Friday, November 9, 2012

Cisco replaces collaboration group head again


Cisco has named a former Symantec executive to head its struggling collaboration group, which saw three different leaders in less than a year.
Rowan Trollope is Cisco's new senior vice president and general manager of the collaboration business. He succeeds O.J. Winge, the former Tandberg executive who assumed leadership of the group earlier this year from former collaboration head Barry O'Sullivan.
Winge (pictured left) is leaving Cisco for "personal reasons," according to this blog post by Marthin De Beer, senior vice president, of Cisco's video and collaboration group.
At Symantec, Trollope was most recently group president of the company's Symantec.cloud business unit where he oversaw product development, strategy, product sales, and marketing teams. He also oversaw the consumer, enterprise and small and mid-sized business segments.
"Rowan brings to Cisco an excellent track record in the software-as-a-service (SaaS) market; vital experience of end-user product development expertise, and a proven background in security and category leadership," De Beer states in his blog.
At Cisco, Trollope will assume responsibility for the Cisco collaboration portfolio, including TelePresence, Unified Communications Manager and WebEx. In addition, he will oversee collaboration software, devices, infrastructure and services that enable video and social collaboration, unified communications, customer contact centers, conferencing, mobility, and desktop virtualizationtechnologies, according to the De Beer post.
Trollop's new duties are effective Nov. 12 and he will report to De Beer.
Winge joined Cisco with its 2009 acquisition of videoconferencing leader Tandberg. He succeeded O'Sullivan last summer as head of the collaboration business, according to CRN.
Cisco's collaboration business has been hampered by execution issues and declining sales. Thebusiness was flat in Cisco's third quarter with TelePresence hit by decreased spending in public sector and enterprise.
In the fourth quarter, collaboration saw an 8% decline.
Jim Duffy has been covering technology for over 25 years, 21 at Network World. He also writes The Cisco Connection blog and can be reached on Twitter @Jim_Duffy.
Read more about lans and routers in Network World's LANs & Routers section.

ISOC honors Facebook, Comcast execs for IPv6 work


The Internet Society last night awarded its highest honor for work related to IPv6, the next generation Internet Protocol, to executives from Facebook and Comcast. Recipients of the award were Paul Saab and Donn Lee, software engineers at Facebook, and John Brzozowski, Distinguished Engineer and Chief Architect for IPv6 at Comcast.
The three engineers received the Itojun Service Award, which recognizes extraordinary dedication to IPv6 deployment. The award is named for Dr. Jun-ichiro "Itojun" Hagino, an active member of the Internet engineering community who died in 2007. Now in its fourth year, the Itojun Service Award includes a $3,000 prize and a crystal plaque.
Brzozowski was honored for his "tireless efforts in providing IPv6 connectivity to cable users all over the world,'' according to Jun Murai of the Itojun Service Award committee. Saab and Lee were honored "for their efforts in making high-profile content available for IPv6 and for their key contributions to World IPv6 Day and World IPv6 Launch," he said.
Previous recipients of the Itojun award were executives from Google, FreeBSD and a French ISP called Free.
"It's obviously a great honor to be recognized with many friends and colleagues,'' Brzozowski said, urging the network engineers in the audience to "keep working hard to deploy IPv6.''
Saab told the audience that "IPv6 turned out not to be so difficult. I encourage everybody to start doing IPv6. We are only 1% to 2% complete, and we need to get to 100%."
IPv6 is the long-anticipated upgrade to the Internet's main communications protocol, which is known as IPv4.
IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses and can support 4.3 billion devices connected directly to the Internet. IPv6, on the other hand, uses 128-bit addresses and supports a virtually unlimited number of devices - 2 to the 128th power. The Internet needs IPv6 because it is running out of IPv4 addresses.
Brzozowski said that 2.5% of Comcast's traffic currently runs over IPv6, and that Comcast will be done with its IPv6 deployment for all U.S. residential customers by June 2013.
Facebook has had IPv6 deployed in production mode since May 2012.
Read more about lan and wan in Network World's LAN & WAN section.

