Using machine learning to automate the current manual process used to gain application visibility brings network visibility and analytics to a new level. By harnessing the power of the semantic Web through machine learning, emerging solutions let you act faster and proactively defend against cyber threats.The timing is good, because new applications are introduced at incredible rates: More than 300 applications are created each day,manlift GTS6 manufacturers and exporters and the Apple AppStore adds some 40,000 apps per month. While everyone benefits from the application diversity, they prove to be a cyber security challenge.
Security teams must dedicate skilled analysts to monitor and analyze their organizations" network activity to determine if the applications are white-listed or authorized. Unauthorized applications must be blocked from entering the enterprise network, since they might consume bandwidth, lower productivity, compromise critical data or pose potential security threats.Even if the impact of the applications is minimal, it is critical that security organization have complete visibility. Security organizations that employ static methods that is, manual reverse engineering struggle to keep pace with identifying and classifying new applications,buy 28-29M Telescopic Work Platform from China especially given the rate at which new applications are being introduced.
They must use machine learning to discover applications, extract signatures and create white lists. Security analysts can then have the incisive intelligence necessary to act early, without using costly and scarce resources.While deep packet inspection solutions have historically held a place in the cyber security solution landscape, a reliance on analysts to manually reverse-engineer applications is quickly becoming the DPI Achilles" heel. DPI solutions provide visibility and enforcement of traffic policies on traffic for which a packet payload signature exists.
2013年8月29日星期四
2013年8月26日星期一
UK Man Builds Homemade Ticker-Tape Machine That Prints Tweets
A UK man has developed a modern-day version of the 19th century ticker-tape machine that prints out tweets instead of stock price information.The new machine, named "Twittertape,” was developed by 32-year-old web developer, Adam Vaughan, from Cumbria in the UK. The device was built from scratch using second-hand parts from clocks."I have a keen interest in history and have always been fascinated by ticker-tape machines as a design piece,” Vaughan told the BBC"s Zoe Kleinman.A ticker-tape was the earliest digital electronics communications machine. It was able to transmit stock price information over telegraph lines.
The device, which was used from 1870 through 1970, consisted of a paper strip which ran through a machine known as a stock ticker. It received its name due to the sound it would make as the paper strip rolled out."One day I thought it would be nice to have one sat on your desk and started to think about what information it could produce. Twitter is perfect,” Vaughan told Kleinman.He said he spent three months developing the machine, with most of his time spent on trying to find the right parts."I"m a web developer by trade so actually building stuff is quite new to me,” he said in the BBC interview. "I built it all from scratch after finding some examples online.”
The Twittertape machine is able to connect to a computer through an ethernet cable and pull data straight from Vaughan"s Twitter account. Future versions of the machine could include a control panel so the owner could program the machine to print from a particular hashtag or from multiple accounts.Vaughan"s Twittertape machine has gained some notable attention from Steampunk and it may become even more popular based on a study published in July.Researchers said that Twitter will one day become more comparable to a television rather than a social network. The team from Columbia Business School and the University of Pittsburgh said Twitter will become less of a communications vehicle and more of a content-delivery vehicle.
The device, which was used from 1870 through 1970, consisted of a paper strip which ran through a machine known as a stock ticker. It received its name due to the sound it would make as the paper strip rolled out."One day I thought it would be nice to have one sat on your desk and started to think about what information it could produce. Twitter is perfect,” Vaughan told Kleinman.He said he spent three months developing the machine, with most of his time spent on trying to find the right parts."I"m a web developer by trade so actually building stuff is quite new to me,” he said in the BBC interview. "I built it all from scratch after finding some examples online.”
The Twittertape machine is able to connect to a computer through an ethernet cable and pull data straight from Vaughan"s Twitter account. Future versions of the machine could include a control panel so the owner could program the machine to print from a particular hashtag or from multiple accounts.Vaughan"s Twittertape machine has gained some notable attention from Steampunk and it may become even more popular based on a study published in July.Researchers said that Twitter will one day become more comparable to a television rather than a social network. The team from Columbia Business School and the University of Pittsburgh said Twitter will become less of a communications vehicle and more of a content-delivery vehicle.
2013年8月22日星期四
Hollywood Prospectus Podcast: Breaking Bad
RHA is the only organization that independently elects a Senate representative. All other student life representatives are appointed by an SGA committee.Though the seats were left off of the table at tonight's meeting, they could be "reevaluated" in the future, Chowdhury said."I really want SGA to be making decisions based on what students are really asking for, not what SGA assumes is best," Chowdhury said.The Senate also approved two resolutions to welcome School of Public and International Affair Dean Stefanie Lindquist and UGA President Jere Morehead.Strap on your high heels, ladies and germs, it's time to head to the desert.
