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Obama Team Challenges Web Developers

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Tagged in: Web Developers

The Obama administration, which recently switched the Whitehouse.gov site to the open source Drupal platform, plans to engage open source developers in a discussion of how they can work better with government agencies.


In a recent presentation to Drupal developers in Washington, D.C., White House new media director Macon Phillips, deputy director Dave Cole, and creative director Nick Lo Bue disclosed plans to add new features to WhiteHouse.gov, including custom news feeds, user authentication, and more tagged, searchable raw data.

The White House will challenge developers to apply some of the best ideas they are already working on "for the public good," including for use by WhiteHouse.gov and elsewhere in the public sector, Cole said. An event is planned, though it's not clear when it will take place.

"We can call upon the expertise of the community to say, hey, this has been our experience with this module, are there any ways to improve this? We're excited to rely on the community even more for ideas," said Lo Bue.

In developing WhiteHouse.gov on Drupal, the Obama team used mostly available code, but it wrote some custom code to meet scalability and security requirements. The new media team is now working with the White House legal counsel to determine how to contribute that code back to the community. "I can't promise a time line, [as] it's somewhat unprecedented for our organization to take that on, but we feel strongly about it," Cole said.

Cole and Philips provided insight into forthcoming features on WhiteHouse.gov, including new search and authentication capabilities. The site's search engine was built with Apache Solr, which Cole called "one of the best improvements," since it goes beyond keyword search. Moving forward, the White House plans to make it possible to subscribe to topics, so that people can receive alerts when there's a speech, document, or blog post on that topic.

The White House is also working to add user authentication, but it's not yet clear what form that will take, as the new media team continues to weigh privacy concerns. "We want a site that can work both for people who are skeptical of the government and for those who want to participate fully with government," Phillips said.

The White House is planning to make increasing use of RDFa, a way of tagging metadata to content that could make hard-to-find data more searchable. "We have a lot of primary source content and have it exposed in ways that traditionally hasn't been done by government," Cole said. "Instead of just having PDFs that are scanned, we're trying to reverse that trend."


Cisco Nears Completion of Tandberg Takeover

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Cisco has focused lately on the high end of the videoconferencing market, selling "" systems with multiple plasma screens that present life-size images of the participants to provide the illusion of face-to-face communication. With Tandberg, Cisco will also have the world's leading maker of video systems.


The world's largest computer networking Relevant Products/Services equipment maker, Cisco Systems Inc., on Wednesday said it needs only another 6 percent stake in videoconferencing equipment firm Tandberg ASA to be able to complete its $3.4 billion takeover.

Cisco said 84 percent of shareholders in the Norwegian group have backed its 170 kroner ($30.32) per share offer so far -- getting closer to the 90 percent threshold it needs to close the deal.

The announcement comes a day after Cisco announced it would extend its offer period until Dec. 3. The bid was initially set to expire on Tuesday.

Cisco said it would decide Thursday "whether to withdraw the offer or waive this (90 percent) condition," which would result in negotiations with the remaining shareholders and prolong the acquisition process.

The company noted it won't extend its offer period past Thursday.

Cisco's initial offer was 153.5 kroner ($27.38) _ or about $3 billion _ but the company increased its bid on Nov. 16, after securing less than 10 percent of Tandberg stock.

Tandberg shares rose 1.8 percent, to 164.4 kroner ($29.32), in morning trading in Oslo.

Cisco, which has around 64,000 staff worldwide, has focused lately on the high end of the videoconferencing market, selling so-called "TelePresence" systems with multiple plasma screens that present life-size images of the participants to provide the illusion of face-to-face communication.

With Tandberg, Cisco will also have the world's leading maker of video systems ranging from small videophones to full conference-room setups.

The deal would allow it to spend some of the cash it has piled up from its overseas subsidiaries. By buying an international company, Cisco would avoid the U.S. taxes it would have to pay to bring the money home.


Google Launches Public DNS to Speed Up Web

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Tagged in: google

In an unusual move, Google announced on Thursday, a new means by which users can utilize the Google DNS servers to access the Internet. 


Google has even added telephone support for those who choose to make the switch.

For many, the DNS settings that lie at the heart of a user's router rarely need to be touched. When a user types in "www.extremetech.com," for example, the user's PC contacts the DNS server via the router and asks for the numerical IP address of the site, somewhat like 1-800-FLOWERS actually connects to a numerical telephone number.

Google's motivation, according to the company, is to both speed up Web browsing as well as provide enhanced security. "We believe that a faster DNS infrastructure could significantly improve the browsing experience for all web users," Prem Ramaswami, of Google's Public DNS Team, wrote in a blog post. "To enhance DNS speed but to also improve security and validity of results, Google Public DNS is trying a few different approaches that we are sharing with the broader web community."