Twitter error leads to reset passwords, confusion among users


Because of an administrative error, Twitter inadvertently reset the passwords for an undetermined portion of its user base.
A compromised account prompted Twitter to change a certain number of passwords, though the company accidentally reset the passwords to a larger number of users than it needed to, according to astatement the company issued Thursday on its status page. A company spokeswoman declined to provide additional information about the situation.
"In this case, we unintentionally reset passwords of a larger number of accounts, beyond those that we believed to have been compromised," the statement read. Twitter provided no details as to how many of its 500 million users were required to reset their passwords.
Email from Twitter was sent to some users early Thursday morning, Eastern Time. "Twitter believes that your account may have been compromised by a website or service not associated with Twitter. We've reset your password to prevent others from accessing your account," the email read.
The notice left many users perplexed as to if it was a real request, or a forgery from online tricksters. Initially, Twitter offered no additional information on its status page or company blog about the email and what prompted it. A Twitter representative offered no additional information beyond an update posted late morning EST on its status page.
The email provided a link to an SSL (Secure Socket Layer) password reset page on Twitter, as well as to a page where users could check what third-party applications have access to their Twitter accounts. The reset page would not let users reuse their old passwords. Twitter provides access to third-party applications with the permission of its users.
Joab Jackson covers enterprise software and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Joab on Twitter at @Joab_Jackson. Joab's e-mail address is Joab_Jackson@idg.com

Smartphone and tablet users helped Obama win


Wireless smartphone and tablet users helped both presidential candidates raise funds and support in 2012, while mobile computing contributed directly to President Barack Obama's edge in Tuesday's presidential election.
Most exit polls show Obama won 60% of the voters aged 18 to 29. That age group also uses smartphones and other mobile phones and tablets in greater numbers than other age groups.
"Mobile computing really did make a difference in the presidential election," said Darcy Wedd, president of Payvia, a company that provided Web widgets to allow fast campaign contributions from both Obama's and GOP challenger Mitt Romney's mobile applications. "It drew more people to the polls and that was a younger demographic, and that would have helped the re-election of President Obama."
Obama, a Democrat, won just over 50% of the national vote to Romney's 48%. The president's margin was larger in the Electoral College.
Wedd said that Obama had four years as the incumbent to build up social media support on both mobile and desktop devices, including email and text-messaging databases. "Obama already had a captive audience, and you'd see him tweeting supporters to contribute $10, and then have celebrities and athletes retweeting that contribution request," Wedd said in an interview.
Payvia had to seek permission from the U.S. Federal Election Commission to allow political contributions to either candidate through mobile apps, over the mobile Web or through SMS (text) messages. Billing was done through wireless carriers, after Payvia set up relationships with all the carriers in North America and several globally. In most cases, users would text a keyword to a number to contribute a set amount.
Toward the end of the campaign, Payvia introduced simplified technology that would have allowed a smartphone user to open a campaign smartphone app, go to a donate button, then make a donation with a quick confirmation of the user's phone number from the carrier. When the confirmation was clicked, a contribution would have been made with the charge appearing on next month's cellular bill. That feature was not ready in time for this year's election, but will be available in the future,.
Wedd wouldn't disclose how much either campaign raised using mobile contributions, saying only: "Romney did lose, and that's a good way to connect the dots."
In round numbers, Obama's campaign said it raised about $1 billion for his campaign, with some 10 million Americans making individual contributions to the president.
The more notable impact of mobile campaign contributions was centered around specific events, such as the first presidential debate in October. Without disclosing the amount, Payvia said there was a 96% spike in mobile giving on Romney's mobile site during that debate on Oct. 3. The site included a link to donate via mobile directly underneath a video stream of the debate. (During that same debate, 10 million tweets about the event were made, most from mobile devices, Payvia said.)
A message to text-to-donate $10 to Obama's efforts during a Democratic National Convention speech by Obama adviser Jim Messina caused a sudden 61% jump in Obama contributions, Payvia said.
According to Wedd, mobile giving speeds up how quickly contributions can be made, taking just a few seconds, compared to minutes needed to go online on a desktop and type in credit card information.
Younger voters were more inclined to view political tweets and Facebook updates via mobile devices than to watch TV ads, and to quickly retweet or otherwise spread the message, added Jack Gold, an analyst at J. Gold Associates.
"An ability to quickly spread the message, whatever that message was, clearly allowed a viral ability to amplify both negative and positive events and news," Gold said. "Many people also posted when they had voted and probably no one wanted to not be tagged as voting."
Payvia, which faces competition for mobile contribution technology from Boku and Zong (purchased by PayPal), predicts that mobile contributions will take on a bigger role in the next presidential election in 2016.
For Facebook and other social media sites, Wedd said there will likely be a "text-to-donate" button of some kind embedded on mobile sites.
Obama had 31 million Facebook followers at one point in the 2012 campaign, while Romney had 11 million. With that in mind, a donate button on those Facebook pages would have made it easier for supporters to send money to the campaigns, Payvia said.
Wedd also predicted that more apps will appear in 2016 that live-stream campaign events. As for the 2020 election, he wondered, "Will we be able vote on our phones?"
Matt Hamblen covers mobile and wireless, smartphones and other handhelds, and wireless networking for Computerworld. Follow Matt on Twitter at @matthamblen or subscribe to Matt's RSS feed. His email address is mhamblen@computerworld.com.
Read more about mobile payments in Computerworld's Mobile Payments Topic Center.

