Our Latest Discovery: October, 2008 archives

Our Latest Discovery:

October, 2008

Oct 31 2008   10:50AM GMT

The Vault of Tech Terror



Posted by: Ivy Wigmore
Uncategorized

Goood eeevvvening! (It’s always evening here in the Vault of Tech Terror.) Don’t be afraid, Younnnnng Onnnne — that creaking sound you heard was only the vault door swinging slooowly open. The scuffling noises? Oh, that’s just … the “pets” in the pit. And the pounding sound you hear is … your own heart as you face the most terrifying quizzes in all of Techdom! So, put on your garlic necklace, make sure you’ve got your holy water nearby… take a deep breath… and enter The Vault of Tech Terror.

The Horrifying Halloween Series:
Halloween IV: Can you shriek Geek? 

Halloween: VoIP Communications from Beyond 

Halloween III: Tech or treat! 

Halloween II: Do you speak — EEK! — Geek? 

Halloween: Do you speak Geek?

Still calm? In that case, please send us your contact info, so we know who to enlist for protection when next we enter… The Vault of Tech Terror.

Oct 22 2008   5:44AM GMT

Joel Maloff on SIP trunking



Posted by: Ivy Wigmore
VoIP, Networking, wireless, Web 2.0, communications, cloud computing, Mobile Computing
jmaloff_img.jpg “For a service that was forecast by Gartner last year to be part of a more than $2 billion market segment by 2011, SIP trunking remains one of those technical phrases used in vendor circles that is marched out with pride to prospective distributors and customers and received by the marketplace with bewilderment.”

I’m always extremely impressed when marketing people actually demystify terms, instead of spinning hype and building the “baffle ‘em with BS” model to new levels. In this article, Joel Maloff, VP of Marketing for BandTel, explains SIP trunking. Here’s an excerpt:

In a survey commissioned by my company earlier this year, we discovered that even so-called industry experts — analysts, reporters, and others — could not agree on a definition for SIP trunking, nor could they consistently identify the leaders in delivery of SIP trunking services. However, it is not hard to understand the confusion in the general marketplace. For example, a February 2008 Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) draft document entitled “What is aSession Initiation Protocol ( News - Alert) (SIP) Trunk Anyway?” provided the following definition:

A SIP trunk is a virtual sip entity on a server constrained by a predefined set of polices and rules that determine how to process requests. (J. Rosenberg, 2008, http://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-rosenberg…)

No wonder there is confusion!

The same draft also describes SIP trunking in more mainstream circles as a service for enterprises that allows connection to the PSTN as a displacement for circuit-based connections, and as a replacement for costly leased lines connecting distributed telephone systems within an enterprise.

So let’s cut through the mystery and confusion. SIP trunking, simply put, is a way for organizations to accomplish something that they already do, but for less money, with equal or better quality, and with greater functionality. It is also a way for enterprises that were too small and could not afford leased line services to achieve comparable benefits as the big boys but for much more attractive fees than previously. All of this is now achievable because of the underlying packet-switched technology of the Internet as opposed to circuit-switched architecture from the past. SIP is simply the framework that vendors and service providers have agreed to use to accomplish the completion of telephone calls and much more.

Another challenge is that SIP trunking providers differ from one another, and can roughly be grouped in the following three categories: SIP trunks via dedicated lines, SIP trunks in conjunction with hosted services, and pure SIP trunking providers.

Read the rest of the article.


Oct 15 2008   9:00AM GMT

What is Blog Action Day? A chance to help fight global poverty.



Posted by: Alexander Howard
open source, small business, business, Web 2.0, media, Technology, Internet, useful, cool, culture, education, learning, free, academics, volunteer, green, event, entrepeneurship, resource, Development, tool, politics, blogging, buzz, science, communications

Blog Action Day is, according to its founders, “an annual nonprofit event that aims to unite the world’s bloggers, podcasters and videocasters, to post about the same issue on the same day.”

In 2007, the issue was the environment. In 2008, the theme is poverty.

By coordinating the efforts of many bloggers (more than 10,000 different sites, as of this morning), the organizers hope to galvanize improvement in the lots of the world’s poor. As measured by the World Bank, substantial improvements have been made since the 1980s.

Even so, one quarter of the world continues to subsist on less than $1.25/day.

Here’s what you can do to help:

Spread the word!


Oct 9 2008   5:14AM GMT

Overheard and overseen: Is your webcam spying on you?



Posted by: Ivy Wigmore
Uncategorized
jeremiah_grossman.jpg “Web pages know what websites you’ve been to (without JS), where you’re logged-in, what you watch on YouTube, and now they can literally “see” and “hear” you (via Clickjacking + Adobe Flash). Separate from the several technical details on how to accomplish this feat, that’s the big secret Robert “RSnake” Hansen and myself weren’t able to reveal at the OWASP conference at Adobe’s request. So if you’ve noticed a curious post-it note over a few of the WhiteHat employee machines, that’s why.”

Jeremiah Grossman, of WhiteHat Security: Web pages can see you and hear you.