"There’s only one corner of the universe you can be
certain of improving, and that’s your own self.” – Aldous Huxley
Top Picks
Hysteria over swine flu is the
real danger, some say
“’We have people without symptoms going into the emergency rooms
asking to be screened for swine flu at the expense of people with real illness,’
said Cathy Gichema, a nurse in Pikesville, Maryland.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/05/03/swine.flu.react/index.html
Do current health care IT cuts
jeopardize Electronic Health Record vision? President Obama's plan to extend healthcare coverage faces a
significant test on the IT front. Healthcare IT News reports that a new
American Hospital Association survey indicates that more than half of American
hospitals are responding to recent economic pressure by either scaling back IT
projects or tabling them altogether. http://blogs.cioinsight.com/knowitall/content001/infrastructure/healthcare_it_hit_in_recession.html?kc=CIOMINUTE05012009CIO1
Data Centers / Cloud Computing / Green IT
Why virtualization is shaking up
IT data centers
“Simply having a uniform (or near-uniform) software layer between the
physical infrastructure and your compute workloads means you can begin to
assemble a homogeneous physical infrastructure to support a heterogeneous
abstract IT environment.” http://news.cnet.com/8301-19413_3-10168613-240.html
[I don’t recall seeing this
article when it came out and the message is a good one – reduction in
variation is beneficial.]
Security and Risk Management
USPS Probes Security Breach
“CBS News has learned of another data breach potentially compromising the
personal information of thousands of people. Companies Lexis Nexis and
Investigative Professionals have notified up to 40,000 people whose ‘sensitive
and personally identifiable’ information may have been viewed by
individuals who should not have had access.” http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/05/01/cbsnews_investigates/main4982989.shtml
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Dangerous climate change may be
just 50 years away, study warns “If you haven’t done much lately to reduce your carbon
footprint, a new analysis in the journal Nature may motivate you to start
living a more eco-friendly life. When human injection of carbon released into
the atmosphere gets up to one trillion tons, the result will be a dangerous
climate change, says a paper in the journal. http://www.nydailynews.com/lifestyle/2009/05/01/2009-05-01_dangerous_climate_change_may_be_just_50_years_away_study_warns.html
US News / Business / Economics
Chrysler shutdown pushes suppliers closer to
edge
“With all 30 of Chrysler's plants idled through the automaker's
bankruptcy process, its cash-strapped parts suppliers will have no new revenue
for the next 60 days -- or indefinitely.” http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSTRE5405SM20090501
Global companies fear Obama's new tax proposals
“Multinational companies on Monday said President Barack Obama's
proposals to rein in corporate loopholes will make them less competitive, while
consumer advocates said the changes are long overdue fixes for abuse.” http://www.reuters.com/article/economicNews/idUSN0440647120090504
Exploding star is oldest object seen in
universe
“The object, known as GRB 090423, is about 200 million years older than
the previous record-holder for oldest object ever seen. Berger isn't just
interested in the record books, though -- the gamma ray burst extended the
frontiers of human knowledge about the history of the universe.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/04/29/gamma.ray.burst.space/index.html
End Notes
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"’Strategy’ (from the Greek strategos, meaning
generalship) is a set of actions toward a specific goal. The concept of
strategy has developed in the laboratory of war. One of the most popular
"strategy" books ever written (and still read today after 2,400
years) is Sun Tzu’s manual, The Art of War.” – National Association of Corporate Directors
FAQ in Corporate Governance
Top Picks
81 dead in Mexico as flu
emergency goes global
“By Sunday, 81 deaths had been deemed ‘likely linked’ to a
deadly new strain of the virus by health authorities in Mexico. Viral testing has
confirmed 20 cases, said Dr. Jose A. Cordova Villalobos, Mexico's health
secretary. In the United States, the number of confirmed swine flu cases stood
at 11. In New Zealand, officials said 22 students and three teachers, who
returned from a three-week-long language trip to Mexico, may have been infected
with the virus.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/04/26/swine.flu/index.html
Facts about swine flu: http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/04/25/swine.flu/index.html#cnnSTCOther1
BBC Coverage: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8019100.stm
Debunking Data Centers
“Clean white server rooms, security cameras, biometric scanners, enormous
cooling units, uninterruptible power supplies and massive generators make
professional data centers look more impressive than your server room, but are
they?” http://datacenterjournal.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2739
[I really like this
article. The author stresses the need for reliability and makes a very
important point – question your assumptions. Just because the
datacenter looks great doesn’t mean that it is reliable.]
Geithner: Economic slide eases,
no recovery yet
“U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said on Friday that signs of an
easing in the pace of deterioration in the global economy should not be
confused with the start of recovery.” http://uk.reuters.com/article/americasRegulatoryNes/idUKN2445032520090424
Doing More with Less: IT
Framework Integration
“With the economic downturn organizations are pushing to drive down costs
while improving quality. To shorten the learning curve and improve the
likelihood of success, proven business and IT frameworks relating to quality
and other disciplines are being reviewed for insights on how to improve
effectiveness and efficiency. IT groups not familiar with the various
frameworks and how they may integrate are apt to make wrong decisions or allow
business management to make wrong decisions. Given the plethora of
frameworks that IT may be involved with, it only makes sense to review some of
the most common ones at a very high-level and then discuss how they can work
together. The following are common frameworks that IT may well encounter.” http://www.itsmwatch.com/itil/article.php/3816046
Study: Not replacing laptops can
prove very costly
“Companies looking to cope with declining IT budgets by postponing the
purchase of new laptop computers are likely making a mistake, according to a
new report released by technology consulting firm J.Gold Associates LLC.” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9132096&source=rss_null14
[This parallels personal observations regarding the need for a three year
rotation on laptops/notebooks.]
Kurt’s Corner
News and views from Kurt Milne, the
managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@....
Thinking more about risk
There has been some serious soul searching going on in the corporate governance
space about modeling and managing risk as part of overall
governance. This article lays out the problem pretty well, but
I’m not sure it gets the solution quite right. I think more people need
to be trained on basic risk-based thinking. Simple questions such as “what
could go wrong with this project/product/timeline? What are we going to do to
keep it from happening? What is the response if it does happen?”
need to be asked and risks managed. http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=2205
Data Centers / Cloud Computing / Green IT
Details of Data Center Metrics
from Environmental Protection Agency
“The metric which has been put forth by EPA is the energy star rating of
data centers which will be on a scale ranging from 1 to 100. The rating would
help data centers to know where they stand compared to their peers as far as
efficient energy utilization is concerned.” http://datacenterjournal.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2738
DCiE de facto energy efficiency
benchmark for DOE
“The recent announcement by the U.S. Department of Energy Industrial
Technologies Program (ITP) on funding research that seeks to increase the
energy efficiency of server-based telecommunications and data center facilities
has a very interesting measurement mentioned within it. DCIE or Data Center
Infrastructure Efficiency was developed by the Green Grid as a benchmark for
energy efficiency in the data center. DCiE’s reciprocal is PUE which
stands for Power Usage Effectiveness.” http://datacenterjournal.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2578
IBM plans cloud computing
services for 2009
“IBM plans to launch several cloud computing services this year, taking
on companies such as Amazon.com Inc, Google Inc, Microsoft Corp and
Salesforce.com Inc. International Business Machines Corp spokeswoman Kelly Sims
said on Thursday the first of these new services will enable developers to
write software that works with the emerging, Web-based technology. Cloud
computing systems run software and store information in remote, large-scale
data centers that users and programmers access over the Internet.” http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/feedarticle/8470558
Amazon.com Eyes CIOs With Its AWS
Cloud IT Services
“Although skeptics raised eyebrows over Amazon.com's decision to provide
hosted IT infrastructure services, the e-commerce giant remains firmly
committed to this business, as it increasingly courts CIOs and IT managers.
Amazon.com officially entered this market in March 2006 when it launched its
Simple Storage Service (S3) and the Amazon Web Services (AWS) subsidiary, which
today provides a suite of Internet-based IT infrastructure services.” http://www.pcworld.com/article/163825/amazoncom_eyes_cios_with_its_aws_cloud_it_services.html
Security and Risk Management
RSA 2009: A yawner at best
“In my humble opinion, the RSA 2009 security conference, held this week
in San Francisco, was extremely flat compared with past years. Yes, the economy
had a lot to do with it. I believe last year's attendance was around 17,000
people, and I've heard that this year was off about 12 percent to 13 percent.
Personally, I can't believe there were more than 10,000 folks there.” http://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-10226997-83.html
Top five cloud computing security
issues
“In the last few years, cloud computing has grown from being a promising
business concept to one of the fastest growing segments of the IT industry.
Now, recession-hit companies are increasingly realising that simply by tapping
into the cloud they can gain fast access to best-of-breed business applications
or drastically boost their infrastructure resources, all at negligible cost.
But as more and more information on individuals and companies is placed in the
cloud, concerns are beginning to grow about just how safe an environment it is.” http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/04/24/235782/top-five-cloud-computing-security-issues.htm
Health and Healthcare
Patients Irate With Insurers'
'Fail First' Policy
“The basic idea behind step therapy is to start with the most
cost-effective and safest treatment, progressing to more costly or risky
therapy only if the current treatment is not effective. In theory, proponents
say, the strategy both minimizes risks to the patient and keeps overall costs
under control.” http://abcnews.go.com/Health/PainManagement/story?id=7395636&page=1
The Dubious Promise of Digital
Medicine
“Neal Patterson likens the current scramble in health information
technology to the 19th century land rush that opened his native Oklahoma to
homesteaders. Cerner (CERN), the large medical vendor Patterson heads, is
jockeying for new business spurred by a $19.6 billion federal initiative to
computerize a health system buried in paper. ‘It's a beautiful
opportunity for us,’ the CEO says. http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/09_18/b4129030606214.htm?campaign_id=rss_null
'Climate change' forces Eskimos
to abandon village
“The indigenous people of Alaska have stood firm against some of the most
extreme weather conditions on Earth for thousands of years. But now, flooding
blamed on climate change is forcing at least one Eskimo village to move to
safer ground.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/science/04/24/climate.change.eskimos/index.html
How swine flu spreads in humans
“A new strain of influenza is infecting people in Mexico and the United
States and may have killed up to 60 people in Mexico, global health officials
said today. The CDC has analyzed samples of the H1N1 virus from some of
the U.S. patients, all of whom have recovered, and said it is a
never-before-seen mixture of viruses from swine, birds and humans.” http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mexico-flu-box25-2009apr25,0,5114253.story
Mexico City on alert over swine
flu outbreak
“Mexican officials closed all schools Friday in the capital city in an
effort to combat the swine flu virus that has killed dozens in Mexico and
infected eight people in the United States.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/04/25/swine.flu/index.html
Global News / Business / Economics
G7 sees signs of stabilization;
vows cooperation
“Finance chiefs from the G7 powers said the downturn in their economies
was easing and they pledged to ensure big financial firms are sound, according
to a draft statement obtained by Reuters on Friday.” http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE53M52K20090424
Why Iran Is Hungry for Business
with the U.S.
“Americans and other Western companies might benefit, too. Iran, after
all, has 66 million people, good schools, and a diversified industrial
base—with a pent-up appetite for computers, planes, aircraft parts, and
knowhow for the crucial oil and gas industry. And many Iranians like the
prospect of working with U.S. companies rather than the Europeans that have
been the only game in recent years.” http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/09_18/b4129020609532.htm?campaign_id=rss_null
US News / Business / Economics
Why is Wall Street ignoring Detroit?
“Part of this is because the auto sector's problems are taking a back
seat (pardon the pun) to the state of the nation's banks and insurance
companies. And, for now at least, investors are feeling a little better about
the financial sector. There is also a sense that an automaker bankruptcy
may already be priced into the market.” http://money.cnn.com/2009/04/24/markets/thebuzz/?postversion=2009042412
Federal officials privately issue banks'
'stress tests' results
“The results will not be made public until May 4, and banks are not
allowed to reveal them. But the Federal Reserve, which is overseeing the
process, today released details of the data and assumptions used to conduct the
tests. The 21-page white paper was issued ahead of the actual results to give
the public time to understand the process and data, according to a senior Fed
official who spoke on condition of anonymity because the process is ongoing.” http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-stresstests25-2009apr25,0,5490195.story
Pontiac: R.I.P.
“General Motors is expected to announce Monday that it plans to kill its
Pontiac brand, rather than maintain it as a niche brand with one or two models
into the future as had been previously announced by company officials.” http://www.businessweek.com/autos/autobeat/archives/2009/04/pontiac_rip.html
Technology & Science
Scientists complete genome sequence of cows
“Scientists have finished the genome sequence of cows, which could
contribute to better disease resistance and higher quality meat for consumers,
according to reports to be published Friday in journal Science.” http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-04/24/content_11249258.htm
China prepares for market launch of robots
attending lone elderly
“A 1.6-meter tall robot with twinkling eyes may soon become the best
friend for lone elderly people, as Chinese scientists make the final sprint
toward its market launch, said a senior researcher on the robot project here on
Saturday.” http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-04/25/content_11254566.htm
End Notes
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"If you want to build a ship, don't herd people together to
collect wood and don't assign them tasks and work, but rather teach them to
long for the endless immensity of the sea” – Antoine de Saint-Exupery
"Once you choose hope, anything's possible.” – Christopher Reeve
Top Picks
Cyberspies penetrate electrical
grid: report “Cyberspies have penetrated the U.S. electrical grid and
left behind software programs that could be used to disrupt the system, the
Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.” http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE53729120090408
HIMSS09: Greenspan's thoughts on
economy and health care IT generate a buzz “Alan Greenspan, former Chairman of the Federal Reserve,
kicked off the final day of the Healthcare Information and Management Systems
Society (HIMSS) conference in Chicago, IL. He focused on why the economy is in
the state it is in and highlighted some of the telltale signs that we may be
heading out of it; for instance, the dramatic decline in inventories has begun
to slow. But I felt his remarks lead to more questions than answers; the
questions raised focused more on how the economy will impact health care.” http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/cio-for-hire/?p=239
IT Audit / Internal Audit / Compliance / Ethics
Less Than Half of Self-insured
Organizations Addressing HIPAA
“Most self-insured U.S. companies are in danger of failing to meet the
HIPAA security requirements, and for many, the problem is that they think it
applies only to insurance companies and health care providers. In fact, any
organization that handles any individually identifiable health information for
insurance purposes for 50 or more individuals is responsible for meeting the
HIPAA requirements, including the security rule. There are substantial
penalties each time an organization fails to meet the 18 standards and 36
implementation specifications, META Group reported.” http://health-information.advanceweb.com/editorial/content/editorial.aspx?CC=35763
IT Process Improvement / Quality Management
Understanding the Cloud/Ops
Disconnect
“Since ITIL is the lingua franca – the accepted common language
– for IT operations right now, let us use the ITIL framework to consider
operational inter-operability between the Cloud service provider and the
customer.” http://www.itsmwatch.com/itil/article.php/3814356
Why U.S. Navy is Standardizing IT
Strategy Around ITIL “In 2006, EDS had a problem. A big problem. The company was
facing rampant and voluble dissatisfaction of its $9.9 billion contract to
manage the Navy and Marine Corps’s land-side IT infrastructure, better
known as NMCI for Navy/Marine Corp. Intranet. The solve this migraine of a
headache, EDS, now a division of HP, turned to ITIL. “ http://www.itsmwatch.com/itil/article.php/3813651
New ITIL Adoption Slowing
“Large IT organizations are continuing to expand ITIL initiatives at a
healthy pace, but new adoption may be slowing. The obstacles to adoption are
real, and benefits are sometimes difficult to quantify. Furthermore, the
current economic crisis is not favorable to investment in long-term improvement
programs such as ITIL. On the other hand, a downturn in business volume may be
the best time to make changes to IT processes and services, as personnel may
have more time for such initiatives.” http://www.itsmwatch.com/news/article.php/3811856
Note: The Australian IT
Service Management & Help Desk Summit is April 28th and 29th
at Luna Park in Sydney “The Australian IT Service Management & Help Desk Summit
is where the Help Desk industry thought leaders meet, key issues are discussed,
partnerships are formed and business is done. The focus of this event is
People, Process and Technology. The summit will showcase best and innovative
practices in the help desk industry including techniques to make you helpdesk
into and resourceful, motivated and integrated business who deliver on service
excellence.
Join your help desk industry
peers and thought leaders at The Australian IT Service Management & Help
Desk Summit.”
Microsoft's Data Center Chief to
Leave Company
“Manos will be senior vice president of technical services at Digital
Realty, which designs and manages data centers for third parties. He will
oversee the design and construction of Digital Realty's data centers worldwide,
and lead a new professional services offering that the company plans to unveil
shortly, it said in a statement Wednesday.” http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/162841/microsofts_data_center_chief_to_leave_company.html
Digital Realty Trust Adopts Green
Standards
“Wholesale data center provider Digital Realty Trust
(www.digitalrealtytrust.com) is adopting the newly announced Building Research
Establishment Environmental Assessment Method Bespoke (www.breeam.org) data center
standards for all future construction of its data centers, ensuring
environmental sustainability, reduced running costs and increased long term
building value, according to the company's Tuesday announcement.” http://www.thewhir.com/web-hosting-news/033109_Digital_Realty_Trust_Adopts_Green_Standards
Free-Cooling Estimated Savings
The Green Grid launched a free calculator for data centers that want to
estimate the savings that the use of an economizer could bring. http://cooling.thegreengrid.org/calc_index.html
Security and Risk Management
Microsoft warns of dangerous rise
in scareware
“The threat of rogue security software, or 'scareware', has risen
dramatically over the past year or so, according to a new report from
Microsoft, but there was good news for the industry after a fall in the number
of vulnerability disclosures. Scareware is used by criminals to extort
money from vulnerable users by persuading them that their PC is at risk or
infected, and urging them to buy bogus security software.” http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/2240101/microsoft-warns-rise-scareware
Cyber spying a threat, and
everyone is in on it
“Nowadays, a hacker with a high-speed Internet connection, knowledge of
computer security and some luck can pilfer information thought to be safely
ensconced in a digital locker. And the threat is growing, with countries
— including the U.S. — pointing fingers at each other even as they
ramp up their own cyber espionage.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5g9Qba11VwXiwuvQ129By-RandlvAD97F54H00
Rid your computer of the
Conficker virus
“Let's assume you're on the receiving end of the worst April Fool's Day
joke of 2009: your computer's been infected with the Conficker virus. It's a
frustrating but not insurmountable problem. This guide will walk you through
how to cleanse your computer and inoculate against other Conficker variants.” http://download.cnet.com/8301-2007_4-10208734-12.html
Health and Healthcare
HIMSS: Dell, Perot Systems
Unleash Health Care IT Salvo “Dell (NSDQ:Dell) and solution provider Perot Systems
(NYSE:PER ) (2008 VARBusiness 500 No. 35) announced a partnership Monday to
provide products and services to the health-care IT industry, including
virtualized desktops, servers, storage and electronic medical records (EMR)
either on-premise, hosted off-site or in secure private clouds.” http://www.crn.com/healthcare/216403066
HIMSS: Moving From Stimulus Hope
To Real Health-Care IT Projects “If there was a dominant theme at this year's Healthcare
Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) conference in Chicago, it
was undoubtedly the federal stimulus--what the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act means for those with a health-care IT stake, and what they can
do to capitalize on the opportunities it presents.” http://www.crn.com/healthcare/216500291
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Obama, Who Vowed Rapid Action on
Climate Change, Turns More Cautious “President Obama came to office promising swift and
comprehensive action to combat global climate change, and the topic remains a
surefire applause line in his speeches here and abroad. The latest on
President Obama, the new administration and other news from Washington and
around the nation. Yet the administration has taken a cautious and rather
passive role on the issue, proclaiming broad goals while remaining aloof from
details of climate legislation now in Congress.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/11/us/politics/11climate.html
Chu wants labs to work on energy,
climate change
“In a speech today at Sandia National Laboratories, U.S. Energy Secretary
Steven Chu compared unchecked global warming to riding on the Titanic. ‘Lots
of people see there’s an iceberg ahead, but it takes a long time to turn
the boat around,’ Chu said. ‘If we turn it now, we can mitigate the
blow.’” http://www.bizjournals.com/albuquerque/stories/2009/04/06/daily51.html
The Outlook For China's Economy
“Even once the U.S. economy recovers, it will rely less on consumption
and imports and more on an improvement in net exports. The world where the U.S.
was the consumer of first and last resort--spending more than its income and
running an ever larger current account deficit--and where China was the
producer of first and last resort, spending less than its income and running
ever larger current account surpluses, is changing.” http://www.forbes.com/2009/04/08/china-economy-yuan-exports-opinions-columnists-nouriel-roubini.html
Asia key to restoring world
growth-World Bank chief
“Asia is key to restoring global growth and an East Asia Summit in
Thailand next week is a good opportunity to discuss economic issues confronting
the region, World Bank President Robert Zoellick said on Thursday.” http://in.reuters.com/article/specialEvents4/idINN0917011320090409
US News / Business / Economics
Google addresses newspaper woes
“The majority of newspapers should be online, says Google boss Eric
Schmidt, amid criticism it should share some of the millions it makes from
newslinks.” http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7988561.stm
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"Leaders are made, they are not born. They are made by hard effort,
which is the price which all of us must pay to achieve any goal that is
worthwhile. ” – Vince
Lombardi
Optimize
the Cooling in Your Existing Data Center
A Free eBook by: George Spafford
The
number of servers is causing power and cooling demands to rise in most data
centers. This increasing need for cooling is not only negatively impacting
operating expenses but also constraining growth because additional cooling needs
can't be met with the existing infrastructure and requires either substantial
capital investment in the existing facility or investment in a new data
center. What some data centers may be overlooking are optimization methods
that can increase the available cooling capacity substantially while also
reducing costs.
This
eBook will provide an overview of:
·The current pressures facing data centers related to
power and cooling
·The need to baseline current cooling utilization and
costs
·Common improvement opportunities including both process
and technical considerations
Greening the Data Center
“IT organizations are under intense pressure to manage the power consumed
by data centers and the resulting cooling demands. To address these
needs, IT needs to properly blend people, process and technology to create
solutions. This book will provide an overview of processes for planning
but will mainly focus on technical improvement opportunities at a
high-level. The chapters are intended to give management data center
power consumption areas to investigate. Rather than a linear cookbook
approach, the chapters are organized in such a manner that the reader can skip
to the topic of interest.” http://www.itgovernance.co.uk/products/2326
WebMedia’s eBook Library
They have many eBooks on topics of interest to IT professionals including project
management, careers, ITIL, information security and more. It’s hard
to beat a free resource such as this. http://www.devx.com/ebook
IT Audit / Internal Audit / Compliance / Ethics
Markets Like Auditor Rule, But
Some Less Sanguine
“Owen Fitzpatrick, the head of U.S. equities at Germany's Deutsche Bank,
also questioned the wisdom, and efficacy, of the plan. He argued that changing
rules doesn't change reality and that the market won't likely long accept that
these assets really are worth what value the banks are going to assign to them,
and therefore uncertainty over them will remain.” http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20090402-716860.html
Ask Dr. Visible Ops: How Should I
Engage Internal Audit In The Change Management Process? Gene Kim and Hal Pomeranz did a webinar. Gene is blogging
responses to some of the questions. http://www.tripwire.com/blog/?p=292
You Don’t Hate Change
Management (You Hate Bad Change Management) This is a great, as usual, post by Hal Pomeranz about
characteristics of both bad and good Change Management programs. His
premise is simple – many people have experienced poorly implemented
Change Management processes so any attempt at Change Management generates
resistance. http://righteousit.wordpress.com/
Kurt’s Corner
News and views from Kurt Milne, the
managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@....
The other Microsoft powered cloud
solution - for internal clouds Last week Microsoft announced that Azure platform will be focused
on plugging into the Microsoft hosted cloud. However, they are also
offering a solution for companies that want to build an internal cloud, adding
Azure features to Windows Server 2008 and offering a cloud version of System
Center. http://www.informationweek.com/news/hardware/data_centers/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=216402332&cid=nl_IWK_daily_H
Private Clouds take shape IT departments have long sought utility-like IT environments where
computing resources and applications can be provisioned with greater
efficiency. They're using systems management software, cluster and grid
technology, load balancing, and virtualization to do it today. Internal cloud
technology is the obvious next step. Private clouds are driven by CIO concerns
about public cloud service providers – namely around data security,
corporate governance, and reliability. The main drawbacks of private clouds are
that IT departments still have to buy, build, and manage them and those needs
diminish the original promise of cloud computing that included lower up-front
capital costs and less hands-on management by IT staffers. http://www.informationweek.com/news/services/business/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=209904474&cid=nl_IWK_daily_H
Security concerns for cloud
computing
“The trouble with the term cloud computing is that it encompasses such a
huge range of technology offerings: software-as-a-service (SaaS), storage
on-demand, remote server capacity, to name a few. One thing all cloud services
have in common, however, is the way in which they deploy or relocate
potentially sensitive corporate data beyond the firewall and that causes a
serious consternation to information security professionals.” http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/03/27/235439/security-concerns-for-cloud-computing.htm
Lean and Green
“Even in a down economy -- perhaps especially in a down economy -- the
green-technology movement offers plenty of opportunities for Microsoft and its
partners.” http://rcpmag.com/features/article.aspx?editorialsid=2651
Painting The Data Center Green
“Driven by runaway operating costs, pressure to become more
environmentally friendly (and energy efficient) and the realities of multicore
processors, virtualization solutions are being pitched by every major hardware
vendor in the information technology world. Forbes caught up with Stephen Herrod,
chief technology officer at VMware, to discuss the changes. http://www.forbes.com/2009/03/27/virtualization-chips-energy-technology-cio-network-virtualization.html
Tape’s Role in the Green
Data Center
“The veteran technology is inaccurately identified as
‘yesterday’s technology,’ but tape technology is experiencing
a Renaissance; a rebirth based on the growing recognition that tape technology
is responding regularly and reliably to today’s vital business
requirements.” http://esj.com/articles/2009/03/31/tape-green-role.aspx
Financial Data Centers Concerned
Over Power: Study
“With financial market firms investing an average of $1.8 billion
annually on data centers including space, power and cooling, these companies
have major concerns over location, connectivity, flexibility and security when
selecting financial data centers, however, power remains their overriding
concern.” http://www.thewhir.com/web-hosting-news/040209_Financial_Data_Centers_Concerned_Over_Power
Major Cybersecurity Bill
Introduced In Senate
“Two senators on Wednesday introduced sweeping cybersecurity legislation
that would significantly overhaul the nation's information security efforts,
including the creation of a national cybersecurity adviser who would report
directly to the president.” http://www.informationweek.com/news/government/technology/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=216402498
Locking up the cloud
“A Cloud Security Alliance has popped up and will show itself at an RSA
security conference on April 21. The non-profit CSA says it's formed
itself to ‘promote the use of best practices for providing security
assurance within Cloud Computing’, and to show users how to use cloud
computing ‘to help secure all other forms of computing.’” http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/04/03/cloud_security_alliance/
Exams of Injured Workers Fuel
Mutual Mistrust
“Independent medical exams are among the most disputed components of New
York’s troubled workers’ compensation system. Under that system, workers
with bona fide injuries are entitled to medical care and replacement wages,
usually paid for by their employer’s insurer. … a New York Times
review of case files and medical records and interviews with participants
indicate that the exam reports are routinely tilted to benefit insurers by
minimizing or dismissing injuries.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/01/nyregion/01comp.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss
Process Improvement: Tools and
Methodologies for the 21st Century
“It's unlike the process improvement emphasis previously experienced in
health care. There have been methodologies introduced over the past decade such
as Six Sigma, Balanced Scorecard and Rapid Redesign, but older methodologies
such as Workout Sessions, Plan Do Check Act (PDCA) Methodology and Total
Quality Improvement (TQM) still have an important role in the process
improvement tool kit. The methodology that most health care organizations are
adopting is Six Sigma. This methodology was first invented by Motorola to
correct poor manufacturing quality and later adopted by General Electric among
other corporations.” http://health-information.advanceweb.com/editorial/content/editorial.aspx?CC=60881
Walgreen offers some unemployed
free clinic trips
“The offer, which comes more than a year into the recession, only applies
to adults who lose their jobs on or after March 31. Spouses, domestic partners
and children also qualify if they do not have their own health
insurance.” http://uk.reuters.com/article/healthNewsMolt/idUKTRE52U6KY20090331
Insurance Aid for the Newly
Unemployed
“The federal government will pay 65% of Cobra continuation coverage
premiums as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, which
was signed into law on Feb. 17. The coverage will apply to individuals who lost
or lose their jobs between Sept. 1, 2008 and Dec. 31, 2009 and are eligible for
continuing coverage under Cobra, a federal law called the Consolidated Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123889075782289985.html?mod=article-outset-box
Human Error / Safety / Environment
FlightsFromHell.com
This is a pretty funny site. For those of us who travel all the time some
of these stories will bring back memories J Why in this section of the
newsletter? I don’t really have a good answer … safety maybe!
Ice bridge ruptures in Antarctic
“Scientists say the collapse could mean the Wilkins Ice Shelf is on the
brink of breaking away, and provides further evidence or rapid change in the
region.” http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7984054.stm
Study: Cool Spells Normal in
Warming World
“A valuable short paper that has been accepted for publication in
Geophysical Research Letters (subscription required) makes a strong case
against presenting any argument about human-driven global warming that’s based
on short-term trends (a decade or so). I’ve noted here before that
climate campaigners who seek to use real-time events to engage the public can
only retain credibility if they account for natural variability in framing
their case and explain that the odds of such events are shifting.” http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/03/cool-spells-in-a-warming-world/?ref=science
Global News / Business / Economics
G20: Stop taking the China
Kool-Aid
“We should all stop drinking the Kool-Aid on China, and that includes
China itself. China's arrival at the top table of nations is overdue, and its
relationship with the United States crucial, but there is as yet no evidence
that China has some magic bullet whose firing will rectify either the
international economy or - as some are beginning to say - the way that our
increasingly complex world is run.” http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/richard_spencer/blog/2009/04/02/g20_stop_taking_the_china_koolaid
Chinese Economy Sends Mixed
Signals
“Those waiting for a definitive sign that a ‘bottoming out’
of the Chinese economy is at hand will have to wait a while longer, because
recent economic data out of China continues to send conflicting signals. The
exports slump has deepened much more than expected. Fixed asset investment
growth was stronger than anticipated.” http://www.forbes.com/2009/04/01/china-manufacturing-growth-markets-economy-stimulus.html
Asian Data Shows Severity of
Slump
“As world leaders assembled in London for the Group of 20 summit meeting
this week, the latest evidence of the severity of the economic crisis emerged
Wednesday from Asia, with business confidence in Japan plummeting to a record
low, South Korean exports falling for a fifth consecutive month and a
manufacturing index deteriorating in China.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/01/business/global/01iht-asiaecon.html?hpw
Who will lead the world economy
out of recession?
“The United States and China hold the best hope for leading a global
economic recovery, yet they may lack sufficient strength to firmly pull the
world out of recession.” http://uk.reuters.com/article/economyNews/idUKTRE5315GO20090402
Buy China: It's Actually
Benefiting from Global Recessions
“Now, all the major economic forces — America, Japan, and Europe
— are suffering recessions. Only China is the last remaining safe haven.
This article will analyze Chinese economy and how it is benefiting from global
recessions.” http://seekingalpha.com/article/129049-buy-china-it-s-actually-benefiting-from-global-recessions
China to contribute to global
economic recovery
“Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the United Nations Economic and Social
Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) have issued their annual reports
for 2008 recently. The economy in the Asia-Pacific region is generally better
than in any other region on earth in spite of challenges it now faces, and
China is sure to contribute positively to global economic growth.” http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90780/91344/6628656.html
Robots act as scientists without assistants
“Two teams of human scientists Thursday unveiled their work with robots
that not only perform experiments, but also come up with new ones. The
prototypes tackled physics and biology problems that require simple, repetitive
experiments, proceeding by trial and error to uncover knowledge, according to
studies published in the journal Science.” http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/robotics/2009-04-02-Robots_N.htm
The News is brought to you by George Spafford,
Principal Consultant at Pepperweed Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is
nationally recognized as a leader in IT Management Consulting. For more
information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com
or call 888-229-0145. Please let us know if you see stories you think should be
included in the next issue of The News, and feel free to forward this email on
to others.
"It is easier to do a job right than to explain why you
didn't.” – Martin Van
Buren
Top Picks
ITIL Certified Products are Not a
Magic Bullet–More Likely They are Just a Bullet Michael Lohr of Tripwire has some great perspectives to share on
the lack of value around the recent announcement that there would be ITIL
certified tools. The tools haven’t caused 99% of the train wreck
ITIL projects I have seen.
Leaders stress need for G20 unity
“Key politicians from around the world have underlined the need for unity
in addressing the world economic crisis when leaders meet at the G20 summit.” http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7970660.stm
IT Audit / Internal Audit / Compliance / Ethics
Trying to Limit Disclosure on
Explosion
Bayer is trying to limit discussion of an explosion and threats by invoking a
maritime safety law since they have a dock on a canal. The invocation of
the law to avoid public discussion around a sensitive, if not deadly, issue
doesn’t seem right. Take a moment and read the article. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/29/us/29chemical.html?ref=earth
“We should be able to read about
all sorts of success stories with metrics yet most articles are about promise,
theory, and application. Why is this? Why aren’t there more reports of
success and why are both IT and business leaders starting to become jaded when
it comes to the IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL)? Part of the problem is in how
ITIL is viewed and how it is implemented. ITIL isn’t simply about a
collection of processes listed in books. It’s about IT service management
(ITSM) and the belief that IT must deliver services to the business that meet
requirements. In a sense, IT is playing catch-up with manufacturing. Following
WWII, the Japanese were quick to embrace quality management led by the likes of
Deming and Ishikawa. In the 1980s, U.S. manufacturing realized they needed to
fundamentally change how they conducted business in order to compete with the
Japanese. Now, it is IT's turn. This means that not only IT but the business
also must change how IT is wielded in order to successfully enable IT’s
mission of value creation and protection.” http://www.itsmwatch.com/itil/article.php/3811476
With economy in crisis, IBM SOA
strategist Carter sees business processes under scrutiny “Business processes in organization are under new scrutiny
in the midst of the ongoing world economic recession, IBM's Sandy Carter, VP
for SOA and WebSphere Strategy, this week told an audience at a meeting of the
SOA Consortium in Washington, D.C. Some of that process scrutiny could lead to
greater energy savings in IT and other parts of companies, she suggested.
Companies are beginning to look more closely at what they define as 'cost,'
Carter indicated.” http://searchsoa.techtarget.com/news/article/0,289142,sid26_gci1351951,00.html
Kurt’s Corner
News and views from Kurt Milne,
the managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@....
Iowa governor trolling for
Microsoft facility
“Iowa Gov. Chet Culver will travel to Redmond, Wash., next week to try to
shake loose money for a Microsoft data center planned near Iowa's capital city.