Wi-Fi vs. Powerline


Charliehendricks281 needs to extend his network across a large house. He asked the Networkingforum if a Powerline solution would make more sense than wireless.
[Email your tech questions to answer@pcworld.com or post them on the PCW Answer Line forum.]
This isn't an either/or situation. The two can co-exist and enhance each other. You can use a Powerline network to extend your Ethernet, your Wi-Fi, or both. (I'm assuming you already have a router with both Ethernet and Wi-Fi.)
Powerline technology turns your home's electrical wiring into a network. The HomePlug Powerline Alliance provides standardization over products from different companies.
You need at least two Homeplug adapters for a Powerline network. You connect one to your router via Ethernet, and plug it into an AC wall socket. You plug the other into a wall socket in a room too far away for a good Wi-Fi signal, and it gives you one or more additional Ethernet ports. These act as if they're directly plugged into your router--even if they're on the other side of the house. You can usually buy these two adapters together as part of one "starter kit."
When I first set up my own Homeplug system, I was truly astonished by how easy it was. For once, the overhyped expression plug-and-play seemed appropriate.
Using Powerline to extend your Wi-Fi network takes a little more work. You'll need a HomePlug Wi-Fi adapter, which is basically a regular HomePlug adapter with antennas. But you'll also need to set up this adapter with an SSID (translation: a network name) and a password. To effectively extend your existing Wi-Fi network, simply give the adapter the same SSID and password as your existing Wi-Fi network. Your adapter should come with instructions on how to do this.
Although I've had mostly positive Powerline experiences, the technology has its problems. For instance, you can't plug an adapter into a surge protector--unless you buy a HomePlug-compatible surge protector. Other problems can be more serious. Logitech offers a useful list of known Powerline problems here.
Read the original forum discussion.

