Podcasts about intel nuc

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Best podcasts about intel nuc

Latest podcast episodes about intel nuc

c’t uplink
Mini-PCs von Asrock, Asus, Geekom, Minisforum und Zotac: Besser als Dell, Lenovo & Co | c't uplink

c’t uplink

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2024 72:19


Mini-PCs benötigen weniger Stellfläche, sparen Strom, arbeiten leise und kosten im Idealfall nicht viel. Die Kollegen Carsten Spille und Christof Windeck erklären, worauf beim Kauf zu achten ist, wo die Minis ihre Stärken haben, aber auch ihre Schwächen und Leistungsgrenzen. Zudem haben sie sechs Mini-PCs mit aktuellen AMD- und Intel-Prozessoren getestet. Leise und stromsparend arbeiten die meisten Mini-PCs wirklich – und wenn man Carstens und Christofs Ausstattungstipps vor allem zum Prozessor berücksichtigt, auch schnell genug. Ausführlich diskutieren wir, welche Aufgaben unter "schnell genug" fallen und wofür dann doch schnellere Hardware nötig ist. Beim Thema KI wird klar, dass einige Prozessoren zwar durchaus KI-Beschleuniger eingebaut haben, aber dass bei deren Leistungsfähigkeit und vor allem bei den Anwendungen, die dann wirklich von lokaler KI profitieren, noch sehr viel im Fluss ist. Auch auf den Gebrauchtkauf gehen wir ein. Interessanterweise sind Gebrauchte von den großen PC-Herstellern wie Dell, HP und Lenovo empfehlenswert, aber Neugeräte nur eingeschränkt: Denn deren Hauptvorteil sind Integrationsfähigkeiten in Firmeninfrastruktur, wovon Privatkunden nicht profitieren. Aktuelle Hardware setzen Dell, HP und Lenovo hingegen nur sehr zögerlich oder zu gepfefferten Preisen ein. Im Test kommen sie daher nicht vor, wir testen die sechs Modelle Asrock Industrial NUC BOX-155H, Asus NUC 14 Pro, Geekom A8, Minisforum Atomman X7 Titanium, Zotac ZBox Edge MA762 und Zotac ZBox CI671 Nano. In puncto Geschwindigkeit, Ausstattung und Lautstärke unterscheiden sie sich durchaus eklatant. Als weitere Option stellen wir einen Bauvorschlag vor, der den Barebone Asrock DeskMini X600 und einen Desktop-Prozessor von AMD nutzt. Damit hätte unser Bauvorschlag im Test als schnellster und flexibelster Kandidat abgeschnitten – aber wäre in anderen Aspekten unterlegen.

c’t uplink
Kaufberatung zu Mini-PCs (2024) | c't uplink

c’t uplink

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2024 49:10


Mini-PCs kommen mit wenig Platz, Strom und Geld aus – so die Hoffnung. Die c't-Redakteure Christian Hirsch, Benjamin Kraft und Carsten Spille vermitteln im Podcast c't uplink das Wissen, damit diese Hoffnung aufgeht. Die meisten Mini-PCs nutzen Mobilprozessoren von AMD oder Intel, wobei die Prozessornamen nur sehr grobe Schlüsse auf die Leistungsfähigkeit oder Details wie die Anzahl seiner Performance- und Stromsparkerne erlauben. Die Grafikchips sind für die meisten Büro- und Grafikarbeiten schnell genug und steuern mehrere hochauflösende Monitore an. Auch die Schnittstellenauswahl vieler Mini-PCs ist auf dem aktuellen Stand. Wir sprechen einige renommierte (z.B. Apple, Dell, HP, Lenovo) und weniger bekannte (z.B. Asus, MSI, Shuttle, Zotac) Marken an und erläutern das Risiko, scheinbar günstigere Mini-PCs gänzlich unbekannter Marken meist aus China selbst zu importieren. Eine Alternative ist der Gebrauchtmarkt, beispielsweise bei Refurbishern. Außerdem: Was man für den Einsatz mit Windows 11 beachten, wann Linux infrage kommt und welche Modelle als genügsame Smart-Home-Server taugen. Bei Mac minis diskutieren wir, ob man noch gebrauchte Intel-Macs kaufen sollte oder lieber zu M1 oder neuer greift." Interessant ist auch die Frage, inwieweit man – vor allem gebrauchte – Mini-PCs selbst erweitert kann. Und noch interessanter ist, sich den Mini PC gleich ganz selbst zu bauen aus einem Barebone etwa aus dem c't-Bauvorschlag. ► c't-Artikel (Paywall): Bauvorschlag für einen kompakten Office-PC mit Achtkern-CPU, c't 28/2023, S. 32 https://www.heise.de/select/ct/2023/28/2327211535094981700 ► heise+-Artikel (Paywall): Mac mini im Eigenbau: Ryzen-Office-PC als Hackintosh mit macOS 14 https://www.heise.de/ratgeber/Mac-mini-im-Eigenbau-Ryzen-Office-PC-als-Hackintosh-mit-macOS-14-9632928.html Auf YouTube: https://youtu.be/Hlr3S0egFbY

The Guy R Cook Report - Got a Minute?
Test Your Intel NUC 9 Wi-Fi & Bluetooth

The Guy R Cook Report - Got a Minute?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2024 2:09


Got a Minute? Checkout today's episode of The Guy R Cook Report podcast - the Google Doc for this episode is @ Test Your Intel NUC 9 Wi-Fi & Bluetooth ----more---- Support this podcast Subscribe where you listen to podcasts I help goal oriented business owners that run established companies to leverage the power of the internet Contact Guy R Cook @ https://guyrcook.com The Website Design Questionnaire https://guycook.wordpress.com/start-with-a-plan/ In the meantime, go ahead follow me on Twitter: @guyrcookreport Click to Tweet Be a patron of The Guy R Cook Report. Your help is appreciated.   Contact Guy R Cook https://theguyrcookreport.com/#theguyrcookreport Follow The Guy R Cook Report on Podbean iPhone and Android App | Podbean   https://bit.ly/3m6TJDV Thanks for listening, viewing or reading the show notes for this episode. This episode of The Guy R Cook Report is on YouTube too @ This episode of The Guy R Cook Report Have a great new year, and hopefully your efforts to Entertain, Educate, Convince or Inspire are in play vDomainHosting, Inc 3110 S Neel Place Kennewick, WA 509-200-1429

ITmedia PC USER
第7~13世代「Intel NUC」のサポートがASUSに移管 1月16日から

ITmedia PC USER

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2024 0:30


第7~13世代「Intel NUC」のサポートがASUSに移管 1月16日から。 ASUSTeK Computer(ASUS)は、1月16日付でIntelが製造/販売した「Intel NUC(Next Unit of Computer)」製品の顧客向けサポート業務を継承した。これにより、第7世代以降のIntel NUCのサポートは、ASUSとその現地法人(日本ではASUS JAPAN)を通して提供されることになる。

LINUX Unplugged
541: Out with a Bang

LINUX Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2023 76:18


The stories that kept us talking all year, and are only getting hotter! Plus the big flops we're still sore about. Special Guest: Kenji Berthold.

EATEL Business Podcast (Audio)
#096: Tech Buying Guide for the 2023 Holidays

EATEL Business Podcast (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2023 51:20


This is DartPoints Podcast #96 for Tuesday, December 12th, 2023.  In this podcast, we talk about tech-related gifts for your holiday buying season!  These gifts range from general tech stocking stuffers to something for the data center engineer. All this and more…. on this DartPoints Podcast. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in this podcast are the speakers own---and do not necessarily represent the views, thoughts, and opinions of DartPoints or a guest's employer. #DartPoints #DaaS, #Storage, #DataCenter, #Cybersecurity, #TechNews, #DisasterRecovery, #DataProtection, #Enterprise, #InternetPrivacy, #LifecycleManagement, #VMware, #NOC, #NetworkOperationsCenter, #ManagedDetectionAndResponse, #MDR Form Smart Swim Goggles - $249 Meta Quest 2 (or the new 3) - $249-$499 Garmin Vivoactive 5 GPS smartwatch - $300 Apple Watch Series 9 Aluminum - $399 iRobot Roomba - J7+ - Wet/dry Robot Vacuum - $699 Furbo 360 Dog Camera - $147 Ubiquiti UniFi Dream Router - $199 on UI.com Intel NUC 13 Pro (Arena Canyon) - $699.00 w/512GB NVMe SSD, 16GB of DDR4 RAM Synology DS723+ - $447.00 for 2 Drive Bay version PluralSight.com - Premium $449 per year, Standard $299 per year VMware VMUG Advantage - General is free, Advantage is $200 per year. OhSnap.com - Modular Wallet ACE Card Tracker - Tracker for Apple Find my and Google. Apple Vision Pro - Next-gen augmented reality headset. Samsung T9 (4TB) - Portable SSD Storage  

Bit-Rauschen: Der Prozessor-Podcast von c’t
Mini-PCs und Intels NUC-Ausstieg | Bit-Rauschen 2023/18

Bit-Rauschen: Der Prozessor-Podcast von c’t

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2023 56:12


Mini-PCs der „NUC“-Familie sind beliebt, aber Intel verkauft die Sparte. Wie es weitergeht, welche Alternativen es gibt: Podcast Bit-Rauschen, Folge 2023/18.

Windows Central Podcast
Surface Laptop Studio 2: Codenamed Ersa REVEALED

Windows Central Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2023 61:46


On this week's episode of the Window's Central Podcast, Dan and Zac discuss what we know so far about the Surface Laptop Studio 2, Microsoft Build 23506, Microsoft's militarised HoloLens entering another round of testing, the FTC looking into ChatGPT, ASUS saving Intel NUC mini PCs, preview Samsung Galaxy Unpacked, debate the best travel laptops, and more! Links: Surface Laptop Studio 2 revealed - Windows Central Microsoft preinstalls the new Outlook app on Windows 11 in latest Insider Preview - Windows Central Microsoft's militarized HoloLens to enter next wave of testing - Windows Central FTC is now taking a look at OpenAI's ChatGPT - Windows Central ASUS just saved Intel NUC mini PCs from extinction - Windows Central Follow us on Twitter: @Daniel_Rubino @ZacBowden

ThinkComputers Weekly Tech Podcast
ThinkComputers Podcast #371 - RTX 4060 Ti 16GB, New DeepCool Digital Coolers, Intel NUC Done & More!

ThinkComputers Weekly Tech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2023 78:10


This week on the podcast we talk about our reviews of the Lian Li Galahad II Trinity SL-INF Liquid CPU Cooler as well as DeepCool's new Digital CPU coolers.  We also discuss the NVIDIA RTX 4060 Ti 16GB and if anyone cares, Intel exiting their NUC business, some new acquisitions and much more!

STB-Finance理財大富翁
Intel is making strategic adjustments to support partners who can continue to lead innovation in the NUC system product line華碩系列三

STB-Finance理財大富翁

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2023 17:37


英特爾與全球科技解決方案供應商華碩(2357)已達成一份合約的條款清單(term sheet),華碩將製造、銷售和支援第10代至第13代Intel新一代運算單元(NUC)產品線,並進行未來產品設計的開發工作。 英特爾副總裁暨客戶平台解決方案事業群總經理Sam Gao表示,英特爾的NUC團隊致力於提供獨一無二的產品,推動超小型電腦的市場創新;隨著英特爾的策略調整,首要任務是確保客戶和合作夥伴能夠順利交接,協助生態系合作夥伴持續推動NUC系統產品的創新和成長,期待華碩持續提供優質的產品和服務,為英特爾的NUC系統客戶提供完善的支援。 英特爾正進行策略調整,支持生態系合作夥伴能夠繼續引領NUC系統產品線的創新和發展。華碩能夠提供客戶領先業界的專業知識,在迷你PC方面也擁有豐富的經驗,是延續推動NUC系統產品創新與發展的理想之選。 華碩營運長暨全球資深副總裁謝明傑強調,誠摯感謝英特爾對華碩的信心,相信華碩能夠引領NUC系統產品線的發展,攜手強化迷你PC的未來,擴大在AI和AIoT領域的發展,並致力為NUC系統客戶提供卓越的產品和支援。 根據擬定中的合約,華碩將取得Intel NUC系統產品線設計的非專屬授權,製造並販售第10代至第13代NUC系統產品,並進行未來產品設計的開發。華碩亦將成立全新「NUC事業部」,持續為Intel NUC系統客戶提供產品與支援 小額贊助支持本節目: https://open.firstory.me/user/ckpn6ychi2iii0882y4jgrcz8 留言告訴我你對這一集的想法: https://open.firstory.me/user/ckpn6ychi2iii0882y4jgrcz8/comments 純網路銀行一切服務都透過網路完成,可以節省掉實體銀行的店租、ATM 、行員、水電費、維護費之類的成本,進而提供更優惠的存款及貸款利率,促進金融產業邁向4.0 一. 美術地國-股票and地產✨: https://lin.ee/QlcbzeR 二.Telegram,理財STB✨ https://t.me/stbstock11 Intel and ASUS (2357), a global technology solutions provider, have reached a term sheet for a contract. ASUS will manufacture, sell and support the 10th to 13th generation Intel Next Generation Computing Unit (NUC) product line, And carry out the development work of future product design. Sam Gao, vice president of Intel and general manager of the Customer Platform Solutions Business Group, said that Intel's NUC team is committed to providing unique products and promoting innovation in the ultra-small computer market; with Intel's strategy adjustments, the first task is to ensure that customers and partners It can be successfully handed over and assist ecosystem partners to continue to promote the innovation and growth of NUC system products. We expect ASUS to continue to provide high-quality products and services, and provide comprehensive support for Intel's NUC system customers. Intel is making strategic adjustments to support ecosystem partners to continue to lead the innovation and development of the NUC system product line. Asustek can provide customers with industry-leading expertise and has extensive experience in mini PCs, making it an ideal choice for continuing to promote the innovation and development of NUC system products. Asus Chief Operating Officer and Global Senior Vice President Xie Mingjie emphasized that he sincerely thanks Intel for its confidence in Asus, and believes that Asus can lead the development of the NUC system product line, work together to strengthen the future of mini PCs, expand the development in the field of AI and AIoT, and devote itself to NUC System customers are provided with superior products and support. According to the proposed contract, ASUS will obtain a non-exclusive authorization for the design of Intel NUC system product line, manufacture and sell the 10th to 13th generation NUC system products, and carry out the development of future product design. ASUS will also establish a new "NUC Division" to continue to provide products and support for Intel NUC system customers Powered by Firstory Hosting

PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #731 - RIP Intel NUC / No RTX 4060 Ti 16GB Reviews? / Crucial T700 Gen5 SSD Performance

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2023 77:06


Another hour plus of tech talk from your favorite group of podcasters (and also Sebastian). Topics below. Recorded July 12, 2023.Timestamps:00:00 Intro02:47 Food with Josh04:09 Intel to end NUC production06:27 Buy a 2TB Intel 670p NVMe SSD for $69 while they last08:17 The Radeon RX 7900 XTX hits $799 (briefly)10:26 NVIDIA not seeding RTX 4060 Ti 16GB to reviewers25:02 ThinkPad 701c upgraded via FrameWork motherboard and iPad screen27:15 Brett's Apple Corner (AR headset discussion)30:58 Google AR head quits33:25 Podcast sponsor - Hello Fresh34:47 Security Corner44:48 Gaming Quick Hits53:41 Crucial T700 Gen5 SSD review1:05:39 Picks of the Week1:15:29 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

Windows Weekly (MP3)
WW 837: A Small Internet Boutique - Microsoft defeats the FTC, AdDuplex shutting down, Azure AD rebrand

Windows Weekly (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 156:23


MICROSOFT BEATS FTC IN DRAMATIC FASHION Judge throws out FTC's request to block Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard For once, common sense prevails FTC threatens to appeal, but legal experts say this will fail UK CMA (sort of) realizes the error of its ways and will renegotiate with Microsoft and then later said it may require a new investigation because they are terrible Just a quick note about an old friend: AdDuplex is shutting down Amazon is first Big Tech firm to legally challenge EU's new anti-Big Tech laws Windows Microsoft releases Moment 3 for the fourth time Insider: New Canary build (today) brings new features from Dev, Arm32 deprecation, etc. Amazon Appstore for Windows 11 is now generally available Microsoft Edge now blocks spam pop-ups. Finally, a reasonable Edge feature Intel is killing the NUC, will exit the PC business Cloud/Enterprise Microsoft is renaming Azure AD to Entra ID Former original NT team member burns bridges as he leaves Google for second time Dev Microsoft is bringing .NET MAUI is coming to Visual Studio Code Microsoft Dev Box is generally available Raspberry Pi open-sources its Code Editor GitHub announced the public beta of passkey authentication Xbox Digital Eclipse is going to release a series of interactive classic video documentaries on Xbox Xbox introduces new voice reporting feature to help battle online toxicity Tips & Picks Tip of the week: You can get a $1 Game Pass trial again App pick of the week: Nostalgia (for Intellivision) RunAs Radio this week: Windows 11 Deployment with Johan Arwidmark Brown liquor pick of the week: Smooth Ambler Old Scout   Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: AWS Insiders - WW Brooklinen.com Use Code WINDOWS cachefly.com