Allowing Google to handle DNS requests, rather than an ISP, will also mean that mistyped URLs will be redirected to a Google error page rather than an ISP-controlled one, on which the owner of the DNS server can place their own ads, PCMag.com software analyst Michael Muchmore noted.

Users who want to try out the new Google DNS servers can change their DNS settings to 8.8.8.8 or 8.8.4.4, as its instructions describe. Google strongly recommends, however, that users copy down their existing settings. Interestingly, Google also provides telephone support for its Public DNS as well.

The new DNS settings are not for ISPs to use, as Google does not have a service-level agreement (SLA) in place. The project is characterized as "experimental".

The new DNS settings can be used by any user worldwide, although performance increases will be fastest for users who are in close proximity to a Google data center. Those data centers are located worldwide, although Google hasn't specified exactly where they are physically located.

Although DNS servers are maintained by a user's ISP, the OpenDNS project has maintained a similar open resolver project for a number of years. Ramaswami said in an interview that the Google will encourage other open resolvers to engage it in dialogue and to adopt some of the techniques Google's Pubic DNS used to better improve the Web.

In his own blog post, David Ulevitch, the founder of OpenDNS, wrote that while he appreciated the spotlight Google's announcement shone on DNS, he was suspicious of Google's motivations. He also noted in passing that OpenDNS can serve enterprise customers, something that Ramaswami said that Google's Public DNS could not duplicate, at least not yet.

"[I]t's not clear that Internet users really want Google to keep control over so much more of their Internet experience than they do already—from Chrome OS at the bottom of the stack to Google Search at the top, it is becoming an end-to-end infrastructure all run by Google, the largest advertising company in the world," Ulevitch wrote. "I prefer a heterogeneous Internet with lots of parties collaborating to make this thing work as opposed to an Internet run by one big company."

Google's Ramaswami said he also supported the customer's right to choose. "Google believes strongly in consumer choice," he said.

However, Ramaswami also emphatically denied that the company would in any way monetize the data it collected, referring to its privacy policies. "This is about making the Web faster, not about the data," he said. "We've gone out of the way to make this true."

From a speed perspective, the Google DNS servers use prefetching, Google said, refreshing the record on a particular network request continuously, asychronously and independently of user requests for a large number of popular domains before the record expires. This allows Google Public DNS to serve many DNS requests in the round trip time it takes a packet to travel to our servers and back, the company claimed.

Google Public DNS was also put into place to prevent the sort of DNS poisoning attacks that were disclosed last year. The system can also prevent so-called DNS "amplification attacks" that attack the DNS server itself, and then use them to route other PCs to attack target sites in an orchestrated distributed denial-of-service attack.

But will users want to trust Google with their each and every request to the Internet? In an attempt to defuse concerns, Google also added a privacy page describing how it handles its records.

Google said that it does keep a user's unique IP address, but only for a short time, to detect and prevent a denial-of-service attack. Afterward, Google begins "burning the logs," in Ramaswami's words.

"Google Public DNS stores two sets of logs: temporary and permanent. The temporary logs store the full IP address of the machine you're using," the company said. "We have to do this so that we can spot potentially bad things like DDoS attacks and so we can fix problems, such as particular domains not showing up for specific users. We delete these temporary logs within 24 to 48 hours.

"In the permanent logs, we don't keep personally identifiable information or IP information. We do keep some location information (at the city/metro level) so that we can conduct debugging, analyze abuse phenomena and improve the Google Public DNS prefetching feature. We don't correlate or combine your information from these logs with any other log data that Google might have about your use of other services, such as data from Web Search and data from advertising on the Google content network. After keeping this data for two weeks.


  • Obama Team Challenges Web Developers
    The Obama administration, which recently switched the Whitehouse.gov site to the open source Drupal platform, plans to
    engage open source developers in a discussion of how they can work better with government agencies.In a recent
    presentation to Drupal developers in Washington, D.C., White House new media director Macon Phillips, deputy director
    Dave Cole, and creative director Nick Lo Bue disclos ...
    Readmore...
  • Cisco Nears Completion of Tandberg Takeover
    Cisco has focused lately on the high end of the videoconferencing market, selling "" systems with multiple plasma
    screens that present life-size images of the participants to provide the illusion of face-to-face communication. With
    Tandberg, Cisco will also have the world's leading maker of video systems.The world's largest computer networking
    Relevant Products/Services equipment maker, Cisco Syst ...
    Readmore...
  • Google Launches Public DNS to Speed Up Web
    In an unusual move, Google announced on Thursday, a new means by which users can utilize the Google DNS servers to
    access the Internet. Google has even added telephone support for those who choose to make the switch.For many, the
    DNS settings that lie at the heart of a user's router rarely need to be touched. When a user types in
    "www.extremetech.com," for example, the user's PC contacts the ...
    Readmore...