the-box-85475b5bf04a?so

    part 1 : new challenges to observabilitypart 2 : 1st party observability tools from #aws [this post]part 3 : 3rd party observability toolspart 4: the future of Serverless observabilityIn part 1 we talked about the challenges serverless brings to the table. In this post, let’s look at 1st party tools from AWSOut of the box we get a bunch of tools pro­vid­ed by AWS itself:Cloud­Watch for mon­i­tor­ing, alert­ing and visu­al­iza­tionCloud­Watch Logs for logsX-Ray for dis­trib­uted trac­ingAma­zon Elas­tic­Search for log aggre­ga­tionCloudWatch LogsWhen­ev­er you write to std­out, those out­puts are cap­tured by the Lamb­da service and sent to #cloud­Watch Logs as logs. This is one of the few background processing you get, as it’s pro­vid­ed by the plat­form.All the log mes­sages (tech­ni­cal­ly they’re referred to as (...)

    #aws-lambda #cloud-computing

  • THE #serverless SERIES — Automating IT Engineers & Reshaping #tech #leadership
    https://hackernoon.com/the-serverless-series-automating-it-engineers-reshaping-tech-leadership-

    Nope, the Cloud has not made all engineers more productive. Instead, many were made redundant, while others were empowered in new ways that keep changing.Today, the Cloud’s next iteration is Serverless. In this article, we will discuss how the Cloud has continuously empowered the fittest engineers, how the Serverless trend carries on reshaping tech leadership and what that means for businesses.Ten years ago, the Cloud marketing spiel was around the substantial cost savings of just-in-time infrastructure provisioning. IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service) like AWS and PaaS (Platform as a Service) like Microsoft Azure were offering the ability for SysAdmins to configure and spin-off machines on-demand and at scale. While it was technically legitimate, the vast majority of large companies, (...)

    #automation #cloud-computing

  • From Screens to Scenes: Designing in the Era of Ambient Computing.
    https://hackernoon.com/from-screens-to-scenes-designing-in-the-era-of-ambient-computing-eeea3a3

    Every technology revolution introduces new interfaces: Radios introduced knobs and dials, TVs introduced buttons and a remote, Computers introduced the QWERTY keyboard and mouse. Smartphones and Tablets introduced touch screens. Alexa, Google Assistant, and Siri introduced voice.Interfaces define our relationship with technology. Beautiful, usable interfaces establish trust and a greater reliance on the technology. Bad design creates confusion, frustration, eventually leading the user to ditch it for the next best thing.What happens, however, when technology fades into the background and disappears? What will interfaces become when there is nothing physical to interface with? Will we still have the same relationship with technology? Life as we know it now, may actually revert back to (...)

    #digital-marketing #ambient-computing-design #ux #ambient-computing #experience

  • RasPad Review: Turn your Raspberry Pi Into a Tablet
    https://hackernoon.com/raspad-review-turn-your-raspberry-pi-into-a-tablet-499579033214?source=r

    RasPad Review: Turn Your Raspberry Pi Into a TabletThe RasPad turns the Raspberry Pi into a convenient, portable tablet. Disclosure: I received a payment and a RasPad Kit in exchange for writing this review, but these are my honest impressions of the experience.Smaller than a chocolate bar and cheaper than a night out, the Raspberry Pi created a whole new category of computing. It’s been six years since the original was released, and we’ve seen it used in everything from #diy projects to enterprise servers.The Raspberry Pi is a great tool for learning about electronics and programming. But even a basic setup can be intimidating—an unwieldy bunch of peripherals and cables.SunFounder, a company focused on maker education, wants to make things simple. They are wrapping up a wildly successful (...)

    #raspberry-pi #raspad-review #raspberry-pi-into-tablet #paidstory

  • Someone Recreated HyperCard, Apple’s 80s Programming Tool Invented on Acid - Motherboard
    https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/59jg73/vipercard-recreated-hypercard-apple-80s-acid

    ViperCard’s old school look and faithful recreation of the HyperCard experience bring back days when users were encouraged to play with their new machines rather than simply follow their glossily-rendered instructions. In a 2016 interview, HyperCard creator Bill Atkinson said that the point of the tool was to “give programming abilities to people with a passion, rather than trying to give programmers a passion.”