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
Windows Weekly 837: A Small Internet Boutique

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 156:23


MICROSOFT BEATS FTC IN DRAMATIC FASHION Judge throws out FTC's request to block Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard For once, common sense prevails FTC threatens to appeal, but legal experts say this will fail UK CMA (sort of) realizes the error of its ways and will renegotiate with Microsoft and then later said it may require a new investigation because they are terrible Just a quick note about an old friend: AdDuplex is shutting down Amazon is first Big Tech firm to legally challenge EU's new anti-Big Tech laws Windows Microsoft releases Moment 3 for the fourth time Insider: New Canary build (today) brings new features from Dev, Arm32 deprecation, etc. Amazon Appstore for Windows 11 is now generally available Microsoft Edge now blocks spam pop-ups. Finally, a reasonable Edge feature Intel is killing the NUC, will exit the PC business Cloud/Enterprise Microsoft is renaming Azure AD to Entra ID Former original NT team member burns bridges as he leaves Google for second time Dev Microsoft is bringing .NET MAUI is coming to Visual Studio Code Microsoft Dev Box is generally available Raspberry Pi open-sources its Code Editor GitHub announced the public beta of passkey authentication Xbox Digital Eclipse is going to release a series of interactive classic video documentaries on Xbox Xbox introduces new voice reporting feature to help battle online toxicity Tips & Picks Tip of the week: You can get a $1 Game Pass trial again App pick of the week: Nostalgia (for Intellivision) RunAs Radio this week: Windows 11 Deployment with Johan Arwidmark Brown liquor pick of the week: Smooth Ambler Old Scout   Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: AWS Insiders - WW Brooklinen.com Use Code WINDOWS cachefly.com

Radio Leo (Audio)
Windows Weekly 837: A Small Internet Boutique

Radio Leo (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 156:23


MICROSOFT BEATS FTC IN DRAMATIC FASHION Judge throws out FTC's request to block Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard For once, common sense prevails FTC threatens to appeal, but legal experts say this will fail UK CMA (sort of) realizes the error of its ways and will renegotiate with Microsoft and then later said it may require a new investigation because they are terrible Just a quick note about an old friend: AdDuplex is shutting down Amazon is first Big Tech firm to legally challenge EU's new anti-Big Tech laws Windows Microsoft releases Moment 3 for the fourth time Insider: New Canary build (today) brings new features from Dev, Arm32 deprecation, etc. Amazon Appstore for Windows 11 is now generally available Microsoft Edge now blocks spam pop-ups. Finally, a reasonable Edge feature Intel is killing the NUC, will exit the PC business Cloud/Enterprise Microsoft is renaming Azure AD to Entra ID Former original NT team member burns bridges as he leaves Google for second time Dev Microsoft is bringing .NET MAUI is coming to Visual Studio Code Microsoft Dev Box is generally available Raspberry Pi open-sources its Code Editor GitHub announced the public beta of passkey authentication Xbox Digital Eclipse is going to release a series of interactive classic video documentaries on Xbox Xbox introduces new voice reporting feature to help battle online toxicity Tips & Picks Tip of the week: You can get a $1 Game Pass trial again App pick of the week: Nostalgia (for Intellivision) RunAs Radio this week: Windows 11 Deployment with Johan Arwidmark Brown liquor pick of the week: Smooth Ambler Old Scout   Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: AWS Insiders - WW Brooklinen.com Use Code WINDOWS cachefly.com

Windows Weekly (Video HI)
WW 837: A Small Internet Boutique - Microsoft defeats the FTC, AdDuplex shutting down, Azure AD rebrand

Windows Weekly (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 156:23


MICROSOFT BEATS FTC IN DRAMATIC FASHION Judge throws out FTC's request to block Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard For once, common sense prevails FTC threatens to appeal, but legal experts say this will fail UK CMA (sort of) realizes the error of its ways and will renegotiate with Microsoft and then later said it may require a new investigation because they are terrible Just a quick note about an old friend: AdDuplex is shutting down Amazon is first Big Tech firm to legally challenge EU's new anti-Big Tech laws Windows Microsoft releases Moment 3 for the fourth time Insider: New Canary build (today) brings new features from Dev, Arm32 deprecation, etc. Amazon Appstore for Windows 11 is now generally available Microsoft Edge now blocks spam pop-ups. Finally, a reasonable Edge feature Intel is killing the NUC, will exit the PC business Cloud/Enterprise Microsoft is renaming Azure AD to Entra ID Former original NT team member burns bridges as he leaves Google for second time Dev Microsoft is bringing .NET MAUI is coming to Visual Studio Code Microsoft Dev Box is generally available Raspberry Pi open-sources its Code Editor GitHub announced the public beta of passkey authentication Xbox Digital Eclipse is going to release a series of interactive classic video documentaries on Xbox Xbox introduces new voice reporting feature to help battle online toxicity Tips & Picks Tip of the week: You can get a $1 Game Pass trial again App pick of the week: Nostalgia (for Intellivision) RunAs Radio this week: Windows 11 Deployment with Johan Arwidmark Brown liquor pick of the week: Smooth Ambler Old Scout   Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: AWS Insiders - WW Brooklinen.com Use Code WINDOWS cachefly.com

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)
Windows Weekly 837: A Small Internet Boutique

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 156:23


MICROSOFT BEATS FTC IN DRAMATIC FASHION Judge throws out FTC's request to block Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard For once, common sense prevails FTC threatens to appeal, but legal experts say this will fail UK CMA (sort of) realizes the error of its ways and will renegotiate with Microsoft and then later said it may require a new investigation because they are terrible Just a quick note about an old friend: AdDuplex is shutting down Amazon is first Big Tech firm to legally challenge EU's new anti-Big Tech laws Windows Microsoft releases Moment 3 for the fourth time Insider: New Canary build (today) brings new features from Dev, Arm32 deprecation, etc. Amazon Appstore for Windows 11 is now generally available Microsoft Edge now blocks spam pop-ups. Finally, a reasonable Edge feature Intel is killing the NUC, will exit the PC business Cloud/Enterprise Microsoft is renaming Azure AD to Entra ID Former original NT team member burns bridges as he leaves Google for second time Dev Microsoft is bringing .NET MAUI is coming to Visual Studio Code Microsoft Dev Box is generally available Raspberry Pi open-sources its Code Editor GitHub announced the public beta of passkey authentication Xbox Digital Eclipse is going to release a series of interactive classic video documentaries on Xbox Xbox introduces new voice reporting feature to help battle online toxicity Tips & Picks Tip of the week: You can get a $1 Game Pass trial again App pick of the week: Nostalgia (for Intellivision) RunAs Radio this week: Windows 11 Deployment with Johan Arwidmark Brown liquor pick of the week: Smooth Ambler Old Scout   Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: AWS Insiders - WW Brooklinen.com Use Code WINDOWS cachefly.com

Radio Leo (Video HD)
Windows Weekly 837: A Small Internet Boutique

Radio Leo (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 156:23


MICROSOFT BEATS FTC IN DRAMATIC FASHION Judge throws out FTC's request to block Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard For once, common sense prevails FTC threatens to appeal, but legal experts say this will fail UK CMA (sort of) realizes the error of its ways and will renegotiate with Microsoft and then later said it may require a new investigation because they are terrible Just a quick note about an old friend: AdDuplex is shutting down Amazon is first Big Tech firm to legally challenge EU's new anti-Big Tech laws Windows Microsoft releases Moment 3 for the fourth time Insider: New Canary build (today) brings new features from Dev, Arm32 deprecation, etc. Amazon Appstore for Windows 11 is now generally available Microsoft Edge now blocks spam pop-ups. Finally, a reasonable Edge feature Intel is killing the NUC, will exit the PC business Cloud/Enterprise Microsoft is renaming Azure AD to Entra ID Former original NT team member burns bridges as he leaves Google for second time Dev Microsoft is bringing .NET MAUI is coming to Visual Studio Code Microsoft Dev Box is generally available Raspberry Pi open-sources its Code Editor GitHub announced the public beta of passkey authentication Xbox Digital Eclipse is going to release a series of interactive classic video documentaries on Xbox Xbox introduces new voice reporting feature to help battle online toxicity Tips & Picks Tip of the week: You can get a $1 Game Pass trial again App pick of the week: Nostalgia (for Intellivision) RunAs Radio this week: Windows 11 Deployment with Johan Arwidmark Brown liquor pick of the week: Smooth Ambler Old Scout   Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: AWS Insiders - WW Brooklinen.com Use Code WINDOWS cachefly.com

The PC Pro Podcast
PC Pro Podcast 626

The PC Pro Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2023 65:18


The team discusses a big week for AI, outages at Microsoft and Apple's latest move to break away from Google. Our Hot Hardware candidate is the Intel NUC 11 Essential, a £150 mini-PC designed for always-on duties.

VMware Communities Roundtable
#631 - VMUG HomeLab Intel NUC & vSphere 8 for 450. 00 w/Matt Heldstab

VMware Communities Roundtable

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2022 60:11


Did you miss the vExpert gift this year, you can get a great NUC system for 249.99 to start your holiday project this year. With this hardware you get a silent home lab system (no fan) that will run vSphere 8. Pick up the VMUG advantage membership for 200.00 and get a vSphere 8 license and all the rest. A great 2023 kickstart to update your skills and have fun.

TechLinked
Microsoft vs Sony, Surface Pro 9, Meta Connect + more!

TechLinked

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2022 7:09


0:00 this guy was not linked 0:15 Microsoft, Sony beef over Activision deal 1:26 Surface Pro 9, Surface Laptop 5 2:39 Meta Quest Pro 3:50 Vessi Footwear 4:23 QUICK BITS 4:31 RTX 4080 12GB benchmarks 5:16 I don't know... what this is 5:24 Intel NUC 13 Raptor Canyon 5:51 Gaming Chromebooks 6:29 DALL-E 2 in Microsoft Designer, Bing News Sources: https://lmg.gg/AHy0v

Ask Noah Show
Episode 307: Ask Noah Show 307

Ask Noah Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 53:57


This week, Noah and Steve tell you about the new Intel NUC that supports a TRIPPLE GPU Slot, a company that provides commercial support for Linux users, and the courts are divided on the scope of cell phone searches! -- During The Show -- 04:00 Rural 5G Internet - Chris User Hardware Netgear RAX45 ZTE MC8010CA Telus in Canada CGNAT Cradle Point (https://cradlepoint.com/) Peplink (https://www.peplink.com/) 07:40 Listener Responds to 305 - Greg White list "assets.adobedtm.com" 09:20 HDMI-CEC - Avri Wikipedia CEC (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_Electronics_Control) HDMI 2.0a Ethernet over HDMI (https://thehometheaterdiy.com/hdmi-with-ethernet/) Cable companies are going to IP TV STI Cables STI HDMI Decimator (https://www.btx.com/decimator-md-lx-hdmi-sdi-converter) 15:00 Listener follows up on own hosting question - Gary A2 Hosting 16:15 ParrotSec ParrotSec (https://parrotsec.org) Multiple flavors/editions 18:30 Euro Linux Euro Linux (https://en.euro-linux.com/eurolinux/desktop/) Euro Linux Review (https://www.debugpoint.com/eurolinux-desktop-review/) Desktop Functionality - Server Grade Quality Compatible with RHEL Simple Update Management 22:30 NUC Desktop ARS Technica (https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2022/10/intel-is-making-a-nuc-desktop-thats-big-enough-for-a-triple-slot-gpu/) Tripple GPU Takes out the guess work Raptor Canyon Box K-Series Core i9, i7, i5 750 Watt power supply 32:28 News Wire NVK Driver Gaming on Linux (https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2022/10/nvk-is-a-new-open-source-mesa-vulkan-driver-for-nvidia-gpus/) Collabora (https://www.collabora.com/news-and-blog/news-and-events/introducing-nvk.html) Meta AI Inference Engine Analytics India Mag (https://analyticsindiamag.com/meta-open-sources-an-ai-inference-engine-that-works-on-both-nvidia-amd-gpus/) Kaos Linux 22.10 Source Forge (https://sourceforge.net/projects/kaosx/files/ISO/KaOS-2022.10-x86_64.iso) Robo Linux 12.08 Source Forge (https://sourceforge.net/projects/robolinux/files/) EasyOS 4.4.1 BK Home (https://bkhome.org/news/202210/easyos-441-released.html) Fatdog64 813 Puppy Linux (https://forum.puppylinux.com/viewtopic.php?t=7003) SparkyLinux 22.10 Sparky LInux (https://sparkylinux.org/sparky-2022-10/) Tuxedo OS Live ISO 9 to 5 Linux (https://9to5linux.com/tuxedo-computers-releases-live-iso-of-its-ubuntu-based-tuxedo-os-linux-distro) LibreSSL 3.6.0 Open BSD Journal (https://www.undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20221006105921) OpenSSH 9.1 Open BSD Journal (https://www.undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20221006091946) OpenBGPD 7.7 Open BSD Journal (https://www.undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20221007085644) OpenZFS 2.1.6 -Github (https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/releases/tag/zfs-2.1.6) WireShark 4.0 WireShark (https://www.wireshark.org/docs/relnotes/wireshark-4.0.0.html) Blender 3.3.1 LTS Blender Nation (https://www.blendernation.com/2022/10/07/blender-3-3-1-lts-and-blender-2-93-11-lts-released/) SUSE ALP v0.01 The Register (https://www.theregister.com/2022/10/05/suse_alp_v001/) Endor Labs $25M Silicon Angle (https://siliconangle.com/2022/10/10/endor-labs-launches-25m-secure-open-source-code-dependencies/) Legitify Open Source For U (https://www.opensourceforu.com/2022/10/a-new-open-source-scaling-and-security-tool-is-now-available-to-download/) MS 'Farm of the Future' Microsoft (https://blogs.microsoft.com/ai/microsoft-open-sources-its-farm-of-the-future-toolkit/) 34:30 Cellphone Searches EFF Article (https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2022/10/new-federal-and-state-court-rulings-show-courts-are-divided-scope-cell-phone) Law Justia (https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/ca5/19-10842/19-10842-2021-01-05.html) Richardson v. State United States v. Morton EFF Filed amicus brief Good Faith Exception Password vs Bio-Metrics/Reboot the phone 51:00 Launch of "Critical Thought" Noah's New Talk Show (News Radio 1310 AM KNOX) Focused on local & regional issues. Airs Monday - Friday 09:00am - 12:00pm (Central) Streamed online at knoxradio.com (https://player.listenlive.co/64061) More time to invest in Ask Noah Show / creating content. -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! 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Sixteen:Nine
Paul Ciolino, OptiSigns

