Is data center infrastructure a battle ground for terrorist vs. governments?

MSNBC has news about a hacker attack on al-Qaida’s web com sites.

NBC News: Hacker attack cripples al-Qaida web communications

Digital assault is similar to one last year linked to UK government

WASHINGTON — Computer hackers shut down al-Qaida's ability to communicate its messages to the world through the Internet, interrupting the group's flow of videos and communiqués, according to a terrorism expert.

"Al-Qaida's online communications have been temporarily crippled, and it does not have a single trusted distribution channel available on the Internet," said Evan Kohlmann, of Flashpoint Global Partners, which monitors the group's communications.

This could be the action of government-sponsored hackers.

Kohlmann said the latest incident "once again appears to bear the telltale fingerprints of government-sponsored hackers."

Think about this.  Would you want to be the persons trying to repair the al-Qaida outage?  Don’t you think the hackers and others are watching who is repairing the outage.  It is hard to hide when you are repairing something that has lots of visibility.

This is like flushing out the enemy and setting a trap.  If you scare the IT staff too much they don’t repair the site which is a win as well.

Can you imagine the guys trying to figure out how to repair the sites and constantly worried a predator UAV is targeting them?

If California targets Amazon.com Subsidiaries for Sales Taxes, can AWS continue to have locations in CA?

CNET has an article about Amazon.com distancing itself from its development groups in California.

California targets Kindle lab in Amazon tax spat

by Declan McCullagh

Amazon.com said today that it's reluctantly severing ties with affiliates in California, a move that it hopes will let it continue shipping products to state residents without collecting sales taxes.

The specific subsidiaries Amazon.com is severing ties with are A9 and Lab126.

The measure says that any retailer who "through a subsidiary" has any "place of business" in California must collect sales taxes. And--surprise!--Amazon has two subsidiaries in California: A9, in Palo Alto, which works on search technology, and Cupertino-based Lab126, which designed the Kindle and is rumored to be working onmuch more.

But, what about AWS's locations in CA?  Does AWS need to severe ties with those sites as well?

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Amazon's Retail business model with customers avoiding sales taxes is an issue that affects Amazon's data center locations which then affects the AWS users as the operation of AWS cannot jeopardize Amazon.com's business model.

Is AWS's Northern California data centers next on will be spun off?  Ever wonder why Reno is a big distribution center for California?  Because, it is in Nevada along with a bunch of others who don't want to be in California's tax base.

Attending Oscon, the convergence of Open Source and Data Center

I have been thinking of different conferences to go and a bunch of my friends at Structure said they were going to OSCON.  Some of the biggest data centers run open source software and with Facebook's Open Compute project there is a convergence of ideas on open source the data center and server hardware in addition to software.

What is OSCON?

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What do you do once you’ve changed the world? Do it again.

Join today’s open source innovators, builders, and pioneers July 25-29 as they gather at the Oregon Convention Center in Portland, Oregon, to share their expertise and experience, explore new ideas, and inspire each other.

Learn first-hand how new developments in open source are shaping the future. Challenge your assumptions, fire up your imagination, and kick your brain into high gear. Rub shoulders with open source rock stars—and have some serious fun with 2000+ people like you.

Here are a few of the sponsors are of OSCON that I know I will run into some friends from these companies.

Sponsors

Diamond Sponsor

  • Microsoft

Premier Platinum Sponsor

  • Google
    • SugarCRM

    Gold Sponsors

    • Facebook
    • HP
    • Intel
    • Rackspace Hosting

Drop me a line if you'll be there as well dave(at)greenm3.com.  The crowd is big so it is hard to just run into people randomly.

Will miss DatacenterDynamics SF this year, three years of attendance

I have gone to DatacenterDynamics SF for three straight years and was planning on attending this year, but  I will not be there this time.

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After spending the past two weeks visiting the SJ/SF bay area, I promised my kids I would stay home this week.

My kids have been having sleep overs, pizza parties and swimming in the Lake is a regular activity.

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I am going to miss the DatacenteDynamics gang, but my kids and their friends want me at home.  Someone has to man the pizza oven.

