According to Reuters, Google CEO Eric Schmidt is discussing a possible expansion of his company’s facilities. Malaysia is the most likely location, as that country ranks number one in Google usage in Southeast Asia. The country is also close to Google’s existing offices in Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan.
Tags: Asia, Australia, ceo, China, email, EU, Europe, Google, Hong-Kong, India, Internet, japan, Korea, Malaysia, office, search, Singapore, strategy, taiwan, USAEntries tagged as 'office'
Google may expand into Malaysia
ism tech
Posted Tuesday, 29 January 2008
Asustek is the most hated PC company
ism tech
Posted Monday, 14 January 2008
From one of my students comes a link to this article about Asustek, also known as ASUS. Here’s a November 2007 article from Forbes with some more details.
The company’s US$299 Eee PC laptop runs Linux on an Intel processor, and ships with OpenOffice and Firefox preinstalled. The price is less expensive than a copy of Microsoft Windows Vista, and was enough to scare Microsoft into a special deal: Eee PC buyers could add Microsoft Windows for US$40.
While the XO project and other spinoffs try to bring their low-cost laptops to the US mass market, Asustek is moving aggressively.
Tags: Apple, Dell, example, Firefox, hardware, Intel, Linux, Microsoft, office, taiwan, Vista, WindowsThe mobile office in Honolulu
ism tech
Posted Sunday, 9 December 2007
There’s two articles in today’s Honolulu newspapers about local Internet usage.
An article in the Honolulu Advertiser’s business section reports that Honolulu residents tend to spend more time on the Internet than the average US Internet user.
Oceanic Time Warner’s Road Runner cable modem service recently celebrated its 10th anniversary in Honolulu. The company reports that Honolulu is one of its most mature markets, with 220,000 customers. Many customers use residential broadband service to work from home.
Meanwhile, the lead story in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser’s business section examined the coffee shop office. At the bottom of the article, there’s a nice set of netiquette tips for public WiFi users. One major item in this list – people who buy little or nothing from a coffee shop while they use the free WiFi. Squatters beware!
Sadly, there wasn’t a single meaningful mention of security and privacy issues in either article. I recommend that anyone who uses their computer in a public place buy and use a privacy filter. This is a thin piece of polarized plastic that completely covers the screen. The filter restricts the viewing angle, making it difficult for anyone but the user to read the screen. 3M has a nice selection of filters that will fit most laptops. The Gadgeteer has a good review here.
The next two pictures demonstrate how a privacy filter works, by comparing a bare screen on the left with the filtered screen on the right.
More public WiFi services are offering encrypted sessions, but it’s a good idea to use a VPN (virtual private network) to encrypt traffic. For companies whose employees tend to use public WiFi, a VPN is an easy expense to justify. Residential users can also set up their own VPN with a router, open source software or web-based services like GoToMyPC.
This article mentioned Kokua Wireless, a free municipal WiFi service that covers my office building in downtown Honolulu. Kokua’s coverage of downtown Honolulu is quite good, as shown in this screen shot from their mapping application.
Residential broadband providers have joined the battle for customer loyalty. Road Runner has Speed Zone, its own public WiFi network for its residential and business customers. Hawaiian Telcom partnered with Skywave to offer HT Spots, its own attempt at satisfying this key success factor. Users must have be a broadband subscriber to use these either of these services.
In the last few months, I’ve noticed more people around town using mobile data cards from Sprint, AT&T and Clearwire. These devices are more expensive and more secure than some public WiFi connections. Both HawTel and Oceanic offer encrypted public WiFi connections, of course.
Tags: at&t, Chinatown, Clearwire, computer, free, Hawaii, Honolulu, Internet, key-success-factors, ksf, mobile, network, office, privacy, security, Sprint, Time-Warner-Cable, USA, VPN, WiFi, WiMaxMobile devices for US census takers
ism tech
Posted Monday, 26 November 2007
Engadget reports on a new Windows Mobile PDA that census takers might use for data collection. bandwidth is provided by Sprint. The batteries last 10 hours – an amazing result on a PDA that is deisgned for heavy data entry and network usage in the field.
The US Constitution requires a national census every 10 years. One early use of Hollerith cards was in the 1890 US Census. The previous census in 1880 used manual methods and took 9 years to complete. With Hollerith’s cards and tabulation equipment, the Census Bureau finished the 1890 count within 7 years at twice the cost of the 1880 census. The reports and data were far more complex and complete than any previous census, however.
I keep a stack of vintage Hollerith cards in my office, so I can remember the good old days.
Tags: data, hardware, IBM, Microsoft, mobile, network, office, pda, USA, WindowsDepressing cubicles
all
Posted Friday, 16 November 2007
Wired has a pictorial summary of its “saddest cubicle” contest.
I hate cubicles. They’re not just depressing - they’re demeaning, especially when other employees have their own private offices on the same floor. If most of the employees work in a cubicle, the CXOs should, too. Share the pain.
Private meetings can be taken in a conference room.
Andy Grove used to work in a cubicle at Intel, as this 1995 Fast Company article describes.
Tags: cubicle, fun, history, Intel, office, USA







