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loadingtheperfect37 · 4 years ago
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Mindmanager 9 Mac Download
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Mac users interested in Mindmanager mac os 10.5 generally download: Mindjet MindManager 11.2 Simulates a whiteboard where all the data is stored and all the ideas are managed. Once you’ve installed and opened MindManager, you’ll be presented with a welcome screen: Here you’ll have the option to learn about the new features in MindManager 9 for Mac, watch video tutorials on how to use MindManager, or you can start using MindManager right away. Use Pre-defined Map Templates!
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MindManagerDeveloper(s)MindjetInitial release1998; 22 years agoStable release(s)(±)
Windows20.1.231 / 30 January 2020; 9 months ago(1)macOS13 / 18 September 2019; 13 months ago(2)
Operating systemWindows, macOS, Android, iOS, webTypeMind mappingLicenseWebsitewww.mindjet.com/mindmanager
MindManager is a commercial mind mapping software application developed by Mindjet. The software provides ways for users to visualize information in mind maps and flowcharts. MindManager can be used to manage projects, organize information, and for brainstorming.
As of December 2015, Mindjet had approximately two million users,(3) including notable customers such as Dow, Microsoft, Pfizer, and Cisco.(4)
Features(edit)
Mindjet Mindmanager 9 Free Download
MindManager provides ways for users to visualize information using mind maps, and with the release of MindManager 2016 for Windows, now includes flowchart and concept map creation tools. The digital mind maps can be used as a “virtual whiteboard” for brainstorming, managing and planning projects, compiling research, organizing large amounts of information, and for strategic planning.(5)MindManager also has features that allow budget calculations and formulas, Gantt chart views of project timelines, and guided brainstorming. Documents can be attached to mind map topics and viewed within the MindManager application. Links, images, and notes can also be added to mind map topics and viewed and searched in a side panel.
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Development(edit)
Formulas in MindManager
The software that became MindManager was originally developed by Mike Jetter in the mid-1990s while he was recovering from a bone marrow transplant to treat leukemia. Jetter's goal was to develop a program that would overcome the limitations of creating mind maps with pen and paper, such as the inability to easily move items around. Following his release from hospital, Jetter decided to sell the software.(6) The software's mind maps were initially based on the method created by Tony Buzan.(7) Over time, however, Mindjet has developed its own style of mind mapping.(8)
The software was originally marketed under the name 'MindMan — The Creative MindManager'.(9) In 1999, it was rebranded as MindManager.(10) Originally only available for Windows, MindManager expanded to Mac OS X in 2006.(11) With the release of version 7, the Windows version of MindManager adopted the ribbon interface first seen in Microsoft Office 2007 and introduced support for Office Open XML.(12) In 2011, mobile versions of MindManager were released for both iOS and Android.(13)(14) Later that year, the company acquired Thinking Space, an Android-based information mapping application,(15) and Cohuman, a social task management service,(16) which the company developed into a collaborative, cloud-based service to complement MindManager called Mindjet Connect or Project Director.(17)
In September 2012, the Mindjet company combined all of its software, including MindManager, Mindjet Connect, and its mobile offerings into a single product, also called Mindjet.(18)
Mindjet moved away from the single-product offering in mid-2013. The stand-alone mind mapping product was again named MindManager, with a more expansive version tailored to large enterprise adoptions called MindManager Enterprise released in 2014. MindManager Enterprise added sharing options including viewing/editing within Microsoft SharePoint. A MindManager mind map viewer also became available with MindManager Enterprise 2016.
Mindmanager Download Free
On August 9, 2016, Corel announced that they had acquired the Mindjet MindManager business.(19)
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Mindmanager Mac Serial
Reception and awards(edit)
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MindManager has received generally positive notice from reviewers. MindManager 2016 for Windows took first place in Biggerplate's(20) MindMapper's Choice poll.(21) MindManager 8 received four out of five stars from TechRadar,(22) while MindManager 9 received 3.5 out of 5 stars from PC Magazine and 4 out of 5 stars from Macworld.(23)(24) MindManager was chosen as one of the top 5 best mind mapping tools.(25)(26)
MindManager also received a number of awards, including 'Collaboration Product of the Year' for 2008 by Intranet Journal,(27) a Jolt Productivity award for Design and Modeling tools from Dr. Dobb's Journal,(28) and 'Best of CeBIT' in the Personal Software category in 2004.(29)
See also(edit)
References(edit)
^'MindManager 2020 for Windows'. mindjet.com.