Sixteen:Nine

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 35:31


The 16:9 PODCAST IS SPONSORED BY SCREENFEED – DIGITAL SIGNAGE CONTENT It has been nagging at me for the last few months that I didn't know a hell of a lot about OptiSigns, even though the Houston-based company was a main advertiser on Sixteen:Nine. That's been fixed, having had a great conversation last week with the company's sales director Paul Ciolino. We got into a whole bunch of things, from the company's roots, how software development bridges the US and Vietnam, and their go-to-market model. OptiSigns is focused on making a product and services available that manage to tick the much-demanded boxes of intuitive and affordable, but also have a lot of sophistication and scalability. Ciolino works out of New York City, which will help explain why you might hear sirens in the background. Subscribe to this podcast: iTunes * Google Play * RSS TRANSCRIPT Paul, thank you for joining me. Can you give me the background on what OptiSigns is all about? Because I know them, but I don't know much about your company yet.  Paul Ciolino: Yeah, absolutely. Dave, thanks so much for having me. First of all, excited to be here. You're my first podcast ever so it's a wonderful honor for you to have, but OptiSigns is a cloud-based digital signage solution and really the key tenets of OptiSigns signs are: Can we make it a low barrier to entry? Can anybody use it? Is it easy? Is it accessible? Can people deploy on myriad, different platforms or OSs?  And we try to check all those boxes as much as possible while making it all cost-effective.  And the company's based in Houston?  Paul Ciolino: That's right, yep.  How long has the company been around?  Paul Ciolino: So it was founded in 2015, but really the growth started happening within the last three years and we're seeing incredible year-over-year growth now.  Back in 2015, there was already any number of easy-to-use, I don't wanna say entry-level because that kind of diminishes the product, but friendly, price effective, on and on, and I'm curious what prompted the founders to look at the market and go, okay, there's an opportunity here, because, from my perspective, there was a lot of what you've described already out there? Paul Ciolino: Yeah, absolutely. That's a really good question. I think when you think about digital signage top-down and you're looking at it with a bird's eye view, there's just a huge TAM there, right? Even if it is a saturated market, there are hundreds of vendors that do it today. There are a few really big players and there are a few really big players that do it really well. The key differentiator for us is probably just going to be on the usability side of things, and I think that was where, the powers that be, were sitting in a back room somewhere saying, how do we put our footprint on this industry? What can we do to make ourselves stand out and be late adopters of getting into the industry while also being a significant factor?  Yeah, it's an interesting balance that has to be struck in that I've seen a few times promotions for companies who say that we have a very easy-to-use friendly platform and when I've looked at it or other people have looked at it, they said, it's not really all that friendly or easier, or sure, it is friendly, but it doesn't do much.  Paul Ciolino: Yeah, I think that's a good point. When we have this conversation internally a lot, and sometimes I talk to our customer base about it, but really the idea behind designing OptiSigns from the ground up with our engineering team and from a product perspective was like taking a look at something like an iPhone, right? When you purchase an iPhone, you get the iPhone, you take it out of the box, you put a SIM card in it and you just start using it. You've got an iPhone now. So we thought about that with a digital signage lens, and that's where we started putting our plan into motion.  So when you are a new user of the system, how does it work, is it software as a service?  Paul Ciolino: Yeah, absolutely. At our core, we're a software company. We don't do the installation. We don't do hardware sales outside of a couple of pre-configured devices that you can get. Really, what we do focus on is just that UX/UI component. We have 135 native app integrations now, from a simple weather app to Tableau, Power BI and more sophisticated web scripting and an open API, so we run the gamut of what you can do with digital signage.  Is there a particular market that you guys are targeting?  Paul Ciolino: So the nice thing about digital signage is that there's just so much variability in actual implementations. So when we think about targeting somebody specific, we do have our eyes on a couple of industries like logistics right now is something that we're making a big push into. We're also looking into things like healthcare, we've got a pretty good customer base with healthcare already, but we're seeing a lot of organic conversations happen there. So we're like, hey, what do we do? How can we accelerate their growth into this vertical and things like that? That's interesting because I was waiting for you to say, yeah we're chasing retail and QSR and then I'd be rolling my eyes because everybody and their sister is, but logistics and healthcare, I think that's really smart. They're not all that addressed yet, and I'm curious, what's the ask in logistics, is it for visualizing data like Power BI and Tableau? Paul Ciolino: Yeah, absolutely. A lot of times these people are using more bespoke dashboards as well. So when you think about trying to take something out of the box, and then you think about maybe the staff over at one of these logistics companies, let's call it a trucking company or something like that for example, maybe they don't have the bandwidth on the it side of the ball to have somebody spend three weeks creating a custom integration with an API or something like that, which they can do with us. But we offer OptiSigns where you can basically take your internal dashboards that are gated by username and password, and you can script the authentication and the execution of that username and password, and then get to your target resource that way.  Why do they want that? Where are they showing on these screens?  Paul Ciolino: They're showing everything from lead times to rotation schedules to availability to weather, to all kinds of different, increment factors that could be going into either a trucking scenario again, or maybe we've got some type of supply chain issue, and they're doing a full SWOT analysis in their backroom and they have to have all of this real-time data come up as they're planning around the next week, month, quarter, half year, whatever they're gonna do.  So it's really myriad, just like all of our deployments are as well in different verticals, you can use it however you need to.  I find that interesting because so much of the attention in digital signage is around the wow factor, creative like amazing displays and all these things that are going on, and to me the long tail of digital signage is the stuff that you might describe as boring, just like showing KPIs on a screen or giving instructions on what to do when something happens like an alarm trigger or whatever, like that stuff doesn't get anybody's pulse racing, but it's incredibly valuable to the day to day of a company, right?  Paul Ciolino: I think there's been like this large front end push to make signage sexy when I think, at the end of the day, the reason that somebody's gonna go pay for anything in a digital signage space is that they need it and they need specific things to be up on the screen. I'm not saying you can't make things look sexy with OptiSigns, obviously, you can do that, but at the end of the day, we want people to be able to take anything that they need to have up on their screens and deploy it easily and efficiently without breaking the bank.  You mentioned breaking the bank, your pricing tiers are pretty friendly in that. I think I saw it was $10-12 a month, depending on what you're doing. Is that accurate? Paul Ciolino: Yeah, that's about right, and that's gonna be the starting price, obviously, if people are gonna be looking at growing their business with us and scaling, which is something that we specialize in as well, just making that ease of scaling, something that comes out of the box with us. It could be anywhere from $10-15 a month per screen, unlimited users, unlimited resources uploaded into the cloud, and all that kind of stuff.  The $10 one gives you a lot of functionality, but as you scale up or tier up, so to speak, you are just adding more capability. Paul Ciolino: Yeah, basically the way you can think about it is, let's say somebody's got maybe they even have a hundred screens or something like that, but they're gonna be putting the same thing on a hundred of their screens. They probably don't need to go into the conversation about creating manual permissions or a brand kit or reporting for their advertisers that are paying for ad space or things like that, so they can live with that standard plan that we have and be happy all day.  They still have access to 95% of the functionality on the platform. It's just gonna be some of those more robust features binding to an IDP or an SSO provider or something like that or creating a monitoring and alerting system where they can enable triggers for different events to go to specific people and make sure that they've got as much uptime as possible. That's all quite interesting because when I think of the pricing tier that you're at, it's usually small to medium business operators who the company is targeting and they're never talking about data binding or anything like that, it's just about you can put this menu on a screen and you can change it on demand. Paul Ciolino: Yeah, and you hit the nail on the head there. We have incredible organic growth within those verticals where you're looking at QSRs gyms, and places like that. But I think the thing that we've been doing really well this year, especially, and especially in the last quarter and a half or so, has been getting into really earnest more of those enterprise deployments, where we're talking about, we've got a GDPR situation in Germany or something like that, and we have facilities on five different continents and we need to make sure that everybody's got the right access and we've got audit logs that they can enable and we really do pair very well with very robust security concerns.  Yeah, that's interesting as well in that I've talked to a few companies who started out targeting the small to medium business market and have migrated to enterprise because of the demands of customers, but also it's just that if you're dealing with the entry level market, you're being beaten up on price and it's not necessarily easy to scale that kind of management of all those different customers.  Paul Ciolino: Yeah, and I think that's something that's, again, credit to our engineering team, they make it so easy for people to scale on multiple different levels, whether you're talking about headcount as users within the platform, you're talking about multiple locations, or you're talking about multiple screens within a single location, and it really does just make it very intuitive. We've got our support team as well who's great. I think the CSAT that we talked about in our H1 review was like 94 or something like that, and that's an objective number, I'm not putting a lens on that one, but I think when you think about implementing something new and you're looking at a by process that maybe has 15-20 touchpoints or something like that, you're making a pretty big commitment just from a G&A perspective as a client, and then you think about, okay, is this gonna save my needs for the next year, three years, five years, ten years, and if so, how is that gonna look? What is my hardware, reliability gonna look like and things like that, and we kind of cover all bases.  Is it important when you're dealing with those kinds of pricing tiers to minimize the number of customer touches, make as much of your offer and your software self-service and not have to provide a lot of support and customer contact? Not that you don't wanna talk to your customers, but it's just that if you have a whole bunch of them, that means you need a whole bunch of people to deal with them. Paul Ciolino: Absolutely. Yeah, so that's again, credit to our engineering team and the way that we laid the bedrock as a company from our founders to be able to build this thing where it is very self-service.  Another thing that we do that a lot of companies these days are moving towards is we've got a support blog, we've got a support site. We've got a ticket creation system, a phone number, and an email. It's very multi-threaded in how people can actually go about getting the help they need, and I think that's something that has allowed us to spend time on growth and not as much time on maintenance, while still providing an exceptional level of service to our customer base.  You've mentioned a lot of growth in the last three years. Why do you think that is? What is it that's resonating?  Paul Ciolino: So at the end of the day, every company's going to have a little bit of this slow out of the gates kind of motion, right? And once you get the feeling for an industry and a customer base, and you have enough conversations and you get enough feedback, all of those things combined into something very powerful, even from a business owner's perspective, where you're like, okay, I can listen to these things and then I can go act on them. And one of the nice things about us is we run a very agile team, a very lean team, and we have the same communication with the same people, a lot of the time, and so that means that we can go ahead and pivot on almost a weekly basis with our roadmap if we need to, and we can effectively release functional app integrations or just things that maybe we don't think about that our users think about. And I think that level of service that comes from, even the engineering team level, is something that is really hard to achieve in any business in 2022 these days.  And some of the software development's done in Vietnam, right?  Paul Ciolino: That's right. They have a very close working relationship with our founders. They've worked together for a long time. They know how to communicate effectively, and it's really paid dividends for us as a business.  Is that kind of a historical thing? I don't know South Texas all that well, but I believe that there's a pretty big Vietnamese diaspora there that went over there for fishing fleets and everything else, but I suspect there's still a lot of business ties back? Paul Ciolino: Yeah, absolutely. I can't speak to the geopolitical business ties within the founder's relationship levels. Personally, I've benefited from the influx of the Vietnamese community in Houston via Cajun cuisine, but outside of that, I think it's just something where people have worked together before, I've worked with people and at a few different companies or something like that, and we can talk about anything at the drop of a hat and we can make an effective decision when it needs to be made How do you sell? Is it just direct to the customer or are you doing things like an affiliate channel or reseller channel? Paul Ciolino: Yeah, so we absolutely do offer that. We have a couple of different options available. We've got an affiliate program to where, maybe you don't wanna spend the time or you don't have the time or the capital or anything else to be able to go and become a reseller, but you have a lot of people that you know in your network that are interested in digital signage. So we've got that affiliate program. You can make some money off of referring customers to us and it pays out quarterly and things like that, and we try to make it very easy and low maintenance for them to maintain those relationships, and then also generate business for us that are not cold leads at all. They're very warm leads.  The other side of that is gonna be that reseller pro reseller program that you mentioned and that can work in a few different ways. You can package the software, if you need to, you can white label it, and that's not even in our top-level plan, that's in our middle level plan. It's not like we're gate keeping too much here like we really do wanna make this software available to anybody that needs it, and we're doing that in several different ways as well.  You're happy enough to be just operating under the hood and nobody even knows it's OptiSigns?  Paul Ciolino: Absolutely, that's why I'm off camera.  You have an $80 Android stick that you offer as a hardware option. I'm curious how often that comes up as an ask or are they using any number of different platforms out there, because I know you have a web player or that's the foundational player. Paul Ciolino: So going back to the low barrier to entry that we're going with at OptiSigns. We're OS agnostic. You can deploy Windows or Linux, we've got an ARM Linux. We've got LG commercial grade native app, an Android native app, and Fire TV so you can use a Fire Stick as well. It really doesn't matter how you deploy with us, that is just there as an Option. We don't make any money off of those devices, they're literally just there in case somebody thinks that's the best deployment for them, and if you go to, like Reddit or somewhere third party where there's no Optisign sales lens on it, you can see that these Android players are generally very reliable.  We've had them deployed for, I think over a year and a half now, and we've got over 99% uptime with them. So things like that, providing reliability to our customers and, places like Australia, where it gets super hot over there, maybe there's not the best wifi connection, things like that. Those are really good deployments. I think we've got over 10,000 of our Android sticks that are out right now, and that's just one of our deployments. Oh really, and are people going down that path because they are price sensitive or they just want like a dumb-down device that they can just stick in? Paul Ciolino: Yeah, I think it's somewhere between those two. Okay. So if you think about it like a Fire Stick, it's gonna be a little bit cumbersome, people can go watch ESPN or something like that on a Fire Stick. If you're looking at something like a Raspberry PI, right now those are incredibly expensive. We do sell those too, just in case that's what people are familiar with and maybe they need more granular security pushes or something like that to their systems..  That's interesting, I've never heard somebody say Raspberry PIs are incredibly expensive, but I know what you're saying. Once you fully get them out, they're not $35, right?  Paul Ciolino: Yeah, with supply chain stuff happening right now, they're like $300 or something like that. That's what I've been hearing. We're selling them for $130 on our site, I think, but outside of that, you've got the ability to do something like an Intel NUC, or you can do a Micro PC, or you can have a full-blown computer behind a screen. When you think about something that marries the functionality of what those things can do without the processing power, because you don't need it, but you also have the reliability that's gonna be above something like a Fire Stick, or if you're just using a web browser version or something like that, I think that's a really nice, happy medium.  One of the devil's advocates arguments around web players for digital signage is: yes, you can get this application running on any number of different kinds of devices, whether they're smart TVs or Fire sticks or whatever it may be, but there's not a lot of device management. How do you counter that argument?  Paul Ciolino: Honestly, it's not really our job to counter that argument because it's not gonna be our most recommended deployment. We're not gonna sit in front of the University of Central Florida and say, you guys should be using a web browser version for all 360 TVs that you have or something like that. We're gonna tell 'em like, what do you need? Do you have wifi in every area? Do you need an ethernet adapter? Do you need to go to a Raspberry PI? And so we'll have a very consultative conversation with our customer base before we even get into demoing the software. So that's like the first thing that we wanna nail down with our customers: How are you gonna deploy? And let's figure out the reasons why you wanna do that, and not just because, you're used to doing it that way, or you heard it was the best from like Jim down the street.  So you are saying that you have native players as well, or you have web players that have device management? Paul Ciolino: Yeah, so kind of all of the above. So if you wanted to go, like with what's called our managed device route, right? Like you could do something where you get that $80 Android stick, we'll charge you a little bit extra, as long as you have a pro plus package, you're gonna have our version of an Apple Care where we have an MDM, our support team can remote in, they can troubleshoot. You don't have to spend valuable time with your IT professionals or anything like that to go and troubleshoot these sticks. We can do it for you.  So is that your happy place? If a customer goes down that path where obviously you're making a bit more money out of them, but you remove some of the mystery, so to speak because it's a known device. Paul Ciolino: Yeah, absolutely, and I think at the end of the day, we're happy if our customers are happy, and that's why we have that consultative approach on the deployment.  Tell me about the app store/library. You mentioned you have a hundred plus apps on there. Paul Ciolino: Yeah. So we've everything from, something like just a native designer app that's within the platform, or something like the Adobe Designer Suite, or like Canva or something like that. Something simple, something that most people that are creating digital signage are gonna need at some point. How does that work?  Paul Ciolino: Yeah, it's basically a frame within the platform, it is just like an app. It'll take you to a page where you can design from a template, we've got like 700 plus templates out there right now. Everything from menus to employee appreciation to emergency notices, all that kind of stuff, and then you can go ahead and configure each element on the page. You could even do something like pull from a data source where we can map elements within that page to a spreadsheet in Google or Excel, and so for QSRs in particular, this is really beneficial because they can go into a spreadsheet, never have to log into OptiSigns again, once they get the framework of their menu done, they can just change their pricing by changing that spreadsheet. Do you have to work with your customers to help them figure out what to do? Paul Ciolino: Absolutely, and that's within the fee structure that we have, with supporting meetings, and obviously we've got our blog with really good documentation on it as well. Where are you seeing traction in the marketplace? I know you mentioned healthcare and logistics. Are there particular areas where there seems to be a lot of interest and more of an ask than maybe in the past?  Paul Ciolino: We talked about it earlier actually, but one of the places where we see a ton of room for growth is gonna be in that reseller side. So creating those partnerships and channels. We have a couple of partners where if they need to have somebody do install and maintenance, we can do that as well. We're never gonna be that company that vertically integrates all of that under one umbrella, but we can certainly provide the introductions to those. We predict that the reseller marketplace is gonna be a significant chunk of our revenue within the next two years.  You also have a mobile app, which I was curious about. Is that a mobile app for control of the screens?  Paul Ciolino: Yep, nail on the head. So that's just gonna be an admin app. You don't want to go on an iPhone 5s and start designing on there for screens that are gonna be much bigger than that. We tried to keep it pretty myopic with the app deployment. That's just one of those things where somebody's on the go, maybe it's a small business owner, maybe it's somebody in a larger company that is going around and they wanna show something cool to their stakeholders or shareholders or whatever it's gonna be, and they can go ahead and just control it ad hoc as they need it. Was that something that you developed because a customer was asking for it, or you could just figure out that this is something that would be useful? Paul Ciolino: I honestly can't speak to the inception of the idea. But I do know the way that we think about things in general and it's like:  Is there going to be a need for this at some point?cHow much is it gonna cost us from a time money perspective? Is it worth it? And then we just go do it.  You also have an audience analytics add-on, what's that about? And is that something you guys wrote or is it a partner?  Paul Ciolino: No, that is actually a proprietary algorithm that our engineering team has done as well. We're talking about basically three different statistics here. The first one is going to be gender: Is the person looking at the screen male or female or walking by the screen, male or female? The second is going to be dwell time, and that's gonna be, how long is this person in front of the screen for? The third is gonna be attention time and that's how long is this person interacting with the screen for? And so when you think about reporting, OptiSigns does it really well in a couple of different ways. The first way is going to be like a proof of play reporting where you've got an advertiser, they're paying for a certain ad to be played a certain number of times over a certain period, you can batch those reports, send them out, do whatever you need to do, make sure that everybody's cool. Everything's transparent. Everything's above board.  Same thing with AI reporting, but that's gonna be more in the split testing realm of things, right? Where you design an advertisement or you design a menu or you design something and you want to see how people engage with it when you test different versions of it and so you can basically take August 1 through August 31 on this design, September 1 through September 30 on this design. What does my dwell time look like? What does my attention time look like? How's my split looking? Are males interacting more with this design? Are females interacting more with that design? All that kind of stuff. The audience analytics stuff using computer vision has been around for probably 15 years, and the challenge in the past was that it was expensive and you had to have additional hardware and everything else, and that kind of ruled out much adoption.  Has that changed? I believe it's $5 a month at MSRP so I suspect at scale it gets cheaper than that, and I'm assuming you're using just simple USB cameras to do the capture.  Paul Ciolino: Yeah, honestly, I think you could probably just pitch this for me at this point, but basically you need any camera that can see, right? It doesn't have to be a fancy camera that can do like 4k or anything like that. You wanna make sure that you're setting it up at the right distance, obviously, you don't want a $20 USB camera trying to find out who's looking at the screen 50 yards away or something like that.  But outside of that, it really is just plug-and-play. Does it make sense financially for you to go invest the time and the little bit extra money for that to get that kind of feedback for your own purposes or for your client's purposes? If yes, then, it's a great option to have.  Does that change the hardware set-up at all? I guess what I'm saying is does the $80 Android stick no longer the right device because you've got the extra overhead of the video processing?  Paul Ciolino: Yep, nail on the head again. You're gonna need to do a Linux or a Windows deployment with something like that, just because of the processing power that's needed to be able to effectively communicate that data back to the algorithm.  So just going back to the company, how large is it?  Paul Ciolino:  So we're just sub-20 right now so we're a very small shop. We definitely move quickly for sure, and again, just going into that, learned communication that we all have together, makes it really efficient for all of us to get stuff done. And it's just privately held, self-funded that sort of thing?  Paul Ciolino: Yep, precap and no debt. I asked about shares when I was joining and they said yes, but it'll be very expensive.  So what can we expect out of OptiSigns through the rest of this year and into next year?  Paul Ciolino: I think more the same, we're gonna be obviously focusing on a few different verticals going forward as we identify some customers, as we continue to move internationally, we've got a decent customer base in the EU, UK. We're blowing out into South America at this point a little bit. We do have a decent customer base in Australia as well, and then I've been having conversations with people in places like Somalia and other countries in Africa. So the reach is wide, right? And we've really only tapped that kind of outreach from a marketing perspective, even. We really haven't put a whole lot of dollars into growing our business internationally. It's mostly been organic.  So I think you can see that we're gonna be growing organically again. We're gonna be trying to be more aggressive in the way that we ideate on how we're going to tackle new verticals and things like that as well. But yeah, at the end of the day, we want to continue to make a product that will take any screen and turn it into a digital sign that you can use in any way that you and your team or your clients need to use it.  All right, and they can find the company at optisigns.com?  Paul Ciolino: Yes. Paul, thank you very much for spending time with me.  Paul Ciolino: Absolutely. Dave, it was a pleasure.

