1968: Computer scientist Douglas Engelbart kicks off the personal computer revolution with a product demonstration that is so amazing it inspires a generation of technologists. It will become known as “the mother of all demos.”
The presentation included the debut of the computer mouse, which Engelbart used to control an onscreen pointer in exactly the same [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Demos’
Apple Cracks Down on Application Demos, Outlines App Store Rules
The new beta version of Mac OS X 10.6.6 outlines rules for application developers, including a ban on demos. – Computer maker Apple announced the second beta of Mac OS X 10.6.6, with support for the forthcoming Mac App Store, which also includes new rules for developers, most notably a ban on trial versions of applications destined for the company’s online application storefront. The instructions were posted…
Demo Slam Makes Tech Demos Fun
Have you ever decided to skip the tech demo and just plow into using a new technology? If you’re anything like the majority of people out there, you have probably done just that. But why?
AMD Demos ‘Llano’ APU for Notebooks, Desktop PCs
AMD showed off its upcoming “Llano” APU, which offers integrated compute and graphics capabilities onto the same piece of silicon. Llano will ap-pear in systems in 2011. – Advanced Micro Devices officials gave the industry a glimpse of their upcoming “Llano” processor, part of the companys Fusion initiative that integrates computing and graphics capabilities onto a single piece of silicon.
AMD on Oct. 19 gave a demonstration of what the APU (Accelerated Processing Un…
FalconStor Demos New Accelerator, Data Protection for VMware View
In the VMware Lab at VMworld, FalconStor also will be demonstrating the FalconStor Network Storage Server replication package for VMware. – SAN FRANCISCO — Open standards storage maker FalconStor, which provides the array software for a number of major systems makers, Aug. 30 demonstrated a new storage area network accelerator and a data protection pacakge at VMworld 2010 specifially for VMware’s View control suite.
The demonstratio…
Microsoft Demos Windows Phone 7 Series Apps at Mix 2010
At its Mix conference for Web developers and designers, Microsoft shed more light on plans for its upcoming Windows Phone 7 Series family of devices. The software giant provided more detail on the development experience for creating applications for the new smartphone platform and demonstrated some of the applications that can be expected on the platform. Moreover, Microsoft sent its Windows Phone 7 Series development tools to a bunch of its partners to build applications and integrations of their technology with the Windows Phone 7 Series. This slide show looks at a smattering of those apps.
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IBM Lotus CTO Demos IBM Project Vulcan
EWEEK senior writer Clint Boulton chats with Charlie Hill, distinguished engineer and CTO of IBM’s Lotus software group, who shows off IBM’s experimental new Project Vulcan collaboration platform. Vulcan, which will be released to developers in the second half of this year through IBM LotusLabs, comprises a blend of existing IBM software, including IBM Lotus Notes, Sametime, Connections, with IBM’s Cognos business intelligence applications. Equal parts Google Wave, Facebook and BI, Vulcan is geared to help customers unlock business data from its CRP and ERP silos and share it with IBM’s messaging and collaboration products. In this video, Hill shows how he can share content with users through Vulcan, access calendars, search for users in the IBM network, and mash up Connections profile information with business analytics reports. Should this platform come to fruition, it could give IBM a competitive advantage over Microsoft, Google Apps, and even Salesforce.com, which has added collaboration software to its portfolio. Hill said IBM plans to add real-time co-editing tools to Vulcan via Project Concord. Expect Vulcan to hit the market in 2010.
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Siemens Demos Twitter in UC App
At the VoiceCon 2009 show in San Francisco, officials with the Siemens Enterprise Communications Group will show off the upcoming integration of Twitter with the companys OpenScape UC application. The demo is the latest example of the growing presence of social networking programs in business, improving not only communication between workers, but also between companies and their customers.
– In a nod to the growing influence of social networking in the business
world, Siemens enterprise communications unit is looking to integrate Twitter
with its unified communications application.
At the VoiceCon 2009 show in San Francisco
Nov. 4, the Siemens Enterprise Communications Group or SEN
…
Microsoft Demos Digital Camera, Laptop, Netbook Ecosystem at Windows 7 Launch
On Oct. 22, Microsoft launched Windows 7 with much fanfare. One of the highlights of the launch was watching Steve Ballmer show off many of the new devices sporting the upgraded Windows operating system. Microsoft touted the diversity of Windows 7 devices on display, from all-in-one PCs to digital cameras to a myriad of laptops in different shapes and colors and a variety of new netbooks. Many of the new Windows 7 notebooks are small, lightweight and a few are available for under $500. Here is an offering of some of the new Windows 7 compatible devices Microsoft had on hand for the launch.By eWEEK Staff
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Arguments the left has to win
We must settle our differences on issues from nuclear weapons to healthcare if we are to exert pressure on the policy makers
This week James Purnell launched a Demos project, Open Left, which is asking what it means to be on the left today. To understand the difficulties that face the left you have to start way back. For almost 10 years a consensus has developed within the three main parties inspired by the Thatcher counter-revolution, which argued that government should keep out of industry and leave everything to the market.
It was that very policy that led to the present economic crisis and which has had a dramatic effect on the level of Labour support in two ways: a falling turnout for Labour and the emergence of the BNP.
The present government has many achievements of which we can be proud, not least on the environment, but the party is seen as offering management rather than representation. Policies worked out on the sofas in Whitehall will not, in my opinion, make much of a contribution to the rebuilding of confidence among the voters.
Nor indeed will sectarian strife on the left help.
