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Russian hackers stole U.S. cyber secrets from NSA: media reports

October 5, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Russian government-backed hackers stole highly classified U.S. cyber secrets in 2015 from the National Security Agency after a contractor put information on his home computer, two newspapers reported on Thursday.

As reported first by The Wall Street Journal, citing unidentified sources, the theft included information on penetrating foreign computer networks and protecting against cyber attacks and is likely to be viewed as one of the most significant security breaches to date.

In a later story, The Washington Post said the employee had worked at the NSA’s Tailored Access Operations unit for elite hackers before he was fired in 2015.

The NSA declined to comment, citing agency policy “never to comment on our affiliates or personnel issues.” Reuters was not able to independently verify the reports.

If confirmed, the hack would mark the latest in a series of breaches of classified data from the secretive intelligence agency, including the 2013 leaks of data on classified U.S. surveillance programs by contractor Edward Snowden.

Another contractor, Harold Martin, is awaiting trial on charges that he took classified NSA material home. The Washington Post reported that Martin was not involved in the newly disclosed case.

Republican U.S. Senator Ben Sasse, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in a statement responding to the Journal report that, if true, the details were alarming.

”The NSA needs to get its head out of the sand and solve its contractor problem,“ Sasse said. ”Russia is a clear adversary in cyberspace and we can’t afford these self-inflicted injuries.”

Tensions are already high in Washington over U.S. allegations of a surge in hacking of American targets by Russians, including the targeting of state election agencies and the hacking of Democratic Party computers in a bid to sway the outcome of the 2016 presidential election in favor of Republican Donald Trump.

Citing unidentified sources, both the Journal and the Post also reported that the contractor used antivirus software from Moscow-based Kaspersky Lab, the company whose products were banned from U.S. government networks last month because of suspicions they help the Kremlin conduct espionage.

Kaspersky Lab has strongly denied those allegations.

Russian government officials could have used flaws in Kaspersky software to hack into the machine in question, security experts told Reuters. They could also have intercepted traffic from the machine to Kaspersky computers.

Kaspersky said in a statement on Thursday that it found itself caught in the middle of a geopolitical fight.

“Kaspersky Lab has not been provided any evidence substantiating the company’s involvement in the alleged incident reported by the Wall Street Journal,” it said. “It is unfortunate that news coverage of unproven claims continue to perpetuate accusations about the company.”

The Department of Homeland Security on Sept. 13 banned Kaspersky products in federal networks, and the U.S. Senate approved a bill to ban them from use by the federal government, citing concerns the company may be a pawn of the Kremlin and poses a national security risk.

James Lewis, a cyber expert with the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the report of the breach sounded credible, though he did not have firsthand information on what had transpired.

“The baffling parts are that he was able to get stuff out of the building and that he was using Kaspersky, despite where he worked,” Lewis said. He said that intelligence agencies have considered Kaspersky products to be a source of risk for years.

Democratic Senator Jeanne Shaheen, who led calls in Congress to purge Kaspersky Lab products from government networks, on Thursday called on the Trump administration to declassify information about threats posed by Kaspersky Lab.

“It’s a disservice to the public and our national security to continue withholding this information,” Shaheen said in a statement.

Reporting by Dustin Volz and Joseph Menn; Additional reporing by Warren Strobel, John Walcott, Doina Chiacu; Editing by Jim Finkle, Jonathan Oatis and Grant McCool

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Tech

Filed Under: Cloud Computing Tagged With: cyber, From, hackers, media, reports, Russian, secrets, stole, U.S.

4 Lessons I Learned From My Years as a Child Laborer

September 29, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

One of my first entrepreneurial encounters was during my years as a child laborer in Turkey. (Don’t worry, I’m exaggerating. It wasn’t really that bad.)

In fifth grade, I was tasked with selling rugs and flooring to farmers who came to sell their produce at the local farmer’s market in a small town by the Black Sea. I like to think that my boss hired me because I was an extra cute kid, but it probably had to do with the fact that by that time I was already on my third job, so I actually had enough work experience.

My boss — a family friend and a superb salesman in the tradition of the great Turkish rug dealers of Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar — gave me some sales (read: haggling) training and then left me to run his shop. I still retain those thousand-year-old lessons to this day.

Lessons like these four:

1. Know who the decision maker is.

I remember on more than a few occasions haggling with a farmer over a rug and getting to the point where the deal was almost official — only to have the farmer’s wife come along and tell him to stop fooling around in the rug shop and go buy some flour instead.