    This revelation, Atkinson said in the same interview, was inspired by an acid trip. It’s a long story that begins on “a park bench outside [Atkinson’s] house” after having “taken some really nice acid.” During this trip, Atkinson thought about the parallels between stars and streetlamps, and “saw the curvature of the planet.” Eventually, he had a realization that boiled down to average people engaged in different areas of knowledge—music, biology, poetry, chemistry, etc.—being able to talk to each other. Really, information being able to link to other information.

    “If you can facilitate the connection between different bodies of knowledge talking to each other, then there’s a trickle-up effect that maybe you’ll develop some wisdom on the planet,” Atkinson said in the interview.

    With ViperCard, a tiny bit of that original acid-tinged vision for computing is back.

    J’ai adoré HyperCard... Il faut que je vois si ce ViperCard peut utiliser des vieux stacks.
    #HyperCard #Histoire_informatique

  • Deploy a #serverless flask application on #aws Lambda
    https://hackernoon.com/deploy-a-serverless-flask-application-on-aws-lambda-d8ca58af42a4?source=

    ServerlessServerless is one of the new buzz word right now, what does it really means? Serverless computing allows us to focus on building the application without managing infrastructure and scaling. Serverless doesn’t mean no servers at all. It is still there, but we are not going to manage it. The best part is that you only pay for the amount of resources each request consumed. Each request to the serverless function is allocated and the application code runs in a stateless container.Advantages: Horizontally scalable Pay for what you use* Infrastructure managed by service providerAWS LambdaAWS provides serverless service called "Lambda" which can be used to deploy and run serverless applications. AWS lambda lets us run any #python WSGI based applications on cloud. It To (...)

    #flask-application #aws-lambda

  • Why #serverless ? Why Now ?
    https://hackernoon.com/why-serverless-why-now-f09ce43c4767?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    Are you dead in the water with your Serverless development?Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/6SNbWyFwuhkServerless is a misnomer. A perception. It was not materialized until it became a household name, a few years ago. If you’d ask whether there are servers in serverless, the answer — unsurprisingly — is a BIG yes. Now, the million-dollar question — do you have to worry about them?No.Back in the day, it was all just bare-metal servers, which were kept on-premises and managed by the organizations themselves. Then came the virtual machine, a piece of software that mimics the hardware-based servers. Cloud was the next big thing inspired by the distributed computing platforms. Containerization, a.k.a. OS-level virtualization came along and gained popularity afterwards. However, later, IaaS (...)

    #functions-as-a-service #serverless-architecture #cloud-ide #lambda

  • Service #monitoring: The Conceptual Framework
    https://hackernoon.com/service-monitoring-the-conceptual-framework-2ebffebb362d?source=rss----3

    The place to start when planning monitoring for a new service or a checklist when revisiting an existing one.MotivationWhile well-architected systems are fault-tolerant and can continue operating correctly when some of its components failed, persistent failures are highly undesirable and can lead to degraded performance and even system collapse. However, with well-planned monitoring you should be able to:Anticipate disruptionsQuickly identify the source of problemsTrigger automated recovery processesTrigger alarmsIcons made by Freepik from www.flaticon.com, used under CC BYMethodService monitoring is a broad topic, and there are numerous sub-topics to choose from. However, it is a core piece of system design we need before we can launch a service. Thus we need a principled, structured way (...)

    #google-cloud-platform #service-design #aws #cloud-computing

  • #aws #lambda Functions in #java
    https://hackernoon.com/aws-lambda-functions-in-java-24a2e41fa736?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    Amazon Web ServicesIn the past supporting a web application required purchasing one or more computer systems to act as web servers. Additional hardware might include a load balancer to distribute web application load between the web servers and a database server. These computer systems would need to be housed in an air conditioned facility. An alarm system and other security measures would be needed to provide physical security. Enough Internet bandwidth would need to be purchased to support anticipated peak usage.In addition to the capital costs for computer hardware and facilities, staff would be needed to manage the computer systems.Amazon Web Services (AWS) has dramatically reduced the costs of web applications. There is no upfront cost for computing, internet bandwidth and database (...)