^'MindManager 13 for Mac'. mindjet.com.
^Marshall Kirkpatrick (14 November 2011). 'Could Mind-Maps Make SharePoint More Lovable?'. ReadWriteWeb. Archived from the original on 19 April 2012. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
^Glen Chapman (8 October 2009). 'Mindjet boosts online collaboration with Catalyst'. Times of Oman. Agence France Presse. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
^'MindManager 2016 offers all-in-one visual mapping solution'. Mind Mapping Software Blog. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
^'From Adversity, Software Success'. BloombergBusinessweek. 11 April 2005. Retrieved 30 October 2012.
^Benjamin Pimentel (2 May 2005). 'This is no PowerPoint presentation; More execs embracing Larkspur firm's visual software for organizing ideas'. The San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
^Faizel Mohidin (4 April 2009). 'MindManager Software by Mindjet'. MindMapTutor.com. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
^Jordan Ayan (June 1998). 'Dream Weaver'. Inc. Retrieved 30 October 2012.
^'MindManager 3.5 UPDATE! The World-wide Leading Idea and Knowledge Management Tool With Integrated Internet Conferencing'. Business Wire. 8 January 1999.
^'Mindjet Brings Industry-Leading MindManager Software to the Mac'. Business Wire. 31 May 2006.
^Strange, Darren (May 24, 2007). 'MindJet MindManager 7 becomes Fluent with the ribbon: interview'. MSDN. Microsoft. Retrieved December 31, 2016.
^Klint Finley (4 June 2011). 'iPad for Business Round-Up: Mindjet, snagR and More'. ReadWriteWeb. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
^'Work Collaboration Innovator Mindjet Adds New Collaboration Products, Garners Two Million Paid Customers and More Than One Million Mobile Users in 2011'. Marketwire. 7 February 2012.
^Robin Wauters (13 December 2011). 'Mindjet Buys Thinking Space, Launches Mind Mapping App For Android'. TechCrunch. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
^Tony Bradley (12 September 2011). 'Mindjet Unleashes Creativity with Online Collaboration Tools'. PC World. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
^Jessica Stillman (25 November 2011). 'Cohuman + Mindjet = Idea management from inception to execution'. GigaOM. Archived from the original on 5 April 2012. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
^Matthew Finnegan (21 September 2012). 'Mindjet woos channel with simplified software sales approach'. ChannelBiz.co.uk. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
^Corel CEO Patrick Nichols (9 August 2016). 'MindManager Joins Corel'. Mindjet.com. Retrieved 15 August 2016.
^'Free mind mapping software templates and mind map examples'.
^'Biggerplate Annual Mind Map Report 2015'. www.biggerplate.com. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
^Ian Osborne (28 March 2012). 'Mindjet MindManager 8 review'. TechRadar. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
^William Fenton (25 February 2011). 'MindManager 9'. PC Magazine. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
^Alan Stonebridge (11 August 2011). 'MindManager 9 for Mac review'. Macword. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
^'Five Best Mind Mapping Tools'.
^'Five Best Mind Mapping Tools'.