Haggling (or negotiating for you modern business types) with the wrong person is an exercise in futility. Even the person who controls the checkbook might not be the one who has ultimate say in a decision, so clarify that you’re talking to the right person.

Ask questions like: “Who do you need to speak with about this before you make your decision?” or “Is there someone that we need to include in our discussion?”

2. Know your mission.

The farmers I was selling to rarely had a lot of money to spend. If they were buying a new rug or some new flooring, there was a reason for it. It was my job to find out that reason and adjust my haggling accordingly. There’s a big difference between wanting to buy flooring that is easy to clean versus flooring that goes with the drapes.

Whether it’s a partnership, a promotion or a merger opportunity, you must know your counterpart’s needs. Start by asking: “If money was not an issue, what would you like to accomplish with this deal?”

3. Make people feel something.

When haggling, I almost never talked about the rugs. They were fine quality, beautifully crafted and reasonably priced, but a vital lesson my old boss taught me was to focus on the person and connect with them.

If they’re haggling with you, that means they already see value in your product. To get the price you want, you have to connect emotionally with them.

Negotiation expert and author of Start With No Jim Camp argues that people make decisions with their emotions and then justify those decisions with their analytical mind. So, when negotiating with people, try to establish an environment where they feel like you genuinely care about their needs. If you don’t connect with them on an emotional level, it automatically makes them approach the negotiation from a more analytical mindset, taking away an edge for you.

4. Focus on your behavior and actions.

When I first started selling rugs, I had many a potential customer walk away shaking their heads and calling me “impossible” (and various other things). I would set a price in my head and absolutely not budge from it — until my old boss budged me.

“Pala,” he would say, “don’t be a donkey. Be nice and be a little bit flexible and people will give you a fair price.”

Camp backs up my old boss on this one. Rather than zeroing in on the absolute outcome of the negotiation, he says, control what you can, like your behavior and actions, and your negotiations will go a lot smoother.

More importantly, you’ll consistently get better outcomes. You may not be able to hit a home run every time, but you can focus on your swing and it will increase your chances of hitting one.

From the bazaar to the boardroom, having sound negotiating skills will help you in nearly every facet of business, even if you’re a fifth grader.

Tech

Filed Under: Cloud Computing Tagged With: Child, From, Laborer, Learned, lessons, Years

Lessons fall from the cloud, changing data center strategies

September 13, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

The transformative power of cloud computing is long past the point of being news. The cloud model, after all, has irrevocably changed how IT functions …


Cloud Computing

Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: Center, Changing, cloud, Data, Fall, From, lessons, Strategies

Technology lessons from Hurricane Harvey

September 3, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

Cloud computing has played a major part in ensuring business continuity throughout the storm. This was mainly accomplished through having …
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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: From, Harvey, Hurricane, lessons, technology

All the Best Photos From Pippa Middleton’s Stunning Wedding

July 22, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

Pippa Middleton is married! Kate Middleton’s younger sister tied the knot with her longtime boyfriend, financier James Matthews, in the UK on Saturday afternoon. Pippa, who looked breathtaking in her cap sleeved wedding gown, said “I do” at St. Mark’s Englefield in Berkshire. The reception is being held at Carole and Michael Middleton’s home in Bucklebury in their 18-acre garden.

Kate was on hand to escort her kids, Prince George and Princess Charlotte, who served as page boy and flower girl, into the church. And despite not being Pippa’s maid of honor, Kate still made sure to help her sister with her dress before the ceremony began. Prince William and Prince Harry, who brought girlfriend Meghan Markle, also shared a chat before heading into the church. See all of the stunning photos of Pippa and James’s big day below!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/popsugar/~3/jPnjD50xhQM/Pippa-Middleton-Wedding-Pictures-43557696

Giulianna Ramirez Grace Park Gretha Cavazzoni Gwen Stefani Halle Berry Hayden Panettiere


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All the Best Photos From Pippa Middleton’s Stunning Wedding

July 18, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

Pippa Middleton is married! Kate Middleton’s younger sister tied the knot with her longtime boyfriend, financier James Matthews, in the UK on Saturday afternoon. Pippa, who looked breathtaking in her cap sleeved wedding gown, said “I do” at St. Mark’s Englefield in Berkshire. The reception is being held at Carole and Michael Middleton’s home in Bucklebury in their 18-acre garden.