    #aws-lambda-functions #aws-lambda-in-java

  • Before Self-Driving Cars Become Real, They Face These Challenges | WIRED
    https://www.wired.com/story/self-driving-cars-challenges

    OH, THE UNTAINTED optimism of 2014. In the spring of that year, the good Swedes at Volvo introduced Drive Me, a program to get regular Josefs, Frejas, Joeys, and Fayes into autonomous vehicles. By 2017, Volvo executives promised, the company would distribute 100 self-driving SUVs to families in Gothenburg, Sweden. The cars would be able to ferry their passengers through at least 30 miles of local roads, in everyday driving conditions—all on their own. “The technology, which will be called Autopilot, enables the driver to hand over the driving to the vehicle, which takes care of all driving functions,” said Erik Coelingh, a technical lead at Volvo.

    Now, in the waning weeks of 2017, Volvo has pushed back its plans. By four years. Automotive News reports the company now plans to put 100 people in self-driving cars by 2021, and “self-driving” might be a stretch. The guinea pigs will start off testing the sort of semi-autonomous features available to anyone willing to pony up for a new Volvo (or Tesla, Cadillac, Nissan, or Mercedes).

    “On the journey, some of the questions that we thought were really difficult to answer have been answered much faster than we expected,” Marcus Rothoff, the carmaker’s autonomous driving program director, told the publication. “And in some areas, we are finding that there were more issues to dig into and solve than we expected.” Namely, price. Rothoff said the company was loath to nail down the cost of its sensor set before it knew how it would work, so Volvo couldn’t quite determine what people would pay for the privilege in riding in or owning one. CEO Hakan Samuelsson has said self-driving functionality could add about $10,000 to the sticker price.

    Volvo’s retreat is just the latest example of a company cooling on optimistic self-driving car predictions. In 2012, Google CEO Sergey Brin said even normies would have access to autonomous vehicles in fewer than five years—nope. Those who shelled out an extra $3,000 for Tesla’s Enhanced Autopilot are no doubt disappointed by its non-appearance, nearly six months after its due date. New Ford CEO Jim Hackett recently moderated expectations for the automaker’s self-driving service, which his predecessor said in 2016 would be deployed at scale by 2021. “We are going to be in the market with products in that time frame,” he told the San Francisco Chronicle. “But the nature of the romanticism by everybody in the media about how this robot works is overextended right now.”

    The scale-backs haven’t dampened the enthusiasm for money-throwing. Venture capital firm CB Insights estimates self-driving car startups—ones building autonomous driving software, driver safety tools, and vehicle-to-vehicle communications, and stockpiling and crunching data while doing it—have sucked in more than $3 billion in funding this year.

    To track the evolution of any major technology, research firm Gartner’s “hype cycle” methodology is a handy guide. You start with an “innovation trigger,” the breakthrough, and soon hit the “peak of inflated expectations,” when the money flows and headlines blare.

    And then there’s the trough of disillusionment, when things start failing, falling short of expectations, and hoovering up less money than before. This is where the practical challenges and hard realities separate the vaporware from the world-changers. Self-driving, it seems, is entering the trough. Welcome to the hard part.

    Technical Difficulties
    “Autonomous technology is where computing was in the 60s, meaning that the technology is nascent, it’s not modular, and it is yet to be determined how the different parts will fit together,” says Shahin Farshchi, a partner at the venture capital firm Lux Capital, who once built hybrid electric vehicles for General Motors, and has invested in self-driving startup Zoox, as well as sensor-builder Aeva.)

    Turns out building a self-driving car takes more than strapping sensors and software onto a set of wheels. In an almost startlingly frank Medium post, Bryan Salesky, who heads up Ford-backed autonomous vehicle outfit Argo AI, laid out the hurdles facing his team.

    First, he says, came the sensor snags. Self-driving cars need at least three kinds to function—lidar, which can see clearly in 3-D; cameras, for color and detail; and radar, with can detect objects and their velocities at long distances. Lidar, in particular, doesn’t come cheap: A setup for one car can cost $75,000. Then the vehicles need to take the info from those pricey sensors and fuse it together, extracting what they need to operate in the world and discarding what they doesn’t.