^'Collaboration Product of the Year: Mindjet MindManager 7'. Intranet Journal. 22 February 2008. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved 2 November 2012.CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
^'CMP Media Announces Winners for the 16th Annual Jolt Product Excellence & Productivity Awards'. 17 March 2006. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
^''Best of CeBIT America' Award Goes to NEC Solutions Disaster Recovery Fault Tolerant Solution'. 26 May 2004. Archived from the original on 10 May 2009. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
External links(edit)
Official website
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Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=MindManager&oldid=949089414'
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alwzayefcom · 6 years ago
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BlackBerry quarterly revenue rises 18%
BlackBerry quarterly revenue rises 18%
Visitors try out Blackberry smartphones on the first day of the CeBIT 2012 technology trade fair on March 6, 2012 in Hanover, Germany.Sean Gallup | Getty Images News | Getty Images
Canada's BlackBerry reported an 18% rise in third-quarter revenue on Friday, helped by increase in demand for its cybersecurity software.
The company reported a net loss of $32 million for the third quarter ended Nov.…
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viralpearl-blog · 6 years ago
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Cancer overtakes heart disease as biggest rich-world killer
Cancer overtakes heart disease as biggest rich-world killer
LONDON (Reuters) – Cancer has overtaken heart disease as the leading cause of death in wealthy countries and could become the world’s biggest killer within just a few decades if current trends persist, researchers said on Tuesday.
FILE PHOTO: Cancer cells are seen on a large screen connected to a microscope at the CeBit computer fair in Hanover, Germany, March, 6, 2012. REUTERS/Fabian…
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kevinjona4 · 7 years ago
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Google shutting down social network sooner because of new security bug
Google shutting down social network sooner because of new security bug
Sean Gallup | Getty Images
A worker pauses while preparing the Google stand the day before the CeBIT 2012 technology trade fair officially opens to the public on March 5, 2012 in Hanover, Germany. 
Google is shutting down its beleaguered social network sooner than expected in the wake of a new security issue that affected 52.5 million users.
Google Plus received its initial kiss…
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cleopatrarps · 7 years ago
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Australia prepares to ban Huawei from 5G project over security fears
SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia is preparing to ban Huawei Technologies Co Ltd from supplying equipment for its planned 5G broadband network after its intelligence agencies raised concerns that Beijing could force the Chinese telco to hand over sensitive data, two sources said.
FILE PHOTO: A worker adjusts the logo at the stand of Huawei at the CeBIT trade fair in Hanover, in this file picture taken March 15, 2015. REUTERS/Morris Mac Matzen/File Photo
Western intelligence agencies have for years raised concerns about Huawei’s ties to the Chinese government and the possibility that its equipment could be used for espionage. But there has never been any public evidence to support those suspicions.
Huawei, the world’s largest maker of telecommunications network gear and the No. 3 smartphone supplier, has promised that Canberra will have complete oversight of 5G network equipment, which could include base stations, towers and radio transmission equipment.
That sort of oversight model has been accepted by other countries – notably the U.K., where a special laboratory staffed with government intelligence officials reviews all Huawei products.
Other Western countries, including the New Zealand, Canada and Germany, also say they have sufficient safeguards for assuring that Huawei equipment does not contain “back doors” or other mechanisms for secretly monitoring or collecting information.
But Australian intelligence agencies have told lawmakers that oversight will not allay their concerns, two political sources who have been briefed on the matter told Reuters.
“It is a Chinese company, and under Communist law they have to work for their intelligence agencies if requested,” said one of the government sources. “There aren’t many other companies around the world that have their own political committees.”
Both sources declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
FILE PHOTO: The logo of the Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. is seen outside its headquarters in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, April 17, 2012. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo
Huawei has already been mostly shut out of the giant U.S. market over national security concerns. Its business serving small, rural telecom operators is now at risk after new attacks on the company in recent weeks by some U.S. lawmakers. The move to ban Huawei in Australia comes as tensions mount over China’s growing power and ambitions in the region.
Relations between the two countries are at an all-time low after Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull last year accused Beijing of meddling in Canberra’s affairs, and China responded by slowing some Australian imports.
Australia’s 5G service will require a dense network of towers that would then be leased to mobile providers such as Telstra Corp (TLS.AX).
Mobile carriers typically have access to sensitive personal information, such as internet search history or emails. But in Australia and most other countries, there are strict laws governing when and how they can do so.