Week 2 of Breaking Bad's final season brought us all sorts of terrifying, gut-punching delights, and Chris and I brought our shovels. In addition to discussing the goings-on between Marie and Skyler and Huell and his blood pressure,buy 16M Articulated Work Platform from China wondered if Breaking Bad starting at 2:25 has any equals in terms of visual storytelling and if it's part of the fun or part of the problem to spend time guessing at the ending. A similar query could be asked of our next topic, Grantland's latest foray into stylized time-wasting, the Fantasy TV Trade Machine.
Chris is the Picasso — though I would say Jonah Hill — of this business, so we spent some time refiguring Grey's Anatomy, Boardwalk Empire,buy 14M Articulated Work Platform from China and Game of Thrones before challenging each other to get Don Cheadle from the blah House of Lies to the much better Mad Men. Finally we dusted off our cassocks to chat about Trap Lord, the debut album from the self-appointed Hood Pope, A$AP Ferg. This is a very strange, very good record, one that either heralds a new direction for rap or a complete lack of attention in the corner offices at RCA. Bring Kleenex. It's about to get sniffly.
Week 2 of Breaking Bad's final season brought us all sorts of terrifying, gut-punching delights, and Chris and I brought our shovels. In addition to discussing the goings-on between Marie and Skyler and Huell and his blood pressure,buy 16M Articulated Work Platform from China wondered if Breaking Bad starting at 2:25 has any equals in terms of visual storytelling and if it's part of the fun or part of the problem to spend time guessing at the ending. A similar query could be asked of our next topic, Grantland's latest foray into stylized time-wasting, the Fantasy TV Trade Machine.
Chris is the Picasso — though I would say Jonah Hill — of this business, so we spent some time refiguring Grey's Anatomy, Boardwalk Empire,buy 14M Articulated Work Platform from China and Game of Thrones before challenging each other to get Don Cheadle from the blah House of Lies to the much better Mad Men. Finally we dusted off our cassocks to chat about Trap Lord, the debut album from the self-appointed Hood Pope, A$AP Ferg. This is a very strange, very good record, one that either heralds a new direction for rap or a complete lack of attention in the corner offices at RCA. Bring Kleenex. It's about to get sniffly.
2013年8月19日星期一
Frank Lucarelli and Winning Machine both gunning for overdue win
In a span of about 1 minute and 34 seconds Sunday afternoon, two Emerald Downs greats could finally fill a big gap in their impressive resumes.The odds are 15-1 against it. But bet against Winning Machine and trainer Frank Lucarelli in the Longacres Mile at your own risk. They are proven winners, and seem due to win the Grade III, $200,000 Mile. Maybe even overdue.Lucarelli, the second-leading trainer in Emerald Downs history, is leading the standings again this year after winning the training title the past two years.
Winning Machine, whom Lucarelli started training in summer 2010, has been one of the best horses on the grounds since winning the Emerald Downs Derby as a 3-year-old in 2009.It would seem only fitting that the two can finally check off the Longacres Mile on their to-do list at the same time."For anyone who races horses in the Northwest, you want to win the Longacres Mile," said Lucarelli, 56, who remembers sneaking into Longacres in Renton when he was a kid. "It's a race I would love to win."
He almost did last year. Winning Machine had never been better than he was a year ago, and he took the early lead in the Mile. At the top of the stretch, favored Taylor Said, an invader from Canada, passed Winning Machine and seemed headed to an easy win.But Winning Machine fought back and the two horses waged a stirring duel to the finish, with Winning Machine falling a head short."I thought we were beaten, but our horse ran on," Lucarelli said. "It was one of the most courageous performances I have ever seen. I think he got his head back in front in midstretch. I've never been more happy and disappointed at the same time.
Winning Machine, whom Lucarelli started training in summer 2010, has been one of the best horses on the grounds since winning the Emerald Downs Derby as a 3-year-old in 2009.It would seem only fitting that the two can finally check off the Longacres Mile on their to-do list at the same time."For anyone who races horses in the Northwest, you want to win the Longacres Mile," said Lucarelli, 56, who remembers sneaking into Longacres in Renton when he was a kid. "It's a race I would love to win."
He almost did last year. Winning Machine had never been better than he was a year ago, and he took the early lead in the Mile. At the top of the stretch, favored Taylor Said, an invader from Canada, passed Winning Machine and seemed headed to an easy win.But Winning Machine fought back and the two horses waged a stirring duel to the finish, with Winning Machine falling a head short."I thought we were beaten, but our horse ran on," Lucarelli said. "It was one of the most courageous performances I have ever seen. I think he got his head back in front in midstretch. I've never been more happy and disappointed at the same time.