Kate was on hand to escort her kids, Prince George and Princess Charlotte, who served as page boy and flower girl, into the church. And despite not being Pippa’s maid of honor, Kate still made sure to help her sister with her dress before the ceremony began. Prince William and Prince Harry, who brought girlfriend Meghan Markle, also shared a chat before heading into the church. See all of the stunning photos of Pippa and James’s big day below!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/popsugar/~3/jPnjD50xhQM/Pippa-Middleton-Wedding-Pictures-43557696

Giulianna Ramirez Grace Park Gretha Cavazzoni Gwen Stefani Halle Berry Hayden Panettiere

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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: best, From, Middleton's, Photos, Pippa, stunning, Wedding

Someone Is Trying to Scrub Trump’s Name From the Wikipedia Page of Lieberman’s Law Firm

June 9, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

There’s a Wikipedia edit war going on right now on the page of the law firm of Kasowitz, Benson, Torres & Friedman. That wouldn’t be notable except for the fact that someone is trying to scrub Donald Trump’s name from the page and Joe Lieberman is a special counsel at the firm. Lieberman is a frontrunner to head the…

Read more…


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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: Firm, From, Lieberman's, name, Page, Scrub, Someone, Trump's, Trying, Wikipedia

HPE offers an escape from the aging HP-UX OS via containers

May 11, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

Hewlett Packard Enterprises’ HP-UX OS has been around for more than 30 years, and users may be looking to move on from the Unix-based OS.

Now HPE is offering a way out of the ancient OS using containers, which are small buckets running instances of applications. The containers will be offered with the Linux OS.

HPE will provide containers to transition from conventional mainframe-style OSes to new hardware like x86-based Xeon servers. In this case, HPE is trying to get users to transition from Itanium chips.

Intel started shipping its last Itanium 9700 chips — codenamed Kittson — on Thursday. Correspondingly, HPE announced new Integrity i6 servers with the new chips. But the future of HP-UX servers is uncertain because Intel has no new Itanium chips beyond Kittson.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here


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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: aging, Containers, escape, From, HPUX, Offers

The laptop ban could expand to flights coming from Europe

May 10, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

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Back in March, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security banned electronics on planes coming to the U.S. from eight Middle Eastern and African countries. Now, the ban is expected to be expanded to some European countries, based on reports from Reuters and The Daily Beast.

SEE ALSO: Confused? Here’s how to get your laptop to your destination

That would mean electronics bigger than smartphones, like laptops, e-readers, and tablets, wouldn’t be allowed on board and would have to be checked. Airlines like Emirates, Royal Jordanian, Qatar Airways, and others that fly between the U.S. and the eight countries initially included in the ban have been dealing with the new rules for almost two months. Read more…

More about Europe, Airlines, Air Travel, Dhs, and Electronics Ban


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CanAm’s Gotham Towers Project Receives I-924 Approval from USCIS

May 6, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

CanAm’s Tishman Speyer Gotham Towers Project received I-924 project exemplar approval from USCIS.

(PRWeb May 06, 2017)

Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2017/05/prweb14312483.htm

Uncategorized


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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: Approval, CanAm’s, From, Gotham, I924, Project, Receives, Towers, USCIS

9 things from Mobile World Congress you should be excited about

April 16, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

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Yes, there was no Samsung Galaxy S8 and yes, its absence was felt. But even without it, Mobile World Congress — the largest mobile show of the year — was anything but boring. 

This year, everyone’s crazy for retro phones. LG slapped competitors in the face with a surprisingly solid flagship. A futuristic-looking, hyperconnected car debuted at MWC instead of at the Geneva Motor Show. And there were just enough weird gadgets for us to geek out over while we sped through the Fira Gran Via’s sprawling convention center halls.

SEE ALSO: It’s embarrassing how much I suck at playing ‘Snake’ on the new Nokia 3310 Read more…

More about Mobile, Smartphones, Top Picks, Mwc17, and Mwc


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IDG Contributor Network: Lesson from AWS outage: stop putting your eggs in the same basket

April 2, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

It happened again.

Amazon Web Services (AWS) went down yesterday for hours,  bringing down a huge chunk of the internet with it. I didn’t realize at the time that AWS was the reason that I was not able to play the latest episode of Supergirl on my Apple TV. And it was not just the iCloud that was affected. It was not just the small sites. Big players were hit big time, including Apple, Adobe, Docker’s Registry Hub, GitHub, GitLab, Quora, Medium, Signal, Slack, Imgur, Twitch.tv…and many more.