Microsoft announced in August that the $500 million data center was to be built
in West Des Moines, Iowa. But a significant economic downturn followed, and in
January, Microsoft cut 5,000 jobs and postponed the project.” http://www.seattlepi.com/business/404392_msft28.html
How Google Routes Around Outages
“Google doesn’t discuss operations of specific data centers. But
Holzle, the company’s Senior Vice President of Operations and a Google
Fellow, provided an overview of how Google has engineered its system to manage
hardware failures and software bugs. Here’s our Q-and-A.” http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2009/03/25/how-google-routes-around-outages/
Expert cites "major
problem" with security policy compliance
“The independent security consultant said too many organizations have
security policies on paper only and don't really have the systems in place to
ensure compliance. He reached back to the demise of Arthur Andersen and
financial troubles at Cooper Tire as being caused in large part to problematic
data destruction policies.” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2009/032509-secureworld-security-policy-problem.html
APIC Supports Coalition to
Improve Healthcare Quality
“The Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology
(APIC) announces its support of the Stand for Quality, a diverse coalition of
more than 165 healthcare organizations who recently announced a plan to improve
the quality and affordability of healthcare for all patients through a
public-private partnership.” http://www.infectioncontroltoday.com/hotnews/healthcare-quality-coalition.html
The Stand for Quality site is: http://www.standforquality.org/
Hospitals begin to embrace
quality improvement methods
“Hospitals across the country are just starting to see the benefits of
lean and Six Sigma quality improvement methods, according to a new study
released by the American Society for Quality of Milwaukee. Hospitals are
beginning to embrace lean and Six Sigma business management strategies to
reduced costs and improve productivity, according to The ASQ Hospital Study,
which looked at implementation of lean and Six Sigma at 77 hospitals.” http://www.bizjournals.com/milwaukee/stories/2009/03/23/daily13.html
Healthcare reform czar has
insider's view of the industry
“DeParle's business experience, coupled with her management of government
medical programs, gives her an insider's perspective on the machinery of
healthcare delivery. But it also raises questions about Washington's
revolving door between government and industry: Can DeParle avoid conflicts of
interest, given the size and market share of some of the firms she has worked
for?” http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-na-deparle29-2009mar29,0,6508858.story
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Among Climate Scientists, a
Dispute Over ‘Tipping Points’
“Environmentalists and some climate experts are increasingly warning of
impending tipping points in their efforts to stir public concern. The term
confers a sense of immediacy and menace to potential threats from a warming
climate — dangers that otherwise might seem too distant for people to
worry about. But other scientists say there is little hard evidence to
back up specific predictions of catastrophe.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/29/weekinreview/29revkin.html
Is China the New America?
“Today, there are increasing demands that China contribute more to
internationally coordinated rescue packages through a reformed International
Monetary Fund (IMF). China is also one of the few economies still growing in
2009, though most economists have reduced their estimates of growth rates.
Finally, China and the United States are the only countries that are large
enough, and have sufficiently well-ordered government finances, to launch major
efforts at fiscal stimulation.” http://www.midasletter.com/news/09032701_Is-china-the-new-america.php
[Great article. It is a reprint from Foreign Policy magazine.
Definitely read it.]
US News / Business / Economics
U.S. Economy: Spending Growth Slowed in
February
“American consumers’ spending slowed in February and their
confidence remained near a three-decade low this month, reflecting the toll of
a deteriorating job market. Purchases advanced 0.2 percent after climbing
1 percent in January, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. The
Reuters/University of Michigan final index of consumer sentiment was 57.3 in
March after 56.3 in February.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601068&sid=awlvE9_aHA6g&refer=home
Nuclear-Power Industry Enjoys Revival 30
Years After Accident
“The U.S. has 104 reactors from the earlier wave of construction, which
generate about 20% of the nation's electricity. Utilities have applied to build
26 new reactors, often at or adjacent to existing plants, and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, which has to approve the plans, says the first approvals
could come by 2011. Given how long it takes to build a plant, the first
wouldn't come on line until later in the decade.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123820275563962721.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Airline Lobby Impatient With Delays on New
Traffic Control System
“The United CEO said air travel delays cost U.S. businesses, passengers
and shippers $40 billion a year. The current system, which can barely cope with
the level of air traffic in the skies today, costs United alone $600 million a
year, the company estimates. With a new ATC system, safety would be improved,
airlines would become more punctual, burn less fuel and reduce carbon
emissions, Mr. Tilton said.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123818857733360521.html#mod=loomia?loomia_si=t0:a16:g2:r5:c0.052417:b23414074
Technology & Science
Tesla Motors Model S Backed by Google
Founders Brin, Page
“Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin are two of the investors
pumping money into Tesla Motors, which has revealed the prototype for its
all-electric, zero-emission sedan, the Model S. Drivers will theoretically be
able to monitor the car’s electric charge via an iPhone or laptop. Tesla
represents an attempt by Silicon Valley to build a car company, and will rely
on government money to put the Model S into production.” http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Green-IT/Tesla-Motors-Model-S-Backed-By-Google-Founders-Brin-Page-336717/
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"Boys, there ain't no free lunches in this country. And don't
go spending your whole life commiserating that you got the raw deals. You've
got to say, I think that if I keep working at this and want it bad enough I can
have it. It's called perseverance.” – Lee Iaccoca
"Defeat never comes to any man until he admits it.” – Josephus Daniels
Top Picks
Information Security Governance
and Boards of Directors: Are They Compatible? By Endre Bihari “This paper presents a critique of emergent views on the
roles of the boards of directors in relation to information security. The
analysis highlights several concerns about the separation and validation of
proper theory and business assertions of information security at board level.
New requirements articulated by industry bodies – represented by a
selected group of experts and evident in literature – are compared to the
underlying theory of corporate governance to identify possible
discrepancies.” http://scissec.scis.ecu.edu.au/conferences2008/proceedings/2008/aism/Bihari%20Information%20Security%20Governance.pdf I really enjoyed this paper that Endre wrote.
Be sure to check it out.]
Resurrecting a failed ITSM
implementation
“Organizations are eager to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of
IT services. The IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL) has much to offer with its IT
Service Management (ITSM) philosophy and reference processes. The challenge
that groups face when implementing ITIL is that the process must be tailored to
the needs of each organization, and it is critical that it's done correctly. As
a result, many ITIL projects either stall or outright fail. Herein lies a challenge:
How can these projects recover?” http://searchdatacenter.techtarget.com/tip/0,289483,sid80_gci1351147_mem1,00.html
[If you have any thoughts on the article/topic,
please drop me a note.]
IBM, Sun talks seen continuing to
next week-sources
“IBM (IBM.N) is still in talks to buy Sun Microsystems Inc (JAVA.O) and
discussions could take several more days as IBM studies various parts of Sun's
computer server and software businesses, according to people with knowledge of
the matter.” http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUSN2051831420090320
IT Audit / Internal Audit / Compliance / Ethics
Peanut case reveals inspector-company
ties
“As federal legislators prepared to revamp the nation’s food-safety
system, they examined the cozy relationship between food inspectors and the
companies they inspect —- exemplified by the company linked to the
salmonella outbreak —- at a congressional hearing Thursday.” http://www.ajc.com/services/content/printedition/2009/03/20/peanut0320.html
FTC Asked to Investigate Google's
Privacy Breaches
“The recent privacy glitch with Google Docs is just the latest example of
security concerns with Google's cloud computing services, and the Federal Trade
Commission should take note, according to a filing from the Electronic Privacy
Information Center (EPIC).” http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2343346,00.asp
IT Process Improvement / Quality Management
ITIL tools standard, endorsed by
ITIL creator, seeks to aid buyers
“For the first time since creating the Information Technology
Infrastructure Library more than 20 years ago, the U.K.'s Office of Government
Commerce (OGC) has officially endorsed a compliance framework to audit vendor
products, documentation and processes against the published best practices of
ITIL (versions 2 and 3). The compliance scheme will be managed by the OGC's
official accreditor, APM Group Ltd. The move seeks to create a formal,
recognized ITIL tools standard to make technology investments easier, though
other organizations already offer similar services.” http://searchcio-midmarket.techtarget.com/news/article/0,289142,sid183_gci1349709,00.html?track=NL-1014&ad=691872&asrc=EM_USC_6060583&uid=4561296
[Thank you for sending this in
Michael! I wonder if organizations will fall for this and think it will
guarantee success. The fact is that ITIL promises much *BUT* if it
is not implemented correctly (meaning if the processes are not designed and
implemented correctly with the goals of the organization in mind and then the
tools supporting the needs of the processes, the compliance of a tool
doesn’t really matter.]
Kurt’s Corner
News and views from Kurt Milne,
the managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@....
Economic Blues Could Slow Data
Center Construction
Basically the article reviews the capital investment required and that on-going
data center construction is likely to continue but new construction may be put
on hold while organizations monitor economic conditions. http://www.networkworld.com/news/2009/032009-economic-blues-could-slow-data.html
Federal policies could make or
break cloud computing, experts say “The United States could secure economic and technological
dominance in the burgeoning realm of cloud computing, or it could fall behind
the rest of the world, depending on how Congress may choose to regulate
industry, experts said Friday. Meanwhile, as cloud computing becomes more
commonplace in the lives of everyday consumers, the new federal chief
information officer, Vivek Kundra, said Friday he is reviewing what policies
are necessary to ensure the federal government does not fall behind.” http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-10201461-38.html
What Customer Data Should You
Keep--And Toss?
“Heartland Payment Systems, a credit card processor, may have had up to
100 million records exposed to malicious hackers. Payment processors CheckFree
and RBS Worldpay, and employment site Monster.com, have all reported data
breaches in recent months, as have universities and government agencies.
Experts at Wharton say that personal data is increasingly a liability for
companies and suggest that part of the solution may be minimizing the customer
information these companies keep.” http://www.forbes.com/2009/03/19/heartland-payment-security-entrepreneurs-sales-marketing-security.html
VA's security lessons learned
“The theft in 2006 of an employee laptop that contained personal
information on millions of veterans taught the Veterans Affairs Department some
hard lessons. VA became ‘the poster child of data breaches,’ said
Kathryn Maginnis, the department's associate deputy assistant secretary for
risk management and incident response. As a result of that incident and
several breaches that followed, the department developed a comprehensive
incident response program and incident resolution team that evaluates all
serious exposures of sensitive data.” http://gcn.com/articles/2009/03/23/update1-va-incident-response.aspx
'Smart Grid' may be vulnerable to
hackers
“Is it really so smart to forge ahead with the high technology, digitally
based electricity distribution and transmission system known as the "Smart
Grid"? Tests have shown that a hacker can break into the system, and
cybersecurity experts said a massive blackout could result. Until the
United States eliminates the Smart Grid's vulnerabilities, some experts said,
deployment should proceed slowly.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/03/20/smartgrid.vulnerability/index.html
Social Security goes live with
first federal e-health information exchange
“The Social Security Administration (SSA) today said it has gone live
with a disability claims processing system that was designed to reduce the time
millions of Americans spend each year waiting for benefits to be approved
— and that could mark the start of the rollout of national health
information network.” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9130144
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Navy to begin collision
investigation
“Fifteen sailors aboard the nuclear attack submarine Hartford suffered
minor injuries when it collided with the New Orleans, an amphibious transport
dock from San Diego that was on its maiden deployment, said Cmdr. Jane
Campbell, a spokeswoman for the Navy's 5th Fleet in Bahrain.” http://www3.signonsandiego.com/stories/2009/mar/21/1n21sub235921-navy-begin-collision-investigation/
Climate Change Myths and Facts
“A recent controversy over claims about climate science by Post op-ed
columnist George F. Will raises a critical question: Can we ever know, on any
contentious or politicized topic, how to recognize the real conclusions of
science and how to distinguish them from scientific-sounding spin or
misinformation?” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/20/AR2009032002660.html
Global News / Business / Economics
World Bank Outlook Further Dims
China's Sun
“The World Bank cut its forecast for China’s gross domestic product
growth the second time in four months, predicting that the economy would expand
by only 6.5% in 2009, its weakest performance since 1990.” http://www.forbes.com/2009/03/18/world-bank-china-markets-economy-growth.html
IMF: Global economy to shrink for
first time in 60 years
“The total of goods and services produced around the world is projected
to slump by 1 percent in 2009, compared with a 3.2 percent growth rate the year
before. Leading the slump will be the world's most developed economies,
including the United States, Europe and Japan.” http://edition.cnn.com/2009/BUSINESS/03/20/imf.global.economy/?iref=hpmostpop
US News / Business / Economics
Fed steps up, buys Treasuries in support of
US economy
“The Federal Reserve stepped up to support the US economy, buying $300
billion in Treasuries. The bold move signaled the Fed's belief that the
recession would end which in turn pushed the dollar down 1.6 cents, making
commodities a cheap bet against inflation.” http://www.axcessnews.com/index.php/articles/show/id/17691
Google kicks Amazon in the Kindle
“Escalating the ebook wars, Google has backed Sony's Reader Digital Book
with more than half a million public-domain titles coded in the open ePub
format. The move, announced today, gives Sony's eBook store more than
600,000 titles in total, dwarfing the roughly 245,000 closed-format titles
currently available for the much-hyped Amazon Kindle.” http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/03/19/google_and_sony_ebooks/
[Interesting. Note, you can email PDF files to a Kindle. Simple
text PDFs convert fairly well actually.] http://www.crn.com/retail/215901113
I like the following Business week article’s take on it: “For
starters, the Amazon approach may appeal to people who are interested in newer,
more expensive books, such as New York Times bestsellers, Baker says. At $10
bucks a pop through Amazon, books add up. Sure, Sony lures e-reader buyers with
free books, but at some stage, sales of digital books will outweigh the revenue
generated through the sale of a machine.”
NASA: Space station work 81% complete as
solar arrays unfurled
“The solar arrays are designed to gather energy through 32,800 solar
cells and then transfer that power through the truss to the space station's
batteries. Unfurled and with data and power cables attached and tested, the
arrays are expected to begin delivering energy to the space station sometime
today, according to Debbie Nguyen, a spokeswoman for the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9130138&intsrc=news_ts_head
End Notes
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"Government's view of the economy could be summed up in a few
short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it
stops moving, subsidise it””
– Ronald Reagan
“Ask five economists and you'll get five different answers
(six if one went to Harvard)”– Edgar Fiedler
Top Picks
AFCOM's Five Predictions for Data
Centers Bode Well for Green “What that means is that the c-suite is finally realizing
that although the data center is critical to operations, it is also a major
element of costs and greenhouse gas emissions. All of which points toward more
efficient and greener data center technologies, notably virtualization and
cloud computing.” http://greenercomputing.com/news/2009/03/11/afcoms-five-predictions-data-centers-bode-well-green
[The article lists the five
predictions too, so be sure to take a look.]
China worried about U.S. debt
investments
“The Chinese leader is worried about the $1 trillion his country holds in
U.S. treasury bonds. Those bonds finance U.S. debt, including the massive
stimulus program just getting started.” http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=news/business&id=6709138
[If other countries, notably
China, stop buying US debt, then there will be huge problems globally.]
New Approaches to Greening the
Data Centre
“The truth is that IT is an easy target. When corporate executives,
concerned with rising electricity costs, and keen to support Corporate Social
Responsibility initiatives ask ‘where do we use lots of electricity and
produce lots of CO2 emissions?’ the first answer they are likely to
receive is ‘the data centres’.” http://www.it-director.com/business/content.php?cid=11127
[Certainly this awareness is
being fueled by all the stories in the media about “green IT” and
data center power consumption.]
IBM dives into water tech
“IBM on Friday disclosed the elements of an initiative to sell technology
and services to better manage fresh water, often referred to as the ‘oil
of the 21st century.’” http://news.cnet.com/8301-11128_3-10194866-54.html
[Remember when the guy gave the
recommendation of “plastics” in The Graduate? The word I
would utter to a new grad might very well be “water” for a myriad
number of reasons. I am very intrigued, to say the least, by IBM’s
move into this market.]
Looking for Books on Governance,
ITIL, Green IT, and so on??? Be sure to visit the IT Governance UK now. They have both of
my Green IT books published and ready for ordering plus books on many other
topics available in hardcopy and downloadable formats. http://www.itgovernance.co.uk/MicroSite/?site=158
Kurt’s Corner
News and views from Kurt Milne,
the managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@....
Cost-Cutting Goals
Expand—But Don’t Take Over Nice breakdown of IT executive priorities from CIO Insight.
However, when I read the results of this and other surveys – I always
want the data segmented by IT Value Archetype instead of by company size.
IT is not generic. IT priorities are different at different companies –
because regardless of size, what the business needs/expects from IT is
different at different companies. http://internet.ziffdavisenterprise.com/CIOI_Downloads/CIOI_0812_Rsch.pdf
IT Value archetype benchmark
– what type is your IT shop? ITPI offers a free IT Value archetype benchmark.
Answer 9 questions about how IT drives business value and prioritizes basic
resource decisions. Get a 2 page summary assessment of your
organization’s IT Value Archetype as compared to 269 other firms.
The benchmark, based on findings of the IT Strategic Alignment Study, offers a
summary of key challenges and suggestions for improving strategic fit with the
business. The recommendations are based on analysis of practices that top
levels of performance at other IT organizations of your type. http://www.itpi.org/itarchetype.php
Data Centers / Cloud Computing / Green IT
Cloud forms slowly over data
center
“A survey of some of the 4,300 members of AFCOM – an association of
data center managers that sponsors Data Center World – found that budget
cuts and virtualization are big issues for 2009, but cloud computing
isn’t yet” http://searchstorage.techtarget.com/news/article/0,289142,sid5_gci1350242,00.html
The Dirt on E-Waste
“Nobody knows precisely how much e-waste is generated by schools
nationwide. According to the Natural Resources Defense Council, Americans on
the whole throw out about 130,000 computers a day. That tallies up to 47.5
million a year. And the numbers can only grow.” http://www.thejournal.com/articles/24101
Five Energy Trends Driving Your
Data Center
“With high oil prices still fresh in recent memory, companies have focused
on driving data center costs down through greater efficiencies. The starting
point for the discussion is always reducing the energy requirements, but the
need to save energy forces companies to change how they handle their data
requirements, says Rich Lechner, VP of energy and the environment for
IBM.” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2009/031009-five-energy-trends-driving-your.html
Lack of End User Training is a
Large and Growing Threat to IT Security, CompTIA Study Finds
“According to CompTIA’s 7th Annual Trends in Information Security
survey, human error is the primary cause of the most severe security breaches,
yet significantly fewer organizations (45%) provided security training for
their non-IT staff in 2008 compared to 53% in 2007. The results of study will
be released and presented at the FOSE tradeshow in Washington D.C.” http://www.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20090310005840&newsLang=en
2845 ways to spin the Risk
“In the animation below we show how risks can be ‘spun’ to
look bigger or smaller, how medical treatments can be made to seem useless or
to be wonder cures, and how lifestyle changes might look worthwhile or not
worth bothering with. All by changing the words used, the way the numbers are
expressed, and the particular graphics chosen.” http://understandinguncertainty.org/node/233
Time to Tear Up Your IT Strategy
“The EHR incentives in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)
will cause nearly every healthcare organization to tear up their IT strategy
and plans. The incentives are significant and the time lines are
incredibly aggressive for most organizations. We cannot simply overlay
the new work on top of the existing plans.” http://candidcio.com/2009/03/08/time-to-tear-up-your-it-strategy/
Insurers' commitment to
healthcare reform is only skin-deep
“Briefly, the industry wants the government to assume the cost of
treating the sickest, and therefore most expensive, Americans. It wants the
government to clamp down hard on doctors' and hospitals' fees. And it wants
permission to offer stripped-down, low-benefit policies freed from pesky state
regulations limiting their premiums.” http://www.latimes.com/news/columnists/la-fi-hiltzik9-2009mar09,0,3441386.column
US business leaders say hobbled
by healthcare costs
“U.S. business leaders urged lawmakers on Thursday to act quickly on
healthcare reform, saying American companies were losing out to other countries
with cheaper healthcare and healthier workers.” http://www.reuters.com/article/governmentFilingsNews/idUSN1436311320090315
Human Error / Safety / Environment
World faces 'irreversible'
climate change, researchers warn “The findings came at the end of a three-day conference in
Copenhagen, Denmark, where nearly 2,000 researchers gathered to discuss climate
change. The group called on policy-makers to use all tools available to
reduce dangerous emissions of greenhouse gases.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/03/12/irreversible.climate/index.html
Climate change accelerates water
hunt in U.S. West
“Global warming pushes extremes. It prolongs drought while sometimes
bringing deluges the parched earth cannot absorb. California Department of
Water Resources Director Lester Snow says two things keep him up at night:
drought and flood.” http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSTRE52900820090310?sp=true
'Urgent' repair recommended for
some Boeing 777 engines
“Federal transportation safety officials Wednesday issued an
‘urgent’ recommendation calling for a redesign of a component on
some Boeing 777 aircraft engines -- a component blamed for two major mishaps in
the past year.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/03/11/boeing.redesign/index.html?iref=mpstoryview
Int'l press focus on China's
foreign policy amid global economic crisis
“China's diplomacy serves economy and the upcoming financial summit in
London will be a success, Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi on Saturday told
a press conference on the sidelines of the Second Session of the 11th National
People's Congress (NPC). The NPC session,
together with the Second Session of the 11th National Committee of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), has aroused the attention
of overseas media that are keeping a close watch at the two ongoing political
events held annually.” http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-03/08/content_10971941.htm
Japanese media laud China's drive
for 8% economic growth
“Major Japanese media have given extensive coverage to Chinese Premier
Wen Jiabao's government work report at the Second Session of the 11th National
People's Congress (NPC) and applauded China's drive for 8 percent annual
economic growth amid the ongoing world financial crisis.” http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-03/06/content_10958218.htm
Rise in foreclosures 'a shock'
“The number of foreclosure filings rose 6% during the month after falling
10% in January. Worse, filings leaped nearly 30% compared with February 2008.
And the results confounded expectations: A downtrend had been expected due to
the numerous foreclosure moratoriums in effect during the month.” http://money.cnn.com/2009/03/12/real_estate/new_foreclosure_jump/index.htm?postversion=2009031204
As travel declines, aircraft 'boneyard' in
Victorville fills up
“Air carriers are grounding planes at a rate not seen since the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks, and industry experts say this year is likely to set a record
for planes sitting on the ground.” http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-fi-boneyard15-2009mar15,0,4626780.story
[I’ve always found pictures of the aircraft boneyards interesting so this
article caught my eye. Here are some sites with more pictures and
information:]
Obama's Poll Numbers Are Falling to Earth “The
American people are coming to express increasingly significant doubts about his
initiatives, and most likely support a different agenda and different policies
from those that the Obama administration has advanced.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123690358175013837.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
[Ah yes … reality hits.]
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
Warming might be on hold, study
finds
“The discrepancy gets to the heart of one of the toughest problems in
climate science — identifying the difference between natural variability
(like the occasional March snow storm) from human-induced change.” http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29469287/
China calls for closer US ties in
economic crisis
“China is looking to next month's meeting of world leaders in London to
boost confidence and global coordination in dealing with the world financial
crisis, its foreign minister said Saturday. The G-20 meeting, scheduled for
April 2, will bring together Chinese President Hu Jintao and leaders of the
world's major economies in a quest for ways to stabilize financial markets,
lessen fears of a lengthy recession, and begin overhauling the global financial
system.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hSCTc_ieqd4NCB2RsUHOjEQjRnRQD96P15LO0
Baxter admits contaminated
seasonal flu product contained live bird flu virus
“While H5N1 doesn't easily infect people, H3N2 viruses do. If someone
exposed to a mixture of the two had been simultaneously infected with both
strains, he or she could have served as an incubator for a hybrid virus able to
transmit easily to and among people. That mixing process, called reassortment,
is one of two ways pandemic viruses are created.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5iV_RT6oBK3tOhtsWf5pnu5OIby9w
Food Problems Elude Private
Inspectors
“When food industry giants like Kellogg want to ensure that American
consumers are being protected from contaminated products, they rely on private
inspectors like Eugene A. Hatfield. So last spring Mr. Hatfield headed to the
Peanut Corporation of America plant in southwest Georgia to make sure its
chopped nuts, paste and peanut butter were safe to use in things as diverse as
granola bars and ice cream.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/06/business/06food.html?ref=business
[Dan Swanson ran this interesting
story in his newsletter. I thought you might find it thought provoking as
well.]
Lowering Incident Management
Costs “In today’s economy, IT is under pressure to reduce
costs and "do more with less". As a result, IT managers are looking
for ways to cut expenses wherever possible. Incidents and reactive work are
being scrutinized for opportunities to cut costs and therein lies both
challenges and opportunities for the groups that understand the type of costing
benefit their work may bring.” http://www.itsmwatch.com/itil/article.php/3807721
Quality Improvement in
Healthcare: The Six Ps of Root-Cause Analysis
“This model is an adaptation of the approach to root-cause analysis
described in the widely used London Protocol for the investigation and analysis
of clinical incidents (2). The six Ps represent the six perspectives needed to
answer the question, ‘Why did this event happen?’” http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/166/3/372
[The Six Ps are: Patient,
Personnel, Policies, Procedures, Place and Politics. There are many aspects
that IT should consider in any industry.]
Kevin Behr’s Blog
If you haven’t checked this out, you have to. Kevin is a friend of mine
and a card carrying genius. His ongoing blog story about “The Adventure
of Phil Chairs, Interim CIO” is now into its fourth installment. I read
these and can’t figure out whether to laugh or cry. http://blog.kevinbehr.com/?p=153
CMMI for Services is Now
Available - Julia Allen Provides a Brief Overview In
lean economic times, service organizations, which make up 80% of the world
economy, can benefit by using process improvement to make the most of their
resources to achieve desired business results. CMMI for Services (CMMI-SVC) is
a guide to help service provider organizations reduce costs, improve quality,
and improve the predictability of schedules.
Customers are requesting that their service providers demonstrate a CMMI rating
or capability profile, but attempts to use CMMI-DEV in a service setting can
distort the integrity of appraisal results. Service providers deserve the same
opportunity that the development community has enjoyed for years. They deserve
the opportunity to improve their processes based on community models of
practice that specifically address the interests and concerns of service
providers. CMMI-SVC is the model of practice that service organizations have
been waiting for.
CMMI-SVC provides best practices that service providers can use when they
·Decide
what services they should be providing, define standard services, and let
people know about them
·Make
sure they have everything they need to deliver a service, including people,
processes, consumables, and equipment
·Get
new systems in place, change existing systems, retire obsolete systems, all
while making sure nothing goes terribly wrong with the service
·Set
up agreements, take care of service requests, and operate service systems
·Make
sure they have the resources needed to deliver services and that services are
available when needed—at an appropriate cost
·Handle
what goes wrong—and prevent it from going wrong in the first place if
possible
·Ensure
they are ready to recover from potential disasters and get back to delivering
services if the disaster occurs
News and views from Kurt Milne,
the managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@....
Application and desktop virtualization need
effective controls
If you are considering application or desktop
virtualization technologies, they need all the bells and whistles for managing
security, control and compliance risks in an enterprise environment. THAT
SAID – with effective user and configuration controls, application and
desktop virtualization technologies promise to solve some major desktop
compliance and control issues – as well as reduce hardware, power, and
support costs. – Read here about the Top ten removable media security
incidents. Humans are still a major if not the major part of the security
equation. My favorite - #5 USB candy drop…
Evolving Cloud Definitions – storage
space example
The definition of cloud computing so far has
been the most cloud-like – changing shape as it blows across the
technology hype cycle. But, two elements appear to be common to many different
uses of the term. 1) less hard resource investment up front, and 2) pay-as-you-go
pricing model. In other words – solutions that turn fixed costs into
variable costs, and reduce in-house admin and support costs. My sense is that
there are new additional service management and monitoring costs, however.
Power struggle: What role should
IT play in reining in energy costs?
“As energy costs seesaw wildly and public concern over the environment
grows, data centers are landing in the corporate cross hairs. And IT managers
may find themselves on the hot seat, asked to account for the energy costs
their systems incur. Some forward-thinking companies are even beginning to
wonder if it isn't time for their IT and facilities departments to merge.” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=333818
The Case for Data Center Services
Is Strong in a Weak Economy
“It’s almost always a good ideas to outsource one’s data
center needs in order to take advantage of the economies of scale a hosting
provider offers, to save money on and comply with the environmental
requirements power and allow yourself to focus on your core competencies. But
in a credit-starved economy, Peccoralo said, the lack of available financing
‘puts the kibosh on any capital-intensive construction projects”
for those thinking of building their own data center.’” http://www.phoneplusmag.com/hotnews/cp-vegas09/the-case-for-data-center-services-is-strong.html
Using chargeback to reduce data
center power consumption: Five steps
“The key objective is to include power as an IT service delivery cost
component paid by the business user. This is challenging in and of itself when
most organizations are struggling just to get hardware costs allocated. Part of
the challenge is the limited breadth of most chargeback tools and the lack of
reporting of actual power consumption.” http://searchdatacenter.techtarget.com/tip/0,289483,sid80_gci1349650,00.html
The 5 Blind Spots of Data Center
Infrastructure Management This is a press release, from Egenera but I like their comments
regarding five assumptions about virtualization that management teams make that
do not necessarily prove out. It’s worth a quick read. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29480165/
The Problem of Power Consumption
in Servers “Individual servers are consuming increasing amounts of
electricity over time. Before the year 2000, servers on average drew about 50
watts of electricity. By 2008, they were averaging up to 250 watts. As more
data centers switch to higher density server form factors, the power
consumption will increase at a faster rate. Analysts have forecasted that if
the current trend is not abated, then the power to run servers will be equal to
or greater than the server cost, as Figure 1 shows.” http://www.ddj.com/215800830
How to Optimize the Energy
Efficiency of Your Server
“Energy efficiency in the data center is the hot topic of the day. We all
want the fastest, most powerful servers for our data center. We want to
optimize, virtualize and consolidate in the name of making our data centers
more efficient and green. Here, Knowledge Center contributor Julius Neudorfer
examines several key components that impact the total energy a typical server
utilizes, as well as what it really costs to operate a server and how to
optimize the energy efficiency of your server.” http://www.eweek.com/c/a/IT-Infrastructure/How-to-Optimize-the-Energy-Efficiency-of-Your-Server/
Hacker's hobby 'war-dialing'
making a small comeback
“Penetration expert HD Moore has made a new war-dialer for 2009. It is
free, and uses VOIP services to place up to 10,000 calls in an 8 hour period.
The program is called WarVOX, and, like any self-respecting network security
tool, it only runs in Linux. Moore made the tool, he says, to assist network
security auditors find holes in companies' phone systems.” http://www.neoseeker.com/news/10064-hackers-hobby-war-dialing-making-a-small-comeback/
The Building Security In Maturity
Model “The Building Security In Maturity Model (BSIMM) is designed
to help you understand and plan a software security initiative. BSIMM was
created through a process of understanding and analyzing real-world data from
nine leading software security initiatives. Though particular methodologies
differ (think OWASP CLASP, Microsoft SDL, or the Cigital Touchpoints), many
initiatives share common ground. This common ground is captured and described
in BSIMM. As an organizing feature, we introduce and use a Software Security
Framework (SSF), which provides a conceptual scaffolding for BSIMM. Properly
used, BSIMM can help you determine where your organization stands with respect
to real-world software security initiatives and what steps can be taken to make
your approach more effective.” http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2009/03/04/new-effort-hopes-to-improve-software-security/ http://bsi-mm.com
[Thank you Julia!]
Smith: Winning the hidden war “Because secure networking is imperative to our economic
safety and national security, the federal government has an obvious
responsibility to provide comprehensive leadership in preventing these types of
attacks. Until recently, however, our cyber-defense efforts were largely an
uncoordinated hodgepodge of various programs and policies.” http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/mar/08/winning-the-hidden-war/
Health and Healthcare
Health Care Reforms Needed
“Efforts to reduce the incentives that health providers have to undertake
unnecessary procedures are essential if Obama's reform ambitions are to
succeed. However, such reforms are likely to be fiercely resisted by some
doctors, who are highly remunerated for performing certain procedures--which
may explain why the president has kept his plans deliberately vague.” http://www.forbes.com/2009/03/02/healthcare-obama-us-business_oxford.html
Build Security into Every
Product, Coders Advised
“A panel of security experts agreed that security needs to thought of a
lot earlier in the software development lifecycle, and that the IT industry
needs to start shipping ‘hardened’ products, especially with the
advent of the cloud and visualisation making the location of sensitive data
even more difficult to locate.” http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/160877/build_security_into_every_product_coders_advised.html
Common flu strain resists popular
drug Tamiflu
“More than 98 percent of one of the influenza A viruses circulating this
winter is now resistant to the antiviral drug Tamiflu, up from less than 1
percent just two years ago, according to a study in TheJournal of the American
Medical Association.” http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/health/bal-md.tamiflu03mar03,0,5436145.story
Poor maintenance, critical errors
caused jet crash, report says
“The F/A-18 crash that killed four family members in a San Diego neighborhood
on Dec. 8 was caused by poor maintenance on the plane and a series of critical
errors by the pilot and officers trying to guide him to an emergency landing, a
Marine investigation report released Tuesday concluded.” http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-miramar-jet-crash4-2009mar04,0,1947853.story
Chinese Regime Spending
Spree—Strength or Weakness? “While the regime does indeed look strong from afar, get
closer in and the picture looks very different. As Zhongnanhai prepares to
gobble up chunks of the global economy, the regime’s national pension
fund posted its first ever loss.” http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/12966/
Chinese leaders confront economic
crisis
“This year, the number one issue will be how to survive the global
economic crisis and keep China's economy growing. As the global economic crisis
cascades into China, Communist Party leaders fear a spike in unemployment could
trigger social unrest and snowball into a political crisis.” http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/03/03/china.meeting.economy/
IMF Sees ‘Serious’
Risk of Global Economy Contracting
“The International Monetary Fund sees a ‘serious risk’ of a
contraction in the global economy this year and will probably cut its 0.5
percent growth estimate in April, Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn
said.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601116&sid=anGwS5UVc4qw&refer=africa
A sign of hope for China's
economy
“A closely watched index of manufacturing activity in China edged up in February,
an early sign that the economy may have seen the worst of the downturn. The
official purchasing managers' index released by the Chinese authorities
Wednesday rose to 49 in February, from 45.3 the previous month and continuing
its improvement from a low of 38.8 in November.” http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/03/04/business/04chinastat.php
US News / Business / Economics
Wars, Endless Wars
“The United States is on its knees economically. As President Obama
fights for his myriad domestic programs and his dream of an economic recovery,
he might benefit from a look over his shoulder at the link between Vietnam and
the still-smoldering ruins of Johnson’s presidency.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/03/opinion/03herbert.html?ref=opinion
Growing excitement, expectations for green
jobs corps
“Government support has rallied excitement for the prospect of a green
jobs corps, as President Obama's stimulus package puts about $20 billion into
greening the economy, according to the White House.Video” http://www.cnn.com/2009/LIVING/03/02/green.jobs.training/index.html
CNN Website Special: Where the Jobs Are CNN
has a website that links to stories about jobs. For example, on article is
entitled “Experts: Ignore bad news to find a job”. Drop by and
use the page to browse a number of their stories. http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2009/news/where.the.jobs.are/
Bernanke: Fed will use all tools at its
disposal
“Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Saturday the U.S. central
bank would use all of its tools to stabilize financial markets and pull the
economy out of recession.” http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE52627J20090307
Technology & Science
Phew! Asteroid's passing was a cosmic
near-miss
“An asteroid about the size of one that blasted Siberia a century ago
just buzzed the Earth. The asteroid named 2009 DD45 was about 48,800 miles
from Earth when it zipped past early Monday, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
reported.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iMRlXoAOKgOWrgy2Iux54E-dmD8QD96NDH0G0
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue of
The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think ” – Socartes
Top Picks
Calabrese’s Razor
Hal Pomeranz, of Deer Run Associates, has a very thought provoking write-up on
a thought process he terms “Calabrese’s Razor” that can be
used to determine what information security controls are significant. This
is a must read. http://righteousit.wordpress.com/2009/02/26/calabreses-razor/
Five Leadership Lessons From
Obama's First Month
“We can take a page from Obama's playbook and his Feb. 24 speech to
Congress for tips on what to do and what not to do. His first month has been
marked by some great foresight and a few misguided moves. Here are five key
lessons from his first weeks in office.” http://www.forbes.com/2009/02/25/obama-lessons-president-leadership-managing_ceo.html
Twin Crises Feed the Spiral
“U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke held out hope for an economic
recovery by 2010 -- even as new signs emerged that the recession and financial
crisis are feeding on each other in ways that worsen both.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123552193921864791.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
New ITPI Study - IT Governance
Maturity Model “Linking business value to projects and services is a
foundational governance practice revealed in our latest study. We tested
the impact of 66 governance practices on 389 IT organizations in the US, UK,
and Australia. We stacked the high-impact practices in a three-tiered
maturity model to help IT executives map out increasing levels of governance
maturity. Use the model to identify areas for improving the impact of
governance efforts. Key findings of the study include:
·High maturity organizations focus governance efforts on agility
and customer facing business initiatives more than lower maturity peers who
focus more on cost and risk reduction.