    “Developing a system that can be manufactured and deployed at scale with cost-effective, maintainable hardware is… challenging,” Salesky writes. (Argo AI bought a lidar company called Princeton Lightwave in October.)

    Salesky cites other problems, minor technological quandaries that could prove disastrous once these cars are actually moving through 3-D space. Vehicles need to be able to see, interpret, and predict the behavior of human drivers, human cyclists, and human pedestrians—perhaps even communicate with them. The cars must understand when they’re in another vehicle’s blind spot and drive extra carefully. They have to know (and see, and hear) when a zooming ambulance needs more room.

    “Those who think fully self-driving vehicles will be ubiquitous on city streets months from now or even in a few years are not well connected to the state of the art or committed to the safe deployment of the technology,” Salesky writes.

    He’s not the only killjoy. “Technology developers are coming to appreciate that the last 1 percent is harder than the first 99 percent,” says Karl Iagnemma, CEO of Nutonomy, a Boston-based self-driving car company acquired by automotive supplier Delphi this fall. “Compared to last 1 percent, the first 99 percent is a walk in the park.”

    The smart companies, Iagnemma says, are coming up with comprehensive ways to deal with tricky edge cases, not patching them over with the software equivalent of tape and chewing gum. But that takes time.

    Money Worries
    Intel estimates self-driving cars could add $7 trillion to the economy by 2050, $2 trillion in the US alone—and that’s not counting the impact the tech could have on trucking or other fields. So it’s curious that no one seems quite sure how to make money off this stuff yet. “The emphasis has shifted as much to the product and the business model as pure technology development,” says Iagnemma.

    Those building the things have long insisted you’ll first interact with a self-driving car through a taxi-like service. The tech is too expensive, and will at first be too dependent on weather conditions, topography, and high-quality mapping, to sell straight to consumers. But they haven’t sorted out the user experience part of this equation. Waymo is set to launch a limited, actually driver-free service in Phoenix, Arizona, next year, and says it has come up with a way for passengers to communicate they want to pull over. But the company didn’t let reporters test the functionality during a test drive at its test facility this fall, so you’ll have to take its word for it.

    Other questions loom: How do you find your vehicle? Ensure that you’re in the right one? Tell it that you’re having an emergency, or that you’ve had a little accident inside and need a cleanup ASAP? Bigger picture: How does a company even start to recoup its huge research and development budget? How much does it charge per ride? What happens when there’s a crash? Who’s liable, and how much do they have to pay in insurance?

    One path forward, money-wise, seems to be shaking hands with enemies. Companies including Waymo, GM, Lyft, Uber, and Intel, and even seemingly extinction-bound players like the car rental firm Avis, have formed partnerships with potential rivals, sharing data and services in the quest to build a real autonomous vehicle, and the infrastructure that will support it.

    Still, if you ask an autonomous car developer whether it should be going at it alone—trying to build out sensors, mapping, perception, testing capabilities, plus the car itself—expect a shrug. While a few big carmakers like General Motors clearly seem to think vertical integration is the path to a win (it bought the self-driving outfit Cruise Automation last year, and lidar company Strobe in October), startups providing à la carte services continue to believe they are part of the future. “There are plenty of people quietly making money supplying to automakers,” says Forrest Iandola, the CEO of the perception company DeepScale, citing the success of more traditional automotive suppliers like Bridgestone.

    Other companies seize upon niche markets in the self-driving space, betting specific demographics will help them make cash. The self-driving shuttle company Voyage has targeted retirement communities. Optimus Ride, an MIT spinoff, recently announced a pilot project in a new developed community just outside of Boston, and says it’s focused on building software with riders with disabilities in mind.

    “We think that kind off approach, providing mobility to those who are not able-bodied, is actually going to create a product that’s much more robust in the end,” says CEO Ryan Chin. Those companies are raising money. (Optimus Ride just came off an $18 million Series A funding round, bringing its cash pull to $23.25 million.) But are theirs viable strategies to survive in the increasingly crowded self-driving space?