This is not the first time AWS has gone down for hours, bringing everyone down with them. And it won’t be the last time.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here


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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: basket, Contributor, eggs, From, Lesson, network, outage, putting, same, stop

5 lessons from Amazon’s S3 cloud blunder – and how to prepare for the next one

March 23, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

According to internet monitoring platform Catchpoint, Amazon Web Service’s Simple Storage Service (S3) experienced a three hour and 39 minute disruption on Tuesday that had cascading effects across other Amazon cloud services and many internet sites that rely on the popular cloud platform.

“S3 is like air in the cloud,” says Forrester analyst Dave Bartoletti; when it goes down many websites can’t breathe. But disruptions, errors and outages are a fact of life in the cloud. Bartoletti says there’s no reason to panic: “This is not a trend,” he notes. “S3 has been so reliable, so secure, it’s been the sort of crown jewel of Amazon’s cloud.“

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here


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Spotify takes a cue from Tidal with hi-fi streaming option

March 7, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

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Facebook copies Snapchat, and Spotify copies Tidal. 

The top music streaming service is planning to introduce lossless audio — or CD-quality music — to subscribers for a higher monthly price, according to a report in The Verge. 

That report was based on a Spotify user source who got the option to sign up in what looked like a test of potential pricing, and some Reddit users who did, too. A Spotify spokesperson told the publication that “We are always testing new products and offers but have no news to share at this time.” Spotify gave the same statement to Mashable. 

The pricing test offered users an upgrade to high-quality audio for between $ 5 and $ 10 more per month than the usual $ 10-a-month Spotify Premium. That would be $ 15 to $ 20 a month total for lossless audio Spotify subscribers.  Read more…

More about Tech, Music Streaming, Tidal, Spotify, and Business


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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: From, HiFi, option, Spotify, Streaming, Takes, Tidal

5 lessons from Amazon’s S3 cloud blunder – and how to prepare for the next one

March 7, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

According to internet monitoring platform Catchpoint, Amazon Web Service’s Simple Storage Service (S3) experienced a three hour and 39 minute disruption on Tuesday that had cascading effects across other Amazon cloud services and many internet sites that rely on the popular cloud platform.

“S3 is like air in the cloud,” says Forrester analyst Dave Bartoletti; when it goes down many websites can’t breathe. But disruptions, errors and outages are a fact of life in the cloud. Bartoletti says there’s no reason to panic: “This is not a trend,” he notes. “S3 has been so reliable, so secure, it’s been the sort of crown jewel of Amazon’s cloud.“

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

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5 lessons from Amazon’s S3 cloud blunder – and how to prepare for the next one

March 5, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

According to internet monitoring platform Catchpoint, Amazon Web Service’s Simple Storage Service (S3) experienced a three hour and 39 minute disruption on Tuesday that had cascading effects across other Amazon cloud services and many internet sites that rely on the popular cloud platform.

“S3 is like air in the cloud,” says Forrester analyst Dave Bartoletti; when it goes down many websites can’t breathe. But disruptions, errors and outages are a fact of life in the cloud. Bartoletti says there’s no reason to panic: “This is not a trend,” he notes. “S3 has been so reliable, so secure, it’s been the sort of crown jewel of Amazon’s cloud.“

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here


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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: Amazon’s, blunder, cloud, From, lessons, next, prepare

30 of the brightest tech innovations from the UK

February 24, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

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Paid Content By UK’s Department for International Trade

The UK is a world-leading hub for business with an unrivalled network of experienced and innovative companies. Our businesses offer exceptional products and services that have transformed the day-to-day lives of people around the world.

The UK has been home to some of the most genius inventions. Did you know the first photograph was pioneered on our group of islands? That UK physicists, developers and innovative minds have disrupted all areas of lives across the globe? The UK’s rich history of innovation and invention has provided the world with ideas and products we can’t live without – the mobile phone you could be reading this article on began as the humble telephone back in 1876. Read more…

More about Supported and Tech


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10 Key Takeaways From The RightScale State of The Cloud Report

February 19, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

Key takeaways for enterprise CXOs from the RightScale State of the Cloud 2017 report


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The Game Mods Of The Year Awards From Mod DB

January 1, 2017 By Michael Greenwood

Game modders, developers and players voted for the best mods of the year and the results are up on the Mod DB community website.