Les Technos
Apple et Samsung : l'amour vache ?

Les Technos

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2022 15:22


Dans notre Bonus 359 avec Sébastien B. et David. Extradition : Assange a perdu une bataille pour son extradition mais pas encore la guerre. ( https://tinyurl.com/23kfq5qv)Micron : Micron Annonce la 1ère carte MicroSD de 1.5TB. ( https://tinyurl.com/2yzhgat3 | https://tinyurl.com/27l59g4x)Apple : Apple et Samsung à nouveau amoureux pour collaborer sur l'iPhone. ( https://tinyurl.com/2ayybxw7)Intel : NUC "Serpent Canyon". ( https://tinyurl.com/2bwbcl8v)

Les Technos (vidéo)
Apple et Samsung : l’amour vache ?

Les Technos (vidéo)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2022 15:22


Dans notre Bonus 359 avec Sébastien B. et David. Extradition : Assange a perdu une bataille pour son extradition mais pas encore la guerre. ( https://tinyurl.com/23kfq5qv) Micron : Micron Annonce la 1ère carte MicroSD de 1.5TB. ( https://tinyurl.com/2yzhgat3 | https://tinyurl.com/27l59g4x) Apple : Apple et Samsung à nouveau amoureux pour collaborer sur l'iPhone. ( https://tinyurl.com/2ayybxw7) Intel : NUC "Serpent Canyon". ( https://tinyurl.com/2bwbcl8v)

ThinkComputers Weekly Tech Podcast
ThinkComputers Podcast #321 - Crypto Crash, ADATA SE880, AKG Ara & Much More!

ThinkComputers Weekly Tech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2022 66:18


This week on the podcast we go over our reviews of the ADATA SE880 Portable Solid State Drive and AKG Ara Microphone cables. We also discuss the crypto crash and what that means for getting yourself a new graphics card, the new Intel NUC 12, an interesting monitor and much more!

WoodStreamのデジタル生活 (マイクロソフト系Podcast)
第621回 Microsoft Familyと動画編集アプリClipchamp/Intel NUC/Mac Studio (2022/3/13)

WoodStreamのデジタル生活 (マイクロソフト系Podcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2022 24:14


Discordサーバー(チャットルーム)はこちら(WoodStreamのデジタル … 続きを読む →

ThinkComputers Weekly Tech Podcast
ThinkComputers Podcast #308 - Z690 AORUS Ultra, NVIDIA Hack, Starlink in Ukraine & More!

ThinkComputers Weekly Tech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 60:57


This week on the podcast we talk about our review of the Gigabyte Z690 AORUS Ultra Motherboard.  We also discuss details of the apparent hack on NVIDIA and how the hackers are releasing sensitive data, details on the new Intel NUC 12 Extreme, Pure Cooper IHS upgrades, Starlink being deployed in Ukraine and much more!

PC Perspective Podcast
Podcast #659 - RTX 3080 12GB, 2k Watt PSU, NUC 12 with LGA, DLDSR tech, RX 6500 XT x4 + MORE!

PC Perspective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2022 50:17


Post-CES is generally pretty light for a few weeks, but not this year! Josh was out sick but Kent stepped in and we had a low-key discussion of the topics of the evening.  The 3080 12GB, a 2000w PSU, the Intel NUC 12 will have LGA socket, Nvidia latest resolution dance with DLDSR, the RX 6500 XT is only x4 for PCIe, the Intel i9 is hitting 5.5Ghz OOTB?  More below!Timestamps:00:00 Intro02:07 NVIDIA introduces a 12GB version of the RTX 308007:50 NVIDIA's latest driver brings another scaling tech: DLDSR11:12 Does it matter that AMD's Radeon RX 6500 XT is limited to a x4 interface?13:55 Intel's 5.5 GHz Core i9-12900KS announced15:40 NUC 12 Extreme uses DESKTOP processors, has standard LGA socket20:14 Podcast Sponsor: Linkedin Jobs21:17 Samsung has apparently delayed the Exynos 2200 with RDNA2 graphics23:21 PCI Express 6.0 announced24:53 Norton-owned Avira Antivirus wants you to mine ETH28:45 Canon's copy-protected ink component shortage forces workaround31:20 SilverStone's 2050W PSU35:59 Half Life gets ray traced38:14 NVIDIA updating all Shield devices to Android 1139:45 Picks of the Week49:45 Outro★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

7 Minute Security
7MS #502: Building a Pentest Lab in Azure

7 Minute Security

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2022 51:56


Happy new year friends! Today I share the good, bad, ugly, and BROKEN things I've come across while migrating our Light Pentest LITE training lab from on-prem VMware ESXi to Azure. It has been a fun and frustrating process, but my hope is that some of the tips in today's episode will save you some time/headaches/money should you setup a pentesting training camp in the cloud. Things I like No longer relying on a single point of failure (Intel NUC, switch, ISP, etc.) You can schedule VMs to auto-shutdown at a certain time each day, and even have Azure send you a notification before the shutdown so you can delay - or suspend altogether - the operation Things I don't like VMs are by default (I believe) joined to Azure AD, which I don't want. Here's how I got machines unjoined from Azure AD and then joined to my pwn.town domain: dsregcmd /leave Add-Computer -DomainName pwn.town -Restart Accidentally provision a VM in the wrong subnet? The fix may be rebuilding the flippin' VM (more info in today's episode). Just about every operation takes for freakin' ever. And it's confusing because if you delete objects out of the portal, sometimes they don't actually disappear from the GUI for like 5-30 minutes. Using backups and snapshots is archaic. You can take a snapshot in the GUI or PowerShell easy-peasy, but if you actually want to restore those snapshots you have to convert them to managed disks, then detach a VM's existing disk, and attach the freshly converted managed disks. This is a nightmare to do with PowerShell. Deleting data is a headache. I understand Azure is probably trying to protect you against deleting stuff and not being able to get it back, but they night a right-click > "I know what I'm doing, DELETE THIS NOW" option. Otherwise you can end up in situations where in order to delete data, you have to disable soft delete, undelete deleted data, then re-delete it to actually make it go away. WTH, you say? This doc will help it make more sense (or not). Things that are broken Promiscuous mode - just plain does not work as far as I can tell. So I can't do protocol poisoning exercises with something like Inveigh. Hashcat - I got CPU-based cracking working in ESXi by installing OpenCL drivers, but try as I may, I cannot get this working in Azure. I even submitted an issue to the hashcat forums but so far no replies. On a personal note, it has been good knowing you because I'm about to spend all my money on a new hobby: indoor skydiving.

Selfhosted-Adventures
Folge 26 - Firewall Addon Sensei und ein neuer Server bei Nico :)

Selfhosted-Adventures

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2021 38:19


Hallo Leute, heute sprechen wir nochmal kurz über die Opnsense und warum ich den Intel NUC wieder dafür einmotte. Außerdem werde ich ein wenig über Sensei sprechen, damit lässt sich die Firewall um wirklich coole Dinge wie "Application Control" erweitern. Nico erzählt über seine neueste Errungenschaft eines Lenovo M710 und wie er dazu gekommen. Zum Schluss reden wir über "Authentik" einen Identity Provider, welches nun "Sign in with Apple" unterstützt.Viel Spaß beim Zuhören! Links: Opnsense Seinsei Lenovo Thinkcentre M710 Authentik - Sign in with Apple Selfhosted-Adventures Links wie Twitter & Blog

Selfhosted-Adventures
Folge 24 - Erste Schritte mit der OPNSense

Selfhosted-Adventures

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 35:43


Hallo Leute, heute sprechen wir über die ersten Gehversuche, mit der OPNsense Firewall auf einem Intel NUC. Ich rede über die Konfiguration der einzelnen Komponenten, wie zum Beispiel der Fritzbox 7412, die zu einem Modem degradiert worden ist und deren Fallstricke. Nico diskutiert natürlich fleißig mit mir, ob eine Baremetal Installation mehr Sinn machen würde und welche Dienste, er ablösen würde. Viel Spaß beim Zuhören! Links: OPNsense Installation und Ersteinrichtung PPPoE und DHCP FritzBox 7412 Modem Bridge Mode PPPoE Passthrough OPNsense Selfhosted-Adventures Links wie Twitter & Blog

Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 269: Skampizzan

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2021 125:37


I väntan på Melin Lilla Napoli - Finpizza i Falkenberg, vidare diskussion kring tjockbottnade pizzor och glutenfria bakverk Uppföljning Jockes nya skärm: recension Ämnen Alla Appletangentbord recenserade Varför finns det inga serietidningar att prenumerera på längre? Plexdilemma (eller snarare: brist på hästkrafter) - förslag på passande lösningar önskas Film och TV Fredrik och Christian har sett Loke Vi har inte tid för en Dune-föreläsning just nu Fundering: paralleller mellan Dune och LOTR (Atreides = Alverna, Harkonnen = Orcher. Atreiedes arkitektur, soldater mm är eleganta och vackra, osv.). Sammanträffande: Brad Dourif spelar slemmig rådgivare till Baron Harkonnen i Dune, och Ormtunga i LOTR (även där en slemmig rådgivare) Jocke har sett Mare of Easttown Avslutning Things prissättning och releaseplaner 1passwords nya upprörande version. Går appar oundvikligen mot Electron om företaget växer? Länkar Incomparable-nätverket Incomparables medlemspoddar Lilla Napoli - grym pizzeria i Falkenberg Hotell Vesterhavet Lysings Jockes Dell P3221D Netbeans Cleartype Switchresx Alla Apples tangentbord testade ADB ALPS-switchar Speltidningen Robot Petra KP Intel NUC Loke Brad Dourif Things Things 3.14 Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-269-skampizzan.html.

MacStories Unwind
Doppler for Mac, Sofa 3.0, GarageBand, Earnings and a Big Album Drops

MacStories Unwind

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2021 24:22


This episode is sponsored by:Honeybadger – Your Secret Weapon for Exception, Uptime, and Cron MonitoringLearn more about Honeybadger on MacStoriesLinks and Show NotesRewindApple Releases Remix Sessions, Sound Packs, and Producer Packs for GarageBand on the iPhone and iPadDoppler for Mac Offers an Excellent Album and Artist-Focused Listening Experience for Your Owned Music CollectionSofa 3.0 Adds New Ways to Manage Your Media Lists Along With a New Business ModelApple Q3 2021 Results - $81.4 Billion RevenueClub MacStoriesMonthly LogFederico on managing his music collection on an Intel NUC using his iPadJohn on his note-taking philosophy and why you should delete and archive more notesMacStories WeeklyFederico recommends Roon, the client app for the music server running on the Intel NUC he wrote about in the Monthly LogJohn shares a shortcut for converting podcast audio clips to text and saving them in Obsidian alongside the embedded audio fileChristopher Lawley shares his iPad Home ScreensMacStories UnpluggedPanic's PlaydateA conversation about 4th of July parades and real estate open houses leads to Italian private investigators and American personal injury lawyersFederico invites members to play a guessing gameAppStoriesAppStories, Episode 233 – Building an Apple-Only Research and Writing SetupUnwindFederico and John's Joint Pick:Happier Than Ever by Billie EilishFollow us on TwitterFederico ViticciJohn VoorheesFollow us on InstagramFederico ViticciJohn Voorhees

The Tom's Hardware Show
LIVE With Keyboard Modder Alexotos, Intel NUC 11

The Tom's Hardware Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2021 37:28


Keyboard modder and YouTuber Alexotos drops by for the latest episode of The Tom's Hardware Show. We also check out the new Intel NUC 11 Extreme Kit.

BadGuys
BadGuys - 31

BadGuys

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2021 70:58


Λονδίνο, audio comment, σουβλάκια,Intel NUC, hashicorp και fuji μηχανες. Show-notes: - https://www.badguys.fm/posts/episode31/ - https://twitter.com/sam_dumitriu/status/1418559832949460997?s=21 - https://twitter.com/mitchellh/status/1418315344800669698?s=21 - https://www.notebookcheck.net/Intel-NUC-11-Extreme-Beast-Canyon-mini-gaming-PC-can-now-be-pre-ordered-with-up-to-a-Core-i9-11900KB-processor-and-NVIDIA-GeForce-RTX-30-series-GPUs.551990.0.html - https://www.theverge.com/2020/4/24/21234333/intel-nuc-9-extreme-mini-pc-ghost-canyon-gaming-review-price-specs-features - https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/fujifilm-x100v-review

El camionero geek
Realme GT, Lenovo LEGIÓN PHONE, mini Pc Intel NUC, y más temas.

El camionero geek

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2021 37:22


El camionero geek
Realme GT, Lenovo LEGIÓN PHONE, mini Pc Intel NUC, y más temas.

