Friday 13 May 2016

Full Circle Newsletter

Gigaom Full Circle Newsletter
Announcing Gigaom Change 05/13/16
Nanotechnology Virtual Reality
5 Incredible Trends That Will Shape Our 3D Printed Future Virtual Reality And A Parallel Universe Of Cyberclones
3D Printing Artificial Intelligence
This 3D Printer Makes Robots That Can Walk Away as Soon as They're Done MIT builds Artificial Intelligence system that can detect 85% of Cyber Attacks
Robotics Cybersecurity
Tech trends 2016: Cybersecurity in the connected world
A Study In The Interconnectedness Of Things

Announcing Gigaom Change

Stowe Boyd interviews Gigaom CEO Byron Reese about launch of new conference, Gigaom Change

Stowe Boyd: Gigaom Change is a new event you're orchestrating. What was your motivation? Was there an itch you just couldn't scratch? Does the world need another tech conference?

Byron Reese: Gigaom Change is something entirely new and different. There isn't another conference quite like it. It is based on the idea that a series of technologies are all converging on us at the same time, and they promise to a cataclysmic impact on the world.  The seven technologies we will be looking at are artificial intelligence, virtual reality/augmented reality, robotics, human-machine interfaces, nanotechnology, cybersecurity, and 3D printing.

I have noticed that business leaders everywhere are having trouble keeping up with these technologies.  Everyone knows the high-level basic concepts, but this growing complexity is strangling corporate foresight and slowing business productivity.

If you think about it, it is no surprise that these technologies are so overwhelming. Humanity has only faced real change three times in the past: When we got speech 100,000 years ago, when we developed agriculture 10,000 years ago, and when we invented writing 5000 years ago. We are literally going to witness the fourth major change, when our technologies upend our society and its institutions.  Business leaders need to understand how to use these new technologies.

Continue reading at Gigaom.

Virtual Reality

Virtual Reality And A Parallel Universe Of Cyberclones

 

One of the biggest technology trends of 2015 was virtual reality (VR), from Oculus Rift to Google's cardboard headsets.

TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2015 saw a lot of VR experiences where users could wear headsets and navigate an immersive 3D world. In Las Vegas, CES demonstrated a range of new gadgets and gaming experiences involving both VR and AR (augmented reality, e.g., Magic Leap).

It is exciting to predict which killer app incorporating these technologies might become the next unicorn in 2016. But perhaps it is equally worthwhile to pause for a moment and ponder the implication of these technologies in the physical world, both in the near and distant future.

Continue reading at Tech Crunch

Artificial Intelligence

MIT builds Artificial Intelligence system that can detect 85% of Cyber Attacks

What if we could Predict when a cyber attack is going to occur before it actually happens and prevent it? Isn't it revolutionary idea for Internet Security?

Cyber security is a major challenge in today's world, as government agencies, corporations and individuals have increasingly become victims of cyber attacks that are so rapidly finding new ways to threaten the Internet that it's hard for good guys to keep up with them.

A group of researchers at MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) are working with machine-learning startup PatternEx to develop a line of defense against such cyber threats.

The team has already developed an Artificial Intelligence system that can detect 85 percent of attacks by reviewing data from more than 3.6 Billion lines of log files each day and informs anything suspicious.

The new system does not just rely on the artificial intelligence (AI), but also on human input, which researchers call Analyst Intuition (AI), which is why it has been given the name of Artificial Intelligence Squared or AI2. 

Find more information at The Hacker News

Cybersecurity

Tech trends 2016: Cybersecurity in the connected world

This year, cybersecurity will be the main issue vexing global business, firms say


Allowing customers' data to be stolen by hackers is not good for business, firms are finally realising. It damages corporate reputations and erodes the public's "comfort with sharing their data", says Rashmi Knowles of cybersecurity company RSA.

But the worrying news is that breaches are inevitable, warns Geoff Smith of Experis, while a shortage of skilled cybersecurity professionals is likely to push up the costs of beefing up defences and dealing with attacks.

On top of this, new European data protection laws coming into effect in 2018 will see a "dramatic increase in fines" for data breaches, says James Mullock of law firm Bird and Bird, forcing firms to reassess their compliance procedures this year. Dedicated Data Protection Officers reporting to the board would be "a sensible measure", he says.

Continue reading at BBC.

Robotics

This 3D Printer Makes Robots That Can Walk Away as Soon as They're Done

Bringing the world one step closer to having real-life replicators like Star Trek promised, researchers at MIT's CSAIL lab have developed a new 3D printing technique that allows fully-functional robots to be created in a single print run. Add a motor and battery, and they're able to walk right out of the 3D printer.

Typically, building something complex and animated with a 3D printer requires multiple print runs for all the various parts that then need to be assembled afterwards. The process is time consuming and about as far as one can get from a replicator that makes a mug full of piping hot Early Grey tea appear out of nowhere for Captain Picard to enjoy.

Continue reading at Gizmodo.

3D Printing

5 Incredible Trends That Will Shape Our 3D Printed Future

Self-repairing pipes. Printed organs. Bulletproof t-shirts. Seriously?

In April I was asked to speak at the annual TED conference in Vancouver (following Bill Gates...gulp) on the topic of 3D printing production and its implications. I have detailed my thoughts on why the shift to 3D printing production is not only likely but inevitable in articles one, two and three in this series for Forbes. Now, let's take a step into a fascinating future, where daily life will be shaped by several powerful forces directly related to 3D printing production.

What it will be like to live in a 3D-printed world? Imagine the effect of these five trends...

