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The Army was consulting with senior US and Korean officials over the incident and has pulled the affected machine from its network and switched to a different system to handle employment applications.One of the most significant breaches to affect Defence occurred in 2008 when an infected USB drive was plugged into a laptop at a US Army base in the Middle East.Deputy Defence secretary William Lynn said at the time the incident created a digital beachhead for further attacks and data exfiltration.It will probably not come as a surprise to many people that the majority of participants in our study are either experiencing or anticipating an increased load on systems as a result of core business growth and the increased use of technology and information within the business (Figure 1).Beyond these fundamentals, we can also see the impact of changing access patterns. This not only includes remote and mobile access by employees as a result of trends in home working, mobility and BYOD, but also the additional load arising from systems being opened up to the outside world.Security is also becoming more challenging as internal and external users access the corporate infrastructure in new and different ways, and data becomes fragmented across departmental and workgroup systems, laptops and mobile devices, and various forms of cloud storage (Figure 2).

As we can see, even the adoption of something as well-accepted as server virtualisation frequently has security implications, leading to a broad range of concerns and distractions (Figure 3).With all this going on, it’s understandable that many are finding it difficult to keep up, resulting in performance, availability and security problems that often have a direct impact on the business (Figure 4).When IT professionals are asked to compare activity today with what’s likely to unfold over the next three years, responses suggest that the level of pressure is only going to increase. As of today, most of the load on systems is typically from employees working in fixed office locations, but looking to the future, growth is anticipated across all forms of internal and external access (Figure 5).

On the bottom half of this chart, the application perspective is consistent with the anticipated changes in access. Additional demands stemming from the use of more advanced communications systems, e.g. web conferencing, social networks, interactive video, and so on, will add to the load already associated with more traditional solutions. Layered on this will be even more traffic associated with externally facing web applications accessed by customers, partners and suppliers.Turning to security, the fallout from the ongoing access trends in the form of ‘friendly fire’ from within the workforce is as we would expect and as has always been the case. Though as business becomes increasingly connected the growth in external threats, including from national government agencies, is creating more concern for many (Figure 6).+Comment Kickstarter-funded Musaic hopes to outsmart Sonos and beat Bose with speakers that play higher fidelity music across normal Wi-Fi, support Bluetooth and integrate with home automation lighting and security products.

Wi-Fi is becoming the smart home network. Sonos, the streaming speaker king, takes advantage of that but implements its own proprietary Wi-Fi implementation which needs a Bridge box Ethernet cabled to the home's router. Sonos speakers play music streamed in from the internet, wirelessly transmitted from smartphones and tablets or from notebooks and desktop computers where a cable connection to the Bridge seems best.The speakers are controlled from apps on these smart devices. There is a range of variously sized speakers which can be stereo-paired, a sub-woofer and a Playbar for TV/Home Cinema-sourced sound. This can use the Sub, and a pair of other speakers to provide surround sound. Lastly the system can play different music simultaneously in different rooms or the rooms can be grouped together.Mid-Fi music listeners say the sound is great while real top-end Hi-Fi buffs say it isn't as good. Both would say the Sonos convenience factor is terrific.Meanwhile, Musaic, a small British startup, is trying to muscle in on the Sonos speaker crowd with its own product. It has a pair of speakers, or music players as it calls them: the 36W RMS MP5 entry-level for small rooms like kitchens and the 60W RMS MP10 for larger rooms like lounges. The boxes are roughly the size of a Sonos Play:3 speaker. They can be controlled by smart device apps, like Sonos, but use standard Wi-fi, as well as receiving Bluetooth-output music from smartphones and tablets which lack the app and are not connected to the Musaic Wi-Fi net.

The speakers have touch-sensitive buttons on their upper surfaces which can be each pre-set to one of 20,000+ internet radio stations or other music sources. Musaic can play 24-bit studio master files for higher fidelity, and allows the direct use of native streaming apps so you can take advantage of any included social media connections and shared playlists.The players each have an Ethernet connection plus analogue input via a 3.5mm stereo mini jack port on the back of a player. This can be used to connect the headphone output of a TV, MP3 player, PC/Laptop, Airport Express unit or other device.Music players integrate with home automation systems using AllJoyn technology. They can control dimmers, bulbs and switches from LED lighting brand LightwaveRF, which produces WiFi-connected lighting units. They can, in theory, also respond to home automation device events varying from the ridiculous – this plant needs watering – to the serious: intruder alarm detects window breakage.