·High maturity organizations also score higher on measures that
gauge business value-add in the areas of improved information management,
business process efficiency, customers retention, and product enablement
·40 of 66 practices test impact performance at a statistically
significant level.
·Just 9 of the governance practices studied predict more than 25%
of the variation in performance.
Amazon’s Kindle 2.0 I received my Kindle on February 26th. It’s
sleek, easy to use and thinner than the business books I usually have crammed
in my carry on bag and can charge from my notebook’s USB port.
Furthermore, the screen’s clarity and contrast is truly remarkable.
For me, the issue isn’t about cost savings – it’s about
convenient access to new magazines and books in a very small form factor.
So my recommendation is especially aimed at travelers who want access to a library
without carrying all the books. I bought the two year warranty and
leather case. I can’t speak to the warranty but the case definitely
will help protect the Kindle when it is in my computer bag. I’ll
post recommendations to books and such as I read them. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00154JDAI?ie=UTF8&tag=georgespaffor-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B00154JDAI
IT Audit / Internal Audit / Compliance/Ethics
PCAOB Audit Chief Thomas Ray
Steps Down
“Thomas Ray, chief auditor and professional-standards director of the
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, will step down March 6 to return to
the private sector, according to the PCAOB.” http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/13209813?f=alerts
IT Governance Institute Offers
Guidance for Companies Adopting the ISO IT Governance Standard
“The recent IT governance standard released by the International
Organization for Standardization (ISO) marks the global recognition of the
importance of IT governance, and is applicable to enterprises of all types and
sizes. To help organizations adopt ISO/IEC 38500: 2008—Corporate
governance of information technology, the nonprofit, independent IT Governance
Institute (ITGI) has released a free white paper, available at www.itgi.org. Titled ITGI Enables ISO/IEC
38500:2008 Adoption, the paper explains how ITGI frameworks and research
provide implementation support that organizations can tailor to their specific
needs.” http://www.itgi.org/Template_ITGI.cfm?Section=Recent_Publications&Template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&ContentID=47866
ITIL certification builds IT
workers’ skills in economic downturn “The news is full of failing companies and lost jobs, and
the IT job market has not been spared the current economic recession. It is a
worrisome time for everyone. We can view the recession's effects on the IT
economy from two different perspectives: (1) that of employees, who fear losing
jobs and worry about having the right skills, and (2) that of employers, which
need to improve operating effectiveness and efficiency. While separate, these
views are not mutually exclusive. Continuing education and the pursuit of IT
Infrastructure Library (ITIL) certifications can benefit both groups in terms
of building IT skills and improving IT operational efficiency.” http://searchdatacenter.techtarget.com/tip/0,289483,sid80_gci1347732,00.html#
ITSM Academy Blogs
The instructors at ITSM Academy are blogging about a number of topics around
ITSM. One blog is called the ITSM Professor and the other is Jayne
Explains, where Jayne Groll gets a chance to air her views. http://www.itsmacademy.com/Page.bok?file=blogs.html
Kurt’s Corner
News and views from Kurt Milne,
the managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@....
I think I have
“Cloudigo” – a serious but not life threatening condition
similar to vertigo, that is caused by reading too many definitive statements
about cloud computing. I think it started when I heard Nicholas Carr
present his new book at a conference this week. Seems like everyone is
talking about the cloud. I’m not sure they are saying anything,
however. It’s time for a release of the cloud edition of buzz-word
bingo! It’s especially confusing when things we have known and used for
years, like yahoo mail or gmail – are now part of “the
cloud”.
Taking
steps to clarify cloud governance Cloud computing begets good IT governance; a
focus on IT governance leads you to the cloud. OK. http://www.sdtimes.com/link/33287
Latest from VMWare on
cloud offering VMwarereleased
key pieces of an ambitious new product that's designed to help companies more
efficiently juggle complex computing tasks. Dubbed the Virtual Data Center
Operating System (VDC-OS), the software creates a bank of computers, storage
devices, and networking equipment that a company can tap at will, as computing
needs arise—say, during a December spike in Web traffic for an online
retailer. http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/feb2009/tc20090224_743328.htm
Green Issues No Longer Dominate
as Data Centers Need to Reduce Costs “A survey of registered attendees at this year’s Data
Centre World in the United Kingdom suggested only one in eight data center
managers cited green issues as their primary reason for establishing energy
saving strategies. The previous year one in three attendees suggested green
issues were fueling there energy efficiency drives.” http://hostsearch.com/news/data_centre_world_news_8340.asp
Effort to Establish Open, Green
Standard for Universal Power Gains Momentum
“A San Ramon, California-based group that aims to spread more efficient
power-charging systems announced this month that industry momentum is building
for an open, green standard for universal power. Officials at Green Plug,
a private organization, say companies such as Ricoh, SimpleTech, Pacific Gas
& Electric and the Natural Resources Defense Council are among those
joining their ranks – and that they’ve built a Web tool to capture
words of support.” http://asterisk.tmcnet.com/topics/open-source/articles/51323-effort-establish-open-green-standard-universal-power-gains.htm
Security and Risk Management
Obama budget eyes boost to
cybersecurity funds
“The budget proposed by President Barack Obama includes substantial
funding aimed at improving the security of U.S. private and public computer
networks, fueling a growing market for U.S. defense and information technology
contractors” http://uk.reuters.com/article/americasIpoNews/idUKN2625557720090226
Banks, Credit Card Firms Wait For
The Other Shoe To Drop Amid Reports Of Another Payment Processor Breach “As of this posting, the victim firm's identity had not been
revealed. According to several credit unions, Visa recently alerted them that
another payment processor had discovered a data breach. Among the credit unions
issuing alerts about the breach on their Websites are The Tuscaloosa VA Federal
Credit Union and the Pennsylvania Credit Union Association. The Open Security
Foundation has a notice posted on its DataLossDB site.” http://www.darkreading.com/security/attacks/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=214502489&cid=nl_DR_DAILY_T
[Thank you for sending this in
Kurt!]
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Americans welcome healthcare
reform
“Americans greeted President Barack Obama's pledge to reform healthcare
with enthusiasm tinged by scepticism on Wednesday, saying changes in the
country's expensive and often inaccessible health system are overdue -- but
hard to achieve.” http://uk.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUKTRE51O5CQ20090225
No time to waste on COBRA subsidy
“Not surprisingly, questions remain -- and will continue -- on the
decision to subsidize COBRA health insurance benefits for some people who recently
lost their jobs, and with it, their health coverage. This element of the
recently enacted stimulus bill offers eligible individuals a 65% reduction in
their premiums for up to nine months.” http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-he-yourmoney2-2009mar02,0,882065.story
A national healthcare reform
primer
“On Thursday, Obama's push to expand healthcare coverage began in
earnest, with the announcement of his plan to create a $634-billion fund to do
just that. The amount was described as a down payment over 10 years; the final
price tag would be even larger, perhaps $2 trillion or more.” http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-he-healthreform2-2009mar02,0,1696038.story
Human Error / Safety / Environment
NASA Investigates Failed Global
Warming Sat Launch “Engineers believe the housing on the $280 million dollar
global warming satellite failed to break-away during launch. The clam-like
covering is designed to protect the equipment from atmospheric drag until the
booster reaches space.” http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29386882/
Turkish airline accused over
plane repairs
“Turkish Airlines was accused a week before one of its aircraft was
involved in a deadly crash near Amsterdam of ‘inviting disaster’ by
ignoring aircraft maintenance, it emerged Thursday.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/02/26/turkish.airline.crash/index.html
Jet had repairs days before crash
“The Turkish Airlines plane which crashed into a field near Amsterdam's
Schiphol airport had had repairs for a system malfunction two days
earlier.” http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7914471.stm
Scientist: Global Warming
Evidence, Claims Exaggerated “Claims about the allegedly dire effects of global warming
may be exaggerated, Patrick Michaels, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, a
libertarian think tank, said during a Thursday lecture at the Rockefeller
Center at Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H.” http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,500327,00.html
Risks of Global Warming Rising:
Is It Too Late to Reverse Course?
“The risk of catastrophic climate change is getting worse, according to a
new study from scientists involved with the United Nations Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Threats—ranging from the destruction of
coral reefs to more extreme weather events like hurricanes, droughts and
floods—are becoming more likely at the temperature change already
underway: as little as 1.8 degree Fahrenheit (1 degree Celsius) of warming in
global average temperatures.” http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=risks-of-global-warming-rising
Global News / Business / Economics
Outlook on China: peaceful
partner or warmonger?
“Given the severity of the financial crisis, China will be entering a
stressful and possibly turbulent period. America must be careful not to adopt
policies that risk making the history of great power conflict come to
fruition. One fear is that as China's military strength grows, Beijing
may pursue more aggressive geopolitical strategies in the South China Sea, one
of the largest and most heavily trafficked shipping routes in the world.” http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0226/p09s01-coop.html
Hey Washington - it's a global
crisis “Listening to United States President Barack Obama's speech
to the joint Houses of Congress this week, I kept asking myself what happened
to the global economy What happened to the globalization that
has been such an important part of our economic growth in the past 20 years?
What happened to American leadership? The president was inwardly focused at a
time when that orientation most likely will not solve our economic
problems.” http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/KB27Dj02.html
As Japan's exports cave, eyes
turn to China
“Asia's economic downturn has reached new depths, with a collapse in
Japanese exports casting fresh doubt on China's ability to stave off
recession. Japan, the world's second-largest economy after the United
States, was already in full-blown recession before its January exports tumbled
45.7 per cent from the same month last year, according to figures released
earlier this week by Japan's Ministry of Finance.” http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20090226.IBTRADE26/TPStory/Business
China's banking system stable
amid global crisis: regulator
“The global economic crisis has had little impact on China's banking
system, which remains sound and stable, the nation's banking regulator said
Thursday. ‘The financial crisis has had a limited impact on the
Chinese banking system and the risks are under control,’ China Banking
Regulatory Commission chairman Liu Mingkang told a briefing in Beijing.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gOFOPwn6HKslGZHCo1zR2f2xt4Tw
US News / Business / Economics
General Motors posts $9.6 billion quarterly
loss “General
Motors Corp. posted a $9.6 billion fourth-quarter loss and said it burned
through $6.2 billion of cash in the last three months of 2008 as it fought the
worst U.S. auto sales climate since 1982 and sought government loans to keep
the century-old company running.” http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29405227/
Obama begins getting daily CIA report on
economic crisis
“President Obama and senior administration officials have begun receiving
a daily CIA report on the global economic crisis in addition to briefings on
terrorist threats and other national security issues, CIA Director Leon E.
Panetta said Wednesday.” http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-cia26-2009feb26,0,6012124.story
Ford reaches deal with UAW on retiree
healthcare
“In a deal that could set the pace for the entire auto industry, Ford
Motor Co. and the United Auto Workers union came to terms over reducing
billions of dollars in payments due a trust for retiree healthcare
coverage. In related news, financier Steven Rattner will become an
advisor to the Treasury Department and join the Obama administration's panel
overseeing the auto bailout.” http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-fi-uaw-ford24-2009feb24,0,3529818.story
Bernanke's monetary policy testimony to U.S.
Senate
“The following is the full text of U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke's monetary policy testimony delivered in Washington Tuesday before the
Senate Banking Commerce:” http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE51N3L320090224
Jobless claims spike to 26-year high
“The number of Americans filing initial claims for unemployment insurance
spiked, and those living on unemployment benefits hit a record high, according
to a government report released Thursday. For the week ended Feb. 21,
667,000 Americans filed initial jobless claims, up 36,000 from a revised
631,000 the previous week. That's the highest figure since October 1982.” http://money.cnn.com/2009/02/26/news/economy/jobless_claims/index.htm?postversion=2009022608
U.S. economy shrank at faster rate in fourth
quarter
“The U.S. economy contracted at its sharpest rate since early 1982 in the
fourth quarter, revised data showed on Friday, as exports plunged and consumers
cut spending by the most in more than 28 years.” http://uk.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idUKTRE51Q2XK20090227
[I just received my Kindle 2 on Wednesday
(2/25) and am tinkering with it. My first thought is that I will spend
far more than I will save. I’m essentially paying for the
convenience of instant gratification.]
Galaxy may be full of 'Earths,' alien life
“There may be 100 billion Earth-like planets in the Milky Way, or one for
every sun-type star in the galaxy, said Alan Boss, an astronomer with the
Carnegie Institution and author of the new book ‘The Crowded Universe:
The Search for Living Planets.’” http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/space/02/25/galaxy.planets.kepler/index.html
Windows 7 Gets Pre-Release Makeover
“Included in the changes, which number three dozen, is a new keyboard
shortcut that allows the user to launch an application simply by pressing the
Windows logo key in combination with a number that corresponds to the apps'
order in the Quick Launch menu. For example, if an application is listed fourth
in Quick Launch, it could be opened by pressing the Windows key in convert with
the number 4 key” http://www.informationweek.com/news/windows/operatingsystems/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=215400011&subSection=News
Wind power helps ski resort during recession
“In fall 2007, the $4 million project was complete. The turbine is
nicknamed Zephyr, after the Greek god of the west wind. And Zephyr isn't afraid
to make its presence known. The tower is more than 250 feet tall. The hub
adds 10 feet, and the blades extend an additional 123 feet, creating a 386-foot
green machine.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/02/27/ski.wind.turbine/index.html
End Notes
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"We learn more by looking for the answer to a question and
not finding it than we do from learning the answer itself. ” – Lloyd Alexander
Top Picks
Kevin Behr’s Blog
Kevin co-authored Visible Ops with Gene Kim and myself. He’s
started a blog to reflect his keen observations on the state of IT today.
The three of us are working on a new book that will help shed light on the
strategic use of IT by coupling concepts from Visible Ops, the Theory of
Constraints and years of frustration. Kevin is remarkably brilliant and
you need to visit his blog for a dose of humor, creative genius and keen
insights. http://www.kevinbehr.com/blog/
RSS: http://feeds2.feedburner.com/kevinbehr
[By the way, subscribe or live with
eternal regret J]
The Rise of the Mega-Data Center
“Behind popular Web services such as Facebook, Google (GOOG), and
Amazon's (AMZN) AWS are racks and racks of computers serving up millions of
pages or providing raw computing power. The use of thousands of servers to
deliver one application or act as a pool of computing resources has changed the
way that chipmakers and computer vendors are building their products. It has
also led to the rise of the mega-data center.”
Enabling a Green and Virtual Data
Center “To say that ‘green’ is a popular topic is an
understatement. Green messaging in general and in the information technology
(IT) industry in particular tends to center around carbon footprint and
emissions reduction or cost savings. But no matter how much companies talk about
incorporating green IT plans, there remains a significant gap between those
words and actions put in place.” http://greenercomputing.com/feature/2009/02/18/enabling-green-virtual-data-center
Controversial data-security rules
slow to take hold in Massachusetts
“Massachusetts officials this month gave companies a second reprieve on
complying with new regulations aimed at any entity that stores the personal
data of state residents. They also softened a particularly contentious
provision requiring businesses to ensure that third parties handling such data
are in compliance with the rules. But the state left intact other parts
of the regulations that have sparked criticism from the business community both
inside and outside of Massachusetts.” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&taxonomyId=17&articleId=334342&intsrc=hm_topic
News and views from Kurt Milne,
the managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@....
Desktop and
Application virtualization considerations Server
virtualization has hit its stride in companies large and small. Desktop and
application virtualization, on the other hand, are coming on strong as
important tools for improving IT efficiency and user experience. Some
considerations for evaluating new capabilities. http://searchcio-midmarket.techtarget.com/tip/0,289483,sid183_gci1346985,00.html
An interesting list
of IT functions Many
organizations divide IT into application development and infrastructure
groups. Viewing IT more as a business unit offers an alternative demand
and supply chain focused view. http://www.itsmwatch.com/itil/article.php/11700_3802916_2
News flash - the Cloud is
probably better than your data center
“It might depend on what dimension you're talking about, but in at least
some dimensions, I'm confident the capabilities of many cloud providers far
outpace our everyday data center capabilities. The industry continues to
buzz about a seemingly endless bucket of security concerns in the cloud, but 9
times out of 10 seems to miss the most obvious conclusion. A real
security assessment would likely turn up evidence that the cloud is a good bit
more secure than your data center.” http://blogs.computerworld.com/news_flash_the_cloud_is_probably_better_than_your_data_center
Suddenly, infrastructure is cool
again
“While many executives responsible for their companies' IT operations
grok the vision, they still refuse to make the switch. More than 60 percent of
the companies surveyed recently by Kelton Research reported they did not use
cloud-computing technologies, and most of them have no plans to use them
anytime soon.” http://news.cnet.com/8301-10787_3-10169023-60.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20
Security and Risk Management
How to Improve Virtualization
Security
“In the rush to implement virtualization technologies, organizations are
re-creating the same security mistakes that were made in physical environments
over the past two decades. This is happening largely because they have failed
to recognize that new technologies create the same risks, albeit from a
different perspective. Knowledge Center contributor Richard Rees explains the
five steps you need to take to improve virtualization security in your data
center.” http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Virtualization/How-to-Improve-Virtualization-Security/
Companies Still Need Boost on
Data Center Energy Efficiency: Survey
“Energy efficiency is increasingly a top-of-mind concern for executives
and data center managers, not just as a way to trim spiraling electric bills
and address carbon footprints, but also because electricity availability is
becoming a critical concern. But although the vast majority of executives
are aware of the need to maximize energy efficiency, significant obstacles are
preventing them from putting plans in place, according to a new survey from
Siemens.” http://greenercomputing.com/news/2009/02/20/companies-need-boost-efficiency
Researchers Hack Faces In
Biometric Facial Authentication Systems
“The researchers cracked the biometric authentication embedded in Lenovo,
Asus, and Toshiba laptops by spoofing the biometric systems with everything
from a photo of the authorized user to brute-force hacking using fake facial
images. They successfully bypassed Lenovo's Veriface III, Asus' SmartLogon
V1.0.0005, and Toshiba's Face Recognition 2.0.2.32 -- each set to its highest
security level -- demonstrating vulnerabilities in the systems that let an
attacker cheat them with phony photos of the legitimate user and gain access to
the laptops.” http://www.darkreading.com/security/vulnerabilities/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=213901113&cid=RSSfeed
Driving Fast and Forward:
Managing Information Security for Strategic Advantage in a Tough Economy
The third report at the RSA Innovation and Security Site is now available
(along with the other reports) at: https://www.rsa.com/node.aspx?id=3001
[Thank you for sending this in Julia!]
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Report: 4 million Americans lost
health insurance since recession began “An estimated 4 million Americans have lost their health
insurance since the recession began, and as many as 14,000 people could be
losing their health coverage every day, according to a report by liberal think
tank Center for American Progress' Action Fund. The report also claims at
least half of the 4 million who lost their insurance coverage still are
uninsured. Before the recession started there were an estimated 46 million
Americans without health insurance.” http://www.bizjournals.com/albany/stories/2009/02/16/daily58.html
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Peanut Corp. tells all customers
to stop distribution “The peanut processor at the center of the ongoing
salmonella outbreak has instructed all its customers to stop any distribution
of any of its product in a yet further expansion of one of the nation's biggest
food recalls.” http://www.newsday.com/services/newspaper/printedition/sunday/health/ny-hssalm226045012feb22,0,4587293.story
[Interesting that this didn’t happen until February 20th.]
Color Coded: Hospitals
Standardize to Minimize Human Error “Hospitals in Oregon and Washington are standardizing
overhead calls and color codes to reduce the risk of confusion or human error.
The move follows a survey that found wide variation in the emergency codes
among the region's hospitals. This matters because many doctors and nurses now
work at more than one place.” http://kuow.org/program.php?id=16942
Russia: global warming to cause
droughts, floods
“Russia will likely see more forest fires, droughts and floods in the
coming century due to global warming, and policy makers need to prepare for
large-scale change, scientists warned in a report released Wednesday. It
also said Russia, famous for its brutal winters, will benefit from climate
change in some ways, with warmer temperatures and less snow and ice.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jwNjrvbYFMSgjSDpLXnbiVTw_h5gD96E2BM00
Global News / Business / Economics
Swiss to avoid Senate hearing on
tax havens
“The Swiss government said Sunday it will not attend a U.S. Senate
hearing on tax havens — an apparent protest against a U.S. lawsuit aimed
at forcing banking giant UBS AG to hand over data on tens of thousands of
American customers.” http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/banking/2009-02-22-swiss-senate-hearing_N.htm
Clinton urges China's continued
investment in US
“U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is urging China to
continue investing in United States Treasury bonds and said Sunday that
country's continued investment in the U.S. is a recognition that the two
countries depend on each other.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gUop4tPRyc6GuqJXiHqVNdXuwPgQD96GENH01
[Imagine the power of the biggest
borrower on the biggest lender and vice versa.]
Crisis brings threat of crime
wave to China
“The concern that the migrant workers will now turn to crime is felt all
over China, but nowhere perhaps as keenly as in Shenzhen, part of Guangdong
province, the nation's main industrial hub and labour magnet.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iB6ItKi3H7Lwxlf7-1mOL-53A96g
US News / Business / Economics
Volcker Says U.S. Economy May Suffer for
‘Long Time’
“The U.S. economy will suffer from the effects of the global financial
crisis for ‘a long time’ as a slowdown in demand spreads to other
countries, former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker said.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aEPhoxeCfsvs&refer=home
So, just how bad is the economy?
“James Kolari, an economist at Texas A&M University, says the nation
experienced two ‘rough’ recessions in the mid-1970s and the early
1980s. A recession is generally defined as a decline in the Gross Domestic
Product for two or more consecutive quarters. He says it's not fair to
compare the current economic crisis to the Great Depression, because the
federal government was far more passive in the 1920s.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/02/20/economy.history/index.html
Following the money: stimulus spending plan,
by sector This
is an interactive chart that CNN has developed to show spending per sector.
For example, federal & state governments - $45.4472 billion. You can
click on the sector and then drill down several levels for additional details. http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/02/18/stimulus.spending.chart/index.html
Customer Service in a Shrinking Economy
“Across the business world, managers are trying to pull off the same
perilous high-wire act. Just as companies are dealing with plummeting sales and
sinking employee morale, skittish customers want more attention, better
quality, and greater value for their money. Those same customers are also
acutely aware that their patronage is of growing importance to companies as
others decrease their spending.” http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/09_09/b4121026559235.htm?campaign_id=rss_daily
Technology & Science
OMG! Did Google Earth find Atlantis?
“Google is officially denying widespread Internet rumors that its Google
Earth software located the mythical sunken city of Atlantis off the coast of
Africa. Either that, or Google is totally trying to hide something. Since I
always appreciate a nice juicy conspiracy theory, I'm going to go with the
latter.” http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-10168269-36.html
End Notes
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
China stocks jump 4 pct on
economy hopes
“China's stock market jumped 3.97 percent in heavy trade on Friday,
posting a weekly gain of 9.57 percent, on the back of hopes for an early
recovery of the Chinese economy.” http://in.reuters.com/article/asiaCompanyAndMarkets/idINSHA10535320090206
[If China can stay up, at least someone can buy US debt.]
GAO updates manual for
information system audits
“The Government Accountability Office today said it has significantly
revised its manual for guiding agencies how to perform information system
control audits to reflect the use of modern technology, more technical criteria
and changes in government auditing standards. The Federal Information
System Controls Audit Manual focuses on evaluating the effectiveness of general
and application controls that include system, business process and data
management system controls, GAO said in a report.” http://fcw.com/articles/2009/02/02/gao-manual-update.aspx
This February 2009 release of the FISCAM is available at: http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d09232g.pdf
Audit: CBP weak on IT security
“Information technology security remains a significant deficiency at U.S.
Customs and Border Protection but is no longer a material weakness, according
to an independent audit released today by Homeland Security Department
Inspector General Richard Skinner. In a previous review in September
2007, audit firm KPMG noted a material weakness in entitywide security of CBP
computer systems, including problems with system access controls, service
continuity and software change management.” http://fcw.com/articles/2009/02/02/cbp-weak-it.aspx
The Evolution of Incident
Management
“For years, real-world ITSM practitioners knew there were challenges with
how Incident Management attempted to incorporate service requests and alerts
from monitoring tools. As a result, they developed their own practices. Now,
with ITIL v3, the Incident, Service Request and Event Management processes are
independent and that is a great thing.” http://www.itsmwatch.com/itil/article.php/3801266
Kurt’s Corner
News and views from Kurt Milne,
the managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@....
Five Companies shaping cloud computing Traditional
view – cloud computing has to either save a lot of money, or allow the
business to do things they couldn’t do before. From article -
“Two key factors might prompt businesses to trend away from on-premise
IT, he says. “One is if they can save an enormous amount of money –
not ten percent, but an enormous amount. Or, if they can do things they
couldn’t do otherwise. And to some extent that’s not really giving
it up, but using it for new things.” http://itmanagement.earthweb.com/features/article.php/3798591/Five-Companies-Shaping-Cloud-Computing-Who-Wins.htm
Value chain thinking applied to Could
Computing - Complexity budget Alternate
view – mash up of Porter’s
Value Chain model, with Goldrart’s
Theory of Constraints applied to IT complexity. From blog “complexity
has a cost, like any other resource, and we can't expect an infinite
budget. ask yourself whether buying, racking, and operating your own
servers, storage, and network, that is, building your own infrastructure, gives
you significant, quantifiable advantage in your space. if it doesn't, the
complexity budget associated with that work can now be applied to your
applications. it has moved up the stack. the money and people you would've put
towards infrastructure are now available for creating more code, supporting
more customers, closing more deals. http://blog.layer8.net/ (caution – some
office unfriendly words used)
2008 interview with Jeff Bezos – why
they got into cloud business “we
had enough complexity within Amazon, we found were spending too much time on
fine grained interaction between our network engineering groups, and application
engineering groups. We developed a hardened interface so we could focus
more on course grained interface.” Money question –
‘does is surprise you that a book retailer came up with this
innovation…?’ Watch for answer." http://blog.layer8.net/2009/01/i-was-trying-to-avoid-this.html
Data Centers / Cloud Computing / Green IT
GE Hawking Green Data Center
Gear, Too
“GE is continuing that energy push in 2009 with a major smart meter
marketing campaign (Super Bowl!), and on Monday touting a more unusual area:
energy-efficient data center products. GE says it has made one of its own data
centers more energy efficient using about 30 GE products, and — surprise,
surprise — the conglomerate says those services and products are for sale
for data center developers.” http://earth2tech.com/2009/02/01/ge-hawking-green-data-center-gear-too/
Green IT: Beyond the hype
“Although heavy-handed messaging has led to a great deal of scepticism in
the market, there’s no doubting that environmental concerns are creating
serious market opportunities. ARN recently brought together a group of IT
industry thought-leaders to talk about myths and margins.” http://www.arnnet.com.au/article/262612/green_it_beyond_hype
Green Grid trails new datacentre
guide
“Datacenter 2.0, a ‘top-to-bottom’ guide to designing
power-efficient datacentres, will be published early next year. The result of a
multi-year research effort, it is designed to create a broad overview of how to
enhance energy efficiency within the datacentre, providing clear practical guidelines
on different approaches for both new build sites and retrofit projects.” http://www.vnunet.com/business-green/news/2235818/green-grid-plans-centre-guide
Finding Green Grid White Papers
Note: Many Green Grid
documents are now limited to members only. If there is a Green Grid white paper
that you are looking for, then use Google to search on the document title. They
have recently changed their website over to member-only content but many
documents can be found hosted at other sites/addresses. http://www.thegreengrid.org
Data breach costs, customer churn
up a bit; Repeat offenders abound “The cost of a data breach runs companies $202 per
compromised record, up 2.5 percent from $197 per record in 2007 and up 11
percent from 2006, according to research from Ponemon Institute. In its
fourth annual study on data breaches, the Ponemon Institute, a security
research firm, examined the costs of 43 companies that had been hit by a data
breach.” http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=12015
Security needs a governing body
“Many of the information assurance organizations and certification
bodies, such as ISACA, (ISC)2, ISSA and SANS, require adherence to a code of
conduct for membership. Several of those same organizations have described a
common body of knowledge. The one characteristic lacking in those
definitions of the information security professional and the field itself, is
the existence of a governing body and force of law.” http://www.scmagazineus.com/Security-needs-a-governing-body/article/126918/
Security capital: Funding & Innovation
“Ask 15 experts about where funding for innovation is headed and you'll
get as many different answers. The direst prediction is that we're headed
for a perfect storm: An outbreak in digital crimes due to the economic
recession, with no means to fund innovation required to advance
protections.” http://www.scmagazineus.com/Security-capital-Funding-Innovation/article/126931/
NIST updates recommendations for
IT security controls
“The National Institute of Standards and Technology has released an
initial draft for public comment of a revised version of its Recommended
Security Controls for Federal Information Systems and Organizations. Although
this is Revision 3 of Special Publication (SP) 800-53, NIST calls it the first
major update of the guidelines since its initial publication in December 2005.” http://gcn.com/articles/2009/02/06/nist-updates-sp-800-53.aspx
The Draft is at: http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/drafts/800-53/800-53-rev3-IPD.pdf
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Senators affirm healthcare goals
“Senators Edward M. Kennedy and Max Baucus, in a public letter yesterday
to President Obama, affirmed their commitment to passing a major healthcare
bill this year and urged the new president to move with dispatch to find a
replacement for Tom Daschle, who would have been the White House's point person
on the issue.” http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2009/02/06/senators_affirm_healthcare_goals/
Healthcare Industry Is Pillar of
Strength in Otherwise Weak Economy: American HealthCare Capital, a HealthCare
Mergers & Acquisitions Advisory Firm, Releases First Quarter (2009)
HealthCare Industry Outlook “Although the Federal Bailout has done nothing to alleviate
the nationwide credit crisis, the healthcare services mergers and acquisitions
marketplace continues to be robust. On January 10, 2009, the Wall Street
Journal reported that, although the economy lost 2.5 million jobs in 2008, the
healthcare services industry is the rare exception where jobs are still being
created. The healthcare services industry remains one of the brightest spots in
an otherwise gloomy economy.” http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29011748/
[This will not remain the case. Wait until insurance benefits begin to run out
and indigent care then begins to increase. This will begin in the rise in
uninsured patients should begin within a year of the first round of layoffs so
that would be in the late summer or early fall.]
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Google glitch puts surfers in a
quandary
“Google afterwards admitted that the mistake was down to an error by its
own staff. An employee in charge of compiling the search engine's list of
dangerous sites mistakenly entered a forward slash (/) character as a value to
the file, extending Google's blacklist to every single site on the
internet.” http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/2235522/google-glitch-puts-surfers
Examining Human Error in Wrongful
Convictions
“A new examination of wrongful convictions in New York City and around
the state found that a number of them stemmed not from DNA evidence being used
to prove someone’s innocence, but from a far older phenomenon: human
error. The report, released on Friday by the New York State Bar
Association, studied the cases of 53 men and women whose convictions were
overturned, often after spending years, sometimes decades, in prison for
murders, rapes and other crimes they did not commit.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/01/nyregion/01wrongful.html?ref=nyregion
Global News / Business / Economics
Security Bank: Quenching the
thirst of stakeholders for information “Preparing an annual report, which reflects a
company’s financial position and future direction, amid a deepening
global financial crisis is no easy task especially for banks fighting off
prevailing investor pessimism.” http://www.bworldonline.com/BW020309/content.php?id=047
[Security Bank is in the Philippines and the article is interesting as the
approach they followed to calm investors makes a lot of sense.]
We must pull together to save the
world, says Chinese Premier
“Mr Wen was speaking at the end of a European tour, his first in five
years, aimed at strengthening ties with other countries. He wants to reach out
to international allies during the downturn.” http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/economics/article5640732.ece
Small Mexican towns hurt as
global economy goes south
“The impact has been largely positive, villagers say. But now amid the
worldwide economic slump, many in Los Rodriguez and communities like it across Mexico
that have heavily invested in trade with the United States are starting to feel
— and fear — globalization’s sting.” http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/world/6240694.html
Obama's expensive leap of faith
“When President Obama sits down today at his Oval Office Resolute desk
(Queen Victoria's gift named for a British frigate), he will have on hand $350
billion in just-pledged rescue money for the nation's financial system - and
the very likely prospect of a $825 billion-plus ‘economic recovery’
package landing on his desk for signature within a month.” http://money.cnn.com/2009/01/20/news/economy/obama_inauguration.fortune/index.htm?postversion=2009012012
How to manage your business in a recession
“Managing in any recession is difficult; managing through this one is
especially hard because it's different from previous ones in multiple ways.
Most immediately significant, employment is plunging more steeply than in a
long time - by more than two million jobs last year, more than during the
previous two recessions, and this one is far from over.” http://money.cnn.com/2009/01/07/magazines/fortune/colvin_managing.fortune/index.htm?postversion=2009010817
Singularity U.: No Frats, Just Breakthroughs
“In June, Singularity University is scheduled to open with a faculty
replete with scientific celebrities, and an initial class of 30 students at NASA's
Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley. The subjects taught over a nine-week
period are a menu of the disciplines whose exponential advancement Kurzweil
suggests will overturn the world as we know it—nanotechnology, robotics,
artificial intelligence, biotechnology, energy, and more” http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/feb2009/tc2009022_531934.htm?chan=top+news_top+news+index+-+temp_technology
Google Earth's latest realm is under the sea
“The enhanced Google Earth, available for download at earth.google.com,
offers everything from photographs and videos of sea life to models of
shipwrecks to water temperature data collected from buoys. Dozens of partners -
including the National Geographic Society, the National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration and the Scripps Oceanographic Institution -
contributed information to the project, which is aimed at fostering learning,
promoting conservation and, no doubt, increasing Google's popularity.” http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/02/03/MNCV15LO88.DTL
Kindle sparks excitement for e-books
“After years of trying to convince readers to ditch their hardcovers and
paperbacks in favor of digital readers, electronic-book manufacturers are
having their moment in the sun. Hot on the heels of the success of its Kindle
e-reader, online bookseller Amazon is widely expected to unveil a new version
of the device next week.” http://money.cnn.com/2009/02/06/technology/ebooks.fortune/?postversion=2009020612
FAQ: How Google Latitude locates you
“Google is using technology that's similar to that of Skyhook Wireless in
its Latitude service. Like Skyhook, it is a software-only location solution
that allows any mobile device with Wi-Fi, GPS or a cellular radio to determine
its position with an accuracy of 10 to 20 meters.” http://computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9127462
Are We Bringing Our Germs to Mars?