More and more people worldwide now see that the basic conflict is between the majority who create the wealth and the handful who own it and want jobs and homes, good healthcare and education, decent pensions and peace.
From where I see it now, outside parliament, the reconstruction of a strong left has to begin by developing powerful campaigns centred on the issues that concern people, which can bring in support from across the whole political spectrum.
The Stop the War movement, which has been one of the most successful in my lifetime, enjoyed the backing of conservatives, liberals, greens, as well as those on the left, and will ultimately win a majority for a policy of withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Now some generals are coming out against nuclear weapons at the moment when we are being told we may have to spend billions to upgrade them. This project is the most obvious candidate for a cut in public expenditure.
Housing is another example. We see a long housing waiting list and unemployed builders who cannot be financed because the money is going to the bankers, some of whom are getting huge bonuses, paid for by taxation.
Similarly there is great anxiety about the deliberate privatisation of the public services – which we have seen in academies and the private financing of hospital building – which leaves them outside any democratic control.
It is the same with civil liberties that have been eroded and state pensions which are still dropping behind the earnings with which they were once linked.
Then there is taxation – where the modest increase announced for wealthier people has been denounced by the City but it is nothing compared to the highest level when Churchill left office in 1945 – 95%, justified on the grounds that the money was needed to fight the war and that the rich should share the burdens that others had to bear. These arguments apply to the present economic crisis.
We have to win these arguments if we are to retain power next year.
And that means there has to be much more pressure from below on the policy makers in Downing Street. Out of such pressure will come a revitalised left renewing its commitment to serve those it has always sought to represent.
For the first time in my life the public is more progressive on all these issues than New Labour.
Democracy is the buckle that links the streets to the statute book and to renew the left, democracy must be strengthened in a world increasingly dominated by forces we do not control.
Letters to my Grandchildren, by Tony Benn, will be published in October by Hutchinson




The red Tory delusion
These outrider visions suit Cameron very nicely – just don’t expect him to put them into action
Political cross-dressing is familiar, but so-called Red Tories are indulging in something more like political reassignment surgery. The leading light is Phillip Blond – who clings to David Cameron’s coat-tails while shunning the Conservative creed of coming to terms with the world as it is. He damns Labour for failing to tame big business or close the wealth gap, suggesting the Tories can do better by developing the Cameroonian insight that “there is such a thing as society, but it’s not the same as the state”.
With spending cuts on the way, Cameron can only benefit from an intellectual outrider who promotes a Tory prescription that goes beyond the axe. So in January he spoke at the launch of Blond’s work at Demos, a thinktank that has been courting modernising Conservatives. It has recently been announced Blond is leaving Demos, but he continues to attract sympathetic attention for his party in naturally suspicious quarters – including in the Guardian.
Blond recently proposed “recapitalising the poor“. Even putting aside the irresistible question of how much capital the poor had in the first place, the detail is easy to pick at. Instead of blowing a hole in the government’s books, he conjectures the banking bailout will produce eventual returns for Whitehall to funnel to the dispossessed. He imagines cash-strapped councils have money to hand back to already subsidised tenants, and proposes extending means testing while railing against the poverty trap it creates.
Blond is not a policy wonk but a theologian. Treasury officials would make mincemeat of his detailed plans but, on the big ideas, he has interesting things to say. He highlights pre-1979 Tory traditions of responsibility to the community, and argues that all the main parties are beset by a narrowing liberalism, which imagines people as atomised consumers, not citizens. From that vantage point, he says, the role of small businesses simply drops out of view. He proposes rewriting competition rules, so community life can be considered alongside the price of fish in decisions about whether to license yet another Tesco.
While this policy is attractive, a Tory government would struggle to implement it, because it clashes with the big Conservative business interests. We arrive at the nub of the argument for ingesting Red Toryism with a shovel-load of salt. Clever people, of whom Blond is indubitably one, are prone to over-intellectualising politics – failing to grasp that it is a game where interests trump ideas. In the Tory party, the weightiest interest is property – not the abstract notion, but the real security of those who happen to own it.
The hold of property is not some recent aberration, dating from the Iron Lady’s protection of “our people”. Lord Salisbury saw property’s defence as his central aim – there was “always wealth”, he said. A generation later, Bonar Law promised to “leave things alone” rather than meddle in what different classes owned. Even the more conciliatory Stanley Baldwin pursued deflation, which protected rentiers at the expense of the working man. Throughout, Conservatives have stood against organised labour – which embodies the non-state mutualism that Blond is so keen on but threatens the owners of industry.
Blond ignores all of this, and so fails to comprehend what the Conservative party is – and what it is set to remain. The instinct to approach policy from the point of view of the investor means the Tories have not, as Blond urges, ditched mail privatisation. Instead it is Labour, driven by its own union interests, that has kicked privatisation into touch. Likewise, the overriding need to serve “our people” explains why the Tories remain committed to an inheritance tax cut, and why each Labour budget redistributes a little to the poor.
Inequality has remained stubbornly high despite this because forces such as de-unionisation and privatisation remain powerful. These arguably benefit consumers, but the Tories originally unleashed them at least in part because they served Conservative interests. The Red Tory idea that the party may reverse them now is delusional because – as Palmerston said – interests are eternal.
None of this means conservative intellectual attitudes lack merit – scepticism about what works, realism about human nature, and suspicion of the state have a great deal to commend them. It is also true that conservative interests can at times ally with progressive values. On personal liberty, a case can be made that the Conservatives are now the more progressive party. In the end, though, every party is hostage to its “own people”, on the question of who gets what.