Tablets beat out PCs on holiday shopping lists


Holiday wish lists may deal another blow to the PC industry, according to a new survey.
Asked if they'd rather receive a PC or a tablet as a holiday gift, 59% of respondents in a PriceGrabber survey opted for the tablet, the price comparison shopping site said.
When asked which tablet or tablets they wanted, 63% of respondents said they want an iPad 3 or an iPad 4, while 24% said they're hoping for an iPad mini. ( Apple's iPad launched in March is known as the iPad 3, and the latest tablet, the fourth-generation iPad released in in October, is commonly known as the iPad 4.)
However, it's not all about Apple. Twenty-two percent of those surveyed said they would like a Samsung Galaxy Note Tab while 20% said they are hoping for an Amazon Kindle Fire HD, according to PriceGrabber.
Another 13% have Microsoft's new Surface tablet on their holiday wish list.
"Tablets continue to grow in popularity as a top holiday gift, especially with the emergence of lower-priced tablets in the $200 to $300 price range targeting budget-conscience consumers," said Rojeh Avanesian, a vice president at PriceGrabber, in a statement. "We expect to see a lot of shopping activity in the tablet category again this holiday season, with retailers' battling it out to win the consumer dollar."
The survey results aren't good news for the PC market, which has been battered over the last year by a sluggish global economy and consumers' growing penchant for tablets instead of PCs.
Research firm Gartner last month said global PC shipments dropped 8.3% year over year, with a total of 87.5 million units shipped in the third quarter of 2012. IDC, another industry analyst firm, reported that the global market fell 8.6% in the same period.
The PriceGrabber survey, which polled 1,475 U.S. online shoppers between Oct. 24 and Nov. 1, showed that of the lower-priced tablets, the iPad Mini is the most popular, with 45% saying it would be at the top of their holiday wish lists.
According to PriceGrabber, of those who chose the Mini, 47% said they appreciate its portability and smaller size, while 38% liked its lower price point compared to the regular iPad.
Coming in second was Amazon's Kindle Fire HD with 27%, while third place was a tie between theGoogle Nexus 7 and Amazon's Kindle Fire with 19%.
Sharon Gaudin covers the Internet and Web 2.0, emerging technologies, and desktop and laptop chips for Computerworld. Follow Sharon on Twitter at @sgaudin, on Google+ or subscribe to Sharon's RSS feed. Her email address is sgaudin@computerworld.com.
Read more about tablets in Computerworld's Tablets Topic Center.

iPhone 5 design, quality demands slows manufacturing


You're facing a three to four week wait if you order an iPhone 5 today, according to Apple's Website. Partly, that's because Apple's manufacturing partner is having trouble keeping up with high demand for the new phone.
A comment this week by Terry Gou, chairman of Foxconn Technology Group, is being interpreted by some as evidence that Apple's design for the new phone is needlessly complex, making it hard to manufacture in high enough volumes to meet the demand.
Those constraints may crimp Apple's competition with rival Samsung, whose Galaxy S III smartphone for the first time outsold the iPhone 4S in third quarter 2012, according to a report this week by Strategy Analytics. The Samsung phone was snapped up by 18 million buyers, vs. 16.2 million for iPhone 4S.