2013年8月15日星期四
Comparison chart shows the relative sizes of machines and monsters from the worlds of gaming and film
The infographic, which has unsurprisingly gone viral, shows the relative sizes of all the most famous machines and monsters from the worlds of gaming and film by placing them, for scale, next to a pixel-sized human, the Sydney Opera House, the Titanic and, for good measure, the Great Pyramid at Giza.Unusually for the world of high geekery, there seems to be widespread consensus that the author, a 16-year-old American who goes by the handle, Lexinator117, has done a pretty accurate job.
The result is an eye-opener. I mean,SRRL50D Main Specification manufacturers and exporters had you even heard of the Reaper Destroyers from the game Mass Effect 3? No? Well, listen up – it turns out they are the biggest baddies in the sci-fi playground they're even larger than the Starship Enterprise, which I thought was massive, but turns out to be smaller than the Titanic.That's not the only world-rocker either. Those huge-looking AT-AT walkers from Star Wars turn out to be smaller than the Statue of Liberty. And King Kong... pah, he's absolutely tiny.If you remember the heyday of giant arcade halls filled with stand-up coin-op machines, then you'll also remember that one day they seemingly all disappeared. What was it like to live through that bygone era?
The Final Day at Westfield Arcade—a SRRL50F Main Specification manufacturers and exporters by Andy Hunt—explores what it felt like to have a digital childhood evaporate as its main character tries to jump to adulthood.Many of the strong memories we have about certain games has to do with what we were doing in our lives when we encountered them. If you first played Pac-Man when your parents divorced, all that ghost-gobbling might mean something a little different. Here's a synopsis and you can read the opening pages from The Final Day at Westfield Arcade in the preview below.
The result is an eye-opener. I mean,SRRL50D Main Specification manufacturers and exporters had you even heard of the Reaper Destroyers from the game Mass Effect 3? No? Well, listen up – it turns out they are the biggest baddies in the sci-fi playground they're even larger than the Starship Enterprise, which I thought was massive, but turns out to be smaller than the Titanic.That's not the only world-rocker either. Those huge-looking AT-AT walkers from Star Wars turn out to be smaller than the Statue of Liberty. And King Kong... pah, he's absolutely tiny.If you remember the heyday of giant arcade halls filled with stand-up coin-op machines, then you'll also remember that one day they seemingly all disappeared. What was it like to live through that bygone era?
The Final Day at Westfield Arcade—a SRRL50F Main Specification manufacturers and exporters by Andy Hunt—explores what it felt like to have a digital childhood evaporate as its main character tries to jump to adulthood.Many of the strong memories we have about certain games has to do with what we were doing in our lives when we encountered them. If you first played Pac-Man when your parents divorced, all that ghost-gobbling might mean something a little different. Here's a synopsis and you can read the opening pages from The Final Day at Westfield Arcade in the preview below.
2013年8月13日星期二
In rural Maine, rise of the machines pushes out migrant pickers
Immigrant farm laborers have skills sets that are'plementary to American workers, so replacing any part of that equation would equally impact the other half. An overhaul would also raise the wages for both kinds of workers, while robot technology would lower wages.Meanwhile, agricultural industries are already in trouble without immigration reform. Farms in North Carolina are hard-pressed to find permanent American workers to replace migrant workers. Of the 245 unemployed North Carolinians hired at farms, only 163 people showed up on the first day of work. Worse still, only seven people stuck to the job through the end of the growing season.
From beneath the brim of a tattered straw cap, Oscar Argueta, a 35-year-old coffee farmer from the cloud forests of Intibucá, Honduras, grins as he tops off a plastic crate of wild Maine blueberries.Argueta said he can make as much as US$1,000 per week here, with free housing, subsidized food and even health care provided, a deal that has long enticed migrants to Maine's blueberry fields from as far away as Mexico, Honduras and Haiti.The work is back-breaking, he said, but the atmosphere festive. Mariachi music booms from loudspeakers, a roving lunch truck hawks authentic Mexican fare and workers jibe one another in their native Spanish.
Despite the perks, this year's trip will be Argueta's last to the far northeast of the United States, nearly 4,000 miles from the border with Mexico that is the focus of much of the nation's immigration debate."The tractors are taking all the good work," he said.Argueta has a work visa and entered the country legally — a requirement as the larger blueberry growers adopt E-Verify, a federal electronic verification system that quickly catches false documents.Jobs previously filled by those with dubious documents haven't transferred to Americans, as some proponents of E-Verify anticipated. Instead, many of Maine's largest growers have pushed to mechanize the harvest, eliminating many of the once-coveted seasonal jobs.