Read the full interview at Forbes.
Nanotechnology




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Structure News: Surge pricing for hybrid cloud strategies

STRUCTURE EVENTS Newsletter
 
Where, Believe It Or Not, We're Still Cloud Native
May 13, 2016 / by Tom Krazit
This week, we'll talk about some progress on Structure Security, the latest cutesy name in a long line of cutesy Google names, and two prominent tech companies that are finally kicking the tires on the public cloud.
STRUCTURE NEWS
We're working hard with our council of advisers getting plans in place for Structure Security, and we'll have a lot more information to share next week about our first trip into the world of security, including some new advisors and speakers. We're discovering a clear interest among professionals in the information security and technology worlds in finding better ways to work together, striking a balance between the relentless pressure of shipping product and the relentless pressure of playing defense against well-funded opponents. We're going to spend this summer examining these issues both here in the newsletter and elsewhere on the internets (stay tuned for more on that), and we welcome your feedback as we roll along.
INDUSTRY NEWS
TWITTER BARS INTELLIGENCE AGENCIES FROM USING ANALYTICS SERVICE
The market value of Twitter the company ain't what it used to be, but the value of Twitter data -- especially for those who have firehose access -- has never been greater. Dataminr, a Twitter analytics company backed by Twitter and In-Q-Tel, cut off U.S. intelligence agencies from using its service at Twitter's request, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal (subscription required), although Techcrunch reported that the agencies were using the service as part of an unpaid pilot period that would have come to an end soon enough anyway.

GOOGLE HAS OPEN-SOURCED SYNTAXNET, ITS AI FOR UNDERSTANDING LANGUAGE

Welcome “Parsey McParseface” to that ongoing tradition of “Oh, those wacky Googlers!” announcements. Following the release of TensorFlow last year, Wired reports that Google has open-sourced another artificial intelligence project called SyntaxNet, which aims to teach computers more sophisticated ways to understand text using an analysis tool that is actually called Parsey McParseface.

THE CREATORS OF SIRI JUST SHOWED OFF THEIR NEXT AI ASSISTANT, VIV, AND IT’S INCREDIBLE

So far, 2016 has been the year of AI and helpful friendly bots. Dag Kittlaus and Adam Cheyer, who you might remember from previous personal assistants such as Siri, have a new personal assistant called Viv that wowed the crowd at Techcrunch Disrupt, according to the Verge. Good demos are just that, good demos, but Viv bears watching given its pedigree.

COREOS SECURES $28 MILLION IN SERIES B FUNDING LED BY GOOGLE’S VENTURE CAPITAL ARM

You probably last saw Google and CoreOS together at Structure 2015, and they’re once again teaming up, in a way. ZDNet reports that Google Ventures led a $28 million Series B funding round in the container startup, which is building its container-management software on top of Google’s Kubernetes.

SLACK WANTS TO HELP YOU SIGN INTO ALL YOUR OTHER OFFICE APPS

Back when social media was just getting started, Facebook, Google, and Twitter all vied to provide sign-in capabilities to dozens of third-party apps and websites: Tinder still requires a Facebook login. Now Slack, the darling of the enterprise software world, is making a bid to provide similar capabilities for work-related apps, according to Recode.

DOCKER ROLLS OUT TOOLS TO SCAN CONTAINERS FOR VULNERABILITIES

One topic that has come up with nearly everyone we’ve talked to for Structure Security (as well as Structure 2016, for that matter) is container security, and Docker, the belle of the container ball, is paying attention to those concerns. eWeek reports that Docker Security Scanning -- once known as Project Nautilus -- is now generally available to Docker users and promises to simplify the process of scanning container images for vulnerabilities.
 
BIG PICTURE
The cloud computing watchers who have been predicting the rise of the hybrid cloud strategy -- a little AWS action, a little self-managed datacenter action -- were awarded two more feathers in their caps this week with reports involving Uber and Salesforce.com, two of tech's most prominent companies.

Salesforce is planning to build an internet of things cloud service on AWS, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal (subscription required), which would be the first time it has gotten cloudy with a company that it ostensibly competes with in a few areas. And The Information reports (subscription also required, but people, it's time to start subscribing to good stuff) Uber, the looming tech juggernaut of the post-iPhone era, is said to be considering all three major cloud providers for some infrastructure services despite its status as an outlier: a post-iPhone consumer company that built its own infrastructure.

At one point, hybrid cloud was once considered a cop-out for scaredy cats under the spell of Big Server, too backward in their thinking to completely let go of their boxes. At a time when every CIO in the world is aware of the potential of the public cloud to help their IT strategy, it’s obvious that the market for public cloud infrastructure has a lot more room for growth. Yet as container strategies evolve and infrastructure-management tools evolve along with them, more and more companies will start to see the value of mixing infrastructure they alone control with the flexibility and ease of the public cloud for certain workloads.

We think that one of the key questions of the maturing cloud computing market is the notion of “the datacenter tipping point,” or the idea that every startup that manages to become a webscale player on the back of public cloud infrastructure will start to consider the benefits of rolling their own. Sure, companies like Netflix and Pinterest are still great advertisements for the cloud-only lifestyle, but as cloud services become more complex, there’s something to be said for running your own boxes.

Yet Salesforce and Uber remind us that it works both ways: just as cloud-native webscale companies consider managing their own infrastructure, companies that manage their own infrastructure can’t ignore the benefits of the public cloud. That’s good news for Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and a host of other startups that provide services in their wake, and it’s evidence that notoriously conservative IT managers have realized they can loosen up a bit and direct their focus on the workloads that are most vital to their business.
 
 
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STRUCTURE

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