Showing posts with label Technical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technical. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 6, 2018

6 Years of IPv6 ! How is State of IPv6 Deployment 2018 so far?

Today is the 6th anniversary of World IPv6 launch! #IPv6 #v6launch #infographic

State of IPv6 Deployment 2018:
- The top 10 countries using the new protocol include #Belgium, #Greece, #Germany, the #USA, #Uruguay, #India, #Switzerland, #Japan, #Malaysia, and #Brazil.

- Belgium was the first country in the world where the majority of connections to IPv6-capable content providers used IPv6.

- In 2012, less than one in a hundred connections to Google services used IPv6. Today that number is nearly one in four.

- Nearly half a billion people use IPv6 among just the top 15 ISPs combined. Nearly half of all IPv6 users on the planet today are in India.

- Reliance Jio, a mobile network operator in India, activated over 200 million subscribers with IPv6 connectivity in just 9 months (September 2016 - June 2017).

- 80 percent of smartphones in the US on the major cellular network operators (AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon) use IPv6 (up from under 40 percent less than 3 years ago).

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Letter: Bill Gates sent Microsoft employees for its 40th anniversary

Bill Gates and Paul Allen started Microsoft on April 4, 1975 - exactly 40 years ago today. In honor of the milestone, Gates sent a letter to all Microsoft employees, detailing his plans for the company's future.

Here is the letter:

"Tomorrow is a special day: Microsoft's 40th anniversary.

Early on, Paul Allen and I set the goal of a computer on every desk and in every home. It was a bold idea and a lot of people thought we were out of our minds to imagine it was possible. It is amazing to think about how far computing has come since then, and we can all be proud of the role Microsoft played in that revolution.

Today though, I am thinking much more about Microsoft's future than its past. I believe computing will evolve faster in the next 10 years than it ever has before. We already live in a multi-platform world, and computing will become even more pervasive. We are nearing the point where computers and robots will be able to see, move, and interact naturally, unlocking many new applications and empowering people even more.

Under Satya's leadership, Microsoft is better positioned than ever to lead these advances. We have the resources to drive and solve tough problems. We are engaged in every facet of modern computing and have the deepest commitment to research in the industry. In my role as technical advisor to Satya, I get to join product reviews and am impressed by the vision and talent I see. The result is evident in products like Cortana, Skype Translator, and HoloLens -- and those are just a few of the many innovations that are on the way.

In the coming years, Microsoft has the opportunity to reach even more people and organizations around the world. Technology is still out of reach for many people, because it is complex or expensive, or they simply do not have access. So I hope you will think about what you can do to make the power of technology accessible to everyone, to connect people to each other, and make personal computing available everywhere even as the very notion of what a PC delivers makes its way into all devices.

We have accomplished a lot together during our first 40 years and empowered countless businesses and people to realize their full potential. But what matters most now is what we do next. Thank you for helping make Microsoft a fantastic company now and for decades to come."

Thursday, November 27, 2014

SATYA NADELLA’S Open letter to all Microsoft employees

From: Satya Nadella
To: All Employees
Date: July 10, 2014 at 6:00 a.m. PT
Subject: Starting FY15 - Bold Ambition & Our Core

Team,


As we start FY15, I want to thank you for all of your contributions this past year. I’m proud of what we collectively achieved even as we drove significant changes in our business and organization. It’s energizing to feel the momentum and enthusiasm building. The day I took on my new role I said that our industry does not respect tradition – it only respects innovation. I also said that in order to accelerate our innovation, we must rediscover our soul – our unique core. We must all understand and embrace what only Microsoft can contribute to the world and how we can once again change the world. I consider the job before us to be bolder and more ambitious than anything we have ever done.

Our ambitions are bold and so must be our desire to change and evolve our culture.

I truly believe that we spend far too much time at work for it not to drive personal meaning and satisfaction. Together we have the opportunity to create technology that impacts the planet. 

Nothing is off the table in how we think about shifting our culture to deliver on this core strategy. Organizations will change. Mergers and acquisitions will occur. Job responsibilities will evolve. New partnerships will be formed. Tired traditions will be questioned. Our priorities will be adjusted. New skills will be built. New ideas will be heard. New hires will be made. Processes will be simplified. And if you want to thrive at Microsoft and make a world impact, you and your team must add numerous more changes to this list that you will be enthusiastic about driving.

I am committed to making Microsoft the best place for smart, curious, ambitious people to do their best work.

First, we will obsess over our customers.
Obsessing over our customers is everybody’s job. I’m looking to the engineering teams to build the experiences our customers love. I’m looking to the sales and marketing organizations to showcase our unique value propositions and drive customer usage first and foremost.