“Even though Phoenix was assembled in a special clean room to minimize
bacterial contamination — and the lander's arm, which would have direct
contact with Martian ice, was heat-sterilized before launch — it's likely
that dozens or more species of microbes hitched a ride on Phoenix's 10-month
trip to Mars.” http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1877434,00.html
End Notes
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
“Permanence, perseverance and persistence in spite of all
obstacles, discouragement, and impossibilities: It is this, that in all things
distinguishes the strong soul from the weak.” – Thomas Carlyle
"Be careful what you want, you may get it” – Unknown
Top Picks
The Year of the Ox will bring
little prosperity for the Chinese
“Even before the global financial crisis, those in absolute poverty
(earning less than US$1 a day) doubled in China over the past decade. More than
400 million had seen their net incomes decline over the same period despite
record GDP growth. It is no wonder that domestic consumption growth has been
slow and will not be able to take up the slack as the export sector suffers.
Instead China must rely on state-led fixed investment to keep growth at 8 per
cent, despite acknowledging that this strategy is becoming more inefficient and
wasteful, and therefore increasingly unsustainable.” http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article5586587.ece
[A very well thought out and written, not to mention troubling, article.]
Heartland Payment Systems: Breach
Bad As Tylenol Poisonings? “The data loss debacle at Heartland highlights the fact that
information security will be the next major shareholder derivative and D&O
liability issue, regulatory, consumer, and national security threat, and
class-action litigation subject to impact our ailing economy.” http://seekingalpha.com/article/116415-heartland-payment-systems-breach-bad-as-tylenol-poisonings
[The author eviscerates the
response of Heartland executives to their data loss incident.]
Chinese state media goes global “Even as the People's Liberation Army (PLA) is projecting
hard power across the four corners of the earth, the Chinese Communist Party
(CCP) is mapping out a multi-pronged strategy to publicize globally the
apparent viability of the ‘China
Qualys Has Free eBook for
Download: PCI Compliance for Dummies “Complying with the PCI Data Security Standard may seem like
a daunting task for merchants. This book is a quick guide to understanding how
to protect cardholder data and comply with the requirements of PCI - from
surveying the standard's requirements to detailing steps for verifying compliance.
PCI Compliance for Dummies arms you with the facts, in plain English, and shows
you how to achieve PCI Compliance.” http://www.qualys.com/forms/ebook/pcifordummies/
Cloud computing and compliance:
Be careful up there
“Using the cloud for data processing and storage may have its advantages
in terms of simplicity and cost, but ensuring regulatory compliance will not be
nearly so simple. What it all comes down to, ultimately, is that the user
organization is responsible for figuring out who is doing what to its data and
requiring assurances about the data staying in compliance.” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9126934&source=rss_news
Business ethics takes on greater
import amid increasing scams
“Whatever happened to the golden rule of ‘Do unto others as you
would have them do unto you’? In the fast-paced, technology-driven,
global world we live in, ethics in business has become a serious concern,
reduced to ‘who do you trust?’” http://www.centredaily.com/bussiness_local/story/1092863.html
IT Process Improvement / Quality Management
Gutting Costs Guts Viability
“When we are looking at organizations, we can classify their approaches
as focusing on a spectrum of independent and/or dependent variables. The news
reflects a current overemphasis on dependent variables. Yet, cost cutting is
not a long term strategy. It is, at best, is a short term tactic. In observing
behavior and outcomes we can class cost cutting as a dependent variable because
there are limits to how much cost can be removed from a system and still be
viable.” http://www.cioupdate.com/features/article.php/3797311/Gutting-Costs-Guts-Viability.htm
Companies fail to go green on
procurement
“Only three percent of UK organisations have a fully automated
procurement process even though it would save money and offer a greener
alternative to paper-based procurement. A survey by the National
Computing Centre, in association with COA Software, also found that 69 percent
of companies thought that moving to e-procurement would be more in line with
their organisation's environmental policies, although only 25 percent had such
a green procurement policy in place.” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2009/012309-companies-fail-to-go-green.html?hpg1=bn
News and views from Kurt Milne,
the managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@....
Vision - Companies will be able to build scalable
apps that are self-provisioning.
Sun cloud CTO Lew Tucker, explains that the
'the data center is the computer.' We see a future where there are a bunch of
clouds, both public and private clouds, and companies will be able to build
scalable apps that are self-provisioning. These apps will be able to scale up
automatically where requesting resources will be done in a self-service
fashion."
Practice - With some initiative mixed with
proverbial duct tape and bailing wire, Amazon cloud tapped to pdf 11 million
articles in 24 hours
Derek Gottfrid at NYTimes needed to
pdf 11 million articles. His basic idea was to upload 4TB of source
data into Amazon S3, write some code that would run on numerous Amazon EC2
instances to read the source data, create PDFs, and store the results back into
S3. Read about how 100 E2C instances churned through all 11 million
articles in just under 24 hours.
US Defense Department’s John Garing met
Microsoft Corp. and Amazon.com Inc. to learn about cloud computing, he liked what
he saw. Enough to send him back to Washington ready to change how government
technology works. “People make buying decisions on data processing and
don’t want to build stuff they don’t have to build anymore,”
he said. “You start adding all this together, do the calculus and soon it
says, ‘Hello! Why aren’t we doing this?’” The
government spent about $68.1 billion in the last fiscal year on technology,
with almost a third devoted to infrastructure, according to White House estimates.
Virus strikes 15 million PCs
“A virulent computer virus has infected more than 15 million computers
around the world so far, British experts say. The Independent on Sunday
reported that the worm -- known as Downadup, Conficker or Kido -- had
contaminated 6 million PCs in the past three days alone.” http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/01/25/Virus_strikes_15_million_PCs/UPI-19421232924206/
Defense cybersecurity budget
request likely a third more than reported “A government research company estimates that about a third
of the Defense Department's $4 billion request for spending on IT security is
included in general spending on various departmental programs and not coded
specifically as spent on information systems security, making it difficult to
track the Pentagon's total cybersecurity spending, according to a report
released on Monday.” http://www.nextgov.com/nextgov/ng_20090126_2865.php
Security Control Threats in Tight
IT Budgets
“For all the improvements companies have made to their IT security and
control systems in the last five years, one menace still looms large these
days: that layoffs will wreck the compliance system you’ve carefully
crafted.” http://www.complianceweek.com/article/5239/security-control-threats-in-tight-it-budgets
With Economic Slump, Concerns
Rise Over Data Theft
“Is the worsening economic situation going to turn some employees into
data thieves? That's a top concern amongst IT decision makers, many of
whom say that laid-off employees are the biggest security threat created by the
economic downturn. In a McAfee-sponsored worldwide survey (registration
required) of 1,000 IT decision makers, the company found that 42 percent of
respondents felt that the laid-off employees represented the biggest IT
security threat caused by the recession.” http://www.csoonline.com/article/478333/With_Economic_Slump_Concerns_Rise_Over_Data_Theft
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Some fear window is narrow for
healthcare overhaul
“Mindful of how delays sapped the political will to overhaul healthcare
during the Clinton administration, health advocates hoped to get a major bill
during the new administration's first 100 days. Now, it looks like it will take
longer, and some observers fear that a historic opportunity could be
missed.” http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2009/01/28/some_fear_window_is_narrow_for_healthcare_overhaul/
Web site offering health care
data
“Health care consumers can shop around for routine medical procedures at
hospitals and outpatient facilities using a new online tool launched by the
state [Massachusetts] yesterday. The new Web site, billed as a
consumer-friendly way of accessing cost and quality information about the
state’s medical facilities, was designed to promote transparency in the
health care industry, state health officials said.
Disruptive Innovation, Applied to
Health Care
“As the Obama administration tries to diagnose and treat what ails the
system, however, reformers shouldn’t be worried only about how to pay for
it. Instead, the country needs to innovate its way toward a new health
care business model — one that reduces costs yet improves both quality
and accessibility.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/01/business/01unbox.html?_r=1
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Chasing a fossil-fuel 'fugitive'
to aid climate change fight “Natural gas is often hailed as the clean fossil fuel
because burning it produces about half the carbon dioxide as burning coal. That
may be true, but factor in fugitive emissions and the emissions gap between the
two begins to close. According to Environment Canada's national
greenhouse-gas inventory report, fugitive emissions from the oil and natural
gas sectors in 2006 amounted to the equivalent of about 60 megatonnes of carbon
dioxide, up 65 per cent compared with 1990 levels.” http://www.thestar.com/Business/article/577109
Researcher turns up heat on
global warming skeptics
“Doran's survey of nearly 3,200 such scientists around the world is the
most comprehensive one ever completed. The only apparent doubters?
Petroleum geologists: Just 47 percent of them agreed people have caused global
warming.” http://www.suntimes.com/lifestyles/1397168,CST-NWS-warm26.article
Global warming could unleash
ocean 'dead zones': study
“Under the worst scenario, warmer seas and a slowdown of ocean
circulation would lower marine oxygen levels, creating ‘dead zones’
that could not support fish, shellfish and other higher forms of marine life --
and may not revive for 1,500 to 2,000 years.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hfAnfUGdNC8zDmDQuHpJJYZ95FyA
Geo-engineering 'useful' against
climate change: study
“Massive, futuristic schemes to spur land and sea into sucking up
greenhouse gases may help the fight against global warming but are no
substitute for reducing the pollution itself, scientists said Wednesday.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5itCVurEC5IieqRzD3ccoqlsn9Gpw
[Australia] Seventy patients
exposed to radiation overdose “COFFS Coast cancer patients have been overdosing on
radiation for more than a year, after a radiotherapy machine at Coffs Harbour
Hospital was found to be calibrated incorrectly. … Human error has been
identified as the cause of the incorrect calibration.” http://www.coffscoastadvocate.com.au/story/2009/01/31/70-patients-exposed-to-radiation-overdose/
Global News / Business / Economics
Global economy hit by massive
wave of job cuts
“The world economy was hit by a massive wave of job cuts on Monday with
companies announcing plans to lay off tens of thousands of workers as US
President Barack Obama warned of a crisis that could become ‘dramatically
worse.’ Dutch banking and insurance group ING announced 7,000 job
cuts and a deal for the Dutch state to assume 80 percent of the risk on a
27.7-billion euro portfolio of troubled assets. But shares in British
bank Barclays shot up by 75 percent on unexpectedly strong profit
expectations.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gmRU92Pu4jSJ-zNhpA3MZXzOk8RQ
In Hong Kong and Japan, Grim
Economic Expectations
“London-based accounting firm Grant Thornton International in January
released the results of a survey of more than 7,200 corporate executives in 36
countries worldwide, asking them about their expectations for 2009 both in
terms of the overall economy and their companies. When it comes to pessimism
about the economy in the Year of the Ox, Hong Kong was No. 9, gloomier than the
U.S. and Britain and only a bit better than Japan, the least upbeat of
all.” http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/jan2009/gb20090126_557599.htm?chan=top+news_top+news+index+-+temp_global+business
China's clout grows as U.S.
economy weakens
“When Chinese leaders talk about cashing in its almost one-half trillion
in Treasury Bills, as they sometimes do, the financial markets in the U.S.
shudder. Now China could stoke the U.S. recession, though it certainly does not
want to do that. A more salient reality is that the U.S. needs more money, and
China, which is sitting on nearly $2 trillion in foreign reserves, may be the
only place to get it.” http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/eo20090128a2.html
Russia, China Slam U.S. Economic
System, Blame Capitalism “Speaking on the opening day of the World Economic Forum in
Davos, Switzerland, they both urged more international cooperation to escape
the downturn. They also talked up the abilities of their own economies to ride
out the recession. Wen said he was 'confident' China would hit its 8 percent
growth target for this year even though that was 'a tall order.'” http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,484935,00.html
Honda Swerves Into A Deep Ditch
“Honda Motor's quarterly results Friday signal that the automaker is set
to suffer an operating loss of at least $3.7 billion from January to March.
Vastly softer demand from the West, as well as a slowdown in Asia and Brazil
and the yen's devastating surge, are threatening to drag Honda deep into the
red.” http://www.forbes.com/2009/01/30/honda-loss-guidance-markets-equity-0130_markets03.html
US News / Business / Economics
Microsoft Postpones Iowa Data Center
“Microsoft will continue construction of its new data centers in Chicago
and Dublin and open them based on the level of demand for its online services.
The company will revisit its data center plans quarterly, wrote Arne
Josefsberg, general manager of infrastructure services, and Michael Manos,
general manager of data centers, in a Microsoft blog about its data center
efforts.” http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/158265/microsoft_postpones_iowa_data_center.html
Slump Probably Deepened as Credit Froze: U.S.
Economy Preview
“The worst credit crisis since the Great Depression sent the U.S. economy
into a tailspin at the end of 2008 as consumers and businesses retrenched,
reports this week may show. Gross domestic product contracted at a 5.5
percent annual rate from October through December, the biggest drop since 1982,
according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey ahead of Commerce
Department figures due Jan. 30.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601068&sid=ayFlXO6K.CSM&refer=home
Fed Keeps Rate Near Zero, Is Ready to Buy
Treasuries
“The Federal Reserve left the benchmark interest rate as low as zero,
said it’s prepared to purchase Treasury securities to resuscitate lending
and warned inflation may recede too quickly.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aek1s.x4XxLs&refer=home
USPS may cut day of mail delivery
“The U.S. Postal Service may be forced to eliminate a day of mail service
because the economic downturn has led to plummeting volume and revenue, the
postmaster general said in Senate testimony Wednesday. Postmaster General
John E. Potter told a U.S. Senate subcommittee he wanted to eliminate the
requirement to deliver mail six days a week to every address in America.” http://money.cnn.com/2009/01/28/news/economy/postal_service/
Poor infrastructure fails America, civil
engineers report
“America's civil engineers think the nation's aging and rusty
infrastructure is just not making the grade. The American Society of
Civil Engineers issued an infrastructure report card Wednesday giving a bleak
cumulative ranking of D.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/01/28/infrastructure.report.card/index.html
Exxon Mobil posts record $45.2 billion profit “Exxon
Mobil Corp. on Friday reported a profit of $45.2 billion for 2008, breaking its
own record for a U.S. company, even as its fourth-quarter earnings fell 33
percent from a year ago. The previous record for annual profit was $40.6
billion, which the world's largest publicly traded oil company set in 2007.” http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28931011/
Stimulus bills have big bucks for
‘green’ IT programs
“Among the programs in the House bill, the Energy Department would be
able to spend $2 billion for research and development, demonstration projects
and deployment. A House report on the bill said these projects would cover
biomass, geothermal and solar energy. The funds would also go toward
accelerating research and development for advanced batteries necessary for
conversion to electric vehicles and energy storage to increase the
effectiveness of renewable energy projects, the report said.” http://fcw.com/articles/2009/01/30/stimulus-bill.aspx
Technology & Science
Efficient architectures move sources closer
to loads
“At the heart of the [data center power] problem is inefficient power
delivery, specifically power conversion, memory leakage, cooling and
distribution losses. In recognition of this, the world's top engineers have
scrutinized everything from power distribution to server and point-of-load
power supplies to minimize power waste. Their work has led to architectural
breakthroughs that look to fundamentally change the face of power delivery for
decades to come.” http://www.eetimes.com/news/design/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=212901943
Sun Focusing on Energy-Efficient Data Centers
for Cuts In Cost, Carbon
“Remember the data center construction boom of the dotcom bubble? Well,
the opposite trend — data center consolidation – is starting
to take effect now that energy efficiency is becoming increasingly popular and
the economy has hit the skids. Sun is announcing Monday that it has finished
“the largest data center consolidation project undertaken in the
company’s history,” with a new energy-efficient data center in Broomfield,
Colo.” http://earth2tech.com/2009/01/25/sun-focusing-on-energy-efficient-data-centers-for-cuts-in-cost-carbon/
Data centers transforming slowly
“Enterprises are more likely to invest in improving various aspects of
their data centers but only a minority will contemplate going further, Hewlett
Packard has found after contracting a third party firm to conduct an online survey
of technology decision makers in 600 organizations in the U.S., U.K., Germany,
Brazil, Japan and India.” http://www.echannelline.com/usa/story.cfm?item=24150
[The consolidation numbers for HP are interesting. They have gone from 85
data centers to six and from 5,000 applications to roughly 1,500.]
Google unveils tools that can show if your
ISP is giving you what you paid for
“Want to know if you're actually getting what you're paying your Internet
service provider for? If you are, join the club. The problem is that it
it has been far from easy to get a handle on how your service provider deals
with various kinds of traffic. That may become an easier job now that Google
Inc. is launching what it calls Measurement Lab (M-Lab), an open system that
researchers and consumers can use to access its new Internet performance
measurement tools.” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9126997&intsrc=hm_list
Mars rover may be feeling its age –
finally
“Spirit, the aged and somewhat creaky Mars rover, is stalled on the Red
Planet with a touch of bewilderment, but earthbound engineers are confident
they'll get the mobile explorer up and running smoothly soon.” http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/01/29/MNN915JL6B.DTL
The Case Against Cloud Computing “The
five key impediments are: Current enterprise apps can't be migrated
conveniently; Risk: Legal, regulatory, and business; Difficulty of managing
cloud applications; Lack of SLA; Lack of cost advantage for cloud computing”
Part one: Current Enterprise apps can’t be migrated: http://www.cio.com/article/477473/The_Case_Against_Cloud_Computing_Part_One
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"Perseverance is not a long race; it is many short races one
after the other” – Walter
Elliot
"Stay the course, light a star,
Change the world where’er you are” – Richard Le Gallienne
Top Picks
The New Accountability in
Governance
“Roiling markets, diminished returns, foreclosed neighborhoods, TARP
bailouts, greedy grafters, careers lost, and leaders tottering in the dangerous
dance of debts, defaults, and delistings, have all put Wall Street and Main
Street on edge. Tone-deaf CEOs flew their private jets to plead for bailouts
while millions of retirement savings died, along with fabled firms, after Sept.
15. Greed has taken trust hostage. Shareholders and consumers have lost
money and a legacy of believing their leaders protected them. Or cared at
all.” http://www.huffingtonpost.com/roger-fransecky/the-new-accountability-in_b_160416.html
[Very interesting about the loss of trust in executive
management and the need to restore/recover trust. Here’s another
quote: “This will demand tough, grown-up work, for boards will have
to act with courage and clarity to reform old practices and toss out some
cherished beliefs. For example, among the board members we spoke to, CEO
evaluation existed in name only.” Definitely a good article to read
this week and one I am purposefully putting as #1 in the newsletter.]
White House Offers New Details on Recovery
Plan “The
report released Saturday by the White House on the $825 billion economic
recovery proposal offered more detail about how Mr. Obama intends the money to
be spent in several key areas and was meant to ‘put meat on the
bones,’ as one White House National Economic Council official put it.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/25/us/politics/25report.html
What it might take for the US to remain No. 1
“After the dust settles on the deepest
economic slump since the Great Depression of the 1930s, will the United States
retain its status as the No. 1 economic power in the world? If you listen
to economists, the answer is very much in doubt.” http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0122/p25s09-wmgn.html
Expect the World Economy to
Suffer Through 2009
“We enter the new year grappling with the most serious global economic
and financial crisis since the Great Depression. The U.S. economy is, at best,
halfway through a recession that began in December 2007 and will prove the
longest and most severe of the postwar period. Credit losses of close to $3
trillion are leaving the U.S. banking and financial system insolvent.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123267029592108287.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
[Definitely a must-read.]
Book and Product Recommendations
Book: “Architecting
ITIL” by Randy Steinberg
Randy's new book covers architectures involving: service management, functions,
data, organization, process, and service. He then discusses assessing and
governing the architecture. His style is very straight forward and offers many
different points in each area for the reader to consider. Someone looking for
issues to consider in the various areas are presented with bulleted lists to
review and pragmatically leverage. For people involved with the design of
configuration management databases (CMDBs) or configuration management systems
(CMSes) this book will be very valuable. If you haven't checked it out yet and
are involved with ITSM architecture, then you really should.
Order it on Amazon at: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1425180345?ie=UTF8&tag=georgespaffor-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1425180345
IT Audit / Internal Audit / Compliance
DHS ranks high on GAO's high-risk
list
“The Homeland Security Department is tied for second among federal
departments for having the most high-risk management challenges on the
Government Accountability Office’s biennial high-risk list released Jan. 22.” http://fcw.com/articles/2009/01/23/dhs-high-on-gao-list.aspx
Big trend: Offshoring audit work
“Here's another unintended consequence of Sarbanes-Oxley: Top audit firms
are increasingly outsourcing core audit functions to their overseas affiliates.
The logic goes like this: Sarbanes-Oxley has resulted in ‘fee
fatigue’ for a lot of clients. To give them a break, more auditors are
lowering costs via their overseas affiliates. This logic is hardly rock
solid.” http://www.fiercesarbox.com/story/big-trend-offshoring-audit-work/2009-01-23
The Satyam mess and
Sarbanes-Oxley
“First, we should note that Satyam's ADR traded on the Nasdaq. As such,
the big Indian outsourced service provider was required to comply with Sarbox.
Which didn't prevent the fraud. In fact, it has has thrust
PricewaterhouseCoopers onto the hot seat. How could it have signed off on the
audit?” http://www.fiercesarbox.com/story/satyam-mess-and-sarbanes-oxley/2009-01-16
Operational controls to combat a
down economy “Challenging economic times call for bold actions and
creative approaches to stay ahead of the competition, or perhaps even afloat.
Profitability, strategy, revenue growth, client satisfaction, cash flows, and
other operational objectives are often magnified by boards, creditors, and the
investing community during economic downturns.” http://wistechnology.com/articles/5409/
PCAOB to Auditors: Focus on the
CFO
“A sharp and experienced CFO with broad knowledge of a small company's
operation can make for a much easier and cheaper audit of the company's
internal controls over financial reporting. An unruly finance chief, however,
can wreak havoc on the controls of a tiny firm. Through pithy scenarios,
a Public Company Accounting Oversight Board staff guidance issued today reveals
such down-home wisdom about the crucial role of the CFO in the audit
process.” http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/13005719/c_13003803?f=home_todayinfinance
IT Process Improvement / Quality Management
Gutting Costs Guts Viability
“When we are looking at organizations, we can classify their approaches
as focusing on a spectrum of independent and/or dependent variables. The news
reflects a current overemphasis on dependent variables. Yet, cost cutting is
not a long term strategy. It is, at best, is a short term tactic.” http://www.cioupdate.com/features/article.php/3797311/Gutting-Costs-Guts-Viability.htm
Turning Up the Heat to Save
Energy
“The temperature's rising in online brokerage Scottrade Inc.'s data
center -- and that's a good thing. The move has allowed the St. Louis-based
company to reap enormous energy savings while increasing reliability. Six
months ago, CIO Ian Patterson hired the engineering firm Glumac to construct a
computational fluid dymanics (CFD) model of Scottrade's data center. The model
provided a complete picture of thermal airflows.” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=331546
News and views from Kurt Milne,
the managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@....
There is an open thread on Google groups cloud computing
discussion board – about the “killer app” for cloud
computing. It includes some powerful thinking about enabling technology
and the appropriate business model for cloud vendors. One train of
thought suggests that the cloud is going to be driven by economies of scale and
cost reduction. However, my sense is that it is not about infrastructure
efficiencies. The real demand driver will be enabling business innovation and
speed.
The cement isn’t dry yet. The
answer depends on your perspective. Some analysts and vendors define cloud
computing narrowly as an updated version of utility computing: basically
virtual servers available over the Internet. Others go very broad, arguing
anything you consume outside the firewall is "in the cloud,"
including conventional outsourcing. http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/04/07/15FE-cloud-computing-reality_1.html
Forrester to CFOs: Embrace cloud
computing to cut costs.
However, first two reasons listed in this article are 1) speed – customers don't build; they subscribe and receive services. 2) skills
- ship IT tasks to cloud computing specialists, who "worry
about the nuts and bolts so that you don’t have to." And then 3)
by-the-drink payment plans keep cash in the bank longer. I think #2 is most
important. IT staff can focus on more important business processes. http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Enterprise-Applications/Forresters-Advice-to-CFOs-Embrace-Cloud-Computing-to-Cut-Costs/
Security demands land on desk of
new President
“In an open letter to the new President, BigFix CTO Amrit Williams
claimed that it was ‘imperative that we take this opportunity to
implement a vision for how the United States and the world will securely and
efficiently maximise the value of technology for the betterment of
all’.” http://www.scmagazineuk.com/Security-demands-land-on-desk-of-new-President/article/126100/
Obama 'to get spy-proof
smartphone'
“Writing on his blog for the Atlantic magazine, Marc Ambinder reports
that the National Security Agency has approved a $3,350 smartphone --
inevitably dubbed the ‘BarackBerry’ -- for Obama's use.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/01/22/obama.blackberry/index.html
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
The Greatest Healthcare IT
Generation
“In Washington, Healthcare Information Technology policy planning is
accelerating at a pace that is faster than at any time in history (at least my
30 years in healthcare IT). Over the past few days, the House Ways and
Means Committee completed the Health Information Technology for Economic and
Clinical Health Act (HITECH), as part of the American Economic Recovery and
Reinvestment Plan.” http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/guest/22513/
Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act
(HITECH): http://waysandmeans.house.gov/media/pdf/110/hit2.pdf
American Economic Recovery and Reinvestment Plan: http://waysandmeans.house.gov/media/pdf/110/sbill.pdf
Legislators want more physician payment
disclosure
“A new federal bill requiring more extensive disclosure of payments to
physicians by pharmas and medical device companies is now circulating on
Capitol Hill. The bill, a new version of the Physician Payments Sunshine Act,
would require not only that such companies make annual online disclosures of
how much money or other considerations were provided to doctors, but it would
also demand that they explain the types of services for which doctors were
paid.” http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/story/legislators-want-more-physician-payment-disclosure/2009-01-23?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&cmp-id=EMC-NL-FH&dest=FH
COBRA out of reach for many,
study finds
“Only 9% of eligible unemployed workers took up coverage under COBRA in
2006. Financial assistance of 75% to 85% of premiums could help far more
laid-off workers—about two-thirds—maintain their health insurance
through COBRA, according to the report. Average annual premiums for individuals
under COBRA in 2008 were $4,704, while families paid $12,680 on average, a
price tag out of reach for most unemployed Americans, the New York-based foundation
said in the report.” http://www.modernhealthcare.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090123/REG/301239963&nocache=1&nocache=1
China warns of bird flu risk over
Lunar New Year
“China has warned of the risk of further human cases of bird flu in the
run-up to the Lunar New Year holiday after reporting two new cases over the
weekend. Until this month China had not seen a single human infection in
almost a year, but it has now confirmed three cases of the H5N1 virus in less
than two weeks.” http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE50I1R020090119
European viral epidemic linked to
global warming “An epidemic of the viral disease nephropathia epidemica (NE) has
been linked to increases in the vole population caused by hotter summers,
milder winters and increased seedcrop production by broadleaf trees.” http://www.news-medical.net/?id=45057
Study: Antarctica joins rest of
globe in warming
“Antarctica, the only place that had oddly seemed immune from climate
change, is warming after all, according to a new study. For years, Antarctica
was an enigma to scientists who track the effects of global warming.
Temperatures on much of the continent at the bottom of the world were staying
the same or slightly cooling, previous research indicated.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hFV9GIGdjTz4U0s0KVEPreiOUm6gD95ROFV81
NRC: Human error a factor in
power and cooling interruption at Oconee Nuclear
“NRC and Duke officials met Thursday at the NRC’s Atlanta office to
discuss a brief interruption of power and cooling at Oconee’s Unit 1
reactor during a scheduled refueling and maintenance outage last April
15.” http://www.greenvilleonline.com/article/20090122/NEWS01/90122021/1004/NEWS01
Out on a Limb: Global Warming May
Be Killing Old-Growth Forests “The majestic old-growth forests of western North America, greening
patches of the landscape from Arizona to British Columbia, may be far more
vulnerable to subtle climate change than scientists previously believed. A
study published today in the journal Science reveals that these western forests
are dying at faster rates as regional average temperatures climb more rapidly
than the global average.” http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=out-on-a-limb-global-warm
Global News / Business / Economics
Chinese economy likely grew nine
percent in 2008: analysts
“The Chinese economy likely
grew by about nine percent in 2008, the lowest rate in at least six years, as
global financial woes wreaked havoc on its trade-dependent economy, analysts
said. The government is expected this week to release key official
economic data for last year, and observers believe they will show how the state
uses its own spending to pick up the slack from slowing exports.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5j624C0soYT98YUHA_Iu8GQpeqHNA
Chinese slowdown to cost
Australia billions: PM
“China, Canberra's largest trading partner, buys about 25 billion dollars
in exports annually, including commodities such as coal and iron ore. It
provided the motor for Australia's stellar economic growth for nearly a
decade.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iNQWrzM4h7tYYvcKe7lFfp_WPH-g
Trichet-Global economy to start
rebounding in 2010
“The global economy is in a substantial slowdown but should start
recovering in 2010, European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said on
Thursday.” http://uk.reuters.com/article/marketsNewsUS/idUKLM7578220090122
Expect loonie to fly low as U.S.
goes slow
“Credit is not flowing for Canada's biggest trading partner, the United
States. The U.S. Federal Reserve is pushing money out to all corners of the
economy because banks are not. The problem is acute and widespread and not
easily fixed. Until that happens, the U.S. economy will remain weak and trade
growth will remain anemic.” http://www.calgaryherald.com/business/Expect+loonie+goes+slow/1200503/story.html
Iceland business minister resigns
“Iceland's Minister of Business Affairs Bjorgvin Sigurdsson resigned
Sunday, three months after the collapse of several of the country's leading
banks and its stock market. He said the government had failed to restore
confidence following the crisis.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/01/25/iceland.resignation/index.html
US News / Business / Economics
U.S. economy may sputter for years
“The sleek racing machine that was the U.S. economy is unlikely to return
any time soon despite the huge repair efforts now underway. Instead, it
probably will continue to sputter and threaten to stall for years to
come. The prospects are so gloomy, according to a recent study, that
unemployment may be slightly higher by the time President-elect Barack Obama's
first term ends.” http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-econ19-2009jan19,0,1021931.story
U.S. has itself to blame for financial
meltdown
The Chinese author is with the China Institutes of Contemporary International
Relations. He/she presents a chronology of the problems that have led up
to the current US problems. It’s always interesting to get an
external opinion to problems, so this article is worth reading due to the
perspective from China. http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-01/20/content_10688827.htm
Contrite US Treasury pick vows to move fast
on economy
“Incoming Treasury secretary Timothy Geithner apologized Wednesday over
past tax transgressions while vowing to act with "strength, speed and
care" to revive the stricken US economy. At a confirmation hearing
before the Senate finance committee, Geithner said President Barack Obama's new
administration was forging a ‘comprehensive plan’ to address the
nation's economic crisis, starting with the housing market.”
Prescription for the battered U.S. economy
“Although the United States is aware of its illness, it has trouble facing
it. If an urgent and concerted effort is not made to address it, the future is
insecure given its US$12 trillion government debt and several more trillion
dollars in state, personal and business debt. And if the United States falters,
the rest of the world will follow suit.” http://www.upiasia.com/Economics/2009/01/20/prescription_for_the_battered_us_economy/4727/
Obama faces pressure for faster action
“The rapidly unraveling U.S. economy is piling pressure on President
Barack Obama to try bolder recession-fighting tactics even before all his
economic advisers have found their desks. The headlines in the first 72
hours of Obama's term included up to 5,000 job cuts at Microsoft, a gloomy
economic outlook from General Electric and the steepest Inauguration Day stock
market drop on record.” http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/01/25/business/econ26.1-414920.php
Technology & Science
New data center boasts green, super
efficiency
“San Francisco-based Advanced Data Centers (ADC) says its facility under
construction in Sacramento, California, might be the greenest data center
yet. The McClellan Park data center, being built at the former McClellan
US Air Force base, has already been pre-certified LEED Platinum by the US Green
Building Council — a first in the data center industry, according to
ADC.” http://www.greenbang.com/7149/new-data-center-boasts-green-super-efficiency/
Data Center Colocation Crisis: Act Now or Pay
Later
“Across the pond in New England, I've seen monthly lease prices for
colocation data center space increase 675 percent over the last five years. The
same provider that offered Tier 3-type space for $4 a square foot back then is
now charging about $30. In the metro New York market, don't be surprised to see
prices in the $45 to $50 range.” http://advice.cio.com/michael_bullock/data_center_colocation_crisis_act_now_or_pay_later
How to Leverage Data Deduplication to Green
Your Data Center
“Data deduplication goes a long way toward reducing data storage costs by
making storage much more efficient, which in turn can reduce the overall
footprint inside the data center. Knowledge Center contributor Chris Poelker
explains data deduplication's benefits, including how leveraging data deduplication
can help green your data center.” http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Data-Storage/How-to-Leverage-Data-Deduplication-to-Green-Your-Data-Center/
Hate Vista? You May Like the Fix
“One thing’s for sure: it won’t take Microsoft five years to
produce the next Windows. The company wants to put Vista behind it as soon as
possible. In fact, the next version of Windows is almost here already.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/22/technology/personaltech/22pogue.html?em
Sun Cloud CTO: 'Your Data Center Is Your
Computer'
“’’In cloud computing, 'the data center is the computer.' We
see a future where there are a bunch of clouds, both public and private clouds,
and companies will be able to build scalable apps that are self-provisioning.
These apps will be able to scale up automatically where requesting resources
will be done in a self-service fashion.’” http://www.informationweek.com/blog/main/archives/2009/01/sun_cloud_cto_y.html
World's smallest working fuel cell developed
“A researcher at the University of Illinois, where the 3 x 3 x 1mm
hydrogen-fuelled ‘micro fuel cell’ was developed, said it’s
able to generate power without consuming any itself, according to a New
Scientist report.” http://www.reghardware.co.uk/2009/01/23/worlds_smallest_fuel_cell/
End Notes
The News is brought
to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed Consulting,
LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT Management
Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
The News has a new section! Kurt
Milne will be contributing articles/research he has read and his
thoughts. Be sure to check out “Kurt’s Corner”.
"Don't be afraid to give your best to what seemingly are
small jobs. Every time you conquer one it makes you that much
stronger. If you do the little jobs well, the big ones will tend to take
care of themselves.” – Dale
Carnegie
"Nobody trips over mountains. It is the small pebble
that causes you to stumble. Pass all the pebbles in your path and you
will find you have crossed the mountain.”
– Unknown
Top Picks
Ask the 'dumb' questions “Each semester, I introduce my students to a key idea: I
want them to join me in the fight against the fear of looking dumb. Overcoming
that fear can save them from serious traps.” http://blogs.usatoday.com/oped/2009/01/ask-the-dumb-qu.html
[Great commentary! How
often do we run into problems because our fear of looking “stupid”
caused us not to ask basic questions?]
Powerful Solar Storm Could Shut
Down U.S. for Months
“A new study from the National Academy of Sciences outlines grim
possibilities on Earth for a worst-case scenario solar storm. Damage to
power grids and other communications systems could be catastrophic, the
scientists conclude, with effects leading to a potential loss of governmental
control of the situation.” http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,478024,00.html
2009 CERT ® Technical
Symposium: Security Challenges in an Evolving World - A Celebration of the 20th
Anniversary of CERT
“Participate in the dialog
to identify future challenges and promising solutions in providing a safe and
secure networked computing capability for the nation and the world. Join
us for the 2009 CERT Technical Symposium: Security Challenges in an Evolving
World, March 10-11, 2009, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA.