"It's not easy to make the iPhones. We are falling short of meeting the huge demand," Gou told reporters after a business forum Wednesday, according to Reuters and other news sites. Foxconn is the trade name for Taiwan-based Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., which manufactures the iPhone and other Apple products at factories in mainland China.
The Wall Street Journal reported Gou as saying Foxconn is shipping "far fewer" phones than Apple has requested. "Market demand is very strong, but we just can't really fulfill Apple's requests," Gou said. Some of the quality standards can't be met "due to design-related production difficulties," according to the article (which is behind a paywall but accessible via Google News).
"The scarcity of the phones has been weighing on Apple's share price as well, as investors are concerned Apple may not be able to meet consumer demand in the near future, weighing on its earnings," according to the Journal story.
Gou's apparently brief public comments echo those of an unnamed Hon Hai executive quoted in a Journal blogpost by Lorraine Luk in October. "The iPhone 5 is the most difficult device that Foxconn has ever assembled. To make it light and thin, the design is very complicated," the executive was quoted as saying.
At least at that time, one issue was the propensity for the new phone's metal exterior to suffer scratches. "Hon Hai has recently implemented a new quality check procedure to reduce the chance of damages," Luk reported in her blogpost. "But [the executive] noted the iPhone 5 uses a new coating material that makes it more susceptible to scratching."
Almost at once pundits began speculating that the new iPhone's design was needlessly complex.
It's "so complicated that the company Apple and most of the consumer electronics world considers the best contract manufacturer on the planet can't figure out how to build it in a way that keeps up with demand while maintaining quality," complains Erica Ogg, writing at GigaOm. "It's worth wondering if perhaps Apple went overboard. At what point do we begin wondering what the guys in Apple's design team were thinking?"
Ogg speculates that iPhone designer Jonathan Ive may be to blame, or perhaps the late Steve Jobs. "CEO Tim Cook's background is supply-chain management and manufacturing, and it would be surprising for him to put the iPhone 5 on the company's most aggressive roll-out schedule ever if he didn't think they could meet those goals," she writes.
"But there could be other dynamics at work here: maybe Jony Ive, who leads the industrial design group, gets to have the iPhone design he wants and Cook figures out how to get it made in huge volumes. After all, as Jobs told his biographer, Jobs set it up before he left 'that there's no one at the company who can tell Ive what to do.'"
But it's not clear what Jobs' statement means in practice, since it would in effect put Ive in charge of the company, not Cook.
In his comments this week, Foxconn's Gou didn't go into details. He "declined to say which of the phone's design features has caused production issues and how long it will take for those issues to be solved," according to the Journal. "He also refused to comment if Hon Hai plans to outsource some of the iPhone orders to other makers, or to its Hong Kong-listed subsidiary Foxconn International Holdings Ltd., as some analysts suggested last week."
Apple sold 5 million iPhone 5 units in the first weekend of sales in September, but has not released any sales figures since then, or indicated when the three to four week delay might ease.
John Cox covers wireless networking and mobile computing for Network World.
Twitter: http://twitter.com/johnwcoxnww
Email: john_cox@nww.com
Read more about anti-malware in Network World's Anti-malware section.