    The Climb
    OK, so you won’t get a fully autonomous car in your driveway anytime soon. Here’s what you can expect, in the next decade or so: Self-driving cars probably won’t operate where you live, unless you’re the denizen of a very particular neighborhood in a big city like San Francisco, New York, or Phoenix. These cars will stick to specific, meticulously mapped areas. If, by luck, you stumble on an autonomous taxi, it will probably force you to meet it somewhere it can safely and legally pull over, instead of working to track you down and assuming hazard lights grant it immunity wherever it stops. You might share that ride with another person or three, à la UberPool.

    The cars will be impressive, but not infallible. They won’t know how to deal with all road situations and weather conditions. And you might get some human help. Nissan, for example, is among the companies working on a stopgap called teleoperations, using remote human operators to guide AVs when they get stuck or stumped.

    And if you’re not lucky enough to catch a ride, you may well forget about self-driving cars for a few years. You might joke with your friends about how silly you were to believe the hype. But the work will go on quietly, in the background. The news will quiet down as developers dedicate themselves to precise problems, tackling the demons in the details.

    The good news is that there seems to be enough momentum to carry this new industry out of the trough and onto what Gartner calls the plateau of productivity. Not everyone who started the journey will make the climb. But those who do, battered and a bit bloody, may just find the cash up there is green, the robots good, and the view stupendous.

    #Uber #disruption

  • Alibaba’s next moon shot is to make cities adapt to their human inhabitants, technology seer says | South China Morning Post
    http://www.scmp.com/tech/innovation/article/2123856/alibabas-tech-seer-sees-making-cities-adapt-their-inhabitants-next

    Wang Jian was once called crazy by Jack Ma Yun, the founder and executive chairman of Alibaba Group Holding, for suggesting that the company could have its own mobile operating system.

    That vision, however, proved prescient as smartphones powered by the company’s YunOS mobile operating platform, which was developed by its Alibaba Cloud subsidiary, surpassed 100 million units last year.

    In addition, many of the Hangzhou-based e-commerce company’s recent innovations are rooted in Alibaba Cloud, known as Aliyun in China, as domestic demand for data centre facilities and on-demand computing services delivered over the internet have grown rapidly.

    “It’s not about whether I’m crazy or not, it’s about this era,” Wang, the chairman of Alibaba’s technology steering committee, said in an interview in Hong Kong, where he met with some journalists to talk about his new book Being Online. “[This] is a crazy era, so many new things are happening.”

    Wang, 55, said the city of tomorrow should be able to adapt to its surroundings and inhabitants, almost like a living organism, so that municipal services like public transport, health care and education can be delivered in the right measure and time to minimise waste and optimise usage.

    Alibaba says it is on track to overtake Amazon as world’s top cloud computing services firm

    To that end, a city’s development would be better determined in future by the amount of computing resources it consumes, said Wang. At present, electricity consumption is widely regarded as the measure of development for cities, he added.

    Similarly, the day-to-day behaviour of a city’s residents now has little impact on how a city is organised as well as the way its services are planned and developed, said Wang. That would change with advanced computing technologies that are able to track human behaviour.

    “Do you want to take the bus, or is it because it’s been put there so you’re taking it?” asked Wang, using fixed bus routes as an example of how a city’s services are rigid and do not adapt quickly to changing patterns in the behaviour of its residents.

    Citing the example of a project in northern China, where railway workers were able to tell staff canteens along the line of which meals they plan to have, operators of these dining halls were able to prepare the right amount of food, leading to less waste. [Alibaba Group Holding’s annual Singles’ Day shopping festival on November 11 is a testament to the way cloud computing has changed the retail industry in China. Photo: Edward Wong]

    In its home market in the eastern coastal Chinese city of Hangzhou, Alibaba has created a so-called City Brain that uses artificial intelligence – specifically, deep learning technology that teaches computers to learn and perform tasks based on classifying data – to send out instant traffic alerts and route suggestions to motorists.

    Alibaba said traffic speed has improved by up to 11 per cent in one of Hangzhou’s districts, and that several other cities in China were now implementing smart transport programmes.