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Rather listen to Experienced Robotics Expert than President Obama, for example...

President Obama made the news with his media event at CMU announcing manufacturing’s comeback and role robotics can play, but I didn’t really learn much.  Did you?

Obama forecasts manufacturing comeback

June 24, 2011|By Alex Mooney, CNN White House Producer

President Barack Obama — whose poll numbers have dipped in recent weeks amid a stubbornly sluggish economic recovery — touted the hard-hit manufacturing sector Friday, saying the country’s best production days may well lie ahead.

“We are inventors, we are makers, and we are doers. If we want a robust growing economy, we need a robust manufacturing sector,” Obama told a crowd at Carnegie Mellon University, the school founded by steel industrialist Andrew Carnegie nearly 100 years ago.

The president’s speech followed a tour through the National Robotics Engineering Center at Carnegie Mellon, which the White House describes as a national effort to encourage investment from industry, universities, and the federal government in emerging manufacturing technologies.

President Obama’s media event was fluffy with little technical content.  Especially compared to the hour I spent on the same day listening to Hugh Durrant-Whyte, CEO of NICTA, ex research director at Australia’s robotics efforts.

Hugh Durrant-Whyte

Research Director
Professor of Mechatronic Engineering, Appointed 1995

At the Australian Centre for Field Robotics, USYD

My research focuses on two main areas; navigation of autonomous vehicles and senor data fusion.
In navigation I pioneered the application of Kalman filter and target-tracking methods to the problem of robot localisation. This has had substantial impact in robotics; Many operational mobile robots now use these methods for localisation. I also introduced the revolutionary Simultaneous Localisation and Mapping (SLAM) method. Interest in SLAM is now exploding. My research work is now focused on general probabilistic SLAM problems appropriate to very unstructured, outdoor and underwater, environments.
In data fusion I introduced and pioneered decentralised data fusion algorithms based on the information filter. While I initially undertook this work in the early 1990s, these algorithms are now being used as the theoretical underpinning for many new concepts in network-centric warfare systems. The ACFR now receives considerable funding from overseas defence companies in the UK and US for the development and implementation of this theory. New research work is broadening the scope of these methods to general information fusion problems.

 

Hugh had some great demonstrations of robotics in Australia.

 

 

The Future of Mining has Hugh’s work as well.

Local mines ponder ‘sci-fi’ future

  • From:AAP
  • June 13, 2011 1:25AM

AUSTRALIA-IRON ORE-RIO TINTO

Taking control: A line of Komatsu 930E driverless trucks parked up at a Rio Tinto mine in Western Australia. The company is pushing towards what’s always been science fiction fantasy.

THE film ‘Moon’ portrayed a future where the lunar surface had become a mine dominated by driverless machines.

It’s an eerie concept - mines operating without humans - but moves by Rio Tinto Ltd show the Hollywood  scenario may not be just science fiction dreaming.

The mining giant has announced the roll-out  of driverless haul trucks at Western Australia’s Yandicooginain site.

It’s the largest technological move of this type in the world so far, part of Rio’s “Mine of the Future” program, launched in 2008.

Watch what happens when a Komatsu truck runs over a 4x4.

And, here is another project Hugh worked on.

I was lucky to meet Hugh in person and see his talk on Friday which is one of the best presentations I have seen on using robotics.  Here is one of his speeches from 2010.  Click on the link to see a video of his talk.

The robotics revolution. Hugh Durrant-Whyte

Part 1 | Part 2
In this Warren Centre Innovation Lecture 2010, Hugh Durrant-Whyte describes some of the great leaps forward that have occurred in the field of robotics in Australia over the past decade. Professor Hugh Durrant-Whyte is recognised internationally as one of the most innovative researchers in robotics and is creating an Australian robotics industry. He has played a critical role in raising the visibility of Australian robotics in government, industry, academia and the community, and his work has been applied in mining, defence, agriculture, logistics and remote sensing. Presented by The Warren Centre for Advanced Engineering (University of Sydney) at the RACV Club, Melbourne. June 2010