Australia’s intelligence agencies fear that if mobile operators rely on Huawei’s equipment, the Chinese company could develop a means of collecting data or even undermining the stability of the network. Chinese law requires organizations and citizens to support, assist and cooperate with intelligence work.
Huawei Australia’s chairman, John Lord, said that law does not apply to its operations outside of China.
“That law has no legitimacy outside of China,” Lord said. “Within that country, any information coming through us and any equipment we put into their national infrastructure is safe to the best of our ability, and it’s secure.”
AMERICAN INFLUENCE
In 2012, Australia banned Huawei from supplying equipment to the country’s National Broadband Network, which has been hampered by technological failures. Australia believes that the 5G network, which will provide mobile internet speeds 50 to 100 times faster than current technology, will be the cornerstone for future innovations such as driverless cars. That makes it crucial to keep the network secure.
Turnbull in February received briefings from the U.S. National Security Agency and Department of Homeland Security on the threat from Huawei, one source familiar with the meeting told Reuters.
“The U.K. and New Zealand, they have decided that the risk of Huawei is worth it for the benefits of the network. For the Australian Security and Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) and the U.S., it is not worth the risk,” a second political source said.
AUSTRALIA-CHINA TENSIONS
Although Australia’s intelligence agencies are unwavering in their advice, Turnbull has yet to formally sign off on the Huawei ban.
One of the sources familiar with the process said the government is “in no great rush to confirm the ban.” “It is going to highlight the anxiety that Australian lawmakers have about the rise of China, and it is not going to do any good for the Australian-China relationship,” said Adam Ni, visiting fellow in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National University.
Despite the trade pressure, Turnbull can ill afford to overrule the country’s security authorities amid a rise of Chinese hawks within Australia’s government. In rare public testimony, Australian Security Intelligence Organisation director general Duncan Lewis this year warned that foreign espionage, interference or sabotage could inflict “catastrophic harm” on the nation’s interests – remarks that were widely considered a thinly veiled reference to China. The warning spurred a backbench lawmaker, who sits on the country’s important parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee, on June 18 to urge Turnbull to reject Huawei, a source familiar with the details of the party-room meeting of the ruling government told Reuters.
Turnbull did not directly address the comment, the source said, leaving his own party uncertain of his leanings.
In legislation seen as aimed at China, Australia will soon require lobbyists to declare connections to foreign governments.
Canberra has also called for increased international aid to the Pacific to counter what it says is Beijing’s attempt to exert greater influence.
Reporting by Colin Packham in Sydney; Editing by Gerry Doyle
The post Australia prepares to ban Huawei from 5G project over security fears appeared first on World The News.
from World The News https://ift.tt/2KYoMQx via News of World
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dragnews · 7 years ago
Text
Australia prepares to ban Huawei from 5G project over security fears
SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia is preparing to ban Huawei Technologies Co Ltd from supplying equipment for its planned 5G broadband network after its intelligence agencies raised concerns that Beijing could force the Chinese telco to hand over sensitive data, two sources said.
FILE PHOTO: A worker adjusts the logo at the stand of Huawei at the CeBIT trade fair in Hanover, in this file picture taken March 15, 2015. REUTERS/Morris Mac Matzen/File Photo
Western intelligence agencies have for years raised concerns about Huawei’s ties to the Chinese government and the possibility that its equipment could be used for espionage. But there has never been any public evidence to support those suspicions.
Huawei, the world’s largest maker of telecommunications network gear and the No. 3 smartphone supplier, has promised that Canberra will have complete oversight of 5G network equipment, which could include base stations, towers and radio transmission equipment.
That sort of oversight model has been accepted by other countries – notably the U.K., where a special laboratory staffed with government intelligence officials reviews all Huawei products.
Other Western countries, including the New Zealand, Canada and Germany, also say they have sufficient safeguards for assuring that Huawei equipment does not contain “back doors” or other mechanisms for secretly monitoring or collecting information.
But Australian intelligence agencies have told lawmakers that oversight will not allay their concerns, two political sources who have been briefed on the matter told Reuters.