Marking the occasion of CERT’s Twentieth Anniversary, this two-day
symposium will bring together leaders in cybersecurity to examine the future
challenges we face in securing information and processes as vulnerabilities
change, new computing models emerge, and threats evolve.”
The Integrated Enterprise
Excellence (IEE) Business Governance System: Understanding its Framework,
Benefits, and Why it is more than just TQM, Lean Six Sigma, TOC, etc. “An Integrated Enterprise Excellence (IEE) addresses these
issues and more. IEE is described below with its benefits and how to convey
this methodology and to others. The IEE 21st century governance system,
which has a 9-step detailed execution roadmap, may initially sound like a
re-packaging of Total Quality Management (TQM), Lean Six Sigma, Theory of
Constraints (TOC), Deming’s Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) cycle, the balanced
scorecard, and/or other methodologies. However, it is not.” http://www.smartersolutions.com/blog/forrestbreyfogle/?p=650 http://www.smartersolutions.com/blog/forrestbreyfogle/?p=694
Book and Product Recommendations
Governance of Green IT
I sent a copy of the new Green IT
process book to James Hamilton at Amazon. He was kind enough to review
the book and sent me a quote I can use - “George Spafford's Governance
of Green IT is a concise and easy to read summary of the key processes
required to operate a resource efficient data center.” For
those of you who do not know James, he is a data center guru and for him to say
that about the new book means a great deal to me. James was responsible
for a lot of the industry-leading data center design work coming out of
Microsoft and recently moved to Amazon’s web services group and is now a
VP and Distinguished engineer there. He has a blog where he posts his
thoughts at: http://perspectives.mvdirona.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetRss
For more information on the Governance of Green IT book or to order it, please
visit: http://www.itgovernance.co.uk/products/2106
For a free high-level introduction to the Green IT process, please visit:
http://www.spaffordconsulting.com/webinars.html
and view the December 2, 2008, webinar
There is also a PowerPoint of that webinar at: http://www.spaffordconsulting.com/Governing%20IT%20in%20a%20Green%20World_120208_v1j.ppt
IT Audit / Internal Audit / Compliance
United States: The Move Toward
Mandatory Encryption of Sensitive Personal Information “The security breach notification laws encourage an
increased level of security for sensitive personal information to combat
identity theft. By not requiring notification of affected individuals following
a security breach if sensitive personal information is encrypted, the laws
encourage businesses to encrypt data—thus avoiding the hassle and cost of
complying with the increasing number of security breach notification laws.” http://www.mondaq.com/article.asp?articleid=72468&rss=8&login=true
John Taylor’s Blog on
Identity Theft and Business
Interesting post and he also
quotes some info on the January 15th enactment of the state of
Massachusett’s new data security regulations. “The
Massachusetts Data Security Regulations are perhaps like no other in terms of
their depth and scope. During a teleconference, attorneys from the privacy and
data security practice of the law firm Goodwin Procter (Boston) described this
very detailed, all-encompassing set of rules designed to keep consumers'
personal data safe.” http://jtidtheftblog.blogspot.com/2009/01/compliance.html
Codes of Conduct: Trust but
Verify
“The private military industry, like any other, has codes of conduct.
They generally aim to obligate private military firms to comply with
human-rights principles and international humanitarian law. Many individual
private military and security contractors also have their own codes. Such
codes have been pushed particularly hard by their trade associations.” http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=9894
Symantec Issues Data Center Study
“The study revealed that data center managers are conflicted by more
demanding user expectations and higher levels of performance, while ultimately
challenged by their primary objective of reducing costs. The results of
Symantec's second annual State of the Data Center report is based on a survey
conducted in September and October 2008 by Applied Research, which surveyed
1,600 data center managers in Global 5000 and large public sector institutions
located in 21 countries.” http://thewhir.com/web-hosting-news/011309_Symantec_Issues_Data_Center_Study
Managing e-Waste requires
planning
“Proper management of IT hardware not only boosts a company’s
ecological and environmental sustainability, it can also contribute to
achieving goals on the social front through e-Waste management with zero-impact
on the environment says Akhtar Pasha” http://www.expresscomputeronline.com/20090119/greenit03.shtml
How to Benchmark Data Center
Energy Costs
“Despite the potential for savings, however, most IT departments have not
rushed to benchmark data center energy efficiency, primarily because there's no
incentive to measure it, says Forrester analyst Doug Washburn. He notes that
only 11 percent of IT organizations are responsible for paying their
energy-related operating costs (the power bill typically goes to the facilities
group).” http://www.itworld.com/green-it/60542/how-benchmark-data-center-energy-costs
Kurt’s Corner
News and views from Kurt Milne,
the managing director of the ITPI. He can be reached at: kurt.milne@...
Stability is dead. Long live stability.
**
Maintaining control of a dynamic environment
may be the defining IT challenge of the decade. Kurt’s corner articles
will focus on identifying emerging best practices that help close the gap
between operations frameworks based on stability, and the emerging paradigm of
dynamic virtualization and cloud computing. **Le
Roi est mort, vive le Roi!
Has “server as fuse” finally
arrived?
In case you didn’t see Gartner Group's
top 10 technologies for '09 – drum roll… #1) Virtualization #2)
Cloud Computing. Don’t stop there. #3) Servers Beyond Blades
-- is about hardware becoming more dynamic. “IT professionals who
understand that “wasting” servers… will have an advantage
over previous approaches which scripted, sculpted, and nurtured servers to
maximize the return and life of a single computing device (the physical
server).”
Are sold-out co-location datacenters an
indicator of cloud demand?
IT co-location is the
provision of space, bandwidth, and power in a data center, with the customer being required to provide
and manage the computing hardware. Co-location providers are sold out and
building more facilities.
On the other hand, cogent analysis from
someone who “doesn’t get it”.
”At
one level, I totally get the Could Computing concept. It is sexy as hell. But,
as a user, I could not immediately think about any process running that I would
want to throw out onto a cloud, so I started with the stuff I knew I could
never let leave the building.”
NIST announces that draft Special
Publication (SP) 800-122, Guide to Protecting the Confidentiality of Personally
Identifiable Information (PII), is now available for public comment. SP 800-122 is intended to assist Federal organizations in
identifying PII and determining what level of protection each instance of PII
requires, based on the potential impact of a breach of the PII's
confidentiality. The publication also suggests safeguards that may offer
appropriate protection for PII and makes recommendations regarding PII data breach
handling. NIST requests comments on draft SP 800-122 by March 13, 2009.
Please submit comments to 800-122comments@...
with "Comments SP 800-122" in the subject line.” http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsDrafts.html#800-122
NIST Interagency Report (IR)
7497, Draft Security Architecture Design Process for Health Information
Exchanges (HIEs)
“[This] is intended to
provide a systematic approach to designing a technical security architecture
for the exchange of health information that leverages common government and
commercial practices and that applies them specifically to the HIE domain. This
publication assists organizations in ensuring that data protection is
adequately addressed throughout the system development life cycle, and that
these data protection mechanisms are applied when the organization develops
technologies that enable the exchange of health information. Please
submit your comments to draft-nistir7497-comments@....
The comment period for draft NIST IR 7497 closes on Friday March 13,
2009.” http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/PubsDrafts.html#nistir-7497
INFOCON Mailing List - Daily News
on Cybersecurity & Homeland Security Issues The information warfare mailing list is back up and running after
a brief hiatus. Mr. Naef shares information daily and I find the list
very informative. http://www.iwar.org.uk/general/mailinglist.htm
Obama plans to keep his
BlackBerry
“Obama did not tell CNN how he would overcome the major hurdles to
keeping his BlackBerry, including the requirement to keep a record of every
White House communication. The major concern about using a BlackBerry as
president stems mostly from using it for outbound e-mail, several analysts have
told Computerworld.” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9126258&source=rss_topic17
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Microsoft: Don't just throw money
at health care
“In stark contrast to the many businesses beating a path to Washington to
beg for money, Microsoft is urging caution as the government looks to spend
billions on digitizing health care. Peter Neupert, the former
Drugstore.com CEO, who now heads Microsoft's health care unit, said investment
is a ‘necessary, but not sufficient’ condition for improvement and
said that spending money on computer technology may not even be the right first
step.” http://news.cnet.com/8301-10805_3-10142627-75.html
[Great perspective from Peter Neupert of MS and he’s right.
Spending money isn’t the goal – improving healthcare is.]
Prospect of big bucks for health
IT draws cheers from many “In a series of press conferences and similar events in
Washington today, business leaders, the informatics community, the Partnership
to Fight Chronic Disease and others expressed enthusiasm for the inclusion of
billions of dollars for health IT in the forthcoming economic recovery
bill.” http://govhealthit.com/articles/2009/01/14/prospect-of-big-bucks-for-health-it-draws-cheers-from-many.aspx
[Interesting but you’ll view it in a different light if you read the
comments from Neupert above first.]
Simple Checklist Makes Surgery
Safer
“A checklist for surgical teams that includes steps as basic as having
the doctors and nurses introduce themselves can significantly lower the number
of deaths and complications, researchers reported Wednesday.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/20/health/20surgery.html?ref=health
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Biologist: Birds competing for
airspace with planes “Populations of large birds have increased dramatically
since the 1970s, when environmental regulations were instituted in the United
States. Birds have become more accustomed to living in urban environments near
airports and the number of airline flights has risen sharply, according to
Dolbeer.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/01/15/dolbeer.birdstrikes/index.html?eref=rss_tech
Black Boxes in Hand, Full Story
Emerges
“Investigators looking into the emergency water landing of US Airways
1549 raised the wreckage from the icy Hudson River late Saturday, capping a
dramatic and elaborately planned recovery effort.” http://www.abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=6675047&page=1
More peanut butter products
recalled
“The company that sells Little Debbie snacks announced a recall Sunday of
peanut butter crackers because of a potential link to a deadly salmonella
outbreak. The voluntary recall came one day after the government advised
consumers to avoid eating cookies, cakes, ice cream and other foods with peanut
butter until health officials learn more about the contamination.” http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28695782/
Global News / Business / Economics
China becomes world's third
largest economy
“China has overtaken Germany to become the world's third-largest economy
earlier than expected, after estimates for the country's gross domestic product
were revised higher. The National Bureau of Statistics of China reported
this morning it now believes the Chinese economy grew by 13% in 2007, up from
an earlier estimate of 11.9% and China's highest annual growth rate since
1993.” http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/jan/14/china-world-economic-growth
Why Innovation Could Not Save
Nortel
“Analysts and innovation consultants alike say promises and buzzwords
could not save the troubled equipment maker from sagging demand for phone gear
and a crippling $4.5 billion debt load. Efforts to create new products and
business either came too late or, worse, were far off-base." http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/jan2009/id20090114_754937.htm?campaign_id=rss_tech
It's the Global economy, stupid!
“Tomorrow, Barack Obama takes over as the 44th President of the United
States of America, the first African-American to occupy the Oval Office. The
eyes of the world will be on him, not only because he symbolises the great
American dream but also because it looks to the US to lead the world out of the
present economic morass. Will its hopes be realised, or belied?” http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/Opinion/Columnists/Its_the_Global_economy_stupid/articleshow/3998679.cms
US News / Business / Economics
Recession? Not for These Businesses
“While the U.S. recession is largely a story of bank failures, job
losses, and consumer penny-pinching, the downturn is also stimulating sections
of the economy that run counter to such economic cycles. People look to repair,
not replace. Workers switch industries, seeking recession havens where possible
such as health care and education.” http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/content/jan2009/db20090116_786365.htm?campaign_id=rss_daily
Obama to push bankers to resume lending
“President-elect Barack Obama will push bankers to resume lending to
businesses and consumers to help put the ailing economy back on track, but
things will get worse before they get better, his top aides said Sunday.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/18/AR2009011801203.html
PG&E’s Savings by Design
“SAVINGS BY DESIGN is a program to encourage
high-performance nonresidential building design and construction. Sponsored by
four of California's largest utilities under the auspices of the Public
Utilities Commission, Savings By Design offers building owners and their design
team a wide range of services:
* Design Assistance
provides information and analysis tailored to the needs of your project to help
you design the most efficient building possible.
* Owner Incentives help
offset the costs of energy-efficient buildings.
Green-minded Google Gets Red-faced Over
Search Energy Consumption Claims
“So much for clean, green IT and green computing for Google Web services.
Harvard University physicist Alex Wissner-Gross says that Google uses a lot of
energy. Specifically, two Google searches on a computer can generate almost the
same amount of CO2 (carbon dioxide) as boiling a kettle for a cup of tea. When
you consider the millions of Google searches users do daily, that's a lot of
boiled water. Google proceeds to throw cold water on the metrics.” http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Search-Engines/Greenminded-Google-Gets-Redfaced-Over-Search-Energy-Consumption-Claims/
Methane discovery could mean life on Mars “The
methane could have come from past or present subsurface microorganisms,
geological activity or comets striking the planet, scientists and NASA
officials said. Scientists were not sure how long the methane has been on the
planet.“ http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/space/01/15/mars.methane/index.html?eref=rss_tech
Complaints flood Seagate over hard drive
problems
“Seagate Technologies' online support forum has been riddled this week
with complaints from owners of the high-capacity Barracuda 7200.11 hard drive,
which in recent months had already drawn some complaints that the drive has
been freezing up during data transfers or failing all together.” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9126280&source=rss_news
$16B Bank Goes Off The Grid With Hydrogen
Fuel Cells
“A search on "hydrogen fuel cells" turns up a blend of results,
including some puzzlers (e.g., from Sept. 2007, a hydrogen fuel cell bicycle).
But add the words "data center" to the search and you'll find that
$16 billion First National Bank of Omaha and its data center are in their tenth
year of being completely powered by hydrogen fuel cells and are -- literally --
off the grid.” http://www.informationweek.com/blog/main/archives/2009/01/16b_bank_goes_o.html
InformationWeek Analytics: An Inconvenient
Data Center
“Wild price swings in the energy market and Al Gore have likely raised
the green concept to your CEO's desk. This InformationWeek Analytics Report
provides a high-level overview of the state of green IT initiatives to help you
assess your current footprint and the options available.” http://www.informationweek.com/news/infrastructure/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=212900868&subSection=All+Stories
End Notes
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"A champion is someone who gets up, even when he can't.” – Jack Dempsey
"Never Quit. "Don't ever, ever quit. Recognize that
stopping now, regrouping to try a new approach isn't quitting. If you quit
you'll regret it forever." – Rudy Ruettiger
Top Picks
To secure IT systems, prepare for
accidents
“A society that runs on information technology cannot expect to run
without a hitch as long as humans are involved. The government's
Information Security Policy Council has decided to beef up steps to ensure the
safe utilization of information technology by assuming that accidents affecting
providers and users are bound to occur.” http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/editorial/20090108TDY04305.htm
A 'Just Culture' Is The Right
Culture For Improving Patient Safety
“Human error occurs in the health care environment and sometimes those
errors harm patients. In the December 2008 issue of Urologic Nursing, Celeste
M. Mayer and Dale Cronin say that to improve patient safety, the health care
industry must find ways to detect and learn from mistakes, holding the system
accountable for errors, instead of focusing on the individual(s)
responsible.” http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/134631.php
[Healthcare needs to focus on
processes and controls – lessons learned from quality’s revolution
in manufacturing following WWII.]
Top 2009 Resolution: Don't Be
Stupid
“The most famous motto in our time has been Google's Don't Be Evil. I'm
not sure what that means exactly, but here's a motto for the next four or five
years: Don't Be Stupid. It would not have occurred to me to posit Don't
Be Stupid as a motto for our times had not 2008 ended with the Bernard Madoff
story.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123137194364962579.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
IT Audit / Internal Audit / Compliance
Q+A-How did Satyam pull off
India's biggest corporate fraud?
“India vowed to strengthen laws to prevent corporate fraud after Satyam
Computer (SATY.BO), the country's fourth-largest software company, shocked
investors by revealing profits had been falsely inflated for years.” http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssTechMediaTelecomNews/idUSBOM19559220090108
Information security still a
problem at IRS
“The Internal Revenue Service failed to address more than half of the
security weaknesses identified in previous audits, according to a report
released by the Government Accountability Office on Friday. Inadequate
monitoring of network activity and a lack of computer access controls continues
to put financial and taxpayer information at risk.” http://www.nextgov.com/nextgov/ng_20090109_7354.php
IT Process Improvement / Quality Management
Spotlight on Software Quality
Improvement: Three Strategies for Success
“Standards in software development are essential to efforts toward
improving communication between customer and contractor, reducing software
costs throughout the entire life cycle, and improving overall software quality.
Organizations have a number of viable choices to consider when it comes to
applying software quality process improvement methodologies. Three useful
options—the V-Model, ISO9000, and Six Sigma—provide different
approaches to helping ensure quality in the software development
process.” http://it.tmcnet.com/topics/it/articles/48115-spotlight-software-quality-improvement-three-strategies-success.htm
How to Benchmark Data Center
Energy Costs
“Despite the potential for savings, however, most IT departments have not
rushed to benchmark data center energy efficiency, primarily because there's no
incentive to measure it, says Forrester analyst Doug Washburn. He notes that
only 11 percent of IT organizations are responsible for paying their
energy-related operating costs (the power bill typically goes to the facilities
group).” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2009/010709-how-to-benchmark-data-center.html
Will data centers transform in
2009? “Despite the benefits of virtualization and the compact
nature of blade servers, many enterprise IT shops won't be able to fully
overhaul in their data centers in 2009. A recent HP commissioned survey found
that some 20% of 600 technology decision makers plan to initiate a ‘complete
transformation’ of their data centers. The remaining 80% intend to
implement individual transformation projects including automation (64%), green
IT (60%), operations management (59%), virtualization (59%) and business
continuity (58%).” http://edge.networkworld.com/newsletters/nsm/2009/010509nsm2.html
Security and Risk Management
How I got taken by a work-at-home
scam
“Scammers are busier than ever because tough economic times are making
people more desperate to make money, says Christine Durst, CEO of Staffcentrix,
a company specializing in home-based careers that sifts through home-based job
leads every day.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/LIVING/worklife/01/07/home.scams/index.html
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Behind the Health Spending Data
“Spending on health care in the United States grew in 2007 at the lowest
rate in nine years, according to government analysts — a sliver of good
news for those worried about the relentless rise in health care costs. But
buried within the overall statistics was sobering evidence that health costs
continue to be a pressing concern that can only be remedied through deep-seated
reform in the delivery of health services.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/08/opinion/08thu3.html
COBRA Too Costly for Many
Unemployed, Report Finds
“The cost of buying health insurance for unemployed Americans who try to
purchase coverage through a former employer consumes 30 percent to 84 percent
of standard unemployment benefits, according to a report released yesterday.
Because few people can afford that, the authors say, the result is a growing number
of people being hit with the double whammy of no job and no health coverage.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/09/AR2009010903350.html
Group makes push to improve
quality care and safety in hospitals “As the Institute for Healthcare Improvement wraps up a
two-year safety campaign that helped connect more than 4,000 hospitals, it is
challenging the facilities to use a new network and adopt a World Health
Organization surgical checklist.” http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2009/01/05/prsf0108.htm
HL7 passes standards for EHR
system for children
“Health Level Seven (HL7), a healthcare IT standards development
organization, has passed the American National Standards Institute
(ANSI)-approved standard that specifies basic functional requirements for child
healthcare in an electronic health record system.” http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/hl7-passes-standards-ehr-system-children
U.S. health information
technology falls short-report
“Efforts to use information technology to improve U.S. health care will
fall short of the potential seen by health leaders and could even set back the
cause, a National Research Council report said on Friday. A committee of
academic and industry experts found the information systems at eight U.S.
medical centers noted for leadership in information technology failed to
provide timely, efficient, safe and patient-centered care.” http://uk.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUKTRE50855M20090109
Study: Climate Change to Threaten
Food for Half World's Population by 2100 “The National Science Foundation study examines the severity
of rapidly warming temperatures on the world's food security. Using
direct observation and climate models, the study's authors found there was a
90-percent probability that by 2100 the lowest temperatures during growing
season in the tropics and subtropics will be higher than any recorded to date.” http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-01-08-voa46.cfm
Hidden harm of Google searches
“Performing two Google searches from a desktop computer can generate a
similar amount of carbon dioxide to boiling the kettle for a cup of tea,
according to new research. While millions of people tap into Google
without a thought for the environment, a typical search generates about 7g of
carbon dioxide. Boiling a kettle generates about 15g.” http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24899323-11949,00.html
Global News / Business / Economics
Toyota orders 11-day factory halt
“Toyota Motor Corp. is to halt production at its Japanese plants for 11
days in February and March as a sharp slide in U.S. sales has left dealers'
lots full of unsold cars. A 37% slump in December sales in Toyota's
biggest market was its sharpest fall in more than a quarter of a century and worse
than declines at struggling U.S. rivals General Motors (GM, Fortune 500) and
Ford Motor (F, Fortune 500).” http://money.cnn.com/2009/01/06/news/international/toyota_factory_halt.reut/index.htm?postversion=2009010607
Businesses face confidence crisis
“Business confidence among Chinese enterprises is expected to remain weak
untill 2010, according to a survey conducted by UK-based L.E.K. Consulting,
indicating that the global financial turmoil is taking a firmer grip than
previously expected on the Chinese economy.” http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/bizchina/2009-01/09/content_7381342.htm
Billions pulled out of China
“Royal Bank of Scotland has warned it may become the fourth big investor
in just a few days to pull billions of dollars out of the Chinese banking
system, fuelling fears that China's faltering economy could be hit by massive
capital outflows in coming months. Reports indicate the British bank, now
controlled by the U.K. government, has been in talks with Chinese regulators
for the past few days to sell down its 4.3% stake in Bank of China worth
$3.7-billion.” http://www.financialpost.com/news/story.html?id=1156102
Saving the global economy
“The Bank of England has cut interest rates to 1.5%, their lowest ever.
Congress's budget office this week forecast a US budget of $1.1 trillion this
year, easily the biggest ever, and equal to 8.3% of national income. The IMF
reckons the global economy needs a gigantic boost of $1.2 trillion this year to
avoid losing altitude, but no-one has a clear idea where the cash will actually
come from or exactly what will happen if it doesn't appear.” http://money.uk.msn.com/investing/articles/nicklouth/article.aspx?cp-documentid=12584598
Satyam's U.S. Clients Face Tough
Choices
“Details of the stunning fraud at Indian outsourcing giant Satyam are
still trickling out. On Friday, Jan. 9, former Chairman Ramalinga Raju was
arrested, the company's stock was delisted, and its board of directors was
liquidated. It's unclear whether the $2.1 billion-a-year company will survive.
But worried as they are, Satyam's current customers cannot abandon the company
overnight; in the tech-services business, the operations of the client and
service provider can be deeply intertwined.” http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/content/jan2009/db2009019_127597.htm?campaign_id=rss_daily
[This highlights the need to carefully scrutinize partners. I’m
sure many firms did their due diligence and still will be burned by this.
Satyam serves to demonstrate that unscrupulous firms are out there.]
US News / Business / Economics
The economics of solar power
“By 2020, global installed solar capacity could be 20 to 40 times its
level today. But make no mistake, the sector is still in its infancy.
Even if all of the forecast growth occurs, solar energy will represent only
about 3 to 6 percent of installed electricity generation capacity, or 1.5 to 3
percent of output in 2020.” http://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Energy_Resources_Materials/Strategy_Analysis/The_economics_of_solar_power_2161
[This is a very interesting article and has
an audio podcast that accompanies it.]
Fed predicts economy will get worse
“The U.S. economy is likely to deteriorate further this year and
unemployment will rise into 2010, according to the latest forecasts from the
staff of the Federal Reserve. This bleak forecast was presented to Fed
policymakers when they met last month and lowered interest rates to near zero.
Low interest rates are one key tool the central bank uses to try to spur
economic activity.” http://money.cnn.com/2009/01/06/news/economy/fed_minutes/index.htm
TARP Oversight Panel Urges
Transparency, Accountability
“The Obama administration is already looking at a broad revamp of the
program, which has faced criticism from Democrats and Republicans over its
implementation. Obama's team is expected to launch a major program to prevent
foreclosures. House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank (D.,
Mass.) said he is working with the Obama administration to try and come up with
restrictions on how the second installment of the fund is used, including aid
to cities.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123151863031268319.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Technology & Science
Some like it hot: Why waste dough cooling
down a data center? “Monroe
says more businesses are starting to challenge the theory that data centers
must resemble meat lockers. Not only are they more readily adopting and pushing
the envelope with free cooling (the practice of using outside air to keep
things comfy for those servers), they’re pushing the upper limits on how
hot systems can run over an extended period of time.” http://blogs.zdnet.com/green/?p=1627
Enterprise technologies to watch this year
“Asian enterprises will look to technologies that can help stretch their
IT dollar in the year of the Ox, according to a BizIT poll of more than 50
regional tech chiefs. And with the spirit of prudent spending expected to
keep the lid on enterprise's propensity to try out new and higher-risk
technologies, it is no surprise that many vendors gave familiar-sounding names
when asked which technologies will dominate in 2009.” http://business.asiaone.com/Business/SME%2BCentral/Tete-A-Tech/Story/A1Story20090106-112720.html
Green tech expert clarifies data center heat
discussion This
is an interesting commentary on the Arrhenius equation and what it means in
data centers from Peter Hopton of Very PC in the UK. http://blogs.zdnet.com/green/?p=1634
Data centre of the future? Bigger, greener,
‘cloudier’
“Feast your eyes on what may well be the data centre of the future: a
purpose-built, campus-style data centre that is not only greener than its
forerunners, but will help to support the rise in data centre outsourcing in
general and cloud computing specifically.” http://www.businessreviewonline.com/blog/archives/2008/12/data_centre_of.html
'Cancer-free' baby born in London
“The first child in Britain known to have been screened as an embryo to
ensure she did not carry a cancer gene was born Friday, a spokesman for
University College London told CNN. Her embryo was screened in a lab days
after conception to check for the BRCA-1 gene, linked to breast and ovarian
cancer.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/01/09/uk.cancerfree.baby/index.html
Robotic suit helps paralyzed walk
“A new robotic suit could transform the lives of paralyzed people, giving
them the ability to walk again. The invention, known as ReWalk, acts like
a kind of exoskeleton. It consists of lightweight, motorized leg supports and
an assortment of intricate motion sensors.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/01/09/robotic.suit/index.html
End Notes
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"To believe in yourself and to follow your dreams, to have
goals in life and a drive to succeed, and to surround yourself with the things
and the people that make you happy - this is success!” – Sasha Azevedo
“The power of a movement lies in the fact that it can
indeed change the habits of people. This change is not the result of force but
of dedication, of moral persuasion.” – Stephen Biko
Top Picks
Countries in tug-of-war over
Arctic resources
“One of the planet's most fragile and pristine ecosystems sits atop a
bounty of untapped fossil fuels. Melting polar ice is making the Arctic
more accessible to shipping and other industry. The U.S. Geological
Survey estimates that 90 billion barrels of oil, 44 billion barrels of natural
gas liquids and 1,670 trillion cubic feet of natural gas are recoverable in the
frozen region north of the Arctic Circle.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/science/01/02/arctic.rights.dispute/index.html
Study: Diamonds link comet to
mammal extinction “Tiny diamonds found in the soil are "strong
evidence" a comet exploded on or above North America nearly 13,000 years
ago, leading to the extinction of dozens of mammal species, according to a
study.
Diamonds found in North American
soil suggest a comet led to the extinction of dozens of mammal species.
The scientific report also suggests the cataclysm also reduced the population
of the earliest people to inhabit the region and triggered a 1,300-year-long
cold spell that stretched around the world.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/science/01/02/comet.diamonds/index.html
Global Warming Is Just the Tip of
the Iceberg
“Defense experts have also started to see the link between climate change
and conflict. A 2007 CNA Corp. report, supervised by a dozen retired admirals
and generals, warned that climate change could lead to political unrest in
numerous badly hit countries, then perhaps to outright bloodshed and battle.
One key factor that could stoke these tensions is massive migration as people
flee increasingly uninhabitable areas, which would lead to border tensions,
greater demands for rescue and evacuation services and disputes over essential
resources.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/02/AR2009010202280.html?hpid=opinionsbox1
The Warming Earth Blows Hot, Cold
and Chaotic
“For the time being, no one knows whether this temperature drop heralds a
lasting retreat from global warming or a temporary dip. Last summer was relatively
cool world-wide, for example, while global land temperatures in October were
the warmest for that month in more than a century, government weather records
show. … In matters of climate, the unusual is becoming routine, as higher
temperatures make weather patterns more unstable.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123085070980447477.html
Book and Product Recommendations
The Governance of Green IT
“The economy and
environment have combined to create quite a challenge. On one hand, there is a
push to reduce capital investment and operating expenses. On the other,
organizations are implementing green strategies to reduce the environmental
impacts. Within this context, information technology is struggling to provide
services that support the organization. To sustain support, IT must implement
processes to ensure proper value creation and protection of organizational
goals. To this end, this book sets forth the Green IT process that will enable
value creation and protection in the areas of data center power and cooling.”
The Risks of 'Security by
Compliance' - Interview with ISACA's John Pironti “In an exclusive interview, Pironti discusses: The
risks of 'Security by Compliance'; Top risk management/compliance issues of
2009; What will be the most in-demand skills and job opportunities for
information security professionals.” http://www.bankinfosecurity.com/articles.php?art_id=1137
The Safeguard Madoff Victims
Missed
“As the list of wealthy individuals, institutions, and charities that
have lost millions, even billions of dollars in the Bernard Madoff fraud case
continues to grow, other investors have been asking an important question: Why
was there no independent custodian holding the securities and other assets Mr.
Madoff's firm was said to be investing?” http://www.abcnews.go.com/Business/PersonalFinance/story?id=6562472&page=1
The Impact of Cloud Computing on IT
Departments and Personnel
“While the potential of cloud computing can't be denied, it is not
realistic to expect (or maybe fear) that cloud computing will solve
infrastructure and staffing issues in IT departments in general and in data
centers in particular.” http://datacenterjournal.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2356&Itemid=40
A Crystal Ball Look into the 2009
Data Center
“With 2008 closing, it's time to look into the crystal ball and see what
the future holds for the data center industry. Data center experts around the
world envision a year of innovation, which they hope will alleviate or possibly
even resolve today’s data center challenges.” http://datacenterjournal.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2355&Itemid=40
Energy Efficiency: The New SLA
“For years, IT organizations have been charged with ensuring the
performance, availability, and security of their environments. Now, as more and
more data centers are nearing their power and cooling capacities, a new SLA has
emerged. Today’s IT managers must now also manage energy
efficiency—not as a one-time event, but as an ongoing business
imperative.” http://datacenterjournal.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2352&Itemid=43
SSL cert. hash hacked on PS3 farm
“In New Year's eve's IT Blogwatch, Richi Jennings watches bloggers watch
the MD5 hash algorithm get broken -- by a farm of PlayStations -- with worrying
consequences for SSL digital certificates. Not to mention seasonal blinkenlights…” http://blogs.computerworld.com/ssl_cert_hash_hacked_on_ps3_farm
Google’s “Browser
Security Handbook”
“This document is meant to provide web application developers, browser
engineers, and information security researchers with a one-stop reference to
key security properties of contemporary web browsers. Insufficient
understanding of these often poorly-documented characteristics is a major
contributing factor to the prevalence of several classes of security
vulnerabilities. Although all browsers implement roughly the same
set of baseline features, there is relatively little standardization - or
conformance to standards - when it comes to many of the less apparent implementation
details. Furthermore, vendors routinely introduce proprietary tweaks or
improvements that may interfere with existing features in non-obvious ways, and
seldom provide a detailed discussion of potential problems.” http://code.google.com/p/browsersec/wiki/Main
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Healthcare compliance gets boost
from national HHS privacy framework
“New Medicare provisions for digital prescriptions and expanded HIPAA
influence, quietly put forth in a Health and Human Services framework earlier
this month, mean more organizations will need to grapple with healthcare
compliance issues protecting patient information in 2009. The e-prescription program
will include incentives in 2009 and begin including disincentives for continued
paper use in 2012.” http://searchcio-midmarket.techtarget.com/tip/0,289483,sid183_gci1343805,00.html
City to Pay Doctors to Contribute
to Database
“Experts say it is the most ambitious government effort nationwide to
harness electronic data for public-health goals like monitoring disease
frequency, cancer screening and substance abuse. It follows the Bloomberg
administration’s aggressive focus on everyday health concerns —
which has included startling anti-smoking advertisements in subways and
requirements that chain restaurants post calorie counts — and frequent
use of statistics to drive public policy on crime, homelessness and other
issues.” http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/30/nyregion/30records.html?_r=1
Blue Cross, Zagat to rank doctors
“With the Zagat ratings, Blue Cross members won't find any data on a
North Carolina physician until there are at least 10 surveys on the doctor, to
help avoid skewed data, Bradley said. And comments will be screened to eliminate
anything inappropriate” http://www.newsobserver.com/business/story/1342375.html
Budget Office Sees Hurdles in
Financing Health Plans “One bright spot in a generally bleak picture was the
estimate of potential savings from a requirement for doctors and hospitals to
use health information technology, including electronic medical records, as a
condition of participating in Medicare. Such a requirement could save the
federal government $7 billion in the first five years and a total of $34
billion over 10 years, by reducing medical errors and avoiding unnecessary
tests and procedures, the budget office said. It ‘would also lower health
insurance premiums in the private sector,’ the report said.
If we shopped for health care as
we do for cars
“As Michael Leavitt ends four years as secretary of health and human
services, he offers this attention-arresting arithmetic: Absent fundamental
reforms, over the next two decades the average American household’s
health care spending, including the portion of its taxes that pays for Medicare
and Medicaid, will go from 23 percent to 41 percent of average household
income.” http://www.startribune.com/opinion/37019694.html?elr=KArksLckD8EQDUoaEyqyP4O:DW3ckUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUUss
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Insurance Co. Blames Global
Warming for an Especially Disastrous Year
“Munich Re’s report points out that 2008 was the tenth warmest year
on record according to the World Meteorological Organisation, which means that
the 10 warmest years have all occurred in the past 12. Several recent studies
have suggested that global warming may not be increasing the frequency of
cyclones and hurricanes, but it is making big storms more intense.” http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2008/12/30/insurance-co-blames-global-warming-for-an-especially-disastrous-2008/
Cooling global warming hysteria
just one story of '08
“First, the scientific debate over climate change has entered a new phase.
This change is reflected in, though hardly constituted by, petitions signed by
natural scientists of various kinds disputing the so-called consensus that
human-caused CO2 is responsible for global warming.” http://www.calgaryherald.com/Cooling+global+warming+hysteria+just+story/1128586/story.html
New NASA report details final
minutes of Columbia
“A new NASA report released Tuesday details the chaotic final minutes of
Columbia, which disintegrated over Texas on Feb. 1, 2003. The point of the
400-page analysis is to figure out how to make NASA's next spaceship more
survivable. The report targeted problems with the spacesuits, restraints and
helmets of the Columbia crew.” http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081230/ap_on_re_us/columbia_astronauts
Skeptics skip the long view
“As the chart at right covering the past 10 years shows, that makes it
the third year in a row of falls. Draw a trend line between 1998 and last year
and it slopes downwards. So at least global warming has halted, hasn't
it? That is one way of looking at it. Evidence that the earth is cooling
certainly has put a new bounce in the step of climate change sceptics.
However, the news does not look so good if we take the longer-term view.” http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24866329-7583,00.html
Ocean acidification, global
warming, and the Great Barrier Reef
“Perhaps it’s time to begin talking about global warming and
acidifying oceans in the same breath, rather than as related-but-separate
issues. In mid-December, The Monitor ran a story on research showing that
some areas of the world’s oceans are acidifying faster than marine
scientists had predicted even three years ago. The culprit: the excess
carbon dioxide that human industrial activity and deforestation are pumping
into the atmosphere — and that the oceans are absorbing.” http://features.csmonitor.com/discoveries/2009/01/01/ocean-acidification-global-warming-and-the-great-barrier-reef/
Global News / Business / Economics
Medical travel catches cold
“Medical travel from North
America and Europe has been the next big thing for more than a decade, and it
still is. Western travelers - as opposed to expatriates living in Asia - remain
a tiny fraction of Thailand's healthcare market. That may be partially
attributable to a side effect of the 2006 coup and its chaotic democratic
aftermath: like most central government agencies, the Tourism Authority of
Thailand has ceased to function effectively.” http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/JL24Ae01.html
Gazprom Says Ukraine May Disrupt
Gas Supply to Europe “OAO Gazprom, supplier of a quarter of Europe’s gas,
warned customers that Ukraine may disrupt supplies by siphoning fuel from
transit pipelines should Russia’s gas exporter stop deliveries tomorrow
morning.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aJEYfOlLTeaw&refer=home
Russia, Ukraine say gas dispute
won't hurt Europe
“Overshadowing their confrontation was the specter of 2006, when a
similar dispute interrupted gas shipments to many European countries for three
days. But both Russia and Ukraine now have strong interests in proving to
Europe they can be reliable energy partners, and they assured other European
nations they would not be affected.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iZb7qkByI0qmfe-bmUGoQfQcDzhAD95EJD100
Is China's economy hitting a
great wall?
“Today, China has woken up to a new reality, one that economists say
could make 2009 the most challenging period China has faced in years: declining
exports, slower growth, rising unemployment – and the spectre of social
unrest rippling across the country.” http://www.thestar.com/World/Columnist/article/560480
Will This Bold Shakeup Save Dell?
“After stepping back into the chief executive job in January 2007, Dell
began a program of steep cost cuts and layoffs. And as part of an effort to
regain lost market share, he pushed the low-cost, direct-sales PC maker to turn
out fresh, compelling products consumers will be more likely to want to buy.” http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/dec2008/tc20081231_749138.htm?campaign_id=rss_tech
Consumer Electronics: Innovate or Die
“The problem at the heart of the industry today is that CE companies
still design for their original, early adopter geek audience. Tech geeks drove
the development of the CE industry when it was new and there was a steep
adoption curve. But, now that grade schoolers and hockey moms carry iPhones,
consult their GPS for driving directions, bank online, and share family photos
on Flickr, CE companies need to do more than rely on consumer curiosity to stay
alive.” http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/dec2008/id20081231_993432.htm?campaign_id=rss_tech
Bailing Out Detroit's Bailout Plans
“Our government has said it will provide $17 billion to keep Detroit
running for a few months, but there is a catch. The bailout money came with
some stiff requirements, which were probably a reaction to the government's
handing hundreds of billions of dollars to banks and Wall Street without any
quid-pro-quos.”
GM, Chrysler May Lead Sales Slide to Cap
16-Year Low
“Sales dropped 48 percent from a year earlier at Chrysler, 41 percent at
GM and 33 percent at Ford Motor Co., based on the average estimates of six
analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Toyota Motor Corp. may report a 40 percent
slide and Honda Motor Co. may say its total was down 36 percent, Brian Johnson,
a Barclays Capital analyst in New York, said in a Dec. 31 note to investors.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aqQJQm6uyCFM&refer=home
Server makers get Goooogled
“Elements of Google's most secretive product--its unique PC server
design--is beginning to ripple throughout the rest of the industry. Like
many companies with giant Internet data centers, Google uses big clusters of
commodity x86 servers. But unlike its competitors such as Yahoo and Microsoft,
it has created a motherboard design tailored for big data centers.” http://www.eetimes.com/news/latest/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=212400166
NASA Reports
While writing the entry for the Columbia Crew Survival Investigation Report
release, I found the URL for NASA’s reports. It’s quite
interesting and has everything from budgets to strategic plans. http://www.nasa.gov/news/reports/index.html
Cloud Computing Journal: Data Storage Has
Been Taken for Granted “In
this series of articles (which represent a paper I am writing), I will attempt to
examine key areas where a Cloud Optimized Storage Solution (referred to as COSS
through the remainder of this document) can both bolster the general
availability of the cloud at large and concurrently provide appropriate
performance for the cloud application set based on Service Level Agreements
(SLAs).” http://web2.sys-con.com/node/794945
Storage Investment Priorities for 2009
“Although we re facing a continued
economic downturn in 2009, the growth rate of storage and storage requirements
is not abated. IT professionals are facing tightened budgets with very little
capital, making it difficult for them to acquire new technologies. Yet,
whatever capital investments are made must be maximized to the fullest extent
which means they ll choose the storage solution that will best meet their needs
while looking for a quick return on investment and a return on assets, or ROA.
In this economy, it will be important for IT professionals to stick to the
fundamentals and focus on ROA and the ability to break even quickly.”
NASA's rovers mark five years on Red Planet
“NASA said the rovers had made important discoveries about the wet and
violent conditions on ancient Mars. They had returned 250,000 images,
covered more than 21km (13 miles), climbed a mountain, descended into craters,
struggled with sand traps and ageing hardware and survived dust storms, NASA
said.” http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/01/03/mars.rovers.five.years/index.html
Who The Hell Writes Wikipedia, Anyway?
“The bulk of Wikipedia is written by 1400 obsessed freaks who do little
else but contribute to the site, says a post racing up the Hacker News charts.
The post pulls this number from an essay Aaron Swartz wrote more than two years
ago, based on some comments by Jimmy Wales.” http://www.alleyinsider.com/2009/1/who-the-hell-writes-wikipedia-anyway
End Notes
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"Give me a fruitful error any time, full of seeds, bursting
with its own corrections. You can keep your sterile truth for yourself.” – Vilfredo Pareto
Top Picks
Greener & Leaner: The Top
Trends For Green IT In 2009
“Green IT: It’s no
longer just a buzzword for getting the executive office to buy into new
technologies such as virtualization or more energy-efficient equipment. Once
thought of as a feel-good initiative for enterprises wanting to improve their
brand image through environmental responsibility, the greening of the data
center has become a mandate for organizations of all sizes due to increasing
energy costs and challenging economic conditions.” http://www.processor.com/editorial/article.asp?article=articles%2Fp3052%2F23p52%2F23p52.asp&guid=&searchtype=&WordList=&bJumpTo=True
Tech Innovations for Tough Times
“These days, TRIZ is coming on strong at corporations hungry for new ways
to improve innovation and productivity beyond what they've already achieved
with the widely adopted Six Sigma and Lean techniques” http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/dec2008/tc20081223_490913.htm?campaign_id=rss_tech
This article discusses the use of “TRIZ”, an acronym for the
“Theory of Inventive Problem Solving” in Russian. It is an
approach to innovation that is progressing through early adopters and moving
mainstream. To learn more, see:
Admiring Bill Gates
“As much as I appreciate the goals of the Foundation, I found myself
admiring Bill Gates as a person during the course of the interview. The truth
is that while he was busy developing software, he's also worked on developing
himself. He is the self-made American who has matured into a role model and
leader.” http://radar.oreilly.com/
The Dark Side of Data
“In fact, when it comes down to brass tacks, most of us are in the
unfortunate situation that the vast majority of what transmits over our
networks is, for lack of a better word — “dark.” We know
it’s there — it has to be in order for our businesses to run
smoothly. We see it move from place to place when we chart out things like
bandwidth utilization or overall traffic patterns. But we don’t know,
with any degree of certainty, what it is, where it’s going, where it came
from, or why. It’s dark data.” http://technetnews.net/the-dark-side-of-data.html
[This is a reposting of a September 2008 article. I missed it the first
time around and it is thought provoking – just how much dark data do we
really have?]
IT Audit / Internal Audit / Compliance
Jim Kaplan’s AuditNet If you are looking for audit plans, be sure to check out Jim
Kaplan’s site. http://www.auditnet.org/
Early Suspicions About Bernard
Madoff “The SEC failed dismally in its mandate. One bank failed
after another. All the majors are insolvent. Given the magnitude of the
problem, ‘you have to ask yourself, how could anybody miss the red
flags....’ In addition, the common practice of market manipulation
and insider trading made Wall Street feel it was invulnerable. It still does
even in the current environment, with suggestions of more criminal fraud to be
uncovered, and Madoff now exposed as a swindler.” http://www.countercurrents.org/lendman261208.htm
New Study: What's Next for
Banking Legislation, Regulation? Interview with Eva Weber of Aite Group
“In an exclusive interview, Aite Analyst Eva Weber discusses: Initial
conclusions from the study; Recommendations for financial institutions in 2009;
Key takeaways for banking/security leaders who need to be concerned with all
threats to their institutions.” http://www.bankinfosecurity.com/articles.php?art_id=1123
Archived Webinar: Leveraging
Software to Improve Energy Efficiency
"As the costs of electricity
continues to skyrocket, organizations are faced with needing to manage the
costs associated with the IT services being delivered. Effectively implemented
software solutions can assist organizations seeking methods to reduce costs and
even gain business benefits."
Fifteen Simple Ways to Green Your
Data Center on the Cheap
“The good news is that you don't have to spend big money to reap big
energy savings. And while a few high-profile efforts have been launched
recently that require significant capital outlays to be successful, there are a
number of simple yet effective ways to "green" a data center,
techniques that are kind to budgets and easy to implement. Some simple
ideas work best with new facilities, while others are better suited to
retrofits of existing data centers, but the truth is, all will work well to cut
energy use, and yield financial savings, while not compromising
reliability.” http://greenercomputing.com/feature/2008/12/23/greening-your-data-center-cheap
For clean energy, look to the
Internet
“Like John Doerr of Kleiner Perkins and Vinod Khosla of Khosla Ventures,
Metcalfe believes that the set of skills that helped drive the infotech
revolution can do the same for renewable energy, energy efficiency and
eco-friendly materials.” http://money.cnn.com/2008/12/22/technology/metcalfe.fortune/index.htm
From CIO to Chief Energy Officer
“Put simply, by improving efficiencies of motors, logistics, buildings,
and energy delivery, ICT could increase its impact on emissions reductions in
other sectors by a factor of five compared to the sector’s own projected
increase.” http://www.climatebiz.com/blog/2008/12/23/from-cio-chief-energy-officer
[The gist is that IT has the potential to create five times the savings in
emissions than what it is slated to create with increases in IT’s direct
energy consumption.]
Architecting for Green Computing
“Green computing is becoming more and more important every day. System
architects need to take into account energy consumption and to find ways to
reduce it through: system virtualization, server consolidation, smart unit
positioning in data centers, and others.” http://www.infoq.com/news/2008/12/Architecture-Green-Computing
Security and Risk Management
Top Security Concerns 2009
“Cybercrime and outsourcing were named top security concerns according to
a new study conducted by The Ponemon Institute. The survey found that 50% of IT
operations professionals viewed outsourcing as an imminent and near-time
critical risk, while more than 75% of IT security professionals noted
cybercrime a major issue - despite concerted efforts to thwart hackers in
recent years.” http://www.zdnet.co.uk/talkback/0,1000001161,39582681-39001093c-20099586o,00.htm
Feds consider searches of
terrorism blogs
“The effort comes as
researchers are seeing terrorists increasingly use the Internet to plan
bombings, recruit members and spread propaganda. "Blogging and message
boards have played a substantial role in allowing communication among those who
would do the United States harm," the department said in a recent
notice.” http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2008-12-23-terrorblogs_N.htm
Chertoff Praises Bush
Cyber-security Efforts
“Outgoing Department of Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff says the
Bush administration's work on cyber-security leaves President-elect Barack
Obama well-positioned for progress on securing the nation's IT
infrastructure.” http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Security/Chertoff-Praises-Bush-Cyber-Security-Efforts/
Yes, Virginia, There Will Be More
Attacks
“If there's any good news for security pros in 2009, however, it's
probably the general consensus that IT security will remain a top priority for
corporations and government agencies.” http://darkreading.com/blog/archives/2008/12/yes_virginia_th.html
Redmond security guru explains IE
vuln miss
“Michael Howard, a principal security program manager with the software
giant, explains that the flaw cropped up in a blind-spot developers weren't
trained to scour for potential flaws. Human error is always a factor in
developing secure code and sometimes fuzzing tools can help unearth error.
Unfortunately, in this case, testing tools weren't up to the job either.” http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/12/24/ie_vuln_miss_explained/
[Highlights that there will likely always be holes that can be exploited in a
single layer and why “defense in depth” approaches are so vital.]
Russian hackers target U.S.,
Europe for profit and politics “Cyber-crime, by some estimates, has outpaced the amount of
illicit cash raked in by global drug trafficking. Hackers from Russia and China
are among the chief culprits, and the threat they pose now extends far beyond
spam, identity theft and bank heists. Besides the recent attack on
computers at the U.S. Defense Department, which may have originated in Russia,
according to military leaders in Washington, Russian hackers also are believed
to be behind highly coordinated attacks that brought down government Web sites
in Estonia in 2007 and in U.S.-allied Georgia when war broke out between
Russian and Georgian forces in August.” http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-russia-hackers2_rodriguezdec26,0,5001855.story
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
The Future Of Health Care
“It's not just automakers, finance firms and state coffers that stand to
gain from government loans and stimulus spending. If President-elect Obama is
able to pass a stimulus package early next year, rumored to cost $850 billion,
it could be a boon for the health care industry as well.” http://www.forbes.com/health/2008/12/24/future-medical-technology-forbeslife-cx_rr_1224health.html
Rescue plan renews health IT
privacy debate
“The plan to add health information technology to the multibillion-dollar
economic stimulus package legislators are developing has renewed the debate
over how to protect patient privacy in a nationwide health IT system.” http://www.govhealthit.com/online/news/350729-1.html
Why Tech Can't Cure Medical
Inflation
“While there are benefits that might be had from using computers more
widely in medicine, doing so won't save us any money and, in fact, will likely
make things more expensive. There's even a chance that the quality of care
might get worse along the way.” http://www.forbes.com/technology/forbes/2009/0112/043.html?feed=rss_technology
[This is an interesting article and reminds us of a truth – far more
needs to change than just the computer systems to “treat” the
skyrocketing costs of healthcare.]
Demand for health care help
booming
“Michigan's health care industry, the state's largest employer,
desperately needs thousands of workers to fill jobs with critical shortages.
That may include you -- autoworkers, social workers, accountants, computer
technicians and others laid off in one of the nation's worst recessions.” http://www.freep.com/article/20081228/BUSINESS06/812280359/1003
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Amateurs are trying genetic
engineering at home
“Using homemade lab equipment and the wealth of scientific knowledge
available online, these hobbyists are trying to create new life forms through
genetic engineering — a field long dominated by Ph.D.s toiling in
university and corporate laboratories.” http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/genetics/2008-12-26-diy-dna_N.htm
[The odds of someone creating something devastatingly bad is high. No
containment systems, safety protocols, etc. We have both human error and
malicious acts to worry about.]
NASA: Global warming to increase
severe storms, rainfall
“The frequency of extremely high clouds in Earth's tropics — the
type associated with severe storms and rainfall — is increasing as a
result of global warming, according to a study by scientists at NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.” http://www.usatoday.com/weather/climate/globalwarming/2008-12-19-global-warming-severe-storms_N.htm
‘Airport malaria risk
rising with global warming
“Global warming is raising the risk for infection with so-called
”airport malaria” in malaria-free zones of the United States and
Europe, researchers warn. Here‘s how it happens, as the scientists
explain it: Mosquitoes make their way on to planes in tropical regions, and at
the end of a flight can escape into the increasingly warmer climates of
developed countries, where they now have a better chance of surviving and
proliferating.” http://www.punchng.com/Articl.aspx?theartic=Art200812280392562
Global News / Business / Economics
Toyota's Losses Reflect Troubles
Across the Global Economy “With car sales plummeting, giant automaker Toyota Motor
Corp., posted its first operating loss in 71 years. Economic analysts examine
what impact the company's massive losses will have on the global
economy.” http://money.cnn.com/2008/12/24/real_estate/when_to_refi/index.htm?postversion=2008122414
Russia Faces Rising Unemployment
“Unemployment, wage arrears and short-time working have increased across
Russia's labor force, with industry worst hit. The economic downturn has
quickly revealed the continued unenforceability of labor law and the weak
position of workers, although a proposed government support package for 'core'
enterprises may prevent the situation from reaching the catastrophic
proportions of the 1990s.” http://www.forbes.com/2008/12/24/russia-layoffs-wages-cx_1225oxford.html?feed=rss_news
Japan suffers record fall in
industrial output
“Asian economies showed more signs that recession is deepening across the
world with Japan's industrial output falling at a record pace and South Korea
warning it faces an ‘unprecedented crisis’. The once unstoppable
Chinese economy is also feeling the strain, with companies recording a sharp
slowdown in profit growth in the first 11 months of the year.” http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/dec/26/recession-japan-china-south-korea
US News / Business / Economics
Fed Grants GMAC's Request to Become
Bank-Holding Company
“Several hurdles stood in the way of the approval -- including concerns
about GMAC's low capital levels and the role of its two major shareholders, neither
of which are banks. The firm is also in the midst of contentious efforts to
restructure $38 billion of debt, which faces a deadline on Friday.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123019110401633711.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Data center budgets to stay course in 2009?
“Now, 37.9 per cent of those 133 who were originally polled back in May
say that they have been asked to make changes to their budgets, while 62.1 per
cent have not been asked to change anything.” http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/12/24/afcom_it_budget_survey/
Refi[nance] madness
“Falling interest rates are fueling a mortgage refinance frenzy as
homeowners rush to reduce their housing payments. The average rate for a
30-year, fixed mortgage dropped to 5.08% last week, according to the Mortgage
Bankers Association, more than a full point lower than just a month ago.” http://money.cnn.com/2008/12/24/real_estate/when_to_refi/index.htm?postversion=2008122414
Technology & Science
Navy slashes energy use through variety of
projects “In
about five years, more than 10,000 Marines and their families will move from
Okinawa, Japan, to Guam on what promises to be the greenest military base in
the world. The Guam construction is one of dozens of high-profile
projects being undertaken by the Navy in a concerted effort to cut energy use
and decrease consumption of oil and other fossil fuels by harnessing solar
power, wind energy and even ocean temperatures.” http://www.federaltimes.com/index.php?S=3871808
Lighting's Eye-Popping Future
“The race is on to develop devices that do a better job of converting
electricity to light. Compact fluorescent bulbs have become a popular
alternative, but LEDs have the potential to be twice as efficient.” http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2009/0112/040.html?feed=rss_news
Smaller Companies Win NASA's Space Race
“NASA says the deal is a milestone for the agency as part of its effort
to encourage companies to get more involved in space transport and it was seen
as a major win for two relatively small firms that beat out the giants of the
space industry: Lockheed Martin of Bethesda and Boeing of Chicago.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/23/AR2008122302709.html?hpid=moreheadlines
End Notes
The News is brought
to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed Consulting,
LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT Management
Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"People are always blaming their circumstances for what they
are. I don't believe in circumstances. The people who get on in this world
are the people who get up and look for the circumstances they want, and, if
they can't find them, make them.”
– G.B. Shaw
Top Picks
Ice melting across globe at
accelerating rate, NASA says
“Between 1.5 trillion and 2 trillion tons of ice in Greenland, Antarctica
and Alaska has melted at an accelerating rate since 2003, according to NASA
scientists, in the latest signs of what they say is global warming.
This image shows the changing
rate of mass in mountain glaciers on the Gulf of Alaska. Using new satellite
technology that measures changes in mass in mountain glaciers and ice sheets,
NASA geophysicist Scott Luthcke concluded that the losses amounted to enough
water to fill the Chesapeake Bay 21 times.” http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/science/12/16/melting.ice/index.html
Corporate America still green-lighting green
IT
“Companies are bringing in fewer greenbacks these days, but that has yet
to slow their plans on green IT initiatives, according to a Forrester Research
report released Tuesday. In a survey of over 1,000 global companies, taken in
October when the markets were in a deep spiral, the survey found that greener
policies and practices for IT organizations actually were on the rise.” http://news.cnet.com/8301-11128_3-10124127-54.html
IT Audit / Internal Audit / Compliance
Madoff Gives Sad Twist to Holiday
Depression: Jane Bryant Quinn
“Why do people wind up with the Bernie Madoffs of this world? Because
they’ve neglected one of Ronald Reagan’s favorite sayings,
‘Trust, but verify.’ When it comes to Wall Street, I’m not
even sure about the ‘trust’ part, but ‘verify’ is where
wisdom begins.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601212&sid=audjsBOROA3w&refer=home
SEC investigating 'multiple
failures' in Madoff fraud case
“The federal Securities and Exchange Commission said Tuesday that
allegations against Bernard Madoff and his securities firm had
‘repeatedly’ been brought to the attention of SEC staff as early as
1999 but were not recommended to the commission for action.” http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/12/16/sec.madoff.investigation/index.html
IT Process Improvement / Quality Management
Wanted: A long-term data center
strategy
“Forty-two percent of the several hundred IT users at the session operate
three or more data centers in North America, according to an instant poll
conducted by Gartner. Forty-five percent are expanding or planning to expand
data centers in the next two years, while 43% are consolidating or planning to
consolidate in the next two years. (Twelve percent didn't know their companies'
plans).” http://www.itworld.com/server-and-data-center/59330/wanted-long-term-data-center-strategy
Economic trouble driving green IT
initiatives
“Economic recession is causing many companies to ramp up the speed of
green IT initiatives, while a much smaller number of companies have decided to
slow down their green activities. The lion's share of more than 1,000
companies surveyed by Forrester Research are not making any changes to their
green programs. Among those who will, however, the number of companies
accelerating green IT is twice as high as the number slowing down.” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/121708-economy-driving-green-technology.html
Security and Risk Management
The seven deadly sins of network
security
“…companies that suffer a major network breach have frequently
failed on a more fundamental level. Here are the deadly network security sins
experts say are rampant in the corporate world. Avoid these sins and you will
have taken a critical step toward a secure network.” http://www.itworld.com/security/59322/seven-deadly-sins-network-security
Hacking The Hill
The article is an interesting review of a security incident on October 26,
2006, followed by additional discussions of hackers and congressional systems. http://www.nextgov.com/nextgov/ng_20081219_7148.php
Human Error / Safety / Environment
The Planet Gets Cooler in '08.
What Happened to Global Warming?
“The 2008 climatological report: party cloudy. Or partly sunny — it
depends on your point of view, which underscores why it can be so easy to
misunderstand the mechanism of climate change. The World Meteorological
Organization (WMO) on Tuesday released its weather analysis for the year and
found that 2008 has been the coolest year since the turn of the century.” http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1866862,00.html
Climate change: 2008 is world's
10th hottest year
“The year 2008 is set to be the 10th warmest on record for the globe,
with a temperature 0.31°C above average. And Australia is on track for its
15th warmest year on record, with a temperature 0.37°C above average, according
to the World Meteorological Organisation.” http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24813289-601,00.html
GE Gets Climate Change. Do You? “Controls
on the emission of greenhouse gases will affect the price of energy and the
products, services and sectors that rely on that energy. In other words, it
will affect virtually all sectors of the economy to varying degrees. Some will
be disadvantaged, but others will be advantaged.” http://www.thestreet.com/story/10454323/1/hoffman-ge-gets-climate-change-do-you.html?cm_ven=GOOGLEFI
Second RGGI Auction Nets $106.5M
“More than 31.5 million carbon permits were sold in the second auction of
the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) Wednesday, raising some $106.5
million for energy efficiency programs in the 10 state region.” http://www.climatebiz.com/news/2008/12/19/second-rggi-auction-raises-1065m
Treasuries Fall Amid Automaker Rescue,
Concern Rally Overdone
“Treasuries fell, with most securities losing for the first time in seven
days, as General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC received $13.4 billion in short-
term loans and investors bet that government debt’s gains of more than
four percent this month were exaggerated.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aB5fJZA15O.8&refer=news
IBM Wants to Heat Homes with Data Center
Waste Heat
“IBM's Zurich Research Laboratory is attempting to counteract data
centers' wastefulness by reusing their waste heat. The lab's own data center
is cooling its servers with water that is used to heat a swimming pool in the
area. The data center is cooled with a novel water pump system that absorbs
heat from the computers. Excess heat is sold to the center's neighbors.” http://www.greenercomputing.com/blog/2008/12/19/heat-homes-data-center-heat
End Notes
The News is
brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at Pepperweed
Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a leader in IT
Management Consulting. For more information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145. Please
let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next issue
of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to others.
"Do
not let your fire go out, spark by irreplaceable spark, in the hopeless swamps
of the approximate, the not-quite, the not-yet, the not-at-all. Do not let the
hero in your soul perish, in lonely frustration for the life you deserved, but
have never been able to reach. Check your road and the nature of your battle. The
world you desired can be won. It exists, it is real, it is possible, it is
yours. ”
– Ayn Rand
Top Picks
The World's Most
Influential Companies “The core characteristics of influence are unchanged, whether
it's inspiring a loyal following, spawning big ideas, or building up mammoth
market share. What has changed is how players achieve it. A company's physical
assets are less important now than the force of its ideas.” http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/08_51/b4113043336126.htm?campaign_id=rss_null
[ This is a great article and the interview on this page is very interesting
too. ]
5 Myths About Our Sputtering Economy
“For months now, the nation's economic obituary has been splashed across
the front pages of nearly every newspaper in the country. Journalists and
pundits alike have warned that America's
long-running global dominance has come to a screeching halt, eclipsed by
growing markets in such places as China
and India
and frittered away by our own mismanagement, excesses and myopic approach to
the future. We're long past due for a reality check. The United States
and the incoming Obama administration face formidable challenges, but the
country is by no means on its last legs. Here are a few key myths that need to
be dispelled.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/12/AR2008121203364.html
Book and Product Recommendations
Visible Ops Security, Phase 4
“In Visible Ops Security, Kim, Love and Spafford exemplify the principles
of TQM as applied to integrating security into all business processes. In Phase
4, they start by recommending the formation of an Information Security
Oversight Committee (ISOC) which focuses on ‘whether information security
is meeting the needs of the business.’ In my own lectures to students at
the undergraduate and graduate level, I never fail to emphasize how important
it is that security must serve the strategic goals of the organization: we
don’t run the show!”
ITIL is Cultural Not Technical
“ITIL is a transformation rather than an implementation, i.e. the
cultural change of the people is the ultimate objective and the most important
part. Don't get fixated on processes or, worse still, technology. Make sure the
major spend is on people-change else failure or atrophy is the result.” http://www.itsmwatch.com/itil/article.php/3790896
InformationWeek Analytics: Tomorrow's DataCenter
“While data center architects have weathered much change over the past
decades, there's a transformation on the way bigger than anything we've yet
seen as data centers decisively move from business necessity to strategic
advantage. Meanwhile, IT is working to understand how trends--including
virtualization, cloud computing, escalating power densities and equipment
weight, and new environmental awareness--will mesh with explosive growth in
demand, even as the cost of traditional models escalates out of control,
consolidation projects notwithstanding.” http://www.informationweek.com/news/hardware/data_centers/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=212400439&subSection=All+Stories
Security and Risk Management
DHS Cyber-Security Too Blase About Citizen Info, Panel Says
“The government's latest cyber-security efforts are too wrapped in
secrecy and its privacy assessments downplay citizens' interest in the privacy
of their IP addresses, a government commission reported Monday. At issue
is a Homeland Security anti-hacking system known as EINSTEIN, software which
monitors traffic into and out of government networks in order to detect
abnormal use.” http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2008/12/dhs-cyber-secur.html
Symantec and HP Lose Employees' Personal Information
“According to security breach notices received by the Office of the
Attorney General in Maryland,
recent incidents at both Symantec and HP compromised the personal information
of a number of employees. This was the result of two laptops containing
sensitive, though unencrypted data, being stolen.” http://news.softpedia.com/news/Symantec-and-HP-Lose-Employees-039-Personal-Information-99968.shtml
[ Given that both sell security software it just further highlights how
security is a blend of people, process and technology. ]
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Just a third of U.S. adults got flu shots
“Fewer than a third of U.S.
adults have received a flu vaccine so far this year and only about half said
they intended to get one, according to a survey released on Wednesday.” http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSTRE4BA0UL20081211
Fitch: Negative outlook for health care
“Hospitals and other healthcare industries will have a very difficult
operating environment in 2009, Fitch Ratings predicts. Weaker demand will
be associated with the global economic recession and a U.S.
governmental focus on reducing the consumer burden of health care spending, the
company reports in its 2009 outlook for the healthcare sector.” http://www.bizjournals.com/orlando/stories/2008/12/08/daily52.html
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Drought parches much of the U.S., may get worse
“The value of water is starting to become apparent in America. Over the past three years
a drought has affected large swaths of the country, and conflicts over water
usage may become commonplace in the future, climatologists say.” http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/science/12/11/drought.problem/index.html
Concern for Climate Change Defines Energy Dept. Nominee
“The man tapped to be the next secretary of energy, Nobel Prize-winning
physicist Steven Chu, recently compared the danger of climate change to a
problem with electrical wiring in a house.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2008/12/12/ST2008121200098.html
Next Climate Summit
May Turn on Rich Nations' Approach to Poor Ones
“Poor nations had hoped to strike a deal in which some of the money
raised by auctioning international pollution allowances in the next few years
would go toward this effort, but industrialized countries resisted. While this
sparked a slew of impassioned speeches in the closing hours of the two-week
conference, it also underscored that a future global warming agreement will
depend in large part on the extent to which developed nations address the needs
of vulnerable countries and emerging nations that have become a growing source
of the greenhouse gases responsible for human-induced climate change. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/13/AR2008121301913.html?hpid=sec-nation
Global News / Business / Economics
EU split on rescue plan
“EU member nations squabbled over how to rescue their economies from the
credit crisis and recession as U.S. Republican senators opposed a bailout of
the U.S.
auto industry and the dollar entered rocky territory.” http://uk.reuters.com/article/wtMostRead/idUKTRE4B93IV20081211
Global economy rebalancing the hard way
“The credit crisis is accomplishing something that years of scolding
failed to do: curbing U.S.
consumption and paring the piles of excess cash amassed in China and oil exporting
countries. While economists have long argued that such a rebalancing was
badly needed to safeguard global growth, it is happening so fast that it
threatens to deepen the downturn.” http://www.reuters.com/article/reutersEdge/idUSTRE4BB01K20081212
Falling apart “Just how worrying are the figures,
published on Wednesday December 10th, showing that China’s exports and imports
plunged in November? Exports fell by 2.2% last month from a year ago; imports
plummeted by an astonishing 17.9%. One analyst sums up the news as ‘a
shock figure.’” http://www.economist.com/finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=12758009
Huge U.K.
data center gets green light “The Saunderton campus will be
built to Tier IV specification and will deliver 100MW (megawatts) of power from
two separate grid points from Scottish and Southern Energy, apparently making
it the only one of its kind in the U.K.” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/121008-huge-uk-data-centre-gets.html
IBM, Dell, Intel stand out in Ceres study of climate change
policies
“Reducing emissions of carbon dioxide, the primary greenhouse gas
associated with global warming, has become a priority for many businesses as
expectations grow that under Barack Obama the US will eventually adopt a system
that attaches a cost to carbon.” http://www.news.com.au/technology/story/0,28348,24789272-5014239,00.html
The Ceres Report is at: http://www.ceres.org/Page.aspx?pid=1002
Fostering
Innovation
“Learn how different types of innovation can promote growth and long-term
stability in the articles and podcasts below. Our global chief executive
officer (CEO) and leaders of the DeloitteCenter for Edge
Innovation, which explores emerging opportunities on the edge of business and
technology, discuss how companies can generate and foster fresh ideas to become
industry leaders and shapers. In addition, learn how Deloitte has enabled
innovation for the benefit of our people, clients and communities.” http://www.deloitte.com/dtt/article/0,1002,sid=26562&cid=237338,00.html?WT.mc_id=us_Themme_Innovation_1208
U-M saves energy,
cash with green computing
“Spurred into action by a phone call from Google cofounder Larry Page,
the University of Michigan is on its way to becoming a leader in green
computing, hoping to save money and the environment.” http://www.freep.com/article/20081130/BUSINESS06/811300404
OMG to Acquire
Green Computing Impact Organization (GCIO)
“Prior to the merger, GCIO and OMG already had a relationship for work on
OMG's proposed Green Computing Maturity Model(TM) (GCMM(TM)). GCMM will be a
formal industry standard way to define, assess and monitor the sustainability
of an organization across all aspects of the business. GCMM looks at all facets
of the business such as facility management, corporate procurement / supply
chain, governance, business processes, business operations and business data
and provides a means for companies to model and measure their
‘green’ maturity.” http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/OMG-Acquire-Green-Computing-Impact/story.aspx?guid={F8DC0A66-A887-4DB0-BB92-E82DAF3CFCCA}
Another Week, Another
Financial Drama
“What a week: Detroit flirted with the precipice, the feds fingered a
lion of Wall Street in a $50 billion Ponzi scheme, news giant Tribune slouched
into bankruptcy, investors loaned Uncle Sam $30 billion—interest free. And
then there was Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich, arrested on charges of trying
to shake down Sam Zell and auction off President-elect Barack Obama's Senate
seat.” http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/content/dec2008/db20081212_597566.htm?campaign_id=rss_daily
Using a Geothermal
System to Cool Your DataCenter
“Energy and cost savings of geothermal heat pumps will vary by region and
type of conventional system to which they're connected. While the initial cost
of installing a geothermal system is higher than traditional heating and
cooling methods, the long term benefits and cost savings, not to mention the
efficiency of a geothermal system, can be quickly realized in a short timeframe.
“ http://datacenterjournal.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2318
Microsoft's
Generation 4 DataCenter Vision - the
Architects' Perspective “The goal of Gen 4 is to modularize not only the
server and storage components, which a number of companies are already doing, but
also to modularize the infrastructure, namely the electrical and mechanical
systems. The real innovation is around the commonality, manufacturing, supply
chain and integration of these modules to provide a plug-and-play
infrastructure along with modularized server environments.” http://blogs.technet.com/msdatacenters/
Smart Energy
Solutions: 'Free' Money for Taking Charge of Your Power
“Operating energy-efficient buildings and generating power using
alternative, low-emission or clean technology may be highly desirable, but in
the wide world of building construction, they still represent a niche. An
expensive niche, at that. But there are a number of ways that businesses can
lower their facilities' energy footprints while also saving money. Here's an
overview on how.” http://www.greenerbuildings.com/feature/2008/12/11/smart-energy-solutions-free-money?page=0%2C0
End Notes
The News is brought to you by George Spafford,
Principal Consultant at Pepperweed Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is
nationally recognized as a leader in IT Management Consulting. For more
information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call
888-229-0145. Please let us know if you see stories you think should be included
in the next issue of The News, and feel free to forward this email on to
others.
