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Category: DevOpsUpdate

DevOpsUpdate

  • NSA Develops Super-Secure Android Phone

    The National Security Agency has designed and built a series of Android phones intended to provide communications security for U.S. government staff. The phones were designed by the agency’s Information Assurance Directorate, which is responsible maintaining the U.S. government’s secure communications channels.

    According to a report in SC Magazine, the agency’s goal was to create phones that were secure enough to meet the NSA’s stringent security standards, cheap enough to be produced in large enough quantities, and easy for government personnel to use. The phones are made with commercial components and run a heavily doctored version of Android 2.2. The phones are locked down tightly, and only applications from the Defence Information Systems Agency’s own app store can be installed (no word on whether they have Angry Birds or Words With Friends).

    The phones were developed as part of the NSA’s Mobility Program, which was designed to respond to the growing need among many government agencies for secure methods of communication in an environment that is increasingly reliant on mobile technology.

    The phones are created using entirely off-the-shelf components, meaning that with the plans published by the NSA (PDF), the actual device could easily be reproduced. The software, as previously mentioned, is a heavily modified version of Google’s Android operating system. Android is free and open source, meaning that anyone – including the NSA – can download the source code and modify it to suit their needs.

    There is no word on how widely the government intends to distribute these “Fishbowl” phones. The number will likely be kept fairly low.

  • Steve Jobs, A Balloon-Based Input Device & Cops With Laser Guns

    Steve Jobs, A Balloon-Based Input Device & Cops With Laser Guns

    As usual, we’ve rounded up some interesting videos that are being shared around the web. The Steve Jobs biography was released today, and clearly there’s a lot of interest in that, so first, you can check out the 60 Minutes interview with the biographer first (if you haven’t already).

    View more daily video round-ups here.

    Steve Jobs biographer goes on 60 Minutes:

    A balloon-based input device:

    The alternative to lethal force:

    Check out this crash test:

    I won’t even say anything about this. Just watch:

    Retro games with modern sound effects:

    A LeWeb Preview:

    Extreme flashlight:

  • Twitter Develops Their Own ‘Tweet Button’

    Twitter Develops Their Own ‘Tweet Button’

    It’s no longer a matter of answering the micro riddle, “to tweet or not to tweet.” Twitter helps you simply Tweet everything that moves you. While this capability has existed through third-party services over the years, Twitter is rolling out a dedicated function to harness the power of the “interest graphs” that you weave.

    Not only can you share links with those who follow you, Twitter is extending its “Suggestions for You” feature to assist in the curation of your social nicheworks. After a link is shared, relevant individuals who share your affinity for topics and themes will appear. This allows you to expand your social graph and slowly shape it into a series of interest-related graphs or contextual nicheworks.

    For content publishers, from casual bloggers to influencers to the media elite, Twitter only requires the installation of a few lines of code to set the stage for broader distribution within an ecosystyem where the appetite for “what’s happening” is insatiable.

    Here, I’ve used the TweetMeme to provide sharing functionality. TweetMeme is partnering with Twitter to ensure that this functionality run seamlessly. The company is also expanding its services to fine tune the social web and shape the future of content curation.

    DataSift provides developers with the capacity to to build precise streams of data from 60+ million tweets sent every day.

    – Tune tweets through a graphical interface or our bespoke programming language
    – Streams consumable through our API and real-time HTTP
    – Comment upon and rank streams created by the community
    – Extend one or more existing streams to create super streams

    Find out more on the new DataSift blog or follow @datasift

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