iPad Tips and Tricks for Creating Content


By now, you've probably heard that Mitt Romney wrote his acceptance speech on an iPad. (Oddly, he didn't write a concession speech.) If Romney had won, the content created on the iPad would have been heard around the world.
Who says the iPad is a lousy content creation device?
Well, most CIOs who support "Bring Your Own Device" iPads tell me that the tablet still has a long way to go before it replaces the venerable laptop. Crafting documents, spreadsheets and presentation slides, even writing long email missives on the iPad, can be tricky.
Knowledge workers have to be able to create content quickly and easily on the iPad. That's not happening yet, although apps are getting better. Microsoft Office-capable apps on the iPad have been evolving steadily, and early reports show Office on Microsoft's new Surface tablet is a solid productivity performer.
In the meantime, there are some tips and tricks to make you faster on the iPad today. The 9.7-inch touchscreen means there's little real estate to work with, so you'll need to be very efficient-that is, you won't be able to have multiple windows open. The touch keyboard reduces the real estate even more.
The Killer Keyboard
Content creation starts with the keyboard.
On the iPad, there are three options: the built-in on-screen touch keyboard and two types of physical keyboards that wirelessly connect to the iPad via Bluetooth. There's the small keyboard that doubles as a cover from vendors such as Logitech, and the full-length (albeit extremely thin) Apple Wireless Keyboard.
The decision on which keyboard to use is, of course, personal preference. Nevertheless, the keyboard will be critical, in terms of speed and efficiency.
I was pleasantly surprised at how quickly I adapted to the touch keyboard. The keys do not feel crammed like they do with the small physical keyboards. I've tried to use small physical keyboards and have rejected them for this reason.
If you go the touch keyboard route, here are some important tips.
Putting in an apostrophe or quotation mark is usually a three-touch process starting with the ?123 button on the lower left, the apostrophe or question mark button, then the ABC button to get back to the QWERTY keyboard. This can get annoying really fast.
Instead, use this shortcut: In the QWERTY keyboard mode, hold down the exclamation point button for the apostrophe pop-up, and the question mark button for the quotation pop-up. Along these lines, when typing in a website URL, hold down the .com button for a pop-up menu of .edu, .us, .org and .net.
Another soft keyboard shortcut: Instead of typing a period and a space to start the next sentence, just double hit the spacebar. This will automatically add a period and a space.
The soft keyboard in landscape mode with the iPad propped up slightly using the Apple iPad cover is adequate for most of my content-creation needs. However, if I'm writing anything of significant length, I'll fire up the Apple Wireless Keyboard.
Not only can I type faster on a full-sized physical keyboard, I can use the command key shortcuts for quick copy, cut, paste and other functions. The arrow keys help me navigate around a document and select text without having to take my fingers off the keyboard and touch the screen.
Downsides, though, are many. I had to buy a cover for the keyboard and batteries-the keyboard is a battery hog. I also have to lug it around. Then there's the annoying process of turning Bluetooth on and off on the iPad to connect to the keyboard; I don't have Bluetooth on all the time in order to save battery life.
Email Interruption, App Swiping and More
Nothing staunches the flow of content creation like email interruptions. On the other hand, you can't really turn off email out of fear you'll miss something. It's best to manage it.
Your iPad is probably set up to push email to you right away, resulting in interruption after interruption. Instead, set your Mail accounts to check for new messages at intervals of every 15 minutes or every 30 minutes or hourly (Settings -> Mail, Contacts, Calendars -> Fetch New Data).
When you absolutely have to check email, do it quickly.
But the iPad inbox shows only two lines of each email, which means you'll probably have to tap on the email message to read it-an extra step! By making a slight adjustment, you can preview up to five lines of an email straight from the inbox (Settings -> Mail, Contacts, Calendars -> Preview). Now when you check email, you can get the gist of all of them in one fell swoop, and then get back to work.
If your work includes writing a bunch of emails, and you're in the email app on the iPad, don't engage in multiple finger acrobatics to get to email drafts. Just press and hold down the new message icon in the upper right hand corner, which will call up a pop-up list of all your email drafts.
Another distraction: Facebook, game apps, e-books, music. Let's face it, the iPad is a smorgasbord of entertainment and procrastination possibilities. So before getting down to work on the iPad, turn off all unnecessary apps.
With necessary apps, though, you'll need a way to get to them quickly. As stated earlier, there isn't enough real estate on the iPad to keep multiple windows open. Rather than double clicking the home button to pull up the multi-tasking bar and tap between apps, here's a shortcut: Use the five-finger swipe to move back and forth between apps. (Four fingers work, too.)
Other five-finger gestures: An upward five-finger swipe will call up the multi-tasking bar, and a five-finger pinch will take you to the home page.
Now, you're jumping between Pages, Safari, Email, home screen, and other apps like a pro.
Making Your Way Through Safari
Content creation often includes Web research. Safari on the iPad has evolved over the years to include tabs-a huge productivity time saver-and a reading list for important Web pages. You can touch and hold a word on a Web page to copy and define, the latter being very useful for those big ten-dollar words.
I also use the iPad app WordBook XL, which includes a thesaurus.
Other gesture shortcuts to help you navigate Web pages quickly in Safari: Scroll to the top of a website or list by tapping the top of the iPad screen above the URL. Double tap on an image or text to auto zoom, instead of pinching in and out.
If you tap a link inside a Web page, you'll jump to the new Web page. That's all well and good, but if you wanted tabs on both the new page and the original page, you'll need to do some serious copying and pasting and opening a new page using the + button.
Instead, tap and hold the link until a pop-up menu appears, giving options to open, open in a new tab, add to reading list or copy.
By learning these shortcuts, tips and tricks, you can become much faster creating content on your iPad. Whether or not an iPad can replace a laptop depends largely on how much content you create at your job. For most people, though, the iPad does suffice, especially when they make the most of the iPad's limited real estate.
Tom Kaneshige covers Apple and Consumerization of IT for CIO.com. Follow Tom on Twitter@kaneshige. Follow everything from CIO.com on Twitter @CIOonline and on Facebook. Email Tom attkaneshige@cio.com
Read more about tablet pcs in CIO's Tablet PCs Drilldown.