“It is a Chinese company, and under Communist law they have to work for their intelligence agencies if requested,” said one of the government sources. “There aren’t many other companies around the world that have their own political committees.”
Both sources declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
FILE PHOTO: The logo of the Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. is seen outside its headquarters in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, April 17, 2012. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo
Huawei has already been mostly shut out of the giant U.S. market over national security concerns. Its business serving small, rural telecom operators is now at risk after new attacks on the company in recent weeks by some U.S. lawmakers. The move to ban Huawei in Australia comes as tensions mount over China’s growing power and ambitions in the region.
Relations between the two countries are at an all-time low after Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull last year accused Beijing of meddling in Canberra’s affairs, and China responded by slowing some Australian imports.
Australia’s 5G service will require a dense network of towers that would then be leased to mobile providers such as Telstra Corp (TLS.AX).
Mobile carriers typically have access to sensitive personal information, such as internet search history or emails. But in Australia and most other countries, there are strict laws governing when and how they can do so.
Australia’s intelligence agencies fear that if mobile operators rely on Huawei’s equipment, the Chinese company could develop a means of collecting data or even undermining the stability of the network. Chinese law requires organizations and citizens to support, assist and cooperate with intelligence work.
Huawei Australia’s chairman, John Lord, said that law does not apply to its operations outside of China.
“That law has no legitimacy outside of China,” Lord said. “Within that country, any information coming through us and any equipment we put into their national infrastructure is safe to the best of our ability, and it’s secure.”
AMERICAN INFLUENCE
In 2012, Australia banned Huawei from supplying equipment to the country’s National Broadband Network, which has been hampered by technological failures. Australia believes that the 5G network, which will provide mobile internet speeds 50 to 100 times faster than current technology, will be the cornerstone for future innovations such as driverless cars. That makes it crucial to keep the network secure.
Turnbull in February received briefings from the U.S. National Security Agency and Department of Homeland Security on the threat from Huawei, one source familiar with the meeting told Reuters.
“The U.K. and New Zealand, they have decided that the risk of Huawei is worth it for the benefits of the network. For the Australian Security and Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) and the U.S., it is not worth the risk,” a second political source said.
AUSTRALIA-CHINA TENSIONS
Although Australia’s intelligence agencies are unwavering in their advice, Turnbull has yet to formally sign off on the Huawei ban.
One of the sources familiar with the process said the government is “in no great rush to confirm the ban.” “It is going to highlight the anxiety that Australian lawmakers have about the rise of China, and it is not going to do any good for the Australian-China relationship,” said Adam Ni, visiting fellow in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National University.
Despite the trade pressure, Turnbull can ill afford to overrule the country’s security authorities amid a rise of Chinese hawks within Australia’s government. In rare public testimony, Australian Security Intelligence Organisation director general Duncan Lewis this year warned that foreign espionage, interference or sabotage could inflict “catastrophic harm” on the nation’s interests – remarks that were widely considered a thinly veiled reference to China. The warning spurred a backbench lawmaker, who sits on the country’s important parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee, on June 18 to urge Turnbull to reject Huawei, a source familiar with the details of the party-room meeting of the ruling government told Reuters.
Turnbull did not directly address the comment, the source said, leaving his own party uncertain of his leanings.
In legislation seen as aimed at China, Australia will soon require lobbyists to declare connections to foreign governments.
Canberra has also called for increased international aid to the Pacific to counter what it says is Beijing’s attempt to exert greater influence.
Reporting by Colin Packham in Sydney; Editing by Gerry Doyle
The post Australia prepares to ban Huawei from 5G project over security fears appeared first on World The News.
from World The News https://ift.tt/2KYoMQx via Today News
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newestbalance · 7 years ago
Text
Australia prepares to ban Huawei from 5G project over security fears
SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia is preparing to ban Huawei Technologies Co Ltd from supplying equipment for its planned 5G broadband network after its intelligence agencies raised concerns that Beijing could force the Chinese telco to hand over sensitive data, two sources said.
FILE PHOTO: A worker adjusts the