El camionero geek

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2021 37:22


Sixteen:Nine
Jay Leedy, Sony

Sixteen:Nine

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2021 35:29


The 16:9 PODCAST IS SPONSORED BY SCREENFEED – DIGITAL SIGNAGE CONTENT Sony has been around digital signage for pretty much as long as the industry, but in all my time around this sector I haven't had a particularly strong sense that the company was really serious about digital signage. Until the last year or so. First, the company attracted Rich Ventura over from NEC, and Ventura is as well-known, knowledgeable and hyper-connected as they come in this business. A few months later, Jay Leedy left the huge AV integrator Diversified to join Sony, and while he's maybe not quite as connected as Rich, he's still really well known in this sector, and knows his stuff. Locked down for months like most of us, Leedy's spent his first year with Sony building up relationships with the ecosystem and raising awareness that Sony really, truly is in the digital signage business in a serious way. In our chat, we cover a bunch of things - most notably Sony's own approach to so-called smart displays. While Samsung and LG have proprietary operating systems for their smart screens, and their main competitors use Android, Sony uses Android TV. We get into what that means, in terms of benefits like power and features, and a small number of quirks that owe to its being, at its core, a consumer product. Leedy's gig, in part, is making the developer system aware that Sony has a "pro mode" for Android TV, and how digital signage software companies that already support Android can add support for Android TV quickly and easily. We also get into where Leedy is seeing marketplace demand right now, and where the industry is going in terms of emerging technologies. Subscribe to this podcast: iTunes * Google Play * RSS TRANSCRIPT Mr. Leedy, thanks for joining me. You have, in the past year or so, gone from one company to another. What are you doing at Sony?  Jay Leedy: Hey, Dave. Good to talk to you as well. So when I left Diversified, I had been doing a lot of work in business development for strategic partners, and also working with a lot of the offices globally, driving digital signage solutions through local relationships. Similar work, as when I moved to Sony. I'm part of an organization that is really part of their factory planning and product roadmap team called HES or Home Entertainment & Sound, which is a funny name for an organization in my focus, which is really exclusively B2B, but it sheds a little light on our strategy and how we're developing our Bravia product, with a lot of efficiencies in manufacturing and kind of common components from our consumer line, we poured it into a discrete line of Bravia products.  So I do a lot of partnership development, really taking cues from our professional sales organization that Richard Ventura leads, and based on their feedback and voice of customer insights, leverage that into developing solutions or effecting changes to our hardware components that are made to better serve the B2B market, and in cases where we have gaps in capability, build-out partnership ecosystems to serve that. So my focus immediately, since I came on, which has been about eight months, has really been around digital signage and building out a broad partner ecosystem to serve that market. Yeah, I think it's interesting because I spoke with Richard when he came over to Sony and talked a little bit about his plans and everything else, and I think it's fair to say that Sony in the past decade or so, hasn't been all that present, maybe by design or just circumstance or marketing, I don't know, in the digital signage sector, but I would say in the past year or so, it seems much more a part of it and not might owe to people like you and Rich and others who are known in the ecosystem and have those deep contacts and everything else.  Has it been work to get the digital signage ecosystem, understanding that, “Hey, Sony is a player on the B2B side, and we are interested in talking to you and we do have products that are very digital signage appropriate”?  Jay Leedy: Yeah, it's been an interesting journey, and I'll be honest when I saw Sony at the very last DSE, the same year that LG had decided not to attend. It was a bit of a head-scratcher for me too, I was still at Diversified at the time and had not worked with Sony at all in my capacity there but certainly, with Rich Ventura joining and my coming on, roughly six months after he joined, there's been a distinct focus and an investment at the headquarters level to go after this market seriously.  We've had a Pro Bravia line of products since 2018, but to your earlier point, we have been relatively Invisible to the market so a number of the folks that I reached out to after I joined Sony on the SI and reseller side, comments were, “Where have you guys been? You've got a great brand. You've got great quality. Everybody knows Sony.” But for whatever reason, we had chosen not to really go aggressively after the B2B market and for a number of years, we were really solely focused on consumers. But as you know, there's a huge opportunity in B2B, and coming on and engaging with partners, helping them understand our current strategy, which is really around an Android TV-based system on a chip, that's been surprisingly and enthusiastically met with a lot of optimism and support in the digital signage partnership community. So I think that's largely because it's not proprietary [latform that needs to be developed there, they can use existing development talent that is already familiar with developing for Android and work with us without having to develop a new skill set or onboard new resources. Yeah, I think it's interesting because everybody thinks about Samsung as the company that really introduced the idea of “smart signage” with their system on chip displays, going back to 2013 or something. But I pretty strongly believed that Sony actually had a smart TV and a smart digital signage product before Samsung by a year or so, but it was, as we were just talking about not all that heavily marketed and there wasn't a lot of awareness around it, but Sony has been at this for quite some time. Jay Leedy: We did have a line that I just learned about actually proceeding with our 2018 launch of Pro Bravia that was more of an ODM approach. So because of that, we didn't control the entire solution stack. Now that we do you have that level of control and a strong partnership with Google and the Android team, that combined with inherent components that we've always built into our devices with respect to image processing and high-quality screen components, that's really helped us accelerate, I think. A lot of it, to your point, is really about getting the word out and talking with our reseller and SI community, as well as the consultant community to help them understand that this is a real line, we're committed, and we're not dipping our toes into proverbial water. Like this is something that we have deep investment in and commitment at the highest levels of the organization to go after.  You talked about how easy it is to develop for Android since you don't have to have a proprietary operating system, but is there a clear distinction between Android and Android TV, in terms of development?  Like I've heard some software companies say, “Yeah, the Sony product is great, but it's Android TV. It's not Android as we know it. So it's different. We have to develop differently. There are limitations on what we can do and everything else.” How accurate is that?  Jay Leedy: It's somewhat accurate. I'd say there are some trade-offs. There are some differences between Android TV and Android, specifically that Android TV was designed for watching TV so some of the capabilities like portrait view, for example, are not native in the application. There's ways to work around that. There are currently some cash limitations on a per-app basis that we're working to address with Google as well, and there's also I think the impression that our Pro Bravia line is more of a consumer or prosumer approach, and to some degree, that's, I think informed by a lack of understanding that we have developed and enabled what we call “Pro mode” which turns off certain UI UX functionality, menus and exposes IP control and other capabilities that would be expected in a commercial line of product. So engineers that are unfamiliar with that may rightly or wrongly draw the conclusion that we're not built for commercial use. We are in fact, and because of Android, we can expose IP capabilities that are already native to the solution, the device just has to be configured in a specific way in order to take advantage of that. We've also very quickly, to the credit of our software development team in the San Diego offices at Sony, in partnership with Tokyo have developed a device policy control application that enables deeper system level access and that has been a product of my working directly with that team and them better understanding what the requirements of the market or what the desires of partners are, and what is ultimately going to be really critical in helping us meet the market needs.  So if I'm understanding that correctly, you may have developers from different companies going, yeah Android TV is just not going to be good enough, but if you can get them on a demo and get a sales engineer explaining what you can do, that changes their minds.  Jay Leedy: It does, and I think what's important to a growing number of end customers and subsequently the managed service providers and SI that serve them is a need to be able to specify devices that can predictably plug into their existing device management and network topology infrastructure because MDM has grown so rapidly with bring your own device strategies and the need to manage disparate device types. The familiarity with Android has increased rapidly especially, where only three four years ago, Android was really looked at as something that posed potential risk to network administrators.  Now they only embrace it, because they have the tools and familiarity with those tools as to how to effectively manage devices and also mitigate risk on their networks. And I think with the new Sony Bravia lines that are out, I was reading an email the other day, I think it's like Android 10, right?  Jay Leedy: That's right, yep, and with any of the devices that we release with Android TV, we're obligated to support up to three major updates. Ss Google releases new versions of Android, we would be compatible for three major releases so the Android 10 devices that are hitting the market now will be able to support up to Android 13, for example, which I think is really helpful in helping the developer community understand the extent to which we support their efforts as well.  I think it was the guys over in the Czech Republic, SignageOS guys, who did a review of different smart displays and they took a look at the Sony and said, it was really good in terms of video handling and everything else, because it was a later version of Android versus some of the other ones. Is that something you're hearing?  Jay Leedy: It is. Yeah, in fact, a couple of our partners, who've done initial assessments using benchmarking criteria and content mix and playlists that they use to benchmark all the various players that they evaluate, and in some cases they're even scorecarding and publicly publishing those results, and our performance based on those assessments has been consistent with purpose-built devices like an Intel NUC or a Mac Mini versus some of the others in the market that don't perform nearly as strongly. So I think that's partly because of the processing power that we have, our dedicated video processors as well. And, also having powerful connectivity handling and, some of the other components that really make these strong performing devices.  So is there a “but” that comes up still? You know, “These are great, but they don't do this or they don't do that.”  Jay Leedy: Yeah. We have a couple of limitations. One is that per app cache is currently at a max threshold of 2GB, which for many of the applications does not present a challenge, but when you get into scenarios where you're trying to cache locally assets that are fairly large, that can create a challenge. There's a limitation with native rotation, that when putting it into portrait mode, as we touched on earlier, it natively doesn't support that, but in most of the applications that we're testing, we have an answer for that with HTML and CSS workflows that don't present any concern and we're actively working to resolve those issues and take that feedback and insight that we get from our partners and our resellers and customers. And that's really my job is to carry those into our planning and roadmap afterwards.  Yeah, so much of digital signage now is built up around web-based technologies that in the same way that you can have a responsive webpage that'll go into portrait for a smartphone, I assume the same thing is happening here, right?  Jay Leedy: That's right. The trend, in general, is towards progressive web apps versus native applications, and better understanding that and helping our development team understand how we can address and create a kind of a fertile platform to be able to accommodate those strategies. It is part of our focus as well, and that's really why we built this large ecosystem to get as much feedback as we can so that we can remain relevant and proactively drive into the market with the right tools for the community.  So when I looked at Sony in recent years, if I would go to their booth at something like ISC and ask them about digital signage, they would look around and try to find somebody who knew about it and they drag somebody over and they may, or maybe not know much, and if they did, they would point me in a couple of directions to something called TEOS, which is what I gather is more of an office management collaboration toolset, and then there was some CMS software partnership with a company who I wasn't terribly familiar with so I would walk away from those little drive-by meetings and think, “okay, they're not really active in this”, but that's changed if you're talking to 40-60 different software companies you're trying to build something up?  Jay Leedy: That's right, yeah, and the change is also in helping our professional sales organization and the product management and sales engineers better understand digital signage as a whole, but also the nuances and specialized differentiation between the different partners. You're right, we did have limited expertise internally prior to Rich and myself coming on digital signage. We had made some inroads and I think had a strategy that entailed reselling digital signage software. That is really not our focus now. We really want to, at the end of the day, remove obstacles to specification and be able to plug into existing estates seamlessly with NSOC that has already pre-qualified as compatible or in the event that, we uncover an opportunity that doesn't have that compatibility or inherent that we have a process and a program to move quickly and ensure that performance evaluation can take place, both by putting a display in our partner's hands and putting their product in our software engineers hands and doing parallel testing and having a feedback loop that's ongoing.  So what are you hearing from the various companies out there?  And God knows there are many of them that have been developing two different system-on-chip displays for several years now, and I say “they” in a global fashion and I understand, some haven't done that, but many have, where are they going and what are they doing?  Jay Leedy: You mean in terms of…?  The development, do you see a shift to smart displays from PCs, and do you see a different direction in terms of how they're developing? Cause I get a sense that the smart companies are understanding that they've got to stop just being this kind of island of activity where it just like digital science, you've got to be integrated.  Jay Leedy: Yeah, you're right about that. I think generally there was a desire by the digital signage software community to consolidate their development resources as much as possible. So not maintaining expertise on a wide range of platforms is desirable. There's also been a shift away from any Chrome OS support and that the logical kind of migration is to support Android, so we're seeing that.  We're also seeing, in general, a trend towards, using a SOC where possible versus a purpose-built device, both in terms of reducing the cost of hardware, as well as points of failure. But yet you're always going to have scenarios where there is a dedicated playback device may be required, higher-resolution or video walls, but more and more we're seeing a desire to specify and be able to run multiple applications on a single device that in many cases Bravia is built to be able to handle, and that goes beyond digital signage, it edges into typical AV installations and all the device control and integrated solutions in that market as well.  So there's enough processing power on these two to handle to basically multitask or multithread?  Jay Leedy: That's right.  With the different software companies, are you getting any sense that they're coming or they're looking for an alternative to what they've been doing in the past, because some of the big guys, the Samsungs, and LGs of the world, in particular, have started introducing their own software platforms or CMS software? Jay Leedy: Yeah, I'd say that's correct. There's a desire certainly by the leading software partners to align with manufacturers that are competing with their business, and that's the same with the systems integrators and managed service providers where we don't have a device monitoring network operations kind of service offering. In some cases, there are manufacturers that have built up those practices and that creates a threat to the highest growth rate part of that industry sector, and it would make logical sense to align with the manufacturer that's staying in their lane, so to speak, and let them grow the business that is most attractive for them to realize returns on. But the flip side of that argument is that if you are going with a company that has proprietary smart displays and its own CMS, it's kind of a matched set, so to speak, and therefore it simplifies the lives of the integrators. You just know that their displays and the software are already baked in and validated for it so that makes it simple for me.  Jay Leedy: Yeah, I can see that. But I think flexibility is a big part of the need in the market. We're seeing that kind of confirmed with a number of touchpoints through the industry where especially when you're approaching a customer that has a fairly mature strategy and maybe legacy devices that are across a wide global estate that are not all going to be deemed end of life at the same time, they need to be able to have more interoperability and flexibility and also be able to capitalize on trends as they occur, and as relationships evolve and shift over the life of those things  Does activity and interest in the signage sector differ from what it did 15-16 months ago? Jay Leedy: That's a great question. I think I just read your Workplaces Reworked white paper yesterday, which was really well done by the way. And you slept well last night, right? (Laughter)  Jay Leedy: I did. We are seeing an increased interest in unified communication and hybrid working environments, or I think accelerating the need for physical spaces to be able to have more heads-up displays for situational awareness, all that stuff is driving that. And I think there are also opportunities because of the way that these spaces are being organized differently to place communication tools where they previously didn't exist, as well as in the cases of huddle rooms and conference room spaces, there's a number of clients that are interested in activating both screens and using them as communication tools more passively when that environment is not being used for its primary purpose. That definitely has been a trend that we've seen, and I would expect to continue to grow.  Setting workplace aside, are there verticals that seem to be emerging and other ones that are, you would maybe coach a solutions provider or software company to stay away from for now or not bother with?  Jay Leedy: I think enterprise, education, healthcare, they all seem to be on a more of a growth trajectory. Obviously, QSR, especially for the drive-throughs, has gone through a major transformation, and there's not any in particular that I think I would steer anybody away from, honestly, we've seen investments that have been pretty significant in transportation as the operators of those hubs, in airports and train stations, have taken advantage of the less traffic. Being able to put labor to drive installation and overhauling those environments at a fraction of the cost, because they don't have to work overnight. They can work during the day.  So there's not anyone in particular that I would say, I would steer away from necessarily where, as far as Sonny's line of product currently, we don't have an outdoor display. That's something that we may choose to bring to market in the future. But as far as working with Sony specifically, obviously, outdoor displays is not something that we would chase but there certainly seems to be plenty of momentum there.  Yeah, I was walking through ISE a year and a half ago, and one of the things that stuck in my head was, “Dear God, there are a lot of companies selling outdoor kiosks,” and that was in Europe. So imagine North America and Asia and add all that up and holy smokes.  So there's nobody sitting around going, “if only somebody would come out with an outdoor ready display for my use.”  Jay Leedy: That's right, yeah. There seems to be plenty of options out there, but plenty of opportunities too as a result.  Where do you see the digital signage software and technology going in terms of new developments and overarching trends? Jay Leedy: Like I mentioned earlier with progressive web apps and a trend towards consolidating developer resources on really focusing on a single platform versus having to support a range of them is certainly a trend in broader integration as well. We're seeing that with companies like Mersive and Crestron, who are able to support digital signage playback in traditional AV applications, and I think beyond that, there are more comprehensive strategies evolving in corporate communications and using a range of different screen types from mobile phones to desktop to traditional digital signage as channels to communicate and meet the need of where the audience wants to receive that information in any shape or form across the entire chain. So when you're working with the 40-50 companies that you're speaking with, what are they asking and why should they be involved with you?  Jay Leedy: Mainly they're asking whether their existing native Android application can run on our device or whether they have to develop something unique and more often than not the answer is that their APK can be sideloaded onto our device and very little modification to their code is required.  So a small job versus a six months job?  Jay Leedy: Exactly, yeah. So that's really attractive, just to have another arrow in the quiver, so to speak and I think they're also looking for more ways to market. The enthusiasm that we've gotten in general when they learned that Sony is leaning in and getting more serious about the B2B side of the business and digital signage in particular, they're super excited about it because, like many of us, myself included, some of the first electronics that we had relationships with as we were teenagers and young adults were Sony products, and the idea of working with a brand that has so much recognition in the market for quality, as well as so much innovation in various sectors of our business, including our interactive entertainment division and then this PlayStation product that just can't even stay on the shelves that we get a little bit of a Halo effect from that when approaching these various partners there, they're really excited about working with us.  Yeah I'd be curious about that. When you come to a Sony display if you're looking at it versus some of the other manufacturers out there, I don't know, I'm thinking maybe you're not going to win a deal based on your price versus some other commodity product but if the buying decision is hanging around, at least in part on visual quality, then you're in the hunt.  Jay Leedy: Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. That's a great point. In terms of color accuracy and acuity and things that are really important to brand marketers, we're absolutely in the hunt, if not first consideration, and I think that also translates to total cost ownership calculations, and some of the kind of quality benchmarks that we hit that are reflected in our warranties.  The industry experts that have worked with us for a long time and as well as are familiar with a number of other manufacturers gravitate towards us because they know they can, more or less, set it and forget it. They're not going to incur costs that they may have to pass on to their customers for field remediation and things that may have been problematic for them previously. So yeah, that seems to really resonate as well.  All right, Jay, thank you so much for spending some time with me. Jay Leedy: Absolutely. Dave, great to talk to you again, and I'm glad everything's going well for you.    