    Neil Wang, the Greater China president of consultancy firm Frost & Sullivan, said integrating technology into a city’s operations enabled traffic to be monitored in real-time and fed back to users, allowing drivers to check traffic conditions and adjust their route during the journey, or even find a vacant parking space via a mobile app.

    “Creating a sustainable and self-conscious city with the help of big data technology is the main idea behind this approach,” said Wang. “Smart cities can use the latest digital technologies to improve their resource allocation, as well as the quality of life for their residents. In particular, transport, health care, and education are some of the key areas that will benefit.”

    The global smart cities market, which comprises of interrelated domains that impact urban living, is forecast to reach US$1.2 trillion by 2019, according to research company Technavio in a report published in February. These domains include industry automation, smart grid, security, education, home and building, health care, transport, and water and waste.
    Smart cities can use the latest digital technologies to improve their resource allocation, as well as the quality of life for their residents.

    New York-listed Alibaba, which owns the South China Morning Post, is not alone in trying to make cities more adaptable to human behaviour. Many other companies, including Google owner Alphabet, are involved in various projects around the world that integrate information technology with city planning.

    In October, Alibaba said it will double research and development spending to US$15 billion over the next three years to develop futuristic technologies that could transform whole industries, or so-called moon shot projects. To do that, the company will set up research labs around the world and hire scientists.

    For Wang, Alibaba’s annual Singles’ Day shopping festival on November 11 is a testament to the way cloud computing has changed the way people shop in China. This year’s edition of the 24-hour shopping promotion chalked up a record of more than US$25 billion in sales.

    The event is made possible by the coming together of mobile payments, e-commerce and back-end logistics underpinned by cloud computing.

    Smart cities: Digital world unlocks door to the future

    “If you think about it, being able to shop at night while tucked into bed, and having that parcel land on your doorstep the next day is in itself crazy,” Wang said.

    There will be more inventions that today may look wacky but could be the norm of tomorrow, Wang said. Citing the example of Thomas Edison’s light bulb, which made it possible to demonstrate the usage of electricity, he said future applications on the internet may exceed the limits of human imagination today.

    “We’re just at the beginning of the beginning of the beginning.”

    Additional reporting by Zen Soo
    This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Smart cities next idea in tech chief’s crazy era

    #Chine #e-commerce #smart-cities #surveillance #disruption

  • PIXLS.US - Faces of Open Source
    https://pixls.us/articles/faces-of-open-source

    Peter really (ahem) throws a light on many amazing luminaries from not only the Free/Open Source Software community, but in some cases the history and roots of all modern computing. He has managed to coordinate portrait sessions with many people that may be unassuming to a layperson, but take a moment to read any of the short bios on the site and the gravity of the contributions from the subjects to modern computing becomes apparent.

    Intéressant cette notion de « communauté » des développeurs au travers d’une manière similaire de se comporter.

    Everyone that I’ve photographed has been absolutely wonderful. I mean, that’s the first thing about this community: it’s a very gracious community. Everybody was very gracious with their time, and eager to participate. I think people recognize that this is a community they belong to and they really want me to be a part of it, which is really great.

    So, I enjoyed my time with everybody. Everybody brought a different, interesting story about things. The UNIX crew from Bell Labs had particularly colorful stories, very interesting sort of historical tidbits about UNIX and Free Software.

    Did your working in open source teach you anything beyond computer code in some way? Was there an influence from the people you may have worked around, or the ethos of Free Software in general that stuck with you? Working with this crowd, was there a takeaway for you beyond just the photographic aspects of it?

    Absolutely! First of all it’s an incredibly inspiring group of people. This is a group of people that have dedicated, in some cases most of, their lives to the development of software that they give away to the world, and don’t monetize themselves. The work they’re doing is effectively a donation to humanity. That’s incredibly inspiring when you look at how much time goes into these projects and how much time this group of people spends on that. It’s a very humbling thing.

    I don’t think it’s an obvious answer that Apple or Google or somebody else would have just come up with this without the open source [contributions]. This stuff is so fundamental, it’s such a basic building block for everything that’s happening now. It may be responsible for the golden age that we’re seeing now. I think it is.