Microsoft slates first Windows 8, RT patches since launch


Microsoft today announced it will issue six security updates next week, including three for Windows 8 and its tablet spin-off Windows RT.
The half-dozen updates will patch 19 vulnerabilities in Windows, Internet Explorer (IE) and the .Net framework.
The four critical updates -- the highest threat ranking in Microsoft's four-step system -- will patch 13 bugs, including an unknown number in Windows Server 2012, Windows 8 and Windows RT, the operating system that powers Microsoft's own Surface RT tablet, according to the advance warningMicrosoft published Thursday.
The Windows 8 and Windows RT security updates will be the first shipped since those operating systems' launch on Oct. 26. While Microsoft had previously issued patches for the new OSes, all but a September "out-of-band" fix for IE tackled problems in its unfinished previews, not the final code.
But Andrew Storms, director of security operations at nCircle Security, downplayed the patches for Windows 8 and Windows RT.
"I'd be more worried if they didn't patch them right off the bat," said Storms. "They've had them in development so long, someone should have found a bug by now. And it shouldn't be surprising.... We all know that everything has bugs, even the newest software."
Another researcher agreed. "This may come as a surprise to many who expected that Windows 8 [would] be much more secure than legacy versions," said Marcus Carey of Rapid7 in an email. "The truth is that Microsoft and other vendors have significant technical debt in their code base which results in security issues."
The update slated for IE is among the critical quartet, and will address one or more vulnerabilities in IE9, now the second-newest browser in Microsoft's stable. IE9 runs only on Windows 7 and Windows Vista.
IE6, IE7 and IE8 -- all which run on the 11-year-old Windows XP -- will not be patched; nor will IE10, the just-released browser bundled with Windows 8 and Windows RT.
"What did they add in IE9 that wasn't in the earlier versions?" Storms asked. "What went wrong?"
Although Storms held off predicting that the IE9 update will be the one to patch first next week -- he said he was concerned about Bulletin 4, which will address unknown bugs in the .Net development framework -- Carey was not hesitant to call a winner in that dubious sweepstakes.
"This will be the top priority for both businesses and consumers since an attacker would be able to compromise their system if the user visits a malicious Web page," Carey said.
According to Carey, the IE9 bug can be used in "drive-by" exploits, those that only require a user be tricked into browsing to an unsafe website.
Web metrics company Net Applications has estimated that IE9 accounted for about 38% of all versions of IE used last month, second only to IE8, which owned a 45% share of the Microsoft browser base.
Next week's IE update will be the first since Microsoft delivered a rush patch to stymie active attacksexploiting a bug. The Sept. 21 out-of-band update, which also included fixes for several other vulnerabilities, had been originally slated to ship two weeks later.
Another update, pegged "moderate" by Microsoft, will patch four flaws in Office's Excel spreadsheet. All still-supported versions of the suite -- ranging from Office 2003 to Office 2010 on Windows, and Office 2008 and Office 2011 on OS X -- will receive the update.
And Storms wondered what Microsoft would reveal next week about Bulletin 4, today's label for an update to the .Net framework within all versions of Windows. Windows RT's Bulletin 4 patch was rated "important," but fixes for all other versions, including Windows 8 and Server 2012, were pegged critical.
"Bulletin 4 could take the cake next week," said Storms. ".Net is so ubiquitous, used not only in software but also in Web services. And who knows where the bug is?"
Microsoft will release the six updates at approximately 1 p.m. ET on Nov. 13.
Gregg Keizer covers Microsoft, security issues, Apple, Web browsers and general technology breaking news for Computerworld. Follow Gregg on Twitter at @gkeizer, on Google+ or subscribe to Gregg's RSS feed. His email address is gkeizer@computerworld.com.
Read more about malware and vulnerabilities in Computerworld's Malware and Vulnerabilities Topic Center.

