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Posts Tagged ‘intelligence’

Drone attacks kill six in Pakistan

Pakistani intelligence officials have been quoted as saying two separate attacks today by U.S. drones have killed at least six suspected militants.
The AFP and Associated Press news agencies quoted officials as saying the first strike hit a vehicle killing four militants.

Business Intelligence, Processes Converge to Drive Business Decision-Making: Report

A Forrester study from October 2010 identifies and outlines the state of the art in BI best practices. – Recent advancements in software capabilities, technologies and deployments
are shifting business intelligence paradigms and are changing the way companies
do business, according to a Forrester Consulting study commissioned by
geographic BI software developer Alteryx. Industries such as retail, re…


APPLICATION ON YOUR OWN SOFTWARE Posted By : Develop Intelligence

Everything now is done faster and smoother by technological innovation. Website designers and makers are here for us producing and setting up different websites for several aspects and ideas in life.

Business Intelligence Software Much Needed Solution for Any Business to Succeed Posted By : JDi Data

To keep the cost of delivering goods and services in line, companies must find ways to reduce waste and eliminate inefficiencies. You can lose control of your cost structure putting pressure on your gross margins without proper infrastructure. Restricted cash flows are forcing companies to analyze cost structures by delving into available information at their fingertips.

Smarter Work Happens with Business Intelligence

Proliferation of smart devices, sensors, logs, database elements and communications streams are causing explosive growth of unstructured data on the enterprise WAN. Meanwhile, a world of competitive and customer information, on websites and in social media, tempt capture, storage and analysis. How do you keep up with the info-torrent, and choose the right data to capture, crunch, and bring online? How do you unlock data’s secrets, make them visible, and put this intelligence to work for business and IT?
– Video Content.


Intelligence reports cast doubts on Afghan strategy

Two new intelligence reports are raising questions about the U.S. Afghan war policy, VOA reports.
This comes just as U.S. President Barack Obama plans to release a review of American strategy in Afghanistan on Thursday.

Sponsored Content: Meeting Today`s Evolving and Emerging Business Intelligence Requirements

The explosive growth in unstructured data, much of it coming from new sources like social networks and smart devices; more demanding user requirements for easy-to-use yet more sophisticated business analytics and visualization tools; and the need to support new deployment options, such as cloud and SaaS, are rapidly altering the business intelligence landscape. This slideshow looks at the technology behind IBMs new Cognos 10 and how this suite can help organizations meet their evolving business intelligence requirements. –  …


Pak intelligence agencies “cloaked in veil of impunity”: Pak editorial

Referring to the case of eleven missing prisoners of Adiala Jail, allegedly abducted by Pakistani intelligence agencies, a newspaper editorial has stated that these spy agencies of have once again “cleverly cloaked themselves in a veil of impunity”. “Pakistan’s intelligence agencies seem to think they are above the law. This could not have been more [...]

Artificial intelligence: No command, and control

Chaos fills battlefields and disaster zones. Artificial intelligence may be better than the natural sort at coping with it

ARMIES have always been divided into officers and grunts. The officers give the orders. The grunts carry them out. But what if the grunts took over and tried to decide among themselves on the best course of action? The limits of human psychology, battlefield communications and (cynics might suggest) the brainpower of the average grunt mean this probably would not work in an army of people. It might, though, work in an army of robots.

Handing battlefield decisions to the collective intelligence of robot soldiers sounds risky, but it is the essence of a research project called ALADDIN. Autonomous Learning Agents for Decentralised Data and Information Networks, to give its full name, is a five-year-old collaboration between BAE Systems, a British defence contractor, the universities of Bristol, Oxford and Southampton, and Imperial College, London. In it, the grunts act as agents, collecting and exchanging information. They then bargain with each other over the best course of action, make a decision and carry it out. …

Suspected U.S. strike kills 15 in Pakistan

Pakistani intelligence officials say a suspected U.S. missile strike has killed 15 suspected militants near the Afghan border. Officials say four missiles hit a compound and a vehicle in the Bangi Dar village of North Waziristan.

Saudis warn of fresh al Qaeda threat

Saudi intelligence services have warned of fresh terror threats against Europe and France by the Yemen-based wing of al Qaeda. The French interior minister said that based on the information, “the threat is real.”