    The average teenager they pick up and post a photo to Instagram - they don’t realize that there’s a hundred open source projects at work to make that possible.

    #Histoire_numérique #Logiciel_libre #Photographie

  • Alibaba to Use Own Immersion Cooling Tech in Cloud Data Centers | Data Center Knowledge
    http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2017/06/14/alibaba-to-use-own-immersion-cooling-tech-in-cloud-data-centers

    Alibaba said it plans to contribute the technology to the Open Compute Project, an open source hardware and data center design effort started about six years ago by Facebook. The Chinese company officially joined OCP this week.

    Its data center cooling technology has reached production stage, the company said, and will soon be ready for deployment in Alibaba’s cloud data centers.

    The concept of submerging servers in dielectric fluid to improve data center cooling efficiency isn’t new. There are several companies selling solutions that use it on the market, the more prominent examples being Green Revolution Cooling and Iceotope.

    #cloud_computing #Alibaba #datacenters

  • Alibaba Cloud to Launch Data Centers in India, Indonesia | Data Center Knowledge
    http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2017/06/14/alibaba-cloud-to-launch-data-centers-in-india-indonesia

    Together with the recently announced data center in Malaysia, Alibaba Cloud will significantly increase its computing resources in Asia. When the three new facilities open, the total number of locations will grow to 17, covering mainland China, Australia, Germany, Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates, and the US.

    “I believe Alibaba Cloud, as the only global cloud services provider originating from Asia, is uniquely positioned with cultural and contextual advantages to provide innovative data intelligence and computing capabilities to customers in this region. Establishing data centers in India and Indonesia will further strengthen our position in the region and across the globe,” Hu said in a statement.

    #cloud_computing #Alibaba

  • IBM Q : Cloud Quantum Computing for commercial use

    http://www.newsweek.com/2017/04/21/quantum-computing-ibm-580751.html

    IBM had been dabbling with commercial possibilities when last year [2016] it released Quantum Experience, a cloud-based quantum computing service researchers could use to run experiments without having to buy a quantum system. In early March, IBM took that program further and announced IBM Q, the first cloud quantum computing system for commercial use. Companies will be able to buy time on IBM’s quantum computers in New York state, though IBM has not set a release date or price, and it is expected to be financially prohibitive for smaller companies at first.

    [...]

    Eventually, quantum computing could outperform the world’s fastest supercomputer—and then all computers ever made, combined. We aren’t there yet, but at 50 qubits, universal quantum computing would reach that inflection point and be able to solve problems existing computers can’t handle, says Jerry Chow, a member of IBM’s experimental quantum computing department. He added that IBM plans to build and distribute a 50-qubit system “in the next few years.” Google aims to complete a 49-qubit system by the end of 2017.

    Note:
    A company called D-Wave Systems already sells 2,000-qubit systems, but its systems are different from IBM’s and other forms of universal quantum computers, so many experts don’t consider their development to have reached that quantum finish line. D-Wave Systems’s computers are a type of quantum computer called quantum annealers, and they are limited because they can be used only on optimization problems. There is a roaring scientific debate about whether quantum annealers could eventually outpace traditional supercomputers, but regardless, this type of quantum computer is really good at one niche problem and can’t expand beyond that right now.

    More on IBM Q:
    http://research.ibm.com/ibm-q
    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/ibm-will-unleash-commercial-universal-quantum-computers-this-yea
    http://www.pcworld.com/article/3176853/hardware/ibms-new-q-program-to-include-a-50-qubit-quantum-computer.html

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5faqB9YLS_8

    #IBM_Q #quantum_computing

  • Interactive Visualization: Methodologies

    http://ccom.unh.edu/vislab/VisCourse/Methodology.html

    Data Visualization overlaps with the area of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) which is as broad as computing and a broad as all of human society. Researchers in the area of Visualization borrow techniques from Psychology, Sociology, Linguistics, Artificial Intelligence and Computer Science, as well as many other areas of knowledge.