TechLinked
5GHz Gaming on a tiny notebook!?

TechLinked

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 5:20


0:00 Shouldn't have told you 0:07 Intel 11th-gen notebook chips hit 5GHz 1:03 Intel NUC 11 Extreme 1:49 Xiaomi 200W charging tech 2:35 Shells 3:03 QUICK BITS 3:07 Microsoft Flight Sim halves size 3:28 LG phones are over 3:56 Twitter starts, ends verification 4:19 Fitbits will track your snoring 4:40 HDMI 2.1 8K upgrade card?

Kubernetes Podcast from Google
Tinkerbell, with Gianluca Arbezzano

Kubernetes Podcast from Google

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2021 44:55


If you’d like something more tangible than a virtual cloud instance, there’s always (still!) bare metal. Tinkerbell is a project from Equinix Metal to manage bare metal servers at scale, and Gianluca Arbezzano is one of its maintainers. We talk stacks, racks and MACs. Do you have something cool to share? Some questions? Let us know: web: kubernetespodcast.com mail: kubernetespodcast@google.com twitter: @kubernetespod Chatter of the week Episode 11, with Vic Iglesias Vic lives here, but not here Pokémon Go social distancing News of the week Flux moves to incubation in the CNCF NetApp Astra goes GA; more information Fairwinds introduces Saffire Cosign, by Dan Lorenc Episode 39 Komodor beta and swag offer Announcing Private Clusters on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Container Engine for Kubernetes (OKE) Linkerd 2.10 The Money Section, with thanks to David Pait, guest of Episode 127 Docker takes $23m in Series “B” funding to get ship done Aqua Security takes $135m in Series E at $1b valuation Snyk raises $300m in Series E valuing company at $4.7 billion Tetrate raises $40m Series B Is Crossplane the Infrastructure LLVM? by Daniel Mangum Episode 141 Links from the interview PHP. and PHP in 2020 Turin InfluxData Episode 91, with Leonardo Di Donato Dropbox’s exodus from Amazon Equinix Metal Packet acquired by Equinix Tinkerbell OpenCompute and Open19 Server terminology: Next Unit of Computing (NUC) Baseboard management controller (BMC) Preboot Execution Environment (PXE) Floppy disks DIY Board management control for an Intel NUC: power control Tinkerbell services: Tink Boots OSIE Hook Hegel PB&J OVH fire How Tinkerbell Got Its Wings, including joining the CNCF Tinkerbell community Episode 136: Backstage, with Lee Mills and Matt Clarke Gianluca Arbezzano on Twitter and on the web Tinkerbell on Twitter

La Tecnología para todos
Raspberry Pi vs Intel NUC

La Tecnología para todos

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2021 54:12


En el podcast de esta semana hablamos de Raspberry Pi y de Intel NUC. ¿Cuál es la mejor opción para nuestros proyectos caseros?Más información en https://programarfacil.com/blog/intel-nuc/

Toginta Podden
Vår nya upptäckt i datorvärlden, varför använder inte fler NUC's?

Toginta Podden

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2020 39:02


Vår värld är fylld av datorer, i princip alla använder en dagligen. Men många av dem är säkerligen mer klumpiga än vad de behöver vara. Faktum är att lösningen förmodligen redan finns där ute. Men varför är det inte mer poopulärt att använda minidatorerna som är små kraftpaket? I dagens poddavsnitt pratar vi om Intel NUC och potentiella användningsområden. Ladda ner e-boken Från 0 till 100 med video i sociala medier (helt gratis) här: https://toginta.com/0-100-sociala-medier/ Följ oss i sociala medier: https://facebook.com/toginta https://www.instagram.com/toginta https://www.linkedin.com/company/toginta Läs mer på vår hemsida: https://toginta.com/ Producerad av: Toginta Productions AB Medverkande: Christian Gennari och Wilhelm Jönsson

StorageReview.com - Storage Reviews
#59: Dave Demlow, Scale Computing (Intel NUC HCI)

StorageReview.com - Storage Reviews

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2020


On this week’s podcast Brian talks in person with Dave Demlow. Dave is the… The post #59: Dave Demlow, Scale Computing (Intel NUC HCI) appeared first on StorageReview.com.

En Liten Podd Om It
En Liten Podd om IT - Avsnitt 276 - #clickbait

En Liten Podd Om It

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2020 58:54


Om Shownotes ser konstiga ut så finns de på webben här också: https://www.enlitenpoddomit.se/e/en-liten-podd-om-it-avsnitt-276   Avsnitt 276 spelades in den 28:e juli 2020 och eftersom Parmesan kan användas som säkerhet vid lån så handlar dagens avsnitt om:   FEEDBACK OCH BACKLOGG: * Johan är tillbaka till jobbet vilket är både bra och fantastiskt. David har byggt en bod. Björn har semester.   ALLMÄNT NYTT * Donald Tump Jrs twitterkonto har blivit blockad på twitter * Förra veckan pratade vi om inspire. Men vi pratade inte om det mest tydliga. Att Microsoft Teams är den nya plattformen för Microsoft. Det gör vi nu. * Spotify släpper "group sessions"   * BONUSLÄNK: https://feber.se/film/nu-kan-du-och-polarna-hyra-en-hel-biosalong/409891/  * Qualcomm introducerar quick charge 5   * BONUSLÄNK: Hur funkar snabbladdning på iphone  * Facebook Messenger Rooms får möjlighet att streama   MICROSOFT   * Windows Virtual Desktop har nu fått nya möjligheter * Microsoft vill inte bara bli "net zero". Hur då? * Är vi intresserade av att Microsoft tjänar pengar som gräs? Ja lite grand... :) * Jobba hemifrån innebär att man jobbar mer?   APPLE Apple och ett gäng andra är åter igen i Antitrust samtal (det handlar om In-app handling) https://appleinsider.com/articles/20/07/28/phil-schiller-says-app-store-fostered-competition-ahead-of-antitrust-testimony https://www.macrumors.com/2020/07/28/schiller-app-store-supports-developers/  Brave kommer lägga med en brandvägg och VPN på iPhone Spotify för desktop (mac) ska kunna starta Chromecast streams   GOOGLE:* Google kräver att nya telefoner har minst 3GB ram, annars får de köra Android Go ALLMÄNT TIPS:* LED Manager for Intel® NUC   * BONUSLÄNK: Typ så här skulle det kunna se ut: https://youtu.be/HwkIhrwew4s?t=152   SHUT UP AND TAKE MY MONEY:* David: En såndär Electrolux i9.2 vore kanske inte så dum?  * Björn: Ett nytt tangentbord. * Johan:  https://www.bauhaus.se/kombinationssag-ryobi-rtms1800-g-eldriven  https://www.bauhaus.se/klyv-kap-geringsag-makita-lf1000-1650w-260mm-eldriven https://www.lego.com/en-us/campaigns/art/the-sith      EGNA LÄNKAR * En Liten Podd Om IT på webben * En Liten Podd Om IT på Facebook * En Liten Podd Om IT på Youtube * Ge oss gärna en recension    * https://podcasts.apple.com/se/podcast/en-liten-podd-om-it/id946204577?mt=2#see-all/reviews     * https://www.podchaser.com/podcasts/en-liten-podd-om-it-158069     LÄNKAR TILL VART MAN HITTAR PODDEN FÖR ATT LYSSNA: * Apple Podcaster (iTunes) * Overcast * Acast * Spotify * Stitcher   LÄNK TILL DISCORD DÄR MAN HITTAR LIVE STREAM + CHATT http://discord.enlitenpoddomit.se   (Och glöm inte att maila bjorn@enlitenpoddomit.se om du vill ha klistermärken, skicka med en postadress bara. :) )

TechBytes
How to use setup an Intel NUC for your Smarthome

TechBytes

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2020 16:56


There are times you need more than the Raspberry Pi you have been using for your Smarthome work. Whether it is because of a processor requirement for a Docker container, ...

TechBytes
How to Implement Raspberry Pi or Intel NUC for your Smarthome

TechBytes

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2020 13:58


It seems like there is a never ending possibilities of what you can run in your Smarthome on a Raspberry Pi. There may be times when a Raspberry Pi may ...

Another Day, Another Pod !
Another day, Another Pod! 289

Another Day, Another Pod !

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2020 16:30


#drafttop #sigma #intel #apple #pokemon #samsung Another day , another vlog! 289 Draft top aluminium can top remover coming on kickstarter looks like a great idea. remove the top off a can and drink like a brand name cup ! very cool. links down below to check it out.. Intel NUC mini computers a great way to get the system you need and a small package. Check with your local stores to see what spec you need. Apple getting investigated again by european commission about the app store and its possible Monopoly. They won with the lightning so this will be interesting to see what happens. Need help getting your kid to brush their teeth? Try the new pokemon app adds pokemon style effects on top of the camera display too add some excitement to the daily task. Samsung patent leaked for a 6 lens camera phone !!! obviously early days and only a patent.But they are obviously thinking about it ? Draft top can top removal device link and 10% code below - https://drafttop.kckb.st/b0d9a0b2 10PERCENT-AVARKH Need a sugar free hit to keep you editing all night try out this aussie company ! Legion Energy- Great tasing flavours, provide 3 separate ranges FOCUS , HYDRATE& REST ! use this link for $5 off your purchase. https://bit.ly/3cwsISh Here's where you can find all our podcast's:- https://anchor.fm/ashley-kendray Spotify-https://open.spotify.com/show/2LmG3hU5V3GfCFat8rZBOm Breaker-https://www.breaker.audio/another-day-another-pod Radio public-https://radiopublic.com/another-day-another-pod-WlyLv7 I've got Merch available, plenty of options great for gifts ! Here's the link :- https://teespring.com/stores/tigers-media Buy us a cup of tea at our PayPal at hankshouse@yahoo.com Want to send something to us, flick us an email to get the address details, cheers ! hankshouse@yahoo.com Catch us on our social pages- Insta-@nightcliff_34 Facebook-@tigersfishingclub twitter-@NightcliffT http://www.youtube.com/c/NTFCMedia --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ashley-kendray/message

StorageReview.com - Storage Reviews
#51: Kristin Brown, Intel NUC

StorageReview.com - Storage Reviews

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2020


If Intel’s diminutive PCs weren’t big enough already, today’s conditions have driven even more… The post #51: Kristin Brown, Intel NUC appeared first on StorageReview.com.

Photo Taco Podcast
Intel NUC – Inexpensive Photo Editing Computer

Photo Taco Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2020 65:57


Can the relatively inexpensive and tiny form factor Intel NUC be a good photo editing computer? The PC counterpart to Apple’s Mac Mini, this is the first in a series of videos taking a look at the Intel 10th generation Next Unit of Computing (NUC) to see how well it can run Lightroom and Photoshop. What Is an Intel NUC? ... The post Intel NUC – Inexpensive Photo Editing Computer appeared first on Photo Taco Podcast.

BOGTAT
Dell XPS 15 and 17 inch, Apple's NextVR, Free GTA-V and Intel NUC 9, Razer Tomahawk

BOGTAT

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2020 11:14


In this episode we take a look into the newly updated Dell XPS 15 and 17 inch Ultrabooks and how they match up with other Ultrabooks. We also talk about the latest acquisition of Apple, NextVR and how this will affect their product line up in the future. Further the brilliant marketing stunt by Epic Games Store by giving out GTA-V for free for limited period and how the game holds its popularity still today. Finally we take a look into Intel NUC 9 and its different iterations with partner companies, specifically Razer Tomahawk and how its differ from NUC 9 and further quick peak into unpopularity of foreign brands like Razer and MSI in India. Product we talked here: Dell XPS 15 Razer Tomahawk Intel NUC 9 Epic Game Store for GTA-V Music Provided by NCS

Chassis Podcast
#3 - Intel NUC 9 e SFF PC

Chassis Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2020 25:24


A questo giro discutiamo del nuovo Intel NUC 9 e del mondo degli SFF PC.

DataCentric Podcast
Scale Computing CEO & Co-Founder Jeff Ready talks HCI

DataCentric Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2020 24:55


Scale Computing is a pioneer in HCI (inventing, in fact, the very term). The company has just come off a record year demonstrating 90% growth. They also recently showed off a full HCI cluster running on an Intel NUC. Scale's CEO and Co-Founder Jeff Ready joins us on this episode of DataCentric, where we talk about: The origins of Scale Computing, and HCI Where HCI fits into enteprise architecture Why HCI is a great fit for the edge, both as it exists today (ROBO, etc), as well as what will be enabled by 5G. What Scale Computing is doing differently in the world of HCI. Special Guest: Jeff Ready.

Piltch Point (Audio)
Intel's New NUC Direction - Episode 214

Piltch Point (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2020 18:02


This week, Avram Piltch talks about the Intel NUC and the future direction of the product line. In the past, the company has released a limited array of models and configuration options to correspond with its processor upgrades. While the line has never been incredibly popular, it has been consistently stable.This year, the company announced a change of direction, but one that is also familiar. The next generation of NUC will no longer be just an Intel-branded product. Instead, it will become a product standard, powered by the Intel NUC Compute Element - a self-contained computing card. These cards will plug into a daughterboard for power and provide the essentials of the computer. The manufacturers, including Razer and Adata, will provide both fully built and bare-bones models that customers can customize.These systems can be upgraded, unlike previous models. They support discrete graphics cards for the first time. There are also upgradable RAM and SSD. The biggest upgradable component, though, is the Compute Element itself. When you need more power, you can simply replace the Compute Element and the system is upgraded.If this idea sounds familiar, it's because it is. The concept is very similar to Intel's Compute Card, right down to the name. The Compute Card was designed to power embedded devices, such as smart TVs. The idea was that, rather than replacing the television, you could simply replace the Card. This would, theoretically, avoid the situation where Hulu and Netflix recently stopped supporting older smart TVs.Like the Computer Card, the NUC Compute Element sounds like it is a solution looking for a problem. The price is higher than a regular PC while being only slightly smaller and being powered by laptop hardware. The video cards may be desktop quality, but the processors are not. Intel is going to have trouble finding an audience for this product.

Piltch Point (Video)
Intel's New NUC Direction - Episode 214

Piltch Point (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2020 18:02


This week, Avram Piltch talks about the Intel NUC and the future direction of the product line. In the past, the company has released a limited array of models and configuration options to correspond with its processor upgrades. While the line has never been incredibly popular, it has been consistently stable.This year, the company announced a change of direction, but one that is also familiar. The next generation of NUC will no longer be just an Intel-branded product. Instead, it will become a product standard, powered by the Intel NUC Compute Element - a self-contained computing card. These cards will plug into a daughterboard for power and provide the essentials of the computer. The manufacturers, including Razer and Adata, will provide both fully built and bare-bones models that customers can customize.These systems can be upgraded, unlike previous models. They support discrete graphics cards for the first time. There are also upgradable RAM and SSD. The biggest upgradable component, though, is the Compute Element itself. When you need more power, you can simply replace the Compute Element and the system is upgraded.If this idea sounds familiar, it's because it is. The concept is very similar to Intel's Compute Card, right down to the name. The Compute Card was designed to power embedded devices, such as smart TVs. The idea was that, rather than replacing the television, you could simply replace the Card. This would, theoretically, avoid the situation where Hulu and Netflix recently stopped supporting older smart TVs.Like the Computer Card, the NUC Compute Element sounds like it is a solution looking for a problem. The price is higher than a regular PC while being only slightly smaller and being powered by laptop hardware. The video cards may be desktop quality, but the processors are not. Intel is going to have trouble finding an audience for this product.