Intelligence agency says “state is stable”

Anti-gay parade street riots in Belgrade on Oct. 10 did not undermine the stability of the state, says a BIA official.
The Serbian intelligence agency (BIA) director’s special adviser, Miroslav Panić, spoke for B92 late on Wednesday in Belgrade to say that “organs with jurisdiction can respond to those attacks adequately”, and that the citizens are not in danger.

The search for extraterrestrial intelligence: Phoning ET

An argument over whether to send messages to aliens

FOR five decades astronomers have searched the vast ocean of space in the hope of picking up some kind of radio message from the neighbours. That nothing has been found has not deterred the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, or SETI to the cognoscenti. Despite those years of effort, SETI has done little more than dip a glass into the cosmic ocean, having looked closely at only 750 of the Milky Way’s billion or so star systems.

That will soon change. The Allen Telescope Array, a cluster of radio telescopes being built in California with SETI in mind, will dramatically speed up the rate at which such systems can be explored. On top of that, as astronomers get better at discovering planets, and find more habitable ones, the number of plausible targets for SETI will increase. …

Intelligence services sign cooperation statement

Heads of nine military intelligence services in the region signed in Belgrade on Thursday a statement on cooperation. It concerns cooperation between military intelligence agencies of South East Europe (SEE) countries which are members of the Regional Cooperation Council (RCC).

How to Use Application Intelligence to Solve Cloud Computing Problems

While virtualized data centers can help with cost-effectiveness and efficiency, it’s been estimated that only 16 percent of all servers are virtualized. Further, many CIOs say that they have not moved to the virtualized or cloud computing model because of the security concerns associated with virtualization and cloud computing. Here, Knowledge Center contributor David Buckwald discusses the threats facing virtualized environments and some best practices for beefing up security around cloud computing networks. – Cloud computing is on the rise. Over 90 percent of recently surveyed companies expect to be using cloud computing in the next three years. Still, securing access to the cloud poses significant challenges for IT departments. Mission-critical, cloud-based business applications such as Salesforce.com,…


Artificial intelligence: Riders on a swarm

Mimicking the behaviour of ants, bees and birds started as a poor man’s version of artificial intelligence. It may, though, be the key to the real thing

ONE of the bugaboos that authors of science fiction sometimes use to scare their human readers is the idea that ants may develop intelligence and take over the Earth. The purposeful collective activity of ants and other social insects does, indeed, look intelligent on the surface. An illusion, presumably. But it might be a good enough illusion for computer scientists to exploit. The search for artificial intelligence modelled on human brains has been a dismal failure. AI based on ant behaviour, though, is having some success.

Ants first captured the attention of software engineers in the early 1990s. A single ant cannot do much on its own, but the colony as a whole solves complex problems such as building a sophisticated nest, maintaining it and filling it with food. That rang a bell with people like Marco Dorigo, who is now a researcher at the Free University of Brussels and was one of the founders of a field that has become known as swarm intelligence. …

Microstrategy Introduces Business Intelligence IPhone and IPad Applications

As Mark LaRow, Microstrategy’s senior vice president of marketing announced, the company is launching a mobile business intelligence application of the next generation for iPad and iPhone produced by Apple. It is known, that in the past Microstrategy concentrated its activity on supporting BlackBerry devices introduced by Research In Motion. LaRow is sure that such [...]

Intelligence tested

Infectious disease may explain why some countries have cleverer populations

HUMAN intelligence is higher, on average, in some places than in others. And researchers at the University of New Mexico have come up with an explanation, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society. Comparing the average IQ in a particular country with its disease burden (based on the reduction in life expectancy caused by 28 infectious diseases) reveals a striking correlation. At the bottom of the IQ list is Equatorial Guinea, followed by St Lucia, with Cameroon, Mozambique and Gabon tied for third last. These countries also have among the highest burdens of infectious diseases. At the opposite end of the scale, Singapore, South Korea, China and Japan show the highest intelligence scores and relatively low levels of disease. America, Britain and a number of European countries also place in the top left-hand corner of the chart. For more on this, see article.

