Categories
technology

Microsoft to buy Groove Networks

Not exactly a shock but indicative of both technical intent and direction at Microsoft. The full article is available at Grid Computing Planet. Most followers of P2P and collaboration technologies are familiar with Groove Networks offering. It enables the creation of a virtual office by connecting PC’s together over a P2P network to create a secure workspace where document, applications and communications can be shared. The Groove software will be integrated within Microsoft Office, integrating with the RTC (Real-time Collaboration) s/w that Microsoft already bundles including Office Live Update.
In another twist, Ray Ozzie, the creator and CTO of Groove will become the CTO of Mc$oft’s collaboration s/w division.

Ozzie, who will become CTO and report to Microsoft Chief Software Architect Bill Gates, is renowned for creating Lotus Notes, now a multi-billion-dollar business for IBM. He is also one of seven “Windows pioneers,” an honor bestowed to engineers who have contributed to the improvement of the operating system.
Gates, who joined the conference call from Redmond, that Groove technology has “fantastic and very unique” properties Microsoft wants to put into Office.
“He’s made a huge contribution in terms of giving us feedback about the platform,” Gates said, citing Ozzie’s work on Windows user interfaces and Visual Studio. “It’s very exciting to have Ray and his team joining Microsoft. I think it’s really going to help us do a better job for all of the information workers out there.”
Noting that he has had the privilege of working with Ozzie for “many decades” as he was building applications on DOS or Windows, Gates said he had wanted to hire Ozzie for a long time. The CTO will have a great deal of say over corporate communication and collaboration offerings.
He will also continue his work with Groove’s roughly 200 employees, which will remain at Groove’s Beverly, Mass., headquarters as part of Microsoft’s Information Worker Group.
Ozzie said his plan for Groove reflected how the business environment was changing, including a different type of security model based less on setting up firewalls and more on how people work with one another.
“Over the years, we’ve been very fortunate have led us all to be carrying around Wi-Fi-enabled laptops,” Ozzie said. “The nature of work itself has changed for many of us. We very commonly do work in a geographically dispersed fashion, in the office, at home, in hotels, at Starbucks and so on. Our interactions involve being on multiple networks…”

Microsoft had already demonstrated its committment to both Groove Networks and collaboration software with a $38 million investment in Groove during 2003.

Categories
science

NASA’s Earth Observatory

Picked this up from Justin Mason’s wonderful taint.org. NASA’s earthobservatory is a collection of topographic maps of the world showing details such as elevation, geoloogical and geographical information about countries, continents and landmasses in general. Here’s the link to my own country of Ireland.

Elevation data used in this image were acquired by the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour, launched on Feb. 11, 2000. SRTM used the same radar instrument that comprised the Spaceborne Imaging Radar-C/X-Band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SIR-C/X-SAR) that flew twice on the Space Shuttle Endeavour in 1994. SRTM was designed to collect 3-D measurements of the Earth’s surface. To collect the 3-D data, engineers added a 60-meter (approximately 200-foot) mast, installed additional C-band and X-band antennas, and improved tracking and navigation devices. The mission is a cooperative project between NASA, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) of the U.S. Department of Defense and the German and Italian space agencies. It is managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., for NASA’s Earth Science Enterprise, Washington, D.C.

Categories
technology

Building in a bag

Pulled this from wired news. The difficulty of providing accomodation quickly and cheaply under arduous circumstances such as wars & natural disasters is a serious issue for governments, armies and aid agencies. According to Wired a solution could be at hand.

A pair of engineers in London have come up with a “building in a bag” — a sack of cement-impregnated fabric. To erect the structure, all you have to do is add water to the bag and inflate it with air. Twelve hours later the Nissen-shaped shelter is dried out and ready for use.

The inventors are students completing their Masters Degrees in Industrial Design & Engineering at the Royal College of Art in London. They got the idea when they heard about inflatable structures used in the repair of broken gas pipes.

The inventors filed a patent, which covers the concept of creating structures using a cement-impregnated cloth bonded to an inflatable inner surface. Full-scale production is planned and could take off soon, as Concrete Canvas is short-listed for the New Business Challenge run by Imperial College London and the Tanaka Business School. The winner of the £25,000 ($48,000) prize will be announced next week.

I like the quote from the program head of Medicins San Frontieres in Uganda who would like to buy 10 as soon as they become available. The advantages over flimsy tents and the transportation issues of prefab buildings mean that many more buildings could be constructed this way in the future. Perhaps even houses?

Categories
Uncategorized

Fwd: RE: sausages

Another one for the record..

regards,

…shane

—– Forwarded message from Shane Michael Dempsey —–
Date: Tue, 15 Mar 2005 08:12:39 -0500
From: Shane Michael Dempsey
Reply-To: Shane Michael Dempsey
Subject: RE: sausages
To: Roisin O’Shea

Hi Love,
I laughed myself silly when I picked up this email. Yes, it was nice to cook for
you this morning. Fun too, how the simple things can come to mean so much.

Also funny that I opened this email in my office on the Cork Road. I was just
about to show a demo of a piece of s/w we’d written and thought that I’d check
my emails before hand. A subject line like “RE: sausages” encouraged me not to
open it straight away, especially not with prying eyes in the vicinity. Yep,
tommorow is payback time. Buckle up honey 😛

love you so much it DOES hurt,

…shane XXXXXXX

Quoting Roisin O’Shea :

>
>
>
> I am sitting here smelling the sausages that you are cooking and have never
> felt such happiness….silly huh but then I do love you beyond measure Til
> tomorrow then, get ready stud it’s my turn!!
> R xxxx

“It’s the simple things in life that are the most extraordinary; only wise men
are able to understand t
hem.” – Paolo Coehlo, The Alchemist.

—– End forwarded message —–

“It’s the simple things in life that are the most extraordinary; only wise men
are able to understand them.” – Paolo Coehlo, The Alchemist.