From beneath the brim of a tattered straw cap, Oscar Argueta, a 35-year-old coffee farmer from the cloud forests of Intibucá, Honduras, grins as he tops off a plastic crate of wild Maine blueberries.Argueta said he can make as much as US$1,000 per week here, with free housing, subsidized food and even health care provided, a deal that has long enticed migrants to Maine's blueberry fields from as far away as Mexico, Honduras and Haiti.The work is back-breaking, he said, but the atmosphere festive. Mariachi music booms from loudspeakers, a roving lunch truck hawks authentic Mexican fare and workers jibe one another in their native Spanish.
Despite the perks, this year's trip will be Argueta's last to the far northeast of the United States, nearly 4,000 miles from the border with Mexico that is the focus of much of the nation's immigration debate."The tractors are taking all the good work," he said.Argueta has a work visa and entered the country legally — a requirement as the larger blueberry growers adopt E-Verify, a federal electronic verification system that quickly catches false documents.Jobs previously filled by those with dubious documents haven't transferred to Americans, as some proponents of E-Verify anticipated. Instead, many of Maine's largest growers have pushed to mechanize the harvest, eliminating many of the once-coveted seasonal jobs.
2013年8月8日星期四
Regular Folks Audition For Their Dreams
The slippages and contradictions between who people are, imagine themselves to be, and present themselves as being inform the structure of Machine, a kind of loose container into which people step and out of which they extract more ideal selves. Each section begins as a screen test, typically though not always of someone born in a small village. These auditions quickly b'e interrogations, with Gurchiani asking her subjects to articulate their goals for the future, and then challenging them to defend their desires.
And then, in most cases Wheel Loader suppliers and distributors, those desires suddenly take shape, as though a subject's act of wishing wills them to life. A young woman who has'e to audition on her wedding day—even costumed in her dress—begins to sing, then appears surrounded at the wedding party while her song continues. A man who left Georgia's largest city, Tbilisi, to govern a small village, moves from introducing himself to the filmmaker to standing in front of his village elders with the news that it's time for him to leave. In other instances—such as the young woman who says she felt herself to be a mother as soon as she learned she was pregnant—the subjects relive transformations that have already taken place.
The film's first auditioner is a young man who says he cries when he sees a sad stranger on the street, lost in thought, because he recognizes himself. He sets the tone for a film less regional than universal in its presentation of the human urge to reshape oneself with others' help. Gurchiani, simultaneously a viewer and character buy Wheel loader :SRRL16F from China—all the more prominent for staying unseen—shares this urge with the strangers facing her. "If I made a film about your life, would you act in it?" she asks a stand-in. Later, she adds, "If I'e with you, will you show me your life?"
And then, in most cases Wheel Loader suppliers and distributors, those desires suddenly take shape, as though a subject's act of wishing wills them to life. A young woman who has'e to audition on her wedding day—even costumed in her dress—begins to sing, then appears surrounded at the wedding party while her song continues. A man who left Georgia's largest city, Tbilisi, to govern a small village, moves from introducing himself to the filmmaker to standing in front of his village elders with the news that it's time for him to leave. In other instances—such as the young woman who says she felt herself to be a mother as soon as she learned she was pregnant—the subjects relive transformations that have already taken place.
The film's first auditioner is a young man who says he cries when he sees a sad stranger on the street, lost in thought, because he recognizes himself. He sets the tone for a film less regional than universal in its presentation of the human urge to reshape oneself with others' help. Gurchiani, simultaneously a viewer and character buy Wheel loader :SRRL16F from China—all the more prominent for staying unseen—shares this urge with the strangers facing her. "If I made a film about your life, would you act in it?" she asks a stand-in. Later, she adds, "If I'e with you, will you show me your life?"
2013年8月5日星期一
Luddites may be vindicated in the relentless rise of the machines
They collect our tolls, check us out of shops, give us directions, deliver our messages, switch on our lights, guard our homes and even kill our enemies. Smart machines have replaced lots of tasks humans were once paid to perform, with plenty more in the pipeline.The British government recently announced driverless cars will be tested on public roads in Britain by the end of the year. Might cab driving soon b'e another occupation of the past?Economics assumes technological advances are positive because they boost productivity. While new machines often cause economic disruption, history suggests new types of jobs are created and, ultimately, everyone benefits.