Disease and intelligence: Mens sana in corpore sano

Parasites and pathogens may explain why people in some parts of the world are cleverer than those in others

HUMAN intelligence is puzzling. It is higher, on average, in some places than in others. And it seems to have been rising in recent decades. Why these two things should be true is controversial. This week, though, a group of researchers at the University of New Mexico propose the same explanation for both: the effect of infectious disease. If they are right, it suggests that the control of such diseases is crucial to a country’s development in a way that had not been appreciated before. Places that harbour a lot of parasites and pathogens not only suffer the debilitating effects of disease on their workforces, but also have their human capital eroded, child by child, from birth.

Christopher Eppig and his colleagues make their suggestion in the Proceedings of the Royal Society. They note that the brains of newly born children require 87% of those children’s metabolic energy. In five-year-olds the figure is still 44% and even in adults the brain—a mere 2% of the body’s weight—consumes about a quarter of the body’s energy. Any competition for this energy is likely to damage the brain’s development, and parasites and pathogens compete for it in several ways. Some feed on the host’s tissue directly, or hijack its molecular machinery to reproduce. Some, particularly those that live in the gut, stop their host absorbing food. And all provoke the host’s immune system into activity, which diverts resources from other things. …

America mulls unilateral raids into Pakistan: WP


WASHINGTON – The US military is studying options for a ‘unilateral strike’ in Pakistan, whom it calls a key ally in the war on terror, in the event that a successful attack on American soil is traced to the country’s tribal areas, The Washington Post reported Saturday.
Experts here were not surprised by the move, despite recent statements by top administration officials that they would leave the military operations against the Taliban to the Pakistani military. One expert said he believes that the report has been planted by the administration in an attempt to pressure Pakistan into launching an offensive in North Waziristan Agency.
Citing unidentified senior military officials, the newspaper said planning for a retaliatory attack was spurred by ties between Faisal Shahzad, the suspect in the failed Times Square bombing, and elements of the Pakistani Taliban, the US newspaper said, quoting unidentified senior military officials.
“Planning has been reinvigorated in the wake of Times Square,” one of the officials was quoted as saying by The Post. The military would focus on air and missile raids but also could use small teams of US special operations troops currently along the border with Afghanistan, the report said. Air raids could damage the groups’ ability to launch new attacks but also might damage US-Pakistani relations.
The CIA already conducts unmanned drone raids in the countryÂ’s tribal regions.
Officials told the Washington Post that a US military response would be considered only if attacks persuaded President Barack Obama that the CIA campaign is ineffective.
A senior US official told the Associated Press news agency on Wednesday that Pakistan already has been told that it has only weeks to show real progress in a crackdown against the Taliban.
The US has put Pakistan “on a clock” to launch a new intelligence and counterterrorist offensive against the group, which the White House alleges was behind the Times Square bombing attempt, according to the official.
US officials also have said the country reserves the right to attack in the tribal areas in pursuit of Osama bin Laden and other targets.
At the same time, the paper said administration is trying to deepen ties to PakistanÂ’s intelligence officials in a bid to head off any attack by militant groups. The United States and Pakistan have recently established a joint military intelligence centre on the outskirts of the northwestern city of Peshawar, and are in negotiations to set up another one near Quetta.
The “fusion centres” are meant to bolster Pakistani military operations by providing direct access to US intelligence, including real-time video surveillance from drones controlled by the US Special Operations Command, the officials said. But in an acknowledgment of the continuing mistrust between the two governments, the officials added that both sides also see the centres as a way to keep a closer eye on one another, as well as to monitor military operations and intelligence activities in insurgent areas.
Obama said during his campaign for the presidency that he would be willing to order strikes in Pakistan, and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in a television interview after the Times Square attempt that “if, heaven forbid, an attack like this that we can trace back to Pakistan were to have been successful, there would be very severe consequences.”
Obama dispatched his national security adviser, James Jones, and CIA Director Leon Panetta to Islamabad this month to deliver a similar message to Pakistani officials, including President Asif Ali Zardari and the Army Chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.
Jones and Panetta also presented evidence gathered by US law enforcement and intelligence agencies that Shahzad received significant support from the Pakistani Taliban, The Post said.