The company is based in London's Tech City area, otherwise known as Shoreditch. Its CEO and founder is Matthew Bramble, a former technical director of Cambridge Audio. Products should be launched later this year, August hopefully.Stereo pairing of the speakers won't be supported at launch but should be added later. It's on the roadmap and requires software development. Wi-Fi interference isn't anticipated. Matt Bramble said the Wi-Fi is 2 x 2 MINO (Multi-in-multi-out) with two aerials per player which are oriented differently: It's pretty damn good actually. THere's mrs detail on his below. The price will be set by retailers and could/should be £200 to £300 per player. We use 2x2 Multi-In/Multi-Out 802.11n. This means we have 2 aerials that can send and receive separate spatially multiplexed streams (i.e. different information on each stream but transmitted within the same bandwidth). One advantage is that if one is momentarily interrupted the other takes over, also as they are positioned apart and with different orientations we can maximise the transmission/reception footprint no matter where the unit is placed or what is nearby.

Lastly with MIMO the high rate signal is split into two lower rate streams. This technique gives greater throughput, or greater signal to noise at the same throughput depending on your requirement. We also operate in both the 2.4 and 5GHz bands so are compatible with the latest routers that use the quieter and higher bandwidth 5GHz channel.For now, in my opinion, Musaic looks a promising technology from a startup, and the technology looks like a better response to Sonos than that from other mainstream speaker suppliers like Bose. The proof will be in the listening, availability, pricing, support, etc.WWDC Like death, taxes and other inevitabilities, it's time for Apple's Worldwide Developer Conference and the annual pre-event leak. This year, it's blurry photos of what's supposed to be the next OS X update, 10.10.Of course, we'll only know for sure the pictures – apparently taken at Apple in California – are the real deal today, when the latest iteration of the desktop operating system is unleashed on fanbois in San Francisco and beyond. And that's not all, because it looks like iOS8 will also rain down upon the faithful.Partially redacted pictures of OS X 10.10, which we're calling OS XXX but Apple is calling Yosemite, emerged on a Reddit thread, before quickly being deleted.

They appear to show a desktop operating system that looks a lot like Apple's mobile OS: iOS. Nonetheless, this tidbit was enough to spark a furious post mortem, with fanbois scouring the pictures like bottom-feeding crabs feasting on a whale carcass.While many Apple aficionados derided the blurry images as fake, the MacRumours site claimed they were real. The bloggers even went to the trouble of deleting the pictures from their site at the request of the original poster.Nonetheless, someone in the blog comments posted the pics again, proving you're not missing much. Were these taken in a steamy shower?Expected to be at today's press conference, the Apple OSX 10.10 with iOS 8 pic.twitter.com/lCJ2udbDnrWell, based on the blurry snaps, they may see additions to the Notification Center, Spotlight and Dock, as well as a slightly tweaked Safari browser. Desktop and laptop systems look likely to get an iOS-style control centre, while there appear to be buttons to start up airplane mode and put the computer into do not disturb mode, which could lead to some interesting workplace situations.The look of the Dock has been modified to look a bit like iOS, whilst the whole design looks a bit more Flat, which was the name for the beefed-up design of iOS 7, for those who remember.

Other bits and bobs expected at WWDC include the latest mobile OS and some sort of smart home technology. The vendor is also rumoured to be about to launch health-monitoring software for its mobile operating system, “Healthbook”.Review The typical low price of a Chromebook suggests you’ll not be buying into a quality product with pleasing design aesthetics. Yet it seems that the brains behind Toshiba’s latest Chromebook weren’t going to be swayed by such presumptions.If it weren’t for the dimpled finish on the shiny metal-effect casing, from the corner of your eye you might mistake it for some Apple fare. Open it up and the layout of this 13.3in Google-powered laptop looks distinctly like a MacBook Pro with the black chiclet keys on the silver finish casing.Regarding the laptop's construction, Toshiba simply says it’s got a “brushed shiny silver finish”, but looking closely I’m inclined to go with plastic all round, especially as the dimpled feet in the base have worn off the paint. Yet it’s hard to tell without closer inspection and I guess that’s no bad thing, because even if it is cheaply constructed, it does a good job of hiding it.

Comparisons with an Apple MacBook Air would be wildly misguided, but just for the record let’s do it anyway. After all, you do get a lengthy battery life from both and … well that’s where the comparisons end, really: the Tosh book has a 1366 x 768-pixel display after all, not like the MacBook Air's 1440 x 900. Our recent MacBook Air speed bump review dealt with the details of Apple’s perennial crowd pleaser; on a Chromebook, you’re always going to have to think small in terms of specs, certainly at this end of the price range.The Toshiba CB30-102 measures up at 329 x 227 x 20mm and weighs a mere 1.5kg. Inside is a dual-core 1.4GHz Intel Celeron 2955U processor which benefits from Haswell performance enhancements, so you end up with a perfectly useable and responsive machine, rather than something that grudgingly grinds its way through what it’s tasked to do. Indeed, Google’s Chrome seems happy enough – given it has only 2GB of DDR3 1600MHz RAM to play with – and it's not so buggy these days, too. Lest we forget, that 2GB of RAM is also shared with an integrated Intel HD Graphics GPU.

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