    The range of methods of analysis that can be applied ranges from techniques borrowed from the physical sciences to techniques that come from literary criticism.

    #visualisation #méthode #méthodologie #sémiologie

  • With Windows 10, Microsoft Blatantly Disregards User Choice and Privacy : A Deep Dive
    https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2016/08/windows-10-microsoft-blatantly-disregards-user-choice-and-privacy-deep-dive

    Microsoft had an ambitious goal with the launch of Windows 10 : a billion devices running the software by the end of 2018. In its quest to reach that goal, the company aggressively pushed Windows 10 on its users and went so far as to offer free upgrades for a whole year. However, the company’s strategy for user adoption has trampled on essential aspects of modern computing : user choice and privacy. We think that’s wrong. You don’t need to search long to come across stories of people who are (...)

    #Microsoft #Windows #conditions_d'utilisation #domination

  • Everything Is Broken
    https://medium.com/message/everything-is-broken-81e5f33a24e1

    Once upon a time, a friend of mine accidentally took over thousands of computers. He had found a vulnerability in a piece of software and started playing with it. In the process, he figured out how to get total administration access over a network. He put it in a script, and ran it to see what would happen, then went to bed for about four hours. Next morning on the way to work he checked on it, and discovered he was now lord and master of about 50,000 computers. After nearly vomiting in fear he killed the whole thing and deleted all the files associated with it. In the end he said he threw the hard drive into a bonfire. I can’t tell you who he is because he doesn’t want to go to Federal prison, which is what could have happened if he’d told anyone that could do anything about the bug he’d found. Did that bug get fixed? Probably eventually, but not by my friend. This story isn’t extraordinary at all. Spend much time in the hacker and security scene, you’ll hear stories like this and worse.

    It’s hard to explain to regular people how much technology barely works, how much the infrastructure of our lives is held together by the IT equivalent of baling wire.

    Computers, and computing, are broken.

  • The Majestic Monolith
    https://m.signalvnoise.com/the-majestic-monolith-29166d022228

    This is a great pattern. No, really. Not being sarcastic here. If you’re Amazon or Google or any other software organization with thousands of developers, it’s a wonderful way to parallelize opportunities for improvement. Each service can be its own team with its own timeline, staff, and objectives. It can evolve independently, at least somewhat, of whatever else the rest of the constellation is doing.
    When you reach a certain scale, there simply is no other reasonable way to make coordination of effort happen. Otherwise everyone will step on each other’s feet, and you’ll have to deal with endless merge conflicts. (Well, at least in theory, I hear Facebook is having a great time with a monolith, whether it’s majestic or not is a different discussion).
    In other words, M/SOA fits the organizational shape of very large corporations. So far so good!
    Where things go astray is when people look at, say, Amazon or Google or whoever else might be commanding a fleet of services, and think, hey it works for The Most Successful, I’m sure it’ll work for me too. Bzzzzzzzzt!! Wrong!
    The patterns that make sense for organizations orders of magnitude larger than yours, is often the exact opposite ones that’ll make sense for you. It’s the essence of cargo culting. If I dance like these behemoths, surely I too will grow into one. I’m sorry, but that’s just not how the tango goes.
    This is true of not just technical patterns, but general organizational approaches too. But that you shouldn’t run HR like a 50,000-person company when you have 50 seems obvious to most though (with some exceptions).
    The problem with prematurely turning your application into a range of services is chiefly that it violates the #1 rule of distribute computing: Don’t distribute your computing! At least if you can in any way avoid it.
    Every time you extract a collaboration between objects to a collaboration between systems, you’re accepting a world of hurt with a myriad of liabilities and failure states. What to do when services are down, how to migrate in concert, and all the pain of running many services in the first place.
    As I said, all that pain is worth it when you have no choice. But most people do have a choice, and they do have an alternative. So allow me to present just one such choice: The Majestic Monolith!
    Having your system described as “monolithic” is usually a point of derision. Them be fighting words amongst many programmers! I say don’t just turn the other cheek, but embrace the monolith with pride and a salute! Don’t just accidentally waltz your system into a monolithic design, do so with intent and with your head held high. Any monolith worth erecting is worth making majestic!