But some leading American economists are debating whether smart machines are now destroying jobs faster than new ones are being created.Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, claim digital technology is restructuring the economy in a way that is "more profound and far-reaching than the transition from the agricultural to the industrial age".People and organisations are falling behind because technology is advancing so fast and, as a result "technological unemployment" is threatening middle-class jobs.In their book Race Against the Machine, Brynjolfsson and McAfee predict gloomy prospects for many occupations as powerful new technologies are adopted not only in manufacturing, clerical and retail but in professions such as law, financial services, education and medicine.
"The pace and scale of this encroachment into human skills is relatively recent and has profound economic implications," Brynjolfsson and McAfee warn. "Perhaps the most important of these is that while digital progress grows the overall economic pie, it can do so while leaving some people, or even a lot of them, worse off."They see rapid technological change contributing to the stagnation of the median i'e and the growth of inequality in the US: "It may seem paradoxical that faster progress can hurt wages and jobs for millions of people, but we argue that's what's been happening."
But some leading American economists are debating whether smart machines are now destroying jobs faster than new ones are being created.Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, claim digital technology is restructuring the economy in a way that is "more profound and far-reaching than the transition from the agricultural to the industrial age".People and organisations are falling behind because technology is advancing so fast and, as a result "technological unemployment" is threatening middle-class jobs.In their book Race Against the Machine, Brynjolfsson and McAfee predict gloomy prospects for many occupations as powerful new technologies are adopted not only in manufacturing, clerical and retail but in professions such as law, financial services, education and medicine.
"The pace and scale of this encroachment into human skills is relatively recent and has profound economic implications," Brynjolfsson and McAfee warn. "Perhaps the most important of these is that while digital progress grows the overall economic pie, it can do so while leaving some people, or even a lot of them, worse off."They see rapid technological change contributing to the stagnation of the median i'e and the growth of inequality in the US: "It may seem paradoxical that faster progress can hurt wages and jobs for millions of people, but we argue that's what's been happening."
2013年8月1日星期四
The rise of the machines – how devices are taking over the internet
"It is also peace of mind for you as a parent to track your errant youngster, and also make sure that if something goes horribly wrong, you have got visibility of it as well," he said.Internet-connected devices are also causing a revolution in the traditionally dull world of vending machines.Shops and petrol stations that operate entirely without shop assistants are beginning to appear in Europe and buy Road Roller SRRR218 from China. Customers can walk in, fill their cars with petrol, buy a drink from a vending machine and pay by scanning their phone on a mobile point-of-sale system. Customers are filmed on CCTV to ensure there is no cheating."It reduces cost of sales significantly," said Overton.
EE is working on a number of projects to fit remote sensors to vending machines, providing the machine owners with real-time feedback on sales. The project will enable'panies to manage restocking much more effectively."They can do dynamic offers, dynamic pricing. They can change their focus – on a hot day, go for cold drinks, and on a cold day, go for hot drinks," he said.The falling cost of 4G phone SIMs is making it'mercially viable for vending machine owners to use the sides of their vending machines for digital advertising. EE has contracts to roll out these digitally enabled machines to several major supermarkets, said Overton.In one case the technology convinced a soft drinks manufacturer on the brink of closing its estate of unprofitable vending to reconsider.
"Everyone can make money selling space. It is fundamentally transforming the business model," said Overton.The buy Road Roller SRRR216 from China is another industry that can also benefit from smart sensors.EE is offering miniaturised GPS positioning sensors, with long battery lives, that at under $50 each are cheap enough to track the movement of individual products through the supply chain."They can track and trace anything anywhere," said Overton.In the past, retailers would typically have had 50% more goods than they needed in their supply chain to'pensate for lost products or late delivery.
EE is working on a number of projects to fit remote sensors to vending machines, providing the machine owners with real-time feedback on sales. The project will enable'panies to manage restocking much more effectively."They can do dynamic offers, dynamic pricing. They can change their focus – on a hot day, go for cold drinks, and on a cold day, go for hot drinks," he said.The falling cost of 4G phone SIMs is making it'mercially viable for vending machine owners to use the sides of their vending machines for digital advertising. EE has contracts to roll out these digitally enabled machines to several major supermarkets, said Overton.In one case the technology convinced a soft drinks manufacturer on the brink of closing its estate of unprofitable vending to reconsider.
"Everyone can make money selling space. It is fundamentally transforming the business model," said Overton.The buy Road Roller SRRR216 from China is another industry that can also benefit from smart sensors.EE is offering miniaturised GPS positioning sensors, with long battery lives, that at under $50 each are cheap enough to track the movement of individual products through the supply chain."They can track and trace anything anywhere," said Overton.In the past, retailers would typically have had 50% more goods than they needed in their supply chain to'pensate for lost products or late delivery.
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