"Never
give in, never give in, never, never, never, never, in nothing, great or small,
large or petty, never give in except to convictions of honor and good sense. ” – Winston Churchill
It'll Be a Good Year for Green IT, IDC Predicts
“Global economic worries -- and a slowdown in overall IT spending -- will
actually help spur adoption of energy-efficient technologies and other green IT
strategies, according to a new report from IDC.” http://greenercomputing.com/news/2008/12/05/2009-will-be-a-good-year-green-it-idc
Microsoft trying to blow the roof off data-center design
“The company envisions a set of prefabricated containers the size of a
semi-trailer filled with as many as 2,000 preconfigured servers. The containers
can be parked next to and plugged into pre-built mechanical, electrical, cooling
and security components. In essence, it is a giant collection of boxes and
pluggable components that can grow and shrink based on need.” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/120408-microsoft-data-center-future.html?t51hb&hpg1=mp
Economic Meltdown: Green IT's Best Friend
“Sometimes bad news can be good news: The economic meltdown may be the
best thing that ever happened to Green IT. I recently interviewed Dr. Albert
Esser, Vice President of Data Center Infrastructure at Dell, and Dell's
resident green guru, and he explains why tough times can be good for greening
the data center.” http://www.greenercomputing.com/blog/2008/12/05/economic-meltdown-green-its-best-friend
Book and Product Recommendations
Visible Ops Security, Phase 3
“Today
I'm reviewing their chapter entitled, ‘Phase 3: Implement Development and
Release Controls,’ which the authors introduce as follows: ‘we move
upstream to the development and release management processes, as well as to the
internal audit and project management processes. We will involve stakeholders
from development, project management, and release management so they get
involved earlier with projects and we will also work with change management,
purchasing, and accounting to maintain accurate situational awareness. We will
define the model for engaging with individual project groups when there are
information security relevant tasks that we can help with.’” http://www.networkworld.com/newsletters/sec/2008/120108sec1.html?hpg1=bn
Dr. Goldratt’s New Book – “The Choice”
Dr. Goldratt has a discussion with his daughter about his philosophy on life. I
purchased my copy at the recent TOCICO show in Las Vegas after hearing him talk about some
of it. At this point, I have only had time to skim it and find it very
interesting . Eliyahu is a remarkable man and people looking for unique
insights as to what he is thinking should buy his new book.
Keeping the Lights On … Literally
“In addition to cost concerns, some data centers managers are finding
they can’t even get additional power from their utility and are
essentially constrained to operate within the limits of the power feeds they
currently have. Combine the two and you can readily see that unless power
demands are managed, IT will be limited in terms of supporting the
business.” http://www.cioupdate.com/features/article.php/3788281/Keeping-the-Lights-On--Literally.htm
Cost of Power in Large-Scale Data Centers “…it turns out that power
alone itself isn’t anywhere close to the most significant a cost.
Let’s look at this more deeply. If you amortize power distribution and cooling
systems infrastructure over 15 years and amortize server costs over 3 years,
you can get a fair comparative picture of how server costs compare to
infrastructure (power distribution and cooling). But how to compare the
capital costs of server, and power and cooling infrastructure with that
monthly bill for power?” http://perspectives.mvdirona.com/2008/11/28/CostOfPowerInLargeScaleDataCenters.aspx
[Great
post by James Hamilton of MS Data Center Futures!]
Dell applies its own data center lessons to new green IT
services “Rather than overhauling the entire
thing, an investment strategy that would be hard to support at any company
right now, the company is encouraging businesses to embrace an endless cycle of
three-year refreshes. And it is using its own experiences in improving data
center productivity to shape a new set of services, according to Albert Esser,
vice president of Dell’s Data Center Infrastructure Group.” http://blogs.zdnet.com/green/?p=1509
Guidelines on How to Plan a Next-GenDataCenter
“At the Gartner Data Center Conference Dec. 2 at the MGM Grand Hotel,
Gartner research vice-presidents Donna Scott and Paul McGuckin offered their
perspectives on what factors and best practices should be considered in
developing a data center strategy and architecture -- while balancing risk,
cost, quality and agility.” http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Data-Storage/Guidelines-on-How-to-Plan-a-NextGen-Data-Center/
ITSM for the Real World
Check out Shane Carlson’s blog on ITSM. His current piece is entitled “Brother,
could you spare some CHANGE? (Managing Cultural Change” http://itsmfortherealworld.wordpress.com/
Google opts out of grant for North Carolina data center
“Google Inc. has opted not to take a $4.7 million state grant to build a
data center in the town of Lenoir,
N.C. – a sign the company may be slowing down its expansion in the state.” http://www.bizjournals.com/sanjose/stories/2008/12/01/daily76.html
[Given
US-Chinese info war spats, is it really safe for a US organization to use a Chinese
infosec tool?
Embedding a Culture of Information Security
“This programme is now available to view on egovtv.tv, the online
television channel for public service modernisation. An interview with Dr
Louise Bennett, Chair of the Security Forum Panel for the British Computing
Society, explores the issue of information security which extends from preventing
data loss to cyber bullying and ensuring teachers are not slandered on
line.” http://www.publicnet.co.uk/abstracts/2008/12/01/embedding-a-culture-of-information-security/
Is there no end to the AutoRun madness?
“Let’s skip any introduction and get straight to the point:
We’re currently facing a problem of epidemic proportions in malware that
is spreading via removable devices.” http://blogs.zdnet.com/security/?p=2235&tag=nl.e550
You are the weakest link
“Human error continues to be the primary cause of information technology (IT)
security breaches. In fact, the UK Government has faced repeated embarrassments
over lost data, with over 270 data breaches being reported over the past year
alone.” http://www.securitypark.co.uk/security_article262361.html
The myth of cloud computing “Though many companies don't
understand the precise workings of the technology, many at least acknowledge
that there's a security challenge to address. Michele Perry, CMO for security
vendor Sourcefire, maker of the popular Snort open-source IDS tool, says customers
are expressing concern that they have no way to proactively track or identify
new virtual systems within their environments.” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9121923&source=rss_topic17
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Doctors ditch drug samples to avoid influencing treatment
“Who doesn't like freebies, especially when it comes to pricey pills?
But free medication samples, which at first glance look like a win-win-win
situation for manufacturers, doctors and patients, can have hidden
costs.” http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2008-11-30-drug-samples_N.htm
Climate change juggernaut on the horizon, UN talks told
“War, hunger, poverty and sickness will stalk humanity if the world fails
to tackle climate change, a 12-day UN conference on global warming heard on
Monday. A volley of grim warnings sounded out at the start of the marathon
talks, a step to a new worldwide treaty to reduce greenhouse gases and help
countries exposed to the wrath of an altered climate.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gTCW-1nX1C78iJTnQTIg3lI-ROwA http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,3837985,00.html
Climate change is old news: Scientists predicted global
warming more than a century ago
“Irish scientist John Tyndall first speculated that human-induced global
warming might be possible back in 1861 and Nobel Prize-winning chemist Svante
Arrhennius had confirmed climate change (with laborious pencil and paper
calculations rather than the shortcut of computers) by the end of the 19th
century.” http://www.sciam.com/blog/60-second-science/post.cfm?id=climate-change-is-old-news-scientis-2008-12-04
Global News / Business / Economics
China to grow 10 percent in 2009 despite global
crisis: government economist
“The main reason is China's
ability to provide its own growth momentum, Xinhua news agency reported, citing
Zhang Liqun, an economist with the Development Research Centre, a cabinet think
tank.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5j1AxLTFbgoJdHBrkxNYUHTy2r5xA
Nine Perplexing Phenomena About China’s Economy
“I would not venture to present a panoramic view of China’s economic situation (which
is impossible for one article anyway). Instead, I will simply list nine visible
phenomena in China’s
economy, mostly paradoxical and unheard of in other economic systems, hoping to
shed some light on an extremely complicated subject.” http://en.epochtimes.com/n2/opinion/china-economy-7869.html
World economy 'weakest since 30s'
“The United Nations says the world economy faces its worst downturn since
the Great Depression. It expects world economic output to shrink by as much as
0.4% in 2009, due to a slump among developed countries - particularly the US and in Europe. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7757506.stm
China, US pledge $20bn trade aid
“China and the US
have pledged $20bn (£13.6bn) to help finance global trade, as part of efforts
to boost the faltering world economy. The money will be made available to
importers, including those in developing countries, who have found it difficult
to get credit to buy goods.” http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7766333.stm
U.S. job losses worst since 1974 as downturn deepens
“U.S.
employers axed payrolls by 533,000 jobs in November, the most in 34 years, as
the year-old recession hammered the economy and hardened calls for dramatic
government action to turn the tide.” http://www.reuters.com/article/vcCandidateFeed2/idUSTRE4B437520081205
Maybe It's Time to
Buy
“Even though they have fallen about 25 percent and 45 percent, respectively,
from their peaks, houses and stocks could well fall further, possibly much
further. That's what happens when bubbles deflate -- things can fall into a
reasonable-value zone, then keep falling until they're unreasonably low. It's
the other side of an inflating bubble, during which prices can keep rising even
after they're unreasonably high.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/06/AR2008120600134.html?wprss=rss_business
Gartner's Top 10 disruptive
data-center technologies
“A new computing fabric to replace today's blade servers and a ‘pod’
approach to building data centers are two of the most disruptive technologies
that will affect the enterprise data center in the next few years, Gartner said
at its annual data center conference Wednesday.” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/120408-gartner-top-10-disruptive-technologies.html
Data Centers
Confront Energy Costs
“The energy-guzzling, ever-expanding data center is in need of a makeover.
In the past, the most important priorities of the data center have been speed, reliability
and uptime. Energy efficiency was not a top priority. Today, data centers are
facing soaring energy prices, coupled with increased energy consumption due to
increases in server processing power Relevant Products/Services and a greater
demand for cooling.” http://www.cio-today.com/news/Data-Centers-Confront-Energy-Costs/story.xhtml?story_id=010000NNRG56
Study: Two-Thirds
of Data Centers Face Critical Power Shortages
“Going green with a data center is no longer merely good public relations,
or just a money-saving project. It's about to become imperative for a
corporation's survival. That's the inescapable conclusion, when you consider a
recent study that discovered that unless data centers figure out a solution to
their energy problems, nearly two-thirds of them will run out of power capacity
by 2011.” http://www.climatebiz.com/blog/2008/12/04/study-two-thirds-data-centers-face-critical-power-shortages
The News is brought to you by George Spafford,
Principal Consultant at Pepperweed Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is
nationally recognized as a leader in IT Management Consulting. For more
information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call
888-229-0145. Please let us know if you see stories you think should be
included in the next issue of The News, and feel free to forward this email on
to others.
"I
am not judged by the number of times I fail, but by the number of times I
succeed: and the number of times I succeed is in direct proportion to the
number of times I fail and keep trying.” – Tom Hopkins
Top Picks
New Webinar: Governing IT in a Green World “IT is a key stakeholder in the
definition of an organization's green strategy and therefore must work to support
the strategy. In order to do this, IT must be aware of the issues facing the
organization and then come up with measures that make business sense. This
webcast will cover a number of high-level topics for environmentally conscious
organizations to consider. You'll understand the risks facing IT, such as
skyrocketing energy costs, Global warming and the potential for new regulations
and learn about developing and implementing "green" strategies in IT,
including how IT can help the organization and what approaches are relevant to
IT.” http://solutions.internet.com/5341_default
Saving Green by Being Really Green
“Green Computing is about 80 percent process, followed by another 20
percent of random product upgrades related to eliminating obsolete equipment
that already costs more to own than its worth. Unfortunately, too many
companies have not taken the time to develop a real green plan. A survey by
Forrester Research found that 20 percent of the companies polled said they did
not have any overall approach to a green computing strategy, while another 35
percent of those surveyed said their company was considering one.” http://blogs.eweek.com/masked_intentions/content/green_computing/saving_green_by_being_really_green.html
[
It’s no surprise really – organizations need a plan and processes
that support the attainment and protection of objectives. ]
Book and Product Recommendations
George’s New Book: The Governance of Green IT “The economy and environment have
combined to create quite a challenge. On one hand, there is a push to reduce
capital investment and operating expenses. On the other, organizations are
implementing green strategies to reduce the environmental impacts. Within this
context, information technology is struggling to provide services that support
the organization. To sustain support, IT must implement processes to ensure
proper value creation and protection of organizational goals. To this end, this
book sets forth a Green IT process that will enable value creation and protection
in the areas of data center power and cooling.”
Visible Ops Security, Phase 2
“Today I’m reviewing their chapter entitled, ‘Phase 2: Find
Business Risks and Fix Fragile Artifacts.’ Read the latest WhitePaper -
Securing endpoints by unifying essential components in a single agentThe
chapter begins with a summary explaining that with infinite risks and finite
resources and time, we have to focus our attention on securing critical areas
of the business.” http://www.networkworld.com/newsletters/sec/2008/112408sec1.html?hpg1=bn
Psystar case reveals Apple's questionable policy on email
retention
“According to a recent legal filing (see page 7, below) in the Psystar vs
Apple antitrust case, Apple employees are responsible for maintaining their own
documents such as emails, memos, and voicemails. In other words, there is no
company-wide policy for archiving, saving, or deleting these documents.” http://www.thestandard.com/news/2008/11/19/filing-apple-employees-responsible-own-lawsuit-record-keeping
Julia Allen sent in the following resources for e-Discovery:
Green data center site selection: Cost versus sustainability
“Over the past two years, SearchDataCenter.com has published articles on the
cheapest places in the U.S.
to operate a data center. The data center site selection reports from 2006 and
2007 consistently rank states in the Midwest
and the South as low-cost options for data center locations. A reader recently
pointed out that we write a lot about green data centers, and that these lists
of data center locations are easy on the finances, but hard on the
planet.” http://itknowledgeexchange.techtarget.com/data-center-facilities/green-data-center-site-selection-cost-versus-sustainability/
How I'm Moving My DataCenter into The Cloud “The service will cost about
US$16,000 per month for the whole kit-and-kaboodle. That compares favorably to
the $210,000 Preferred was going to have to pay to refresh its aging Dell
servers this year, plus $10,000 per month in co-location and bandwidth fees,
Swartz says.” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/112408-how-im-moving-my-data.html
Demand for Storm crashes ordering system
“While Verizon expected the BlackBerry Storm to be a hot-ticket item, it
probably didn't anticipate that demand for the device would crash its online
ordering portal. But on Friday afternoon, Verizon stores were unable to
process any more orders for the Storm, because high traffic apparently had
overloaded the system with ordering requests. A representative at the Verizon
Wireless store in Framingham,
Mass., said that the outage hit
his branch at around 3 p.m. on Friday, with service returning one hour
later.” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/112108-blackberry-storm-demand.html?t51hb
[Poor
capacity planning on their part.]
Why the Midwest can be a
data center haven
“The Midwest is the dark horse of
information technology and the veil is being lifted as to how much of a
catalyst the region can be for high tech. A mix of plentiful, inexpensive power
combined with multiple renewable energy sources, a highly educated workforce,
and excellent quality of life make the Midwest
an attractive destination for IT businesses to locate.”
Microsoft Won’t Go It Alone in Massive DataCenter
Project “BusinessWeek points out that
Microsoft has been sharing news and ideas around its data center build-out
strategy for more than a year with its industry partners (or at least with
Dell, which went on record to pat Microsoft’s back). During that time,
Google has been pursuing a much more closed strategy, from the level of the
individual machine on up to the overarching strategy.” http://www.itbusinessedge.com/blogs/msh/?p=229
Security and Risk Management
The role of an Information Security Council
“One of the more vexing challenges that financial services firms often
face within their information security programs is obtaining sufficient input
and participation from different areas within the organisation. This can be
particularly troublesome when addressing complex security issues and attempting
to set policy.” http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com.au/articles/27840-The-role-of-an-Information-Security-Council
Cyber-attack on Defense Department computers raises concerns
“Reporting from Washington -- Senior military leaders took the
exceptional step of briefing President Bush this week on a severe and
widespread electronic attack on Defense Department computers that may have
originated in Russia -- an incursion that posed unusual concern among
commanders and raised potential implications for national security.” http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/iraq/complete/la-na-cyberattack28-2008nov28,0,230046.story
Symantec Study Reveals Hackers, Online Crooks to Be Big and
Rich
“You hear about it on the news every day -- criminals and profiteers have
made the internet into a war zone. From bank intrusions, to assaults by
massive botnets, to coordinated attacks by foreign nationalists, there seems to
be no end in sight to cybercrime.” http://www.dailytech.com/Symantec+Study+Reveals+Hackers+Online+Crooks+to+Be+Big+and+Rich/article13510.htm
Report Sounds Alarm Over Bioterror
“Seven years after the 2001 anthrax attacks, a congressionally ordered
study finds a growing threat of biological terrorism and calls for aggressive
defenses on par with those used to prevent a terrorist nuclear detonation. Due
for release next week, a draft of the study warns that future bioterrorists may
use new technology to make synthetic versions of killers such as Ebola, or
genetically modified germs designed to resist ordinary vaccines and
antibiotics.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/29/AR2008112901921.html?nav=rss_nation/nationalsecurity
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Financial Crisis Hits Health Care Companies
“While in past periods of economic weakness health care was fairly
resistant to downturns, given the increased influence of managed care and
higher amount of cost sharing in the form of co-pays and deductibles, this
appears to be less the case now. These factors have begun to ripple through the
health care system, impacting hospital, medical equipment, and managed health
care companies.” http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/nov2008/pi20081126_889656.htm
Discount healthcare? “With growing numbers of people
looking for healthcare solutions in these tough economic times, insurers are
starting to offer low-cost options for those who can't afford full insurance.” http://www.miamiherald.com/business/story/793195.html
U.S. 'Not Getting What We Pay For'
“A high-performance 21st-century health system, they say, must revolve
around the central goal of paying for results. That will entail managing
chronic illnesses better, adopting electronic medical records, coordinating
care, researching what treatments work best, realigning financial incentives to
reward success, encouraging prevention strategies and, most daunting but
perhaps most important, saying no to expensive, unproven therapies.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/29/AR2008112902182.html?nav=rss_business
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Carbon dioxide levels already a danger
“A team of international scientists led by Dr James Hansen, director of
NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, say that carbon dioxide (CO2)
levels are already in the danger zone. Concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere
currently stand at 385 parts per million (ppm) and are rising at a rate of two
ppm per year. This is enough, say the scientists, to encourage dangerous
changes to the Earth's climate.” http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/science/11/21/climate.danger.zone/index.html
Global Warming Predictions Are Overestimated, Suggests Study
On Black Carbon “A new Cornell study, published
online in Nature Geosciences, quantified the amount of black carbon in Australian
soils and found that there was far more than expected, said Johannes Lehmann,
the paper's lead author and a Cornell professor of biogeochemistry. The survey
was the largest of black carbon ever published.” http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/11/081119120155.htm
Warming to Global Warming
“The negative effects of global warming have been well-documented by
activist politicians and scientists such as Al Gore and David Suzuki, but the
positive effects have so far received less attention. But a group of
global-warming experts, made up mainly of university economists and
anthropologists, is pushing the notion that global warming might not be an
unmitigated disaster, especially for certain northerly regions, such as Canada,
Russia and Scandinavia.” http://www.canada.com/topics/news/world/story.html?id=cff56e4b-5273-456c-9f31-5d3081e9aa3a
World Bank forecasts China economy to slow to 19-year
low in 2009
“The World Bank said Tuesday China's economy will grow by just 7.5
percent in 2009, the lowest level in 19 years, as global markets for the
nation's once seemingly unstoppable export machine dry up.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iAc8Ke4N1KDRdm5tLnSdKkwz370w
Global slowdown has bigger impact on China economy,
vice premier says “Zhang, who aims to learn about
performance of the industrial sector during the trip, urged the local officials
to give strong support to key enterprises and sectors and also small and
medium-sized enterprises and labor-intensive businesses. China's annual
economic growth rate slowed sharply to 9 percent in the third quarter, from
10.4 percent in the first half, because of slower growth in exports and
property investment.” http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-11/24/content_10406654.htm
OPEC Defers Decision on Output Cut, Seeks $75 Oil
“Crude has dropped 62 percent from July’s record of $147.27 a
barrel as the global recession erodes sales. Ali al-Naimi, the oil minister of Saudi Arabia,
OPEC’s largest exporter and its de facto leader, said yesterday that $75
a barrel represents a ‘fair price’ needed to support investment in
new fields.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&refer=home&sid=agy4Bz_cusnY
Nations Spend in Tandem To Stall Global Recession
“In a bid to jump-start the beleaguered global economy, countries around
the world are introducing massive public spending programs aimed at creating
millions of jobs, boosting the use of green energy and modernizing
infrastructure in a way that could transform urban and rural landscapes.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/28/AR2008112802660.html?nav=rss_business/economy
US News / Business / Economics
The cold evidence
of Cisco's hiring freeze
“Cisco's total number of job listings plummeted 93% in the last week,
according to Aaran Rakers, an analyst at Wachovia Capital Markets who tracks
job listings at the networking giant. The forecast, made in the World Bank's
quarterly update on China,
is down from a previous estimate of 9.2 percent, and would be the fourth lowest
growth rate in the country since the launch of reforms three decades
ago.” http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/35578?t51hb
Job Cuts, Factory
Slump Probably Worsened: U.S.
Economy Preview
“The recession engulfing the U.S. economy deepened this month as
employers slashed more jobs and manufacturing contracted at the fastest pace in
a quarter century, economists said before reports this week.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a53lCMziEuFg&refer=home
And Then There Was
One
“But Detroit
actually has parts worth saving. Melding them into a single entity could buff
up its best brands, like Chevy, Ford and Cadillac, while leaving the clunkers
(Pontiac, Mercury, Saturn, et al.) by the side of the road. It would take a
healthy dose of Nietzsche's ‘creative destruction,’ but that's
preferable to total destruction, especially when you're talking about an
industry that supports 2.5 million jobs.”
Probing the cosmos:
Is anybody out there?
“From a remote valley in Northern California,
Jill Tarter is listening to the universe. Her ears are 42 large and
sophisticated radio telescopes, spread across several acres, that scan the
cosmos for signals of extraterrestrial origin.” http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/space/11/26/aliens.tarter/index.html
Do We Overrate
Basic Research?
“The globalization of science and technology research, Mr. Bhidé added,
should actually work to the advantage of the United
States economy, so long as America remains the best place to
commercialize inventions. As the rest of the world becomes a richer source of
inventions, there is less need for the United States to come up with such
a large share itself — and policy, he says, should reflect that reality.”
The News is brought to you by George Spafford, Principal Consultant at
Pepperweed Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is nationally recognized as a
leader in IT Management Consulting. For more information, check out our
website at www.pepperweed.com or call
888-229-0145. Please let us know if you see stories you think should be
included in the next issue of The News, and feel free to forward this email on
to others.
"Nothing
in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is
more common than unsuccessful people with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded
genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated
derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent. The slogan
"press on" has solved and always will solve the problems of the human
race””
– Calvin Coolidge
Top Picks
New Webinar: Governing IT in a Green World “IT is a key stakeholder in the
definition of an organization's green strategy and therefore must work to
support the strategy. In order to do this, IT must be aware of the issues
facing the organization and then come up with measures that make business
sense. This webcast will cover a number of high-level topics for
environmentally conscious organizations to consider. You'll understand the
risks facing IT, such as skyrocketing energy costs, Global warming and the potential
for new regulations and learn about developing and implementing
"green" strategies in IT, including how IT can help the organization
and what approaches are relevant to IT.” http://solutions.internet.com/5341_default
Energy Versus Water: Is Blue the New Green?
“There is a growing recognition that there are two convergent crises
facing the world: energy and water. Scientific American launched a dedicated
environmental publication this month, Earth 3.0, with the cover story Energy Vs
Water. The article explores the dichotomy between the fact that we need energy
to produce water and we need water to produce energy.” http://cleantechnica.com/2008/11/10/energy-versus-water-is-blue-the-new-green/
[A
forthcoming water shortage is all but inevitable and needs management.]
Economy, not rights, rules the new China-US world
“China now owns over
half-a-trillion dollars in U.S.
government bonds, more than any other country, and Washington
needs Beijing
to continue buying them to help finance the national debt and the $700 billion
financial industry bailout. And while China's economy is heavily
dependent on exports to the U.S., it is also a growing market for U.S.
products, making trade retaliation — long a threat wielded solely by
Washington — more of a two-way street.” http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5j2ZxyVtR_dPyd75yfIAMpV4QNXOgD94K3EE00
The Global Economy's Big Fear Becomes Real: Deflation “At the core of the mounting
concerns about deflation is this: the global financial system is going through
a vicious process of deleveraging. Financial institutions are reducing debt and
raising capital, either directly from governments or from private-sector
sources. By desperately trying to rebuild their battered balance sheets and
regain some semblance of investor confidence, banks and investment banks are
not doing much lending.” http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1861105,00.html?imw=Y
[Definitely
read this article.]
Book and Product Recommendations
George’s New Book: The Governance of Green IT
“The
economy and environment have combined to create quite a challenge. On one hand,
there is a push to reduce capital investment and operating expenses. On the other,
organizations are implementing green strategies to reduce the environmental
impacts. Within this context, information technology is struggling to provide
services that support the organization. To sustain support, IT must
implement processes to ensure proper value creation and protection of
organizational goals. To this end, this book sets forth a Green IT process that
will enable value creation and protection in the areas of data center power and
cooling.”
US Page: http://www.itgovernanceusa.com/product/1827.aspx
International Page: http://www.itgovernance.co.uk/products/2106
Visible Ops Security, Phase 1
Dr. Mich Kabay continues his review of VOS: “Phase 1 provides a
chilling reminder of how badly information assurance implementation can go
wrong.”
Dan's Resource Email List
Leading resources covering subjects such governance, leadership, risk
management, compliance, control, internal audit, IT security, project mgmt, and
numerous others. http://ca.groups.yahoo.com/group/DansResource_EmailList/
IT Process Improvement / Quality Management
Green Grid Proposes a 'Miles-per-Gallon' Metric for Data
Centers
“Speaking to BusinessGreen.com, Green Grid director Jim Pappas said that having
successfully launched a measure for assessing the efficiency of data center
cooling and power supply units in the form of its Power Usage Effectiveness
(PUE) metric the consortium is now working on standards for measuring the
efficiency of the IT equipment itself.” http://greenercomputing.com/news/2008/11/17/green-grid-proposes-mpg-metric-data-centers
Understanding the Green SPECpower Benchmark
“In the middle of this year, the Standard Performance Evaluation Council
(SPEC) released the final version of the SPECpower_ssj2008 benchmark --- a new
suite of tests that details power and performance in a single number. SPEC is a
vendor-neutral industry council that has a long tradition of coming up with
impartial benchmarks and strict compliance constraints that prevent vendors
from monkeying with their systems to inflate or otherwise game their
results.” http://greenercomputing.com/blog/2008/10/28/understanding-green-specpower-benchmark
The SPECpower_ssj2008 benchmark web page is: http://www.spec.org/power_ssj2008/
Hidden Risks of Virtualization
Michael Lohr of Tripwire blogs about why virtualized systems still need change
management. http://www.tripwire.com/blog/?p=200
Experts see data
center through green lens
“It might surprise some CIOs how inefficient data centers still are when
it comes to energy consumption, as many look and operate the same as they have
for years, said Ruth Harenchar, vice president of Consulting Services at
TechnoDyne, a privately held strategic technology consultant.” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/111708-experts-see-data-center-through.html?hpg1=bn
Pitfalls of data center consolidation and relocation
“No C-level executive, whether it's the CIO or CFO, wants to invest in
his company's data center, especially not now, when the economy is executing an
almost perfect swan dive into an Olympic-size recessionary pool. But an
optimally (or even an adequately) functioning data center is not a luxury; it's
a business necessity. If it ain't right, it's got to be fixed.” http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&taxonomyId=14&articleId=9120860&intsrc=hm_topic
Security and Risk Management
GTISC’s “Emerging Cyber Threats Report for
2009”
“GTISC
research and advance interviews with key information security experts from
government, industry and academia uncovered five specific trends and some
profound questions that will drive threats and countermeasures in 2009 and
beyond, including: Malware, Botnets, Cyber warfare, Threats to VoIP and mobile
devices, and the evolving cyber crime economy.” http://www.gtiscsecuritysummit.com/pdf/CyberThreatsReport2009.pdf
A Wealth of Data, and Nobody in Charge
“It's not unreasonable to ask why privacy protection cannot be simply
added to the responsibilities of information-technology departments. After all,
the siphoning of personal information from online databases looms as a common
threat, and educational institutions regularly appear on lists that track
security lapses around the country. More than a dozen data breaches in higher
education are reported each month, according to Educational Security Incidents
(http://www.adamdodge.com/esi) an online catalog compiled by Adam Dodge,
assistant director of information security at EasternIllinoisUniversity.” http://chronicle.com/free/v55/i13/13a00103.htm
Express Scripts data breach is bitter medicine
“Express Scripts is one of the nation’s largest pharmacy benefits
managers. The company, with headquarters in St. LouisCounty,
handles approximately 500 million prescriptions per year for 50 million workers
at 1,600 American companies. Early in October, it received an extortion letter,
the details of which it released on Nov. 6.” http://www.stltoday.com/blogzone/the-platform/published-editorials/2008/11/express-scripts-data-breach-is-bitter-medicine/
[Still no details on how the data was breached.]
Call for strengthened security during economic crunch
“Professor Howard A Schmidt, president of the Information Security Forum,
has urged organisations to strengthen security rather than reduce it in today's
uncertain financial environment.” http://www.info4security.com/story.asp?sectioncode=10&storycode=4121035&c=1
Obama's Cell Phone Records Breached in Verizon Inside Job
“Most large organizations take strong measures to keep outsiders from
accessing their customers' data, but when it comes to insiders, they're
lackadaisical, to say the least. Verizon Wireless apologized to President-elect
Obama after learning that employees had been snooping into his cell phone
account records, but whether the company will change its access procedures is
unknown.” http://www.technewsworld.com/story/65249.html?wlc=1227304619
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Flu season approaches, and Google is ahead of the curve “Google will use information pulled
from its users' search engine queries to help the Centers for Disease Control
track the influenza virus. The CDC has its own tracking system, but it
takes one to two weeks to collect and release the data, according to Jeremy
Ginsberg and Matt Mohebbi, the Google software engineers who blogged about
Google's new endeavor.” http://www.healthcareitnews.com/story.cms?id=10404
Banana bread story offers glimpse into Google co-founder's
healthcare venture “Google co-founder Adam Bosworth
has parted the curtain on KEAS Inc., the new healthcare enterprise he is poised
to launch early next year. If he's successful, it could mean fat
Americans would become fit and healthy.” http://www.healthcareitnews.com/story.cms?
15 senators write a health care letter
“The seven Republicans, seven Democrats and one independent joined in a
letter to Obama on Friday saying they have hammered out seven principles they believe
should be the goal of health care reform.” http://deseretnews.com/article/1,5143,705265066,00.html
Tuberculosis: A new pandemic? “Many people think of tuberculosis
as being a disease from the past. The truth is far from it: Tuberculosis is
mutating into dangerous new strains for which there is no known cure. One
of the most frightening strains is XDR-TB, which stands for extensively
drug-resistant TB.” http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/11/17/tb.pandemic/index.html
Global warming data blunder: Worth the fuss?
“Despite broad consensus on the existence, origins and potentially
catastrophic effects of global warming, a vocal minority continues to question
the motives, methods and assumptions of climate scientists sounding the alarm.
So when temperature data released by NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies
(GISS), one of the leading monitors of climate change, showed an unusually warm
October, climate change skeptics cried foul.” http://www.sciam.com/blog/60-second-science/post.cfm?id=global-warming-data-blunder-worth-t-2008-11-18
Obama commits to action on climate change
“President-elect Barack Obama pledged yesterday that the United States
will move quickly to adopt national greenhouse-gas emissions caps, and would be
willing to work closely with other countries to battle climate change.” http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20081119.OBAMA19/TPStory/Environment
Prices in Canada
Decline, Raising Fears of Deflation
“Prices in Canada
fell by 1 percent on an unadjusted basis from September to October, the largest
such decline in 49 years, Statistics Canada reported on Friday. But the
report provoked a mixed response from economists about the prospects for
deflation in Canada.” http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/22/business/worldbusiness/22canada.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
$2.5 Billion Is Added to Bailout for Iceland
“Iceland finally
received international backing for its bailout plan on Thursday, while Turkey
appeared to be heading for a rescue package of its own. Nordic countries
followed up a $2.1 billion loan to Iceland by the International
Monetary Fund with an additional $2.5 billion.” http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/21/business/worldbusiness/21icebank.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
Putin Vows to Fight Economic Collapse in Russia
“Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin, mindful that Russians have already
been traumatized by two financial crises in the last two decades, tried to
assure the country on Thursday that it would be able to weather the current
one.” http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/21/world/europe/21putin.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
Europeana Website: Connecting Cultural Heritage
“Europeana, Europe's digital library,
museum and archive, will re-open as soon as possible. We'll be bringing you
digitised books, films, paintings, newspapers, sounds and archives from Europe’s greatest collections.”
[The
sight crashed due to overwhelming interest and, apparently, poor capacity
planning. The site plans to re-open by mid-December.]
Economy: Golden era of growth in double figures ends
“The Chinese economy is slowing rapidly – so fast that some
observers fear it could be more than just a temporary dip. Only a huge
programme of public spending, say economists, can prevent the economy from
dropping below the psychologically important level of 8 per cent growth. The
golden era of the past five years, when growth exceeded 10 per cent each year,
has ended.” http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/f8fbbe2c-b761-11dd-8e01-0000779fd18c,s01=1.html
Uncertainty, Climate Change, And The Global Economy
“What will the climate be like in a hundred years’ time? The answer
depends on both how human activity affects climate change and how a warming
climate alters the economy’s productive capacity and human welfare. There
is uncertainty about those links, but this column shows that, absent policy
action, global warming will be a major problem even under very optimistic
circumstances.” http://www.resourceinvestor.com/pebble.asp?relid=48185
Why Beijing
Is In A Risky Place
“As the factory to the world, China may be the nation most
vulnerable to collapsing global demand.” http://www.newsweek.com/id/170305
Sinking global economy looks to China
“With the global financial crunch topping the agenda at recent
international conferences, China
is increasingly being seen as an important factor in resolving the crisis and
creating stability. China
has been in the spotlight at several recent meetings including the Asia-Europe
Meeting in Beijing, the prime ministers' meeting
of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in Astana, the Group of 20
summit in Washington, and the ongoing
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) economic leaders' meeting in Lima.” http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-11/23/content_10399633.htm
US News / Business / Economics
A Cash-Poor And
'Sensitive' GM to Give Up Two Planes
“Struggling General Motors, which was blasted and mocked for using one of
its corporate jets to fly chief executive G. Richard Wagoner Jr. to Washington
this week to beg Congress for a bailout, is preparing to give back two of its
leased corporate jets, the company said yesterday [Friday].” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/21/AR2008112103498.html?nav=rss_business
[The Lesson: Don’t fly a
private jet to a bail out hearing. Dolts. Involve marketing and
other stakeholders with an understanding of perception to discuss image impacts
in a crisis, what to do and as the Big 3 learned, what not to do.]]