Google cleans up search page, eyes mobile users


Have you noticed a change in the look of Google's search results page?
Well, you might not have. Google tweaked the look of its search results page a few days ago, giving it a cleaner, simpler look. However, it's not a change that will jump out at you.
Google wants to optimize its search pages for its growing base of mobile users, and it's a pretty subtle shift.
"It does look cleaner. The text is bigger and I like that," said Ezra Gottheil, an analyst with Technology Business Research. "I didn't notice the change before but I do prefer it."
On Tuesday, Tamar Yehoshua, a search director at Google, wrote in a blog post that changes have been made to Google's search results pages.
"We've been working on ways to create a consistent search experience across the wide variety of devices and screen sizes people use today," Yehoshua wrote. "We started with tablets last year, got it to mobile phones a few weeks ago, and are now rolling out to the desktop."
With the new design, Google was trying to create "a bit more breathing room," she wrote.
Two years ago, Google added a sidebar on the left side of the search results page, offering users shortcuts to News, Images and other options. That left-hand column has been replaced by similar tabs that sit above the search results.
So why such a simple change? Gottheil said Google is focused on making the search experience similar whether a user is on a desktop, smartphone or tablet. It's also an effort to provide busy mobile users with a clean screen.
"Mobile is critically important," Gottheil said. "Google's raw material is the total time people spend using the Web, and an increasing percentage of that time is spent with mobile devices. It needs to be cleaner. You can't waste the left margin on smaller screens."
Google isn't the only Internet company working on how to best handle its burgeoning base of mobile users.
Facebook has been struggling to harness its huge mobile base. In documents filed as part of its initial public offering this past summer, Facebook categorized mobile as one of the big risks facing the company.
The question most companies are dealing with is how to get ads in front of mobile users without alienating them with a cluttered screen and slow response time. That's an especially big problem with mobile users who are trying to get information while they're on the go.
Read more about internet search in Computerworld's Internet Search Topic Center.

VMware releases micro version of Cloud Foundry PaaS


Everything in the cloud seems to be getting bigger or smaller. VMware today went the small route, releasing a micro version of the company's popular open source platform as a service (PaaS), Cloud Foundry.
The claim to fame for Micro Cloud Foundry is that it can be deployed on a single virtual machine. In ablog post announcing the new version, VMware says it's ideal for developers who want to launch an application that's still under development to test it out, for example.
Cloud providers seem to be constantly tweaking their offerings in an effort to expand their product portfolio and the easiest ways to do that are to take existing products and either give them added capacity, or shrink them down into smaller, bite-sized chunks. VMware took the latter approach with today's release.
In contrast, Amazon Web Services recently announced two new types of virtual machines instances for its cloud, both of which are high input/output versions of its popular Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2) offering. At the time, independent analyst Paul Burns noted that adding capacity to existing products not only allows businesses like Amazon to have more products, but it allows customers to have instance types that more closely align with their computing needs.
In that aspect, creating a micro instance of Cloud Foundry seems like a natural move. As a PaaS, Cloud Foundry is used by developers as a cloud-based tool for creating and deploying applications. Traditionally these PaaS deployments live on large cloud environments made up of multiple virtual machines. But a micro instance, like the one released by VMware today, gives another tool for a developer to more easily test and play around with Cloud Foundry on a single machine.
VMware says Micro Cloud Foundry will have all the same features and functionality of the regular Cloud Foundry, the only limitation will be the power of the single VM that it runs on. In addition to announcing the micro version today, VMware also announced new features that will come with the Micro Cloud Foundry release. These include support for standalone apps, and enhanced support for various programming languages, including Ruby, Java and Node.js.
VMware says it will continue to update Micro Cloud Foundry on the same release cycle as its parent product, and promised to continue to improve Micro Cloud Foundry by further improving automation of tasks within the PaaS.
Cloud Foundry is used by a variety of cloud computing companies as a PaaS extension to their infrastructure as a service offering. Piston Cloud Computing, the OpenStack cloud platform, for example, uses Cloud Foundry to provide customers with a PaaS.
Network World staff writer Brandon Butler covers cloud computing and social collaboration. He can be reached at BButler@nww.com and found on Twitter at @BButlerNWW.