PC Perspective Podcast Video
Podcast #572 - Radeon RX 5600 XT Review

PC Perspective Podcast Video

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2020 89:57


PC Perspective Podcast #572 - 01/22/2020 Show Topics 00:00:06 - Intro 00:03:49 - Radeon RX 5600 XT Review 00:20:32 - RX 5600 XT VBIOS Update 00:30:08 - Sponsor: LinkedIn Jobs 00:31:56 - Intel NUC 11 00:36:01 - Steampunk PSU 00:43:47 - Intel Shortages 00:53:15 - Sponsor: ExpressVPN 00:56:44 - MSI Optix Gaming Monitors 01:03:27 - Sonos Bricking 01:12:05 - Disintegration 01:17:17 - Picks of the Week 01:25:46 - Outro See the full show notes. Picks of the Week Josh: Gigabyte X570 AORUS Elite Jeremy: Cheap Vinyl Chair Mat Sebastian: Dr. Katz: The Audiobook

rx radeon rx intel nuc pc perspective podcast
Geeks Gadgets and Guns Podcast
GGG 236 CES 2020

Geeks Gadgets and Guns Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2020 178:05


GGG 236 CES 2020 - This week Matt, Adam, and Heinrich sit down to talk some of the neatest stuff shown off at CES 2020. No more first party xbox exclusives for the new consoles first years https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/10/microsoft-xbox-series-x-exclusive-games-xbox-one/ Bezelless 8k and 8k streaming https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/04/samsung-8k-q950ts-ces-2020/ Samsung 8k’s will include 8k tuners https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/samsung-2020-8k-tv-atsc-3-tuners/ Whirlpool oven integrated smart sensor https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/whirlpool-yummly-smart-thermometer/ New Vizio 4k lineup with oled and FreeSync  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/vizio-ces-2020-4k-oled-smartcast-4/ TP link wifi 6 mesh https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/tp-link-affordable-wifi-6-mesh-routers/ Flood light cam https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/arlo-pro-3-floodlight-camera/ 55” 4k OLED gaming monitor  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/acer-55-inch-monitor-predator-gaming/ Oral-b ai toothbrush https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/oral-b-io-electric-toothbrush-ai-app/ Colgate smart toothbrush  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/colgate-plaqless-pro-electric-toothbrush/ 10 second tooth brush  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/ybrush-10-second-electric-toothbrush-final/ Smart faucet coming this year https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/moen-voice-activated-faucet/ Smart sun visor https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/bosch-virtual-visor/ Netatmo smart lock https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/netatmo-smart-door-lock/ More Samsung wall tv size options  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/samsung-the-wall-tv-2020/   Intel 10th gen cpu’s passing 5ghz https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/intel-10th-gen-h-series-5-ghz/ Smart light to help those with dyslexia  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/lexilight-dyslexia-reading-lamp-ces-2020/ Ikea smart blinds now support home kit https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/ikeas-smart-blinds-now-work-with-apple-homekit/ Tp link wifi 6 gaming router https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/tp-link-wifi-6-tri-band-router/ Dell switch like pc concept https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/dell-concept-ufo-portable-gaming-pc/ Xfinity upgraded modems https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/xfinity-is-giving-its-customers-free-network-security-monitoring/ Lenovo Thinkpad x1 fold https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/lenovo-thinkpad-x1-fold-hands-on-specs-price-availability-durability-windows/ Short throw 4k laser projector https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/hisense-l5-short-throw-laser-projector/ 64 core threadripper confirmed https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/amd-64-core-threadripper-3990x-available-february-7/ https://pcper.com/2020/01/64-core-threadripper-3990x-ces/ Radeon 5600xt launch https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/amd-radeon-rx-5600-xt-1080p-gaming/ https://pcper.com/2020/01/amd-announces-radeon-rx-5600-xt-for-279/ Ryzen 4000 bringing zen 2 to laptops https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/amd-ryzen-4000-laptop-chips/ https://pcper.com/2020/01/zen-2-ryzen-4000-mobile-processors/ Sony OLED and 8k tvs brining auto calibration  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/sony-8k-4k-oled-tv-2020/ Pc console hybrid system now available  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/origin-big-o-pc-playstation-4-pro-xbox-one/ New Elgato 4k60 s+ https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/elgato-40k60-splus-ces-2020/ 8tb ssd prototype  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/sandisk-portable-8tb-ssd-prototype/ Smart shoes https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/nurvv-run-smart-insole/ bacteria killing screen protector https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/otterbox-amplify-screen-protector-anti-microbial/ New Bluetooth spec https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/bluetooth-audio-low-energy/ Intel horseshoe prototype  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/intel-horseshoe-bend-tiger-lake-foldable/ https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/07/intel-horseshoe-bend-foldable-17-inch-tablet-pc-hands-on/ Hyundai flying taxi concept https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/hyundai-and-uber-flying-taxi-concept/ https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/08/hyundai-uber-sa1-air-taxi/  Nighthawk mesh system https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/07/netgear-nighthawk-wifi-6-mesh-system/ electrochromic glass lens cover https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/07/oneplus-concept-one-hands-on-mclaren/ Sunflower home security https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/07/sunflower-residential-security-drone/ https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/08/sunflower-labs-drone-home-security-impressions/ 8k vr for nasa https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/07/vrgineers-8k-vr-headset-nasa/ AMD clarifying FreeSync branding specs https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/amd-freesync-premium-pro-ces-2020/ Panasonic slim vr headset  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/09/panasonic-vr-glasses/ Intel tries for the discrete GPU market again https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/09/intel-xe-d1g-software-development-vehicle/ Pokemon home coming in feb 2020 https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/09/pokemon-home-february/ Pokemon sword and shield expansions coming this year https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/09/pokemon-sword-shield-expansion-pass/ Verizon ends bundling  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/09/verizon-fios-mix-match/ Intel Nuc https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/08/intel-ghost-canyon-nuc-tiger-lake-xe/ https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/07/razer-tomahawk-modular-gaming-pc-nuc-9-extreme/ Garbage disposal for composting https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/07/smart-garbage-disposal-composts-your-food-scraps-instead-of-grin/ Haptic feedback gaming chair https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/08/arcadeo-gaming-chair-hands-on-ces-2020/ Home bio labs https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/08/feles-biolab-startup-ces/ Yale smart delivery box https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/08/yale-home-smart-delivery-box-cabinet-lock-safe/ Bi directional ev charger  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/08/the-quasar-home-ev-charger-can-power-your-car-and-your-house/ Finger print secured external ssd https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/08/samsung-T7-touch-ssd/ Video that works In landscape and portrait  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/08/quibi-mobile-video-turnstyle/ Off grid moisture farming is becoming a thing https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/08/solar-genny-watergen-ces/ irobot adding ifttt support https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/07/irobot-roomba-ifttt-smart-home-partnership/ Bi copter drone https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/08/v-coptr-falcon-bi-copter-drone-zero-zero-robotics/ Rog swift G-sync ultimate monitor https://pcper.com/2020/01/asus-rog-swift-pg32uqx-monitor/   New Nvidia driver with a frame rate cap option https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/06/nvidia-geforce-drivers-framerate-cap-ces-2020/ 360hrz gaming monitor https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/07/nvidia-360hz-esports-display-hands-on-ces-2020/ https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/05/nvidia-360hz-esports-display-gsync-asus-rog-swift-360/ B quiet straight power 11 psu now 80+ platinum  https://pcper.com/2020/01/be-quiet-straight-power-11-platinum-power-supply/ Updated corsair AIO’s https://pcper.com/2020/01/corsair-reveals-new-pro-xt-liquid-cpu-coolers/ Corsair tower air cooler https://pcper.com/2020/01/corsair-a500-dual-fan-cpu-air-cooler/ Inwin signature case https://pcper.com/2020/01/inwin-reveals-the-diey-their-most-incredible-case-design-to-date/ Switch game cube controller mod https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/11/gamecube-switch-joy-con-controller-mod/ GTA4 pc sales end https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/14/gta4-leaves-steam-over-games-for-windows-live/ Portal prequel  https://www.engadget.com/2020/01/04/valve-f-stop-portal-prequel-peek/ Instagram (Matt) Instagram (Heinrich) LFD Research Facebook Apple Podcasts Stitcher  Google Play Contact the show directly at geeksgadgetsandguns@gmail.com

El podcast de EOL
El podcast de EOL: episodio #6

El podcast de EOL

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2020 78:47


Con Sabio, [erick], Alejo I, monthyp y Scylla. Hablamos de la serie de The Witcher, las novedades (o no) del CES, los Intel NUC, el coche de Sony y otros de sus negocios, lo que nos espera en la nueva generación de consolas, los precios de los juegos, lo mejor del año en EOL... y de un cómic.

MiniPC Show - Podnutz
MiniPC Show #98 – PinePinePine Update, AtomicPi Reanimated and Intel NUC Massacres Desktops

MiniPC Show - Podnutz

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2019


iTunes – https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/minipc–show–podnutz/id1087233346?mt=2# RSS – http://feeds.feedburner.com/podnutz/minipcshow Show – http://podnutz.com/category/minipc/ Live Video And Chat – Only via Patreon http://patreon.com/theminipcshow Email – minipc@podnutz.com Form Email – http://podnutz.com/minipcshowcontactform/ Hosted by: Steve McLaughlin – DoorToDoorGeek – http://podnutz.com Brian – AskTheCableGuy FlyingRich – http://www.FlyingRich.com Podnutz Mugs – http://code4sale.com/podnutz/ AliExpress Affiliate Link – http://www.dpbolvw.net/click–7648860–12574854 Notes: PineTime Smartwatch Specifications Released, Availability Scheduled for H1 2020 At the time we […]

Accrotidienne par GLG
Top 5 Meilleur Mini PC pour concurrencer le Mac Mini en #Maxi #Live #libreAntenne 4 Mai 2019

Accrotidienne par GLG

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2019 61:05


Votre PC prend trop de place et vous aimeriez un mini pc Windows comme le nouveau mac Mini, quels sont les 5 mini pc qui peuvent le concurrencer ? Vidéo réalisé avec le soutien de la chaîne Warball Communauty: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmZCrpYza0nklQgWsu_W8xQ 1. #ZOTAC Zbox CI640 Nano (sans ram, sans disque dur) 2. #Lenovo ThinkCentre V350S etThinkCentre M710 Tiny 3. #ASUS Mini PC PN60 (sans ram, sans disque dur) 4. #Intel NUC et Intel NUC Skull NUC6I7KYK 5. #MSI Vortex G25 9 ? : #Corsair One Pro Compact (le plus cher ^^ ) Le Jtgeek c'est 3 Chaines Youtube partenaires de https://legeek.tv -GLG Reviews http://youtube.com/glgreviews -GLG Vidéo http://youtube.com/lesmagouilles -WTS by GLG http://youtube.com/wtsbyglg Soutiens l'aventure sur https://www.utip.io/gregutip Offre moi un café: https://fr.tipeee.com/jt-geek-china Mes nouvelles lunettes: http://s.click.aliexpress.com/e/ViXVF4c GLG Video c'est aussi une accrotidienne du Lundi au Vendredi à 16h et un Jt du geek ou on parle High-tech ,smartphone, serie Tv, Youtube… Lâche toi en commentaires, en suggestions, en idées, en remarques et les produits ou smartphones dont tu voudrais que je parle. Soutiens l'aventure sur Tipeee: https://www.tipeee.com/jt-geek-china ——————- ● Accro En Podcast ● ——————- Retrouvez votre accrotidienne en Podcast sur: RSS: http://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:75856437/sounds.rss Tuto écouter podcast: https://jtgeek.com/?p=57650 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/32qcRl1KNpFgh6jEhi04J3 ——————- ● Suivez Moi Greglegeek / Jtgeek ● ——————- ► Ma Chaine tech | http://youtube.com/glgreviews ► Ma Chaine Touristique et fantastique: http://youtube.com/wtsbyglg ► Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/greglegeek_/ ► Twitter | https://twitter.com/glgreviews ► Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/glgreviews ► Google+ | https://plus.google.com/glgreviews ► GLG Blog | https://jtgeek.com

Waiting for Review
Episode 117: They must be up to something...

Waiting for Review

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2019 49:56


This week we discuss the Intel NUC vs the latest Mac Mini, we discuss the upcoming Mac Pro, what we might see at WWDC on the Mac hardware front and look back at old mac hardware pricing - are todays prices really that high? Finally, we discuss the right to repair and why a "dead motherboard" might not mean needing a new one. Music by Broke For Free Attribution 3.0 United States (CC BY 3.0 US)

7 Minute Security
7MS #353: Tales of Internal Pentest Pwnage - Part 1

7 Minute Security

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2019 42:47


Buckle up! This is one of my favorite episodes. Today I'm kicking off a two-part series that walks you through a narrative of a recent internal pentest I worked on. I was able to get to Domain Admin status and see the "crown jewels" data, so I thought this would be a fun and informative narrative to share. Below are some highlights of topics/tools/techniques discussed: Building a pentest dropbox The timing is perfect - my pal Paul (from Project7) and Dan (from PlexTrac) have a two-part Webinar series on building your own $500 DIY Pentest Lab, but the skills learned in the Webinars translate perfectly into making a pentest dropbox. Head to our webinars page for more info. Securing a pentest dropbox What I did with my Intel NUC pentest dropbox is build a few VMs as follows: Win 10 pro management box with Bitlocker drive encryption and Splashtop (not a sponsor) which I like because it offers 2FA and an additional per-machine password/PIN. I think I spent $100/year for it. Kali attack box with an encrypted drive (Kali makes this easy by offering you this option when you first install the OS). Scoping/approaching a pentest From what I can gather, there are (at least) two popular schools of thought as it relates to approaching a pentest: From the perimeter - where you do a lot of OSINT, phish key users, gain initial access, and then find a path to privilege from there. Assume compromise - assume that eventually someone will click a phishing link and give bad guys a foothold on the network, so you have the pentester bring in a Kali box, plug it into the network, and the test begins from that point. Pentest narrative For one of the tests I worked on, here were some successes and challenges I had along the way: Check out the show notes at 7MS.us as there's lots more good info there!

Záznamy z klubovny
Hardware Club #25

Záznamy z klubovny

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2019 67:56


5:33 Co je Mini PC | 21:48 Chlazení 27:25 Grafika vs iGPU | 37:25 Pasivní HTPC | 47:45 Intel NUC | 50:17 AMD APU

Lon.TV Podcast
Weekly Wrapup 196 - Total cost of NUC barebones kits, shell access is retro and modern, and more!

Lon.TV Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2018 27:32


See all of this week's mentioned content: http://lon.tv/ww196 - This week I correct the record on a portion of my 90's Internet video, explore the total cost of an Intel NUC barebones kit, discuss why shell access is retro and modern, and look at the channel's international viewership. Subscribe for more! http://lon.tv/s , index below: VIDEO INDEX: 00:42 - Supporter thank yous 01:12 - (non)Ad http://lon.tv/blueapron 02:20 - Week in review: Extras channel lon.tv/extras 03:14 - Week in review: Main channel 04:36 - 90's Internet Errata: Origins of Nano text editor 06:46 - On my mind: Week 58 07:26 - Pax panel audio now available on the podcast feed 08:06 - SEGA announces new console 09:12 - Q&A: Total cost of NUC barebones kits 13:44 - Q&A: Shell access to the Internet still modern 16:29 - Q&A: What are the countries that watch my videos the most? 18:42 - Q&A For you: good parts for an AMD mini pc build? 19:36 - Channel of the week: http://lon.tv/jeffseibert 21:41 - Coming up this week 23:45 - Helping the channel 24:20 - My other channels Subscribe to my email list to get a weekly digest of upcoming videos! - http://lon.tv/email See my second channel for supplementary content : http://lon.tv/extras Join the Facebook group to connect with me and other viewers! http://lon.tv/facebookgroup Visit the Lon.TV store to purchase some of my previously reviewed items! http://lon.tv/store Read more about my transparency and disclaimers: http://lon.tv/disclosures Want to chat with other fans of the channel? Visit our forums! http://lon.tv/forums Want to help the channel? Start a Member subscription or give a one time tip! http://lon.tv/support or contribute via Venmo! lon@lon.tv Follow me on Facebook! http://facebook.com/lonreviewstech Follow me on Twitter! http://twitter.com/lonseidman Catch my longer interviews in audio form on my podcast! http://lon.tv/itunes http://lon.tv/stitcher or the feed at http://lon.tv/podcast/feed.xml Follow me on Google+ http://lonseidman.com We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

The HANA Effect
Episode 64 - SAP HANA Express Spreads Joy to Geeks

The HANA Effect

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2016 8:49


SAP Mentor Tamas Szirtes joins Jeff at SAP TechEd 2016 to discuss his experience with HANA Express on the Intel NUC.

BSD Now
148: The place to B...A Robot!