Obama Picks New York Fed Chief to
Lead Treasury
“President-elect Barack Obama has selected New York Federal Reserve Bank
President Timothy F. Geithner as Treasury secretary, handing the post to a
primary architect of the Bush administration's response to the financial crisis,
according to Democratic and industry officials yesterday.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/21/AR2008112102811.html?nav=rss_print/asection
Falling Prices
Raise a New Fear: Deflation
“This week's news of a drop in consumer prices may sound on the surface
like a good deal for financially strapped U.S. households. But economists
warn that sustained deflation -- a period of falling overall prices -- would
deepen the nation's economic troubles. Such a period would make it harder for
people to repay debts and would prompt consumers to delay purchases in
anticipation of lower prices and harder times.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/20/AR2008112000949.html?nav=rss_business/special/3
Technology & Science
DataCenter In A Parking Lot
“Planning a data center expansion may be as simple as taking out some
parking spaces in the corporate parking lot. The newest approach taken by
all the big server makers is modular expansion using trucking containers filled
with some of the most sophisticated computing equipment on the planet.” http://www.forbes.com/technology/2008/11/14/cio-data-module-tech-cio-cx_es_1117datamodule.html
RedRocksDataCenterLeveragesMountain Air for a Green Advantage “RRDC is hidden behind the hog back in Morrison,
Colorado and was chosen because of its location in a low lying frost hollow
that contains abundant cool air much of the year. Housed in a former NASA
satellite uplink facility, the center now draws cool, filtered mountain air
into the building throughout the year, virtually eliminating the need for
expensive air conditioning. Tom adds, ‘We will also be adding duct work
to capture hot server air and use it to heat our office space during the winter
months. This allows us to virtually eliminate our heating costs.’” http://www.sunherald.com/454/story/959059.html
UPS saves $30M and
goes Green with new HP printing and scanning handheld “UPS estimates it will save 93,000+ hours of worker
productivity, over 1.3 KILOTONS (1,300+ tons) of paper and reduced carbon
emissions by 3.8 KILOTONS (3,800+ tons) each year by switching to this
process.” http://blogs.zdnet.com/perlow/?p=9322
IndianDataCenter Footprint to Reach 5.1 Million Square Feet by 2012
“Gartner, in its recently released report has predicted that the total
data center capacity in India
is expected to reach 5.1 million square feet by 2012 and is projected to grow
31 percent from 2007 to 2012. The research company also estimates that the data
center industry in India
is expected to double its capacity in the next two years, and captive and
hosted data centers capacities will grow at comparable rates.” http://networkcomputing.in/Storage-019Nov008-Indian-Data-Center-Footprint-to-Reach-5-Million-Square-Feet-by-2012.aspx
Zero-carbon data centers for green computing “Since cyberinfrastructure allows
for relocation of data facilities to anywhere in the world, the ICT industry
can greatly reduce its emissions by relocating computing resources to
zero-carbon data centers powered by windmills, hydroelectric or geothermal
sources. There are currently at least 100 zero-carbon data centers around
the globe and substantially more expected in the next decade.” http://www.isgtw.org/?pid=1001498
End Notes
The News is brought to you by George Spafford,
Principal Consultant at Pepperweed Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is
nationally recognized as a leader in IT Management Consulting. For more
information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call
888-229-0145. Please let us know if you see stories you think should be
included in the next issue of The News, and feel free to forward this email on
to others.
"We
have the Bill of Rights. What we need is a Bill of Responsibilities.” – Bill Maher
Top Picks
Dr. Michel Kabay Reviews
Visible Ops Security He does a thorough
review of VSS that both serves as an overview and offers up his perspectives on
topics that Gene, Paul and I covered in the book. I think it’s a
very well done review. He has the review on his website and then his
newsletter will be doing the review in a number of installments. Read his entire review at: http://www.mekabay.com/opsmgmt/vos.pdf
Amazon.com builds huge data center in rural Oregon
“A huge data center linked to Amazon.com is going up quietly at the end
of a dirt road nearly a mile long in Eastern Oregon.
It is the second data center to locate along the river in Oregon's
part of the energy-rich ColumbiaBasin. Server farms
typically use lots of electricity and water.” http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/387250_datacenter11.html
[What
is very interesting in this article is that they identify the size of the power
substation next to the property – 10 MW. Wow!]
Miniature Nuclear
Reactors to be on Sale Within 5 Years
“Using technology licensed from the U.S. government, an Arizona-based
company is planning to bring a new generation of miniature nuclear reactors to
market. The Hyperion Hydride Reactor is not much larger than a hot tub, is
totally sealed and self-operating, has no moving parts and, beyond refueling,
requires no maintenance of any sort. The reactor will output 27MW, enough to
power a community of 20,000 homes, says Hyperion Energy, makers of the new
reactor. The first models will roll off the assembly line in five years.”
[This opens the door for a nuclear
powered data center. At 27 MW, that’s 2.7x the 10MW feed to the new
Amazon datacenter in Oregon.
My one concern would be security and dirty bomb potential (the fuel itself
isn’t weapons grade). Toshiba, Hyperion and NuScale are planning
devices.]
Back up your online data. Now.
“The dark side of the cloud is the risk of financial failure at your provider.
At the end of October, Digital Railroad, a photo archiving and commerce site
used by over 1,500 professional photographers, shut down without warning. Users
had just 48 hours to recover images stored on the site. Even if all of them had
been in a position to log on and tried to download their data, it’s
doubtful there would have been enough bandwidth to service the demand.” http://blogs.zdnet.com/SAAS/?p=607
[There
is a clear message in this article – you can’t outsource
responsibility for your controls. Just because you are using a service
provider doesn’t mean that your data is safe.]
IT Audit / Internal Audit / Compliance
Aligning COBIT® 4.1, ITIL® V3 and ISO/IEC 27002 for
Business Benefit
“This project was developed with the Office for Government Commerce (OGC)
to update the very popular management briefing first produced in 2005. The
briefing applies generally to all IT best practices but focuses on three
specific practices and standards that are becoming widely adopted around the
world. It has been updated to reflect the latest versions:
·ITIL
V3—Published by the UK
government to provide a best practice framework for IT service management
·COBIT
4.1—Published by ITGI and positioned as a high-level governance and
control framework over IT processes
·ISO/IEC
27002:2005—Published by the International Organization for
Standardization (ISO) and International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) to
provide a framework of a standard for information security management”
Presidential Agendas and the Fate of Sarbanes-Oxley Various groups are trying to get Obama to
rethink some of the financial regulations that are out there including Sox. http://www.itbusinessedge.com/blogs/ssg/?p=417
Why Does It Depend?
“I am repeatedly asked where a group should begin their ITSM
journey. There are many ways to answer this question and doubtlessly if
you ask a hundred seasoned ITSM “experts” you may get just as many
different answers. There is, however, one answer that is always right
– ‘it depends.’” https://swarm.jupitermedia.com/itsmwatch/2008/11/why-does-it-depend.html
How Data Centers Can Save 1 Million Kilowatt Hours Using 11
Best Practices
“Data center managers can achieve substantial electrical savings annually
if they implement a list of 11 best practices, according to IT analyst company
Gartner. Most of these projects could be completed with little or no budget or
effort, says Gartner researcher Paul McGuckin, and these green IT efforts can
get formerly unconnected corporate departments together on the same
page.” http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Green-IT/Gartner-Report-How-Data-Centers-Can-Save-1-Million-Kilowatt-Hours-Using-11-Best-Practices/
Going green: Social responsibility and data centers
“Green is in vogue. Recent newspapers and magazines are full of articles
on eco-shopping, Wal-Mart’s new ‘green store,’ and the
growing demand for building projects that use environmentally friendly and
energy-efficient materials. A widely run television advertisement asks:
‘What is your carbon footprint?’ IT organizations are also
embracing the green movement.” http://www.emqus.com/index.php?/emq/article/going_green_social_responsibility_and_data_centers_778
Security and Risk Management
How to Ensure Your CallCenter Security
“Information security has emerged as a significant concern for businesses
that use call centers and Interactive Voice Response or voice portal systems
for customer service, which include financial services institutions, insurance
agencies and health care companies. Here, KnowledgeCenter
contributor Ron Settele explains how companies can safeguard against a contact
center security breach, while meeting new regulatory demands to prevent
identity theft.” http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Enterprise-Applications/How-to-Ensure-Your-Call-Center-Security/
Cyber-Hackers Break Into IMF Computer System
“The discovery of the assault last week threw into crisis the Washington, D.C.
based International Monetary Fund (IMF), which offers emergency financial aid
to countries faced with balance-of-payments problems, and provoked a shutdown
of IMF computers that lasted for several days.” http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,452348,00.html
As economy melts down, Internet scammers ramp up
“The economic meltdown is not devoid of opportunities. There's one group
of folks who might do just fine: scammers. Security experts have spotted
an increase in phishing, the scam that uses fake e-mails to get people to hand
over personal financial information that could be used to drain bank accounts
or for identity theft.” http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/yourmoney/chi-ym-scams-1116nov16,0,7713977.story
Outsourcing/Offshoring: An IT Security Expert's View
“Ensuring that people, processes and technology are properly managed to
address this risk is a challenge faced by information security professionals.
There are, however, some unique risks associated with outsourcing that need to
be addressed by various organizational stakeholders to avoid pitfalls.” http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/153747/outsourcingoffshoring_an_it_security_experts_view.html
Security, Virtualization Top Tech Efforts for 2009
“IT organizations consider security, server virtualization and
business-related technologies a top priority for 2009, according to research
released by The Society for Information Management. SIM surveyed 300
member organizations in June and learned that the top five application and
technology developments for the coming year include antivirus protection,
business intelligence, business process management (BPM), continuity planning
and disaster recovery, and server virtualization.” http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/153953/security_virtualization_top_tech_efforts_for_2009.html?tk=rl_noinform
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Another Whack At Health-Care Security Standards
“While federal law
requires health-care providers to secure all their patient data, there's no
specific rule on exactly how that data needs to be secured organization to
organization. The Health Information Trust Alliance LLC -- Hitrust for short -- is the
most recent group of allied health-care provider organizations to take a whack
at creating a single set of security standards.”
Hospital Flooded in Storm to Cut Its Staff by a Third
“The university’s board of regents voted unanimously on Wednesday
to dismiss the 3,800 people, a third of the work force at the hospital, the University of Texas Medical Branch. The goal is to
staunch losses of almost $40 million a month since the hurricane flooded the
school’s buildings and shut down most of the JohnSealeyHospital, the main
hospital of the branch, which has for decades provided care for indigent
patients from across the region.” http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/15/us/15hospital.html?ref=health
Leavitt warns against losing health IT momentum
“The post-election political tide sweeping through Washington, D.C.
threatens to wash out a newly-formed foundation for promoting health IT, Mike
Leavitt, outgoing secretary of Health and Human Services, warned. In
their zeal to reform health care, the incoming administration and the next
Congress could abandon progress made in recent years in adopting interoperable
health IT standards, suggested the secretary.” http://www.govhealthit.com/online/news/350682-1.html
IT shortages hamper health crisis response, say DHS execs “Top Department of Homeland
Security officials said this week that local communities are in dire need of
additional information technologies to support them during public health
emergencies.” http://www.govhealthit.com/online/news/350680-1.html
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Poor training behind Russian sub deaths: ex-officer
“Alexander Nikitin, a former navy captain who worked as a chief engineer
on Russian nuclear submarines, said civilian technicians on board the vessel to
take part in sea trials may have not known how to react when the gas was
released.” http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE4A93EB20081110
Sunspots spell end of climate myth
“The evidence is unequivocal. Measurable, let alone dangerous, manmade
global warming is not happening, and is not likely to happen in the future. The
major cause for concern is the possibility of severe cooling.” http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/4757411a1865.html
[Interesting
… the author says man made global warming is a fiction and that we should
really be worried about the potential for super cooling of the earth due to
sunspots.]
A climate change conversion
“Tackling climate change is, therefore, a matter of finding a new moral
framework from within which to envisage life. Jamison believes that the
Benedictine way of life, which he and his brethren follow, has some resources
for doing that. He also believes they are accessible to all, regardless of
vocation or faith.” http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2008/nov/11/religion-worth-abbey
Global News / Business / Economics
Global investors urge action on climate change
“Global institutional investors holding more than $6 trillion in assets
pushed policymakers Tuesday to quickly hash out a binding agreement to cut
greenhouse gas emissions and promote clean technology. More than 130 big
investors, including London Pensions Fund Authority, want countries to agree to
reduce the climate- warming emissions by 50 percent to 80 percent by
2050.” http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSTRE4AA1CM20081111
Centers of
Attention
“Downsizing is the undisputed global management trend of the moment. This
week Nortel, a Canadian telecoms-equipment company, Britain’s
BT, and DHL, a logistics giant owned by Germany’s Deutsche Post World
Net, were among a host of firms announcing thousands of job cuts. As well as
pruning heads in business units, some chief executives are trimming their
headquarters (HQs), too.” http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/12623849?f=alerts
China's noxious coal fires add to global warming
“China
has the worst underground coal fires of any country on Earth. The fires destroy
as much as 20 million tons of coal annually, nearly the equivalent of Germany's
entire annual production. The costs go beyond the waste of a valuable
fuel, however. Scientists blame uncontrolled coal fires as a significant
source of greenhouse gases, which lead to global warming.” http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/world/6113768.html
Russia the next climate recalcitrant
“The melting of the Arctic ice cap has created an awkward new threat to
international climate change talks by convincing senior officials in Moscow that Russia stands to reap an economic
bonanza from ice-free northern oceans.” http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24659919-2703,00.html
US News / Business / Economics
Stuck on tarmac?
Airlines not required to help passengers
“A federal task force that spent nearly a year wrestling with ways to
assist people delayed for hours aboard planes parked on tarmacs has finalized
its recommendations -- none of which requires airlines and airports to do
anything.” http://www.cnn.com/2008/TRAVEL/11/12/airline.delays.ap/index.html
Rethinking Capital
“In this operating environment, CFOs must now wrestle with issues that
required much less attention during the last few years: cost of capital,
optimum leverage, debt maturities, even sheer liquidity. It's time, in short,
for finance chiefs to reassess their companies' capital structures and manage
them more tightly.” http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/12465250
Technology & Science
Mars Lander
Succumbs to Winter
“The Phoenix Mars lander is dead. Mission
managers said Monday that they had not heard from the NASA spacecraft for a
week and that they thought it had probably fallen quiet for good.” http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/11/science/space/11mars.html?ref=us
Super Chimneys Michael Poschinsky advocates the building of 10 super
chimneys to offset global warming. He has created a website to outline
his ideas around the devices and how they can generate 330 BW of electricity,
induce rain and other benefits. http://www.superchimney.org/
DARPA:
Self-repairing, learning kill-robot tech is go
“Once again the observant techbeat watcher finds his or her lower-torso
garments endampened by fear, as news emerges that heavyweight US military nerds
believe that they have developed IT tech which can ‘regenerate’
autonomously, allowing it to self-repair in the face of shutdown attempts - and
even to learn and develop its capabilities. More terrifyingly still, plans are
afoot to put this technology into the US forces' next generation of robotic
weaponry.” http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/11/13/darpa_aware_ware_srs_go/
The News is brought to you by George Spafford,
Principal Consultant at Pepperweed Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is
nationally recognized as a leader in IT Management Consulting. For more
information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call
888-229-0145. Please let us know if you see stories you think should be
included in the next issue of The News, and feel free to forward this email on
to others.
I was
asked how I select the articles for the newsletter the other day. The
answer is actually quite simple – I read a ton of material every week and
when I find a story that I feel is interesting, I include it. Sometimes
the concept is novel. Sometimes it confirms themes I am already
tracking. In other cases, a story highlights a different
perspective. In a sense, you can tell what I am studying based on the
articles that appear. For about nine months now the intersection of
climatic change, energy costs, data centers, the economy and national security
have weighed heavily on my mind. Thus, you see it in the articles that
are listed in the newsletter.
At any
rate, enough of the boring “stuff”. Have a great week!
--George
"People
are always blaming their circumstances for what they are. I don't believe
in circumstances. The people who get on in this world are the people who
get up and look for the circumstances they want, and, if they can't find them,
make them.”
– GB Shaw
Top Picks
Chinese hack into White House network “Chinese hackers have penetrated
the White House computer network on multiple occasions, and obtained e-mails
between government officials, a senior US official told the Financial
Times. On each occasion, the cyber attackers accessed the White House
computer system for brief periods, allowing them enough time to steal
information before US
computer experts patched the system.” http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/2931c542-ac35-11dd-bf71-000077b07658.html?nclick_check=1
Obama Is Seen Inheriting Worst U.S. Recession Since Reagan Era
“The economy will shrink at a 3.5 percent annual rate in the fourth
quarter and at a 2 percent pace in the first quarter of 2009, nearly twice
prior estimates, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economists led by Jan Hatzius wrote
yesterday in a note. That would be the biggest back-to-back contraction since
1982.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aTP1DuSuMY38&refer=home
Team Obama
“While we wait to find out who becomes Treasury Secretary, here's what
Obama's economic advisory board might say about some more specific corporate
finance issues.” http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/12583555?f=alerts
The Green Grid: Establishing greater energy efficiency in
data centers and business computing ecosystems
“Today, as the amount of data circulating within the Internet and across
computing devices continues to increase exponentially, businesses, government
organizations and other institutions around the world are aggressively filling
data center racks with powerful servers to keep pace. At the same time,
energy shortages and energy costs are now quickly rising to the top of the list
of economic and environmental concerns for organizations worldwide.
Accordingly, a movement to increase data center and IT energy efficiency is
gaining momentum.” http://www.emqus.com/index.php?/emq/article/the_green_grid_establishing_greater_energy_efficiency_in_data_centers_and_business_computing_ecosystems_774
Green IT Beyond Virtualization: Storage Matters
“In our experience, storage consumes as much as 40% of power and cooling
capacity in the typical data center. And unchecked storage growth is a
universal problem--whether you're an academic institution, a governmental
agency, a large enterprise, or a small business, your IT organization is being
challenged by never-ending demands for more storage capacity.” http://www.informationweek.com/news/storage/disaster_recovery/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=212001022
Security and Risk Management
Investing in Your IT Security Career in Tough Times
“Given what I do, communicating with and connecting people, I've offered
both a shoulder to cry on and kick in the pants to those that need it --
especially in uncertain times like the ones we're facing. I don't enjoy either
situation. For the purpose of this column I wanted to offer some sound advice
to those Information Security professionals who are concerned about the future
of their jobs. Think of it as a general checklist of things that you probably
should be doing all the time but need to devote some time and consideration to
right now, especially if your future is uncertain.” http://www.itworld.com/career/57503/investing-your-it-security-career-tough-times
Foreign governments attack White House, Obama, McCain
campaign systems “Hmm, anyone want to place bets on
what “foreign entity” has been hacking into Obama and McCain
campaign computers, as Newsweek reports? Could it be the same country (China)
that penetrated the White House’s email archive system and lifted email
conversation between top officials, as the Financial Times reports?” http://government.zdnet.com/?p=4167&tag=nl.e589
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Obama healthcare plan boon for hospitals: Moody's
“President-elect Barack Obama's plan to extend health care to uninsured
Americans will provide a boon to hospitals, along with medical centers and
hospital equipment makers, according to Moody's Investors Service.” http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/idUSTRE4A65W720081107
AHIMA Addresses Health Record Privacy and Security Breaches
“The alarming news reports concerning high-profile victims of personal
medical information security and privacy breaches raises the bar on the
necessity to educate and inform healthcare professionals, their employers, the media
and healthcare consumers on the importance of privacy protection,
confidentiality and security of personal health records.” http://www.surgicenteronline.com/hotnews/ahima-health-record-privacy-security.html
Human Error / Safety / Environment
Global Warming Predicted To Hasten Carbon Release From Peat
Bogs “Billions of tons of carbon
sequestered in the world's peat bogs could be released into the atmosphere in
the coming decades as a result of global warming, according to a new analysis
of the interplay between peat bogs, water tables, and climate change.” http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/11/081106122249.htm
Nuclear-powered Submarine Accident Kills at least 20
“The Russian navy says the nuclear-powered Russian naval submarine,
involved in a deadly accident, has pulled into port at Bolshoi Kamen, a
military shipyard not far from the eastern city of Vladivostok. Russian Navy officials say at
least 20 shipbuilders and servicemen were killed Saturday when the
fire-extinguishing system aboard the vessel was activated in error. The
officials say the submarine was in the waters of the Sea
of Japan conducting sea trials when the accident occurred.”
Party tussle ensnares Obama's global warming goals
“Democrats are fighting over control of the House Energy and Commerce
Committee and the outcome could affect President-elect Obama's efforts to limit
the heat-trapping gases blamed for global warming. Obama has said he
wants to act quickly on climate change. But bipartisan support could be tested
if liberal California Rep. Henry Waxman unseats the chairman, Rep. John
Dingell, D-Mich. The committee's top Democrat for 28 years, Dingell is an ally
of important of automakers and electric utilities.” http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5i9xAGccax9gEIblO5a1YUtPXXd4gD94ASF381
Countdown to perilous global warming
“Far from going down, the global growth rate of carbon dioxide emissions
is spiking upwards. Findings from the Global Carbon Project this month showed
that the global average percentage rise since the year 2000 is now over three
times higher than the previous decade, rising again significantly in the last
year. These growth rates are now worse than the worse case scenario used by the
UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to model potential global
warming.” http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/nov/09/carbonemissions
Global News / Business / Economics
Tax polluters for global warming funds: U.N. official “The global financial gloom will
make citizens of rich nations reluctant to use their taxes to fight global
warming and any plan to help poor nations should make the polluters pay, a top
U.N. climate official said. His warning cast doubt on a Chinese proposal
to ask the world's rich nations to devote up to 1 percent of their total
economic worth to pay for cleaner expansion in the poor world.” http://www.reuters.com/article/reutersEdge/idUSTRE4A610A20081107
China Announces 4 Trillion Yuan Economic Stimulus
“China announced a 4
trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus plan to spur expansion in the world's
fourth-largest economy, helping sustain global growth as the U.S., Europe and Japan teeter on the brink of
recession. The funds, equivalent to almost a fifth of China's $3.3
trillion gross domestic product last year, will be used by the end of 2010, the
Beijing-based State Council said today on its Web site.” http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aFsnGCiEPuEs&refer=home
UN announces Beijing
Declaration on climate change
“United Nations released the Beijing Declaration here on Saturday,
calling for strengthened international cooperation and improved technology
transfers to battle climate change.” http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-11/08/content_10327867.htm
US News / Business / Economics
GM: Almost out of
cash “The nation's largest automaker reported that it lost
$4.2 billion, or $7.35 a share, excluding special items. That's up from the
loss $1.6 billion or $2.86 a share it reported a year earlier and was far worse
than the forecast of analysts surveyed by earnings tracker Thomson Reuters,
which had forecast a loss of $3.70 a share.” http://money.cnn.com/2008/11/07/news/companies/gm/index.htm?postversion=2008110711
Ford: Massive loss,
job cuts “Ford Motor reported a $3 billion quarterly operating
loss on Friday and said it would reduce staff and capital spending in order to
preserve its dwindling cash. Ford said it would cut salaried employment
costs by 10% - reducing compensation of its white collar workers by eliminating
merit pay, bonuses and the company's matching contributions to their retirement
accounts.” http://money.cnn.com/2008/11/07/news/companies/automakers_3q_results/index.htm?postversion=2008110710
Obama meets with
economic experts for advice “Obama and Vice President-elect Joe Biden convened a
meeting of the transition economic advisory board, a high-powered collection of
business, academic and government leaders. They included Lawrence Summers, who
some have mentioned as a candidate for Treasury secretary, a post he held in
the Clinton administration; Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, whose state has
been hit hard by losses in the auto industry; Google CEO Eric Schmidt; and
former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker.” http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5isOFwdbq0tsqatW6vJpkDRTI1gMgD94A98401
Around the Street:
Labor Pains Worsen “Confirming Wall Street's fears, the U.S. employment report for October, released
Nov. 7, showed a worse-than-expected pace of job losses for the U.S.
economy. Nonfarm payrolls plunged 240,000, vs. market expectations of a 190,000
drop. The unemployment rate jumped to 6.5% in October from 6.1% in September; that's
the highest reading since March 1994.” http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/nov2008/pi2008117_904260.htm
Technology & Science
Mine is Greener
Than Yours “Supercomputing vendor SiCortex has long trumpeted the
power-, cooling-, and space-friendliness of its HPC gear. Over time it's added
those advantages together to create a picture of eco-friendly HPC, and it's
reinforced the message in special events where it uses pedal power from teams
of bicyclists to power its boxes. This week the company is introducing a new
metric, the Green Computing Performance Index, that assesses the performance of
individual supercomputers based on the ratio of their performance on the HPC
Challenge benchmark to power consumption.” http://www.hpcwire.com/features/Mine_is_Greener_Than_Yours_34038934.html
Honda unveils
wearable robotic walker “The experimental device, unveiled Friday, is designed
to support bodyweight, reduce stress on the knees and help people get up steps
and stay in crouching positions.” http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/11/07/robotic.walker.ap/index.html
Profile: Luis von
Ahn
“This is a story about man and machine, and about the researcher whose
Web-based programs harness uniquely human abilities—such as reading or
knowing common-sense facts—and then aggregate that knowledge to solve
large-scale, long-standing problems of computer science.” http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/nov2008/id2008113_656340.htm?campaign_id=rss_tech
UPS Takes the Lead
on Hydraulic Hybrids
“Scientists say the technology can cut carbon dioxide emissions by 30%
and increase fuel efficiency by 50%. If they're deemed a financial success, the
hydraulic components and the trucks could go into mass production by their
respective manufacturers, Eaton (ETN) and Navistar (NAV), by 2011.” http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/content/nov2008/db2008116_037066.htm?campaign_id=rss_tech
End Notes
The News is brought to you by George Spafford,
Principal Consultant at Pepperweed Consulting, LLC. Pepperweed is
nationally recognized as a leader in IT Management Consulting. For more
information, check out our website at www.pepperweed.com or call 888-229-0145.
Please let us know if you see stories you think should be included in the next
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"Nothing
could be worse than the fear that one has given up too soon, and left one
unexpended effort which might have saved the world." – Jane Adams
Top Picks
Microsoft & Google: Cloud Computing Dominance Through
Renewable Energy “Microsoft and Google, in
particular, are leveraging the energy conundrum in such a way as to bolster
their own individual data center strategies, and they are using their enormous
leverage to create formidable barriers to entry that will increasingly make the
"build versus buy" decision an easy one. The aforementioned
barriers are allowing Microsoft and Google to establish data center cost
structures that are so low that they could potentially eliminate
competition.” http://www.virtual-strategy.com/Features/Abstract-Microsoft-and-Google-Cloud-Computing-Dominance-Through-Renewable-Energy.html
[Seriously, if you only read one article in
the whole newsletter, read this one. The author did a superb
job on both research and conveying concepts. It is the best trade article
I have read on any topic in a long time.]
MS to support
Windows Azure with data center investments
“Despite the economic downturn, Microsoft Corp. intends to ramp up the
number of servers running in its data centers worldwide by 15 times over the next
5 years.” http://www.nytimes.com/external/idg/2008/10/27/27idg-MS-to-support-W.html
[Do you see that multiple? In August, Microsoft had monitoring software
running during a promotional video that a blogger noticed. It seemed to
indicate that Microsoft had 15 data centers, 148,357 servers in 17,406
racks. Now, if we multiply the servers by 15, then that would take the
server count to a little over 17 million servers in five years. It would
be extremely interesting to know how many of those are virtual and what that
will do to the aforementioned statistics that also indicted the 148,357 servers
were using 72,500 kWh of power and you can bet they have grown since then so
whatever the future holds, one thing is certain – Microsoft is going to
have some serious capital investments and operating expense investments on an
incredible scale. Couple this with the previous article on Microsoft and
Google and you can begin to see the future “mega” data centers are
going to be stunning.]
Internal Audit Automation Set for Takeoff?
“Software that supports the internal audit process is nothing new, but
the field may be poised to head in a wholly different direction. In the
best-case scenario, that direction will lead to more accurate audits, reduced
costs for both internal and external audit, and elevated roles for internal
audit executives.” http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/12459877/c_12469997?f=home_todayinfinance
The Crisis over How to Audit in a Crisis “The Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board, which oversees U.S.
auditors, convened its standing advisory group on Wednesday to discuss the
impact of the financial crisis on the auditing profession. Its conclusion:
There's a lot to worry about, included increased pressure for fraudulent
behavior. Members of the 36-person group of advisors were concerned not
only about increases in fraud, however, but also about the need for more
thorough analysis of financial statements, the importance of considering
liquidity, and various puzzles connected with the auditing of companies that
are recipients of government bailouts.” http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/12465140?f=home_featured
Strong, professional auditing now more important than ever “The need for effective internal
auditors has been highlighted by the ‘major internal control and risk
management failures’ in financial institutions, Lord Robert Smith of
Kelvin said yesterday. Lord Smith, who five years ago in the wake of the
Enron and Andersen scandal reported for the government on strengthening the
role of audit committees, was addressing an Institute of Internal
Auditors' conference in Cumbernauld.” http://www.theherald.co.uk/business/news/display.var.2462906.0.Strong_professional_auditing_now_more_important_than_ever.php
IT Process Improvement / Quality Management
Controlling Consulting
“In certain circumstances organizations need to bring in specialized help
to facilitate the accomplishment of objectives. One way to do this is to
hire consultants. While many times this works as intended, there are also
situations where the consultants come in, never quite deliver and also never
quite leave. This can become very expensive very fast. The single
best way to avoid risks relating to achieving objectives within the timeframe
and budget allocated is to use project management. A project-based
approach with a project manager reporting on progress, issues encountered,
risks, and so forth will significantly boost the likelihood of success.” https://swarm.jupitermedia.com/itsmwatch/2008/10/controlling-consulting.html
Green Computing? Offset This
“So, I have mixed feelings when I read that Google (NSDQ: GOOG) and other
large enterprises are greening themselves -- in part -- with carbon offsets.
The idea of being ‘carbon neutral’ while still burning fossil fuels
doesn't seem quite right.” http://www.informationweek.com/blog/main/archives/2008/10/green_computing.html
Green Tech: Creating Synergy Between IT and Facility
Strategies
“IT and facilities departments must communicate to effectively run the
modern-day data center and achieve green data center initiatives. This article
addresses the organizational structure and behaviors that may be preventing
green data centers from becoming the norm.” http://www.wwpi.com/top-stories/6254-green-tech-creating-synergy-between-it-and-facility-strategies
Power efficiency only first step toward "green"
data centers, Gartner says Rakesh Kumar of Gartner notes that,
“'Green' requires an end-to-end, integrated view of the data center,
including the building, energy efficiency, waste management, asset management,
capacity management, technology architecture, support services, energy sources
and operations.’” http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/102908-green.html?hpg1=bn
Security and Risk Management
Cyber Security Questions Persist at World Bank
“Now, FOX News has learned, hundreds of employees of an India-based
technology contractor that World Bank president Robert Zoellick ordered off the
agency's property last April on security grounds are still working for the
financial institution. They have been transformed in recent months into bank
staffers or shifted onto the employment rolls of other contractors.” http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,445829,00.html http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,445845,00.html
Security To Go: Is It Time To Shop MSSPs? “IT groups with limited information
security resources that flat-out refuse to seek expert help are doing the
business a disservice. While it's true that those with highly specialized
security policies likely won't get the customization they need with a managed
service security provider (MSSP), far too many organizations have yet to make
infosec a core competency. Some have even decided that infosec will never be a
fundamental proficiency, and they're just securing to the level required by
regs like PCI and calling it a day.” http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=211800247
Healthcare / Bio-Informatics / Care Delivery Organizations
(CDOs)
Inspector general knocks HIPAA security oversight
“A review by the Department of Health and Human Service has found the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Service wanting when it comes to oversight of
health information security.” http://www.govhealthit.com/online/news/350651-1.html
Health IT Poised to Rebound Post-Election
“As I wrote previously, both presidential candidates are bullish on the
healthcare information technology industry – planning to increase
spending and investment as a way to improve the quality of healthcare and
reduce costs through automation and the widespread implementation of other
technologies such as electronic prescribing and computerized medical
records.” http://seekingalpha.com/article/103182-health-it-poised-to-rebound-post-election
Rate of Diabetes Cases Doubles in 10 Years: CDC “The rate of new cases of type 2
diabetes has nearly doubled in the United States in the last decade,
with most new cases appearing in southern states, federal officials reported
Thursday. New diagnoses of type 2 diabetes rose from 4.8 per 1,000 people
from 1995 to 1997 to 9.1 per 1,000 people from 2005 to 2007. These new cases
mirror the increase in obesity rates, and obesity is a leading cause of the
blood sugar disease, officials said.” http://health.usnews.com/articles/health/healthday/2008/10/30/rate-of-diabetes-cases-doubles-in-10-years-cdc.html
PortlandVA hospital mistakenly posts vets' personal data
online
“Personal information, including some Social Security numbers, of about
1,600 patients at the VeteransAffairsMedicalCenter in Portland
was inadvertently posted on a public Web site, PortlandVA
officials said Saturday.” http://www.oregonlive.com/news/index.ssf/2008/11/portland_va_hospital_mistakenl.html
Human error stubborn snag in airline safety
“Safety has improved dramatically in the airline industry in recent
decades. But the human mind remains a stubborn impediment to wiping out crashes
altogether.” http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2008-10-22-insidecrash_N.htm
Global News / Business / Economics
Global Warming and Unbridled Capitalism
“Global warming, due to carbon dioxide CO2 emissions by human activities,
has melted ice caps and mountain glaciers causing an increase of sea levels;
many scientists believe that if this is not arrested, it will bring about
hurricanes, volcanic eruptions and also tsunamis in quick succession than in
the past. Today flooding has become a major concern for many countries.” http://www.asiantribune.com/?q=node/13979
Massive Effort to
Save Mortgages “J..P. Morgan Chase & Co. launched
an ambitious plan Friday to modify the terms of $70 billion in mortgages for
borrowers who are behind on their payments or soon could be. The move by
the New York bank will cover as many as 400,000 borrowers. They'll be moved
into loans carrying lower interest rates, smaller principal amounts or other
more-affordable terms.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122549543952589677.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Eaton Corp. gets
incentives for Jefferson, Shelby
data centers
“Eaton Corp., a diversified power-management company that manufactures
products in the automotive, aerospace, electrical, hydraulics and trucking
industries, has taken the next step toward building twin data centers in
Jefferson and Shelby counties.” http://www.bizjournals.com/louisville/stories/2008/10/27/daily38.html
It’s No Time
to Forget About Innovation
“BY its very nature, innovation is inefficient. While blockbusters do
emerge, few of the new products or processes that evolve from innovative
thinking ultimately survive the test of time. During periods of economic
growth, such inefficiencies are chalked up as part of the price of forging into
the future. But these aren’t such times.” http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/02/business/02unbox.html
Technology & Science
Hubble back in full
snapping mode
“The Hubble space telescope yesterday resumed ‘regular science
operations’ following the failure of the 'scope's operational Science
Instrument Command and Data Handling unit (SIC&DH) back in September and
susbsequent coaxing into life of the back-up unit.” http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/10/31/hubble_first_image/
Phoenix spacecraft on Mars is unlikely to rise
“The death watch is on for NASA's Phoenix
lander, the first spacecraft to sample water on another planet. Buffeted
by dust storms and chilled by temperatures as low as minus 141 degrees
Fahrenheit from the impending arrival of the Martian winter, Phoenix is
clinging to life, NASA officials said Friday.” http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_10869296?source=most_viewed