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Nintendo Switch Could Be Part Of A New Family Of Devices From Nintendo

December 31, 2016 By Michael Greenwood

They may have done that purposefully because if the cloud-computing patent works the way it was described then that means everyone with a Switch …


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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: Could, Devices, Family, From, Nintendo, Part, switch

Full Text: Premier Li Keqiang's remarks at roundtable with prominent figures from US economic …

December 23, 2016 By Michael Greenwood

On China’ s big data and cloud computing industries and access of foreign capital, Premier Li said: Big data and cloud computing are fast-growing …


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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: economic, figures, From, Full, Keqiang&#39s, Premier, prominent, remarks, roundtable, Text

Top 4 Emerging Trends Impacting the Mobile Application Development Platform Market From 2016 …

November 27, 2016 By Michael Greenwood

Continue to Cloud Computing ». From Trekkies, Wookies, and Propellerheads. “Life would be so much easier if we only had the source code.”.


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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: 2016, Application, Development, Emerging, From, Impacting, Market, mobile, Platform, trends

17 More Cartoons From ‘Too Much Coffee Man’ Shannon Wheeler

November 11, 2016 By Michael Greenwood

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Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

October 18, 2016 By Michael Greenwood

Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia

Tokyo Game Show debriefings, new indie games, and the new Destiny expansion highlight this week’s gaming podcast from WIRED. The post Game|Life Podcast: From Tokyo to Virginia appeared first on WIRED.
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McKinsey Predicts Enterprises Are Adopting Cloud Faster As IT Shifts From Build To Buy

September 17, 2016 By Michael Greenwood

Enterprises’ adoption of IaaS as the primary environment for workloads will jump from 10% in 2015 to 51% in 2018. In 2015, 77% of enterprises used traditionally built IT infrastructure as the primary environment for at least one workload; by 2018, this will drop to 43%. Enterprises are likely to choose “hyperscale” providers such as Amazon, Google, and Microsoft, which have the largest capacity. Time-to-market and quality are accelerating cloud adoption in the enterprise with security and compliance being top concerns.


Cloud Computing

Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: Adopting, Build, cloud, Enterprises, Faster, From, McKinsey, Predicts, shifts

Cisco is axing 5,500 jobs as it shifts focus away from hardware

August 18, 2016 By Michael Greenwood


Networking hardware giant Cisco Systems announced that it’s laying off 5,500 employees in the first quarter of 2017. The move will see the company lose about 7 percent of its global workforce. Cisco isn’t in financial trouble: Its fourth quarter and fiscal year 2016 earnings report showed that it increased revenues by 2 percent year-on-year to $ 12.6 billion. However, it’s keen to prioritize its efforts in domains like security, IoT, collaboration, data centers and cloud services. Reuters noted that CEO Chuck Robbins, who completed a year at the company just last month, has been focusing Cisco’s energy towards more software…

This story continues at The Next Web


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Ruggedized Mango SX4 Android-based Laser Scanning Mobile Handheld from…

August 17, 2016 By Michael Greenwood

Advantage Route Systems announces a new IP-65 rated ruggedized Android mobile handheld featuring a built-in 1D or 2D laser scanner.

(PRWeb August 17, 2016)

Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2016/07/prweb13557780.htm


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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: Androidbased, From, Handheld, Laser, Mango, mobile, Ruggedized, Scanning

StrataCore Receives Highly Valued Cloud Solution Award from Unitas Global

August 8, 2016 By Michael Greenwood

Unitas Global’s enterprise cloud offerings help these companies make their migration to open, hybrid cloud computing fast, simple and worry-free.


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Statement from Minister MacAulay on Federal, Provincial and Territorial Ministers of Agriculture …

July 23, 2016 By Michael Greenwood

Cloud Expo, to be held November 1-3, 2016, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA, brings together Cloud Computing, Big Data, …


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Filed Under: cloud hosting Tagged With: Agriculture, Federal, From, MacAulay, Minister, Ministers, Provincial, Statement, Territorial

This Incredibly Hostile Desert Looks Beautiful (From Above)

May 20, 2016 By Michael Greenwood

This colorful image may look like a work of modern art, but it’s actually a false-color satellite image of Rub’ al Khali—the largest contiguous sand desert in the world, and home to insanely hostile conditions.

Read more…


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