BSD Now

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2016 104:32


This week on the show, Allan and I are going to be showing you a very interesting interview we did talking about using FreeBSD to drive This episode was brought to you by Headlines FreeBSD Core Team Election (https://www.freebsd.org/administration.html#t-core) Core.9 has been elected, and will officially take over from Core.8 on Wednesday, 6 July 2016 Many thanks to the outgoing members of the core team for their service over the last 2 years 214 out of 325 eligible voters (65.8%) cast their votes in an election counting 14 candidates. The top nine candidates are, in descending order of votes received: 180 84.1% Ed Maste (incumbent) 176 82.2% George V. Neville-Neil (incumbent) 171 79.9% Baptiste Daroussin (incumbent) 168 78.5% John Baldwin 166 77.6% Hiroki Sato (incumbent) 147 68.7% Allan Jude 132 61.7% Kris Moore 121 56.5% Benedict Reuschling 108 50.5% Benno Rice There was no tie for ninth. BSDNow and the entire community would also like to extend their thanks to all those who stood for election to the core team Next week's core meeting will encompass the members of Core.8 and Core.9, as responsibility for any outstanding items will be passed from outgoing members of core to the new incoming members *** Why I run OpenBSD (http://deftly.net/posts/2016-05-31-why-i-run-openbsd.html) This week we have a good article / blog post talking about why the posted has moved to OpenBSD from Linux. “One thing I learned during my travels between OSs: consistency is everything. Most operating systems seem to, at least, keep a consistent interface between themselves and binaries / applications. They do this by keeping consistent APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) and ABIs (Application Binary Interfaces). If you take a binary from a really old version of Linux and run or build it on a brand-spanking new install of Linux, it will likely Just Work™. This is great for applications and developers of applications. Vendors can build binaries for distribution and worry less about their product working when it gets out in the wild (sure this binary built in 2016 will run on RedHat AS2.1!!).“ The author then goes through another important part of the consistency argument, with what he calls “UPI” or “User Program Interfaces”. In other words, while the ABI may be stable, what about the end-user tooling that the user directly has to interact with on a daily basis? “This inconsistency seems to have come to be when Linux started getting wireless support. For some reason someone (vendors, maybe?) decided that ifconfig wasn't a good place to let users interact with their wireless device. Maybe they felt their device was special? Maybe there were technical reasons? The bottom line is, someone decided to create a new utility to manage a wireless device… and then another one came along… pretty soon there was iwconfig(8), iw(8), ifconfig(8), some funky thing that let windows drivers interface with Linux.. and one called ip(8) I am sure there are others I am forgetting, but I prefer to forget. I have moved onto greener pastures and the knowledge of these programs no longer serves me.” The article then goes through the rundown of how he evaluated the various BSD's and ultimately settled on OpenBSD: “OpenBSD won the showdown. It was the most complete, simple, and coherent system. The documentation was thorough, the code was easy to follow and understand. It had one command to configure all of the network interfaces! I didn't have wireless, but I was able to find a cheap USB adapter that worked by simply running man -k wireless and reading about the USB entries. It didn't have some of the applications I use regularly, so I started reading about ports (intuitively, via man ports!).” The ultimate NetBSD Router (http://blog.tbrodel.me/2016/#netbsd-router) “So yesterday I spent the day setting up a new firewall at home here, based off of this BSD Now tutorial. Having set up a couple of OpenBSD routers before, either based on old laptops, bulky old power-sucking desktops or completely over-specced machines like the Intel NUC, I wanted to get some kind of BSD onto a low-powered ARM board and use that instead.” “I've had a couple of Cubietrucks lying around for a while now, I've used them in a couple of art installations, running Debian and Pure Data, but over all they've been a bit disappointing. It's more the manufacturer's fault but they require blobs for the graphics and audio, which Debian won't allow, so as a multimedia board they're dud for video, and only passable for audio work with a usb sound card. So they've been collecting dust.” “Only thing missing is a second NIC, luckily I had an Apple USB->Ethernet dongle lying around, which when I bought it was the cheapest thing I could find on eBay that OpenBSD definitely supported. There, and on NetBSD, it's supported by the axe(4) driver. USB 2.0 works fine for me as I live in Australia and my ISP can only give me 30Mbps, so this should do for the forseeable future.” + The article then walks through installing and configuring NetBSD + Configuration includes: pf, unbound, and dhcpd “This project has been really fun, I started with basically no experience with NetBSD and have finished with a really useful, low-powered and robust appliance. It's a testament to the simplicity of the NetBSD system, and the BSD design principles in general, that such a novice as myself could figure this out. The NetBSD project has easily the most polished experience on Allwinner ARM boards, even Debian doesn't make it this easy. It's been a joy running the system, it has the bits I love from OpenBSD; ksh(1), tmux(1), an http daemon in base and of course, pf(4). This is mixed with some of the pragmatism I see in FreeBSD; a willingness to accept blobs if that really is the only way to boot, or get audio, or a video console.” bhyve-Bootable Boot Environments (http://callfortesting.org/bhyve-boot-environments/) We have a lengthy article also today from our friend Michael Dexter, who asks the basic question “What if multibooting and OS upgrades weren't horrible?” No doubt if you've been a frequent listener to this show, you've heard Allan or Myself talking about ZFS Boot Environments, and how they can “change your life”. Well today Michael goes further into detail on how the BE's work, and how they can be leveraged to do neat things, like installing other versions of an operating system from the original running system. “If you are reading this, you have probably used a personal computer with a BSD or GNU/Linux operating system and at some point attempted to multiboot between multiple operating systems on the same computer. This goal is typically attempted with complex disk partitioning and a BSD or GNU/Linux boot loader like LILO or GRUB, plus several hours of frustrating experimentation and perhaps data loss. While exotic OS experimentation has driven my virtualization work since the late 1990s, there are very pragmatic reasons for multibooting the same OS on the same hardware, notable for updates and failback to "known good" versions. To its credit, FreeBSD has long had various strategies including the NanoBSD embedded system framework with primary and secondary root partitions, plus the nextboot(8) utility for selecting the "next" kernel with various boot parameters. Get everything set correctly and you can multiboot "with impunity". “That's a good start, and over time we have seen ZFS "boot environments" be used by PC-BSD and FreeNAS to allow for system updates that allow one to fall back to previous versions should something go wrong. Hats off to these efforts but they exist in essentially purpose-built appliance environments. I have long sensed that there is more fun to be had here and a wonderful thing happened with FreeBSD 10.3 and 11.0: Allan Jude added a boot environment menu to the FreeBSD loader” From here Michael takes us through the mechanical bits of actually creating a new ZFS dataset (BE) and performing a fresh FreeBSD 10.3 installation into this new boot-environment. The twist comes at the end, where he next sets up the BE to be a root NFS for booting in bhyve! This is interesting and gives you a way to test booting into your new environment via a VM, before rebooting the host directly into it. *** Interview - Edicarla Andrade & Vinícius Zavam - @egypcio (https://twitter.com/egypcio) BSD-Powered Robots News Roundup Tomohiro Kasumi explains what “@@” means, in the context of the Hammer filesystem (http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/users/2016-June/249717.html) A post from the Dragonfly users' mailing list about what the @@ construct means in the Hammer filesystem “@@ represents the existence of a PFS which is logically separated pseudo filesystem space within HAMMER's B-Tree” “HAMMER only has 1 large B-Tree per filesystem (not per PFS), so all the PFS exist within that single B-Tree. PFS are separated by localization parameter which is one of the B-Tree keys used to lookup the tree.” Each substring in "@@-1:00001" means: "@@" means it's a PFS or snapshot. "-1" means it's a master. ":" is just a separator. "00001" means it's PFS#1, where PFS#0 is the default PFS created on newfs. There is no "00000" because that's what's mounted on /HAMMER. PFS# is used for localization parameter. “Localization parameter has the highest priority when inserting or looking up B-Tree elements, so fs elements that belong to the same PFS# tend to be localized (clustered) within the B-Tree” There is also a note about how snapshots are named: "@@0x00..." A user points out that having : in the path can confuse some applications, such as in the case of adding the current directory or a relative path to the $PATH environment variable, which is a colon delimited list of paths This seems quite a bit more confusing that the datasets created by ZFS, but they might have other useful properties *** FreeBSD 11.0 nearing RC1 (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/11.0R/schedule.html) We've all been eagerly awaiting the pending release of FreeBSD 11.0, and the schedule has now been updated! The first release candidate is slated for July 29th! If all goes well (and we stick to schedule) there will be another RC2 and possible RC3 release, before 11.0 officially drops near the end of August. Start playing with those builds folks, be sure to send your feedback to the team to make this the best .0 release ever! *** TensorFlow on FreeBSD (http://ecc-comp.blogspot.com/2016/06/tensorflow-on-freebsd.html) Next we have a blog post about the experience of a “new” FreeBSD user trying to deploy some non-ported software to his new system. Specifically he was interested in running TensorFlow, but not doing a port himself, because in his words: “First, I apologize for not supplying a port archive myself. After reading the FreeBSD handbook for creating a port, it's too complex of a task for me right now. I've only been using FreeBSD for two weeks. I would also not like to waste anyone's time giving them a terrible port archive and mess up their system.” First of all, good ports are often born out of bad ports! Don't let the porting framework daunt you, give it a go, since that's the only way you are going to learn how to write “good” ports over time. The porters-handbook is a good first place to start, plus the community usually is very helpful in providing feedback. He then walks us through the changes made to the TensorFlow code (starting with the assumption that OSX was a good “flavor” to begin porting from) and ultimately compiling. This ends up with the creation of a pip package which works! A good tutorial, and also very similar to what goes on in the porting process. With this write-up perhaps somebody will take up creating a port of it… hint hint! *** NetBSD: A New Beginning? (http://jamesdeagle.blogspot.ca/2016/06/netbsd-new-beginning.html) We don't get enough NetBSD news at times, but this post by James Deagle talks about his adventure with NetBSD 7.0 and making it his “new beginning” “After a few months of traipsing around the worlds of SunOS and Linux, I'm back to NetBSD for what I hope will be a lengthy return engagement. And while I'm enamored of NetBSD for all the previously-mentioned reasons, I'm already thinking ahead to some problems to solve, some of which have also been mentioned before.” He then goes through and lists some of the small nits he's still running into during the daily workflow YouTube audio - Specifically he mentions that no audio is playing, but wonders if Flash plays some part. (Ideally you're not using Flash though, in which case you need to check the audio backend FF is using. Try PulseAudio since it seems the best supported. If pulse is already enabled, install ‘pavucontrol' to make sure audio is playing to the correct sound device) Slow gaming performance (TuxKart and Celestia) - Check DRI / Xorg? Or is it CPU bound? Lastly some unspecified Wireless issues, which typically end up being driver related. (Or use another chipset) Beastie Bits Reproducible NetBSD? 77.7% of the way there (https://reproducible.debian.net/netbsd/netbsd.html) Create FreeBSD virtual machine using qemu. Run the VM using xhyve. (https://gist.github.com/zg/38a3afa112ddf7de4912aafc249ec82f) FreeBSD PowerPC 32bit pkg repository (unofficial). ~19,500 packages, more to come (https://joshcummings.net/pub/FreeBSD) NetBSD machines at Open Source Conference 2016 Gunma (http://mail-index.netbsd.org/netbsd-advocacy/2016/05/16/msg000706.html) Adam Leventhal (of ZFS and DTrace) does an analysis of APFS (http://arstechnica.com/apple/2016/06/a-zfs-developers-analysis-of-the-good-and-bad-in-apples-new-apfs-file-system/) SemiBug June meeting summary (http://lists.nycbug.org/pipermail/semibug/2016-June/000106.html) KnoxBug Meeting (http://knoxbug.org/content/2016-07-26) Feedback/Questions Andrew - iocage (http://pastebin.com/nuYTzaG6) Florian - Arm + GitHub (http://pastebin.com/PzY68hNS) Clint - Synth (http://pastebin.com/JESGZjLu) Leonardo - Translations (http://pastebin.com/b4LAiPs4) Zachary - Moving things to VMs (http://pastebin.com/VRc8fvBk) ***

Business Solutions for IT Managers
Digitopia: In the Market for Innovation

Business Solutions for IT Managers

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2015


Business Solutions for IT Managers: Belgian shopping district sets the standard for digital retail with Digitopia and Intel NUC and Intel Atom processor.

BSD Now
49: The PC-BSD Tour

BSD Now

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2014 82:51


Coming up this week on the show, we've got something special for you! We'll be giving you an in-depth look at all of the graphical PC-BSD utilities. That's right, BSD doesn't have to be commandline-only anymore! There's also the usual round of answers to your emails and all the latest headlines, on BSD Now - the place to B.. SD. This episode was brought to you by Headlines FreeBSD foundation semi-annual newsletter (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/press/2014jul-newsletter) The FreeBSD foundation published their semi-annual newsletter, complete with a letter from the president of the foundation "In fact after reading [the president's] letter, I was motivated to come up with my own elevator pitch instead of the usual FreeBSD is like Linux, only better!" It talks about the FreeBSD journal (http://www.bsdnow.tv/episodes/2014_01_29-journaled_news_updates) as being one of the most exciting things they've launched this year, conferences they funded and various bits of sponsored code that went into -CURRENT The full list of funded projects is included, also with details in the financial reports There are also a number of conference wrap-ups: NYCBSDCon, BSDCan, AsiaBSDCon and details about the upcoming EuroBSDCon

interview guide talk foundation tour recording presentation how to sd tutorials linux ssl tls bsd freebsd openssl nuc openbsd intel nuc netbsd allan jude ixsystems kris moore tarsnap bsdcan pc bsd eurobsdcon dragonflybsd bsd now asiabsdcon
c't uplink (SD-Video)
c't uplink 2.4: Alles-Player fürs Wohnzimmer, dubiose Windows-Lizenzen, E-Mail-Clients

c't uplink (SD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2014


Volker Zota zeigt uns in c't uplink, wie man das Wohnzimmer mit Raspberry Pi, Intel Nuc und anderen Mini-Boxen in eine Multimedia-Zentrale verwandelt. Wir sprechen außerdem darüber, wie eine rechtsextremistische Partei mit dubiosen Windows-Lizenzen Geld verdient und warum Desktop-Clients für E-Mails noch nicht ausgestorben sind. Mit dabei: Jo Bager (jo), Holger Bleich (hob), Martin Holland (mho, @fingolas) und Volker Zota (vza, @doczet).

c't uplink (HD-Video)
c't uplink 2.4: Alles-Player fürs Wohnzimmer, dubiose Windows-Lizenzen, E-Mail-Clients

c't uplink (HD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2014


Volker Zota zeigt uns in c't uplink, wie man das Wohnzimmer mit Raspberry Pi, Intel Nuc und anderen Mini-Boxen in eine Multimedia-Zentrale verwandelt. Wir sprechen außerdem darüber, wie eine rechtsextremistische Partei mit dubiosen Windows-Lizenzen Geld verdient und warum Desktop-Clients für E-Mails noch nicht ausgestorben sind. Mit dabei: Jo Bager (jo), Holger Bleich (hob), Martin Holland (mho, @fingolas) und Volker Zota (vza, @doczet).

c’t uplink
c't uplink 2.4: Alles-Player fürs Wohnzimmer, dubiose Windows-Lizenzen, E-Mail-Clients

c’t uplink

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2014 35:33


Volker Zota zeigt uns in c't uplink, wie man das Wohnzimmer mit Raspberry Pi, Intel Nuc und anderen Mini-Boxen in eine Multimedia-Zentrale verwandelt. Wir sprechen außerdem darüber, wie eine rechtsextremistische Partei mit dubiosen Windows-Lizenzen Geld verdient und warum Desktop-Clients für E-Mails noch nicht ausgestorben sind. Mit dabei: Jo Bager (jo), Holger Bleich (hob), Martin Holland (mho, @fingolas) und Volker Zota (vza, @doczet).

NZ Tech Podcast
NZ Tech Podcast 180: Telecom Aircade. Dominos NZ domain drama, Telecom M2M dev kit, ThinkPad 10

NZ Tech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2014 46:40


This week – iPhone big screen report, Lenovo’s new ThinkPad 10 tablet, Telecom’s Aircade cloud gaming, Twitter mute, Domino’s NZ domain name drama, Intel Haswell refresh, Telecom M2M dev kit, Intel NUC bootup time and more about Uber and Zoomy. Running time : 0:46:39

NZ Tech Podcast
NZ Tech Podcast 179: Hotel Internet, NZ’s Rex Bionics $20M, Apple vs Samsung, Intel NUC, Uber has landed

NZ Tech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2014 39:51


On the agenda - Hotel internet nightmares, Vodafone joins unlimited Internet party, Uber has officially launched in Auckland, Rex Bionics attracts funds via UK listing, Samsung Mobile CEO rumoured to visit NZ, Intel i5 + Atom NUC, Galaxy S5 in business. Running time : 0:39:30

TyfloPodcast
Intel NUC i Mac Mini

TyfloPodcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2014


Michał Dziwisz i Tomek Kowalik opowiadają o swoich wrażeniach z użytkowania dwóch, miniaturowych, komputerów stacjonarnych.