In order to deliver the experiences our customers need for the mobile-first and cloudfirst world, we will modernize our engineering processes to be customer-obsessed, data-driven, speed-oriented and quality-focused. We will be more effective in predicting and understanding what our customers need and more nimble in adjusting to information we get from the market. We will streamline the engineering process and reduce the amount of time and energy it takes to get things done. You can expect to have fewer processes but more focused and measurable outcomes. You will see fewer people get involved in decisions and more emphasis on accountability. Further, you will see investments in two new or combined functions: Data and Applied Science and Software Engineering. Each engineering group will have Data and Applied Science resources that will focus on measurable outcomes for our products and predictive analysis of market trends, which will allow us to innovate more effectively. Software Engineering will evolve so that information can travel more quickly, with fewer breakpoints between the envisioning of a product or service and a quality delivery to customers. In making these changes we are getting closer to the customer and pushing more accountability throughout the organization.

Second, we know the changes above will bring on the need for new training, learning and experimentation.

Over the next six months you will see new investments in our workforce, such as enhanced training and development and more opportunities to test new ideas and incubate new projects. I have also heard from many of you that changing jobs is challenging. We will change the process and mindset so you can more seamlessly move around the company to roles where you can have the most impact and personal growth. All of this, too, comes with accountability and the need to deliver great work for customers, but it is clear that investing in future learning and growth has great benefit for everyone.

I am committed to making Microsoft the best place for smart, curious, ambitious people to do their best work.

Finally, every team across Microsoft must find ways to simplify and move faster, more efficiently.

We will increase the fluidity of information and ideas by taking actions to flatten the organization and develop leaner business processes. Culture change means we will do things differently. Often people think that means everyone other than them. In reality, it means all of us taking a new approach and working together to make Microsoft better. To this end, I’ve asked each member of the Senior Leadership Team to evaluate opportunities to advance their innovation processes and simplify their operations and how they work. We will share more on this throughout July.

A few months ago on a call with investors I quoted Nietzsche and said that we must have “courage in the face of reality.” Even more important, we must have courage in the face of opportunity.

We have clarity in purpose to empower every individual and organization to do more and achieve more. We have the right capabilities to reinvent productivity and platforms for the mobile-first and cloud-first world. Now, we must build the right culture to take advantage of our huge opportunity. And culture change starts with one individual at a time.

Rainer Maria Rilke’s words say it best: “The future enters into us, in order to transform itself in us, long before it happens.”

We must each have the courage to transform as individuals. We must ask ourselves, what idea can I bring to life? What insight can I illuminate? What individual life could I change? What customer can I delight? What new skill could I learn? What team could I help build? What orthodoxy should I question?

With the courage to transform individually, we will collectively transform this company and seize the great opportunity ahead. 


Thursday, October 16, 2014

Comparison: Google Nexus 6 vs Apple iPhone 6 Plus

Check out the full specs table below.

Google Nexus 6 Apple iPhone 6 Plus

Display

Screen size 5.9in 5.5in
Resolution 2,560 x 1,440 pixels  1,920 x 1,080 pixels
Pixel density 493ppi 401ppi
Type IPS LCD IPS LCD

Processor and battery

Family Snapdragon 805 Apple A8
CPU Krait 450 Cyclone
Cores Quad-core Dual-core
Clock speed 2.7GHz 1.4GHz
GPU Adreno 420
Battery 3,220mAh  2,915mAh
Claimed 3G talk time Up to 24h

Storage and memory

RAM 3GB 1GB
Internal storage 32GB / 64GB 16 / 64 / 128GB
microSD Yes No

Camera

Rear 13-megapixel 8-megapixel
Video 1,080p (Full HD) 1,080p (Full HD)
Front 2-megapixel 1.2-megapixel

Wireless

Standard 4G LTE 4G LTE
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 802.11 a / b / g / n / ac Wi-Fi 802.11 a / b / g / n / ac
NFC Yes Yes
Bluetooth v4.0 v4.0
Integrated wireless charging No No

Dimensions

Size 159.3 x 83 x 10.1mm 158.1 x 77.8 x 7.1mm
Weight 184g 172g
Operating System Android 5.0 Lollipop iOS 8
Price (SIM-free) Unconfirmed £619 / £699 / £789

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Google Nexus 5 review and unboxing

Yay! My Google Nexus 5 device has arrived. Have to admit, it is the perfect size and super fast build quality. Thanks Google for fast shipping.

Good One's:

  • Fast Performance
  • Perfect size
Bad One's:

  • Bad Speaker/sound quality
  • Average Battery life
Product site: http://www.google.com/nexus/5/

Unboxing: