Найденные страницы с тегом engineers всего 6871

DataLore: Can a large language model find all lost scrolls in a data repository? - Amazon Science

How can we effectively generate missing data trans-formations among tables in a data repository? Multiple versions of the same tables are generated from the iterative process when data scientists and machine learning engineers fine-tune their ML pipelines, making incremental improvements. This…

Engineers create fingernail-sized chip that holds 1TB of data | Network World

North Carolina State University engineers have created a material that can hold 1TB of data on a chip the size of a fingernail. The technology represents a 90% reduction in size compared to today's silicon-based chips.

Microsoft engineers file system for a new era | Network World

The upcoming release of Windows Server 8 will feature an entirely new file system, called ReFS, that addresses many of the shortcomings of the aging NTFS (New Technology File System) now used across all current Windows editions, the company announced Tuesday in a blog.

The 6 biggest misconceptions about IPv6 | Network World

For 15 years, Internet engineers and policymakers have been publicizing the need to upgrade the 'Net's current addressing scheme -- known as IPv4 -- to handle the network-of-network's explosive growth. Yet many U.S. CIOs and CTOs continue to harbor misinformation that they use to justify why they are not adopting the next-generation IPv6 standard.

Trial to begin in economic espionage case involving China | Network World

A jury trial is set to begin in a somewhat rare trade-secret theft case in which federal prosecutors are trying to prove that two engineers misappropriated trade secrets from a U.S. technology company to benefit China's government.

IEEE approves next WiMax standard | Network World

The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers has approved IEEE 802.16m, the standard for the next generation of WiMax, which may deliver downstream speeds of more than 300M bps (bits per second).

Mind Games: How Social Engineers Win Your Confidence | Network World

Social engineering and mind games expert Brian Brushwood has not come by his knowledge in the traditional manner of school or business training. Brushwood is the host of the Internet video series Scam School, a show he describes as dedicated to social engineering in the bar and on the street.

RuBee aims to be a rugged alternative to RFID | Network World

The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers has approved a standard for RuBee, a technology that is a bit like RFID but can be used in harsher environments such as underwater or in firearms.

Mommas don’t let their babies grow up to be engineers | Network World

The American Society for Quality commissioned Harris Interactive to conduct an online youth survey to learn about kids' interest level in engineering careers and parents input on the topic.

Microsoft changes Windows 7 UAC due to new exploit code | Network World

A pair of Windows bloggers posted more proof-of-concept code today that subverts an important security feature of Windows 7 , a problem Microsoft knew about as long ago as last October and which one of its software engineers said would be fixed in the beta.

After a hack: The process of restoring once-lost data | Network World

Mat Honan, a reporter with Wired magazine, thought almost his entire digital life had been lost, but a team of recovery engineers were able to restore most of it by diving deep into his compromised laptop. Here's how they did it.

Microsoft to patch Home Server corruption bug – in June | Network World

Microsoft Monday said its engineers were still "heads down working" on the data corruption bug that has plagued Windows Home Server since late last year, but acknowledged that a fix wouldn't be released until June at the earliest.

Battle of the cheap tablets: Nook Tablet vs. Kindle Fire | Network World

Barnes & Noble's new Nook Tablet is pretty similar to Amazon's Kindle Fire and you suspect that B&N took a look at the Fire's success and said to their Nook e-reader engineers, "We need a $199 Android tablet, stat!"

Planning for innovation can be a challenge | Network World

One of the toughest challenges facing IT executives is how to plan for technology that hasn’t been invented yet. Companies generally stress the need for IT to think more like a business, which means crafting long-term strategic plans demonstrating how, say, IT will positively benefit the company in 2011. The gotcha is that engineers can’t always know what products and services will be available in 2011— much less how they’ll affect the company.

Digital security firm announces Asia expansion | Network World

Gemalto provides telecommunications, financial services, eGovernment identity and access management, plus IT security and mass transit systems for more than one billion people worldwide. In Singapore, the firm has some 1,000 employees, with 160 engineers engaged in research and development. MIS Asia editor Ross O. Storey, spoke to Ng Fook Seng, Gemalto's Senior Vice-President, Security Business Asia, about the firm's Asia plans.

Share users get first look at new z/VM operating system | Network World

Share, the independent IBM user group, holds its winter get-together in Tampa, Fla., this week. The event has been held for more than half a century and is aimed at giving IBM customers access to Big Blue engineers, partners, as well as fellow IBM customers to get an in-depth look at the technology that IBM is offering and how it can fit into their data centers.

Verizon’s proposed IMS standard holds potential value | Network World

Late last month, Verizon Wireless announced that it had created a task force with the "industry's 'best and brightest' network engineers and strategists from Cisco, Lucent, Motorola, Nortel and Qualcomm." The team was formed to further work by standards bodies on IP Multimedia Subsystem.

Cisco simulator can help thwart exam cheating | Network World

A Nashua, N.H., maker of Cisco network simulators says its software can help enterprises make sure they are hiring legitimate Cisco-certified engineers to run their networks.

Wipro redeploys some engineering staff to BPO | Network World

Indian outsourcer Wipro has decided to assign to its business process outsourcing (BPO) operations some of the software engineers it had promised to hire from college campuses.

How Green Is Your UPS? | Network World

Servers, switches and routers certainly suck up a lot of electricity. But according to power engineers at Cleveland-based Eaton Corp., all that hardware actually accounts for less than a third of your data center's electricity demand. Your HVAC and power management systems gobble up the rest.

Q&A: New IAB chair mulls DNS security, unwanted Internet traffic | Network World

Olaf Kolkman, a Dutch DNS expert, is the new chair of the Internet Architecture Board, a panel of 13 leading network engineers who provide technical oversight to the IETF, the Internet’s premier standards-setting body. He’s also CEO of NLnet Labs, an Amsterdam research group focused on DNS security. After taking over as IAB chair at an IETF meeting in Prague last week, Kolkman corresponded with Network World senior editor Carolyn Duffy Marsan and shared some thoughts about his new role, why it’s tak

Vendors playing nicely benefits everyone | Network World

A funny thing happened on the way to delivering Vista, Microsoft’s newest client operating system. On multiple occasions, Microsoft engineers and technical pros from leading WAN optimization vendors got on the phone with each other to share their observations, ideas and advice.

Company uses social networking to keep in touch | Network World

Engineering company Beca is embracing the newest communications technologies to stay in touch with subsidiaries around the world and with young engineers on their "overseas experience" who might return once, as CIO Robin Johansen puts it, their "homing pigeon instinct" kicks in.

Microsoft’s OCS weighs in as a stronger UM vehicle than IP-PBX | Network World

In Tuesday’s edition of this newsletter, we pointed readers to our test of the beta code for Microsoft’s Office Communications Server (OCS) in which engineers from Network World Lab Alliance partner Miercom assessed how it stacks up to the wide range of SIP-based IP-PBX systems they’ve tested over the past five.

Intel was slow to embrace low-power chips, exec says | Network World

Intel engineers first began toying with a low-power microprocessor almost a decade ago, but their initial design was rejected by the company's top executives and the effort stalled soon after, an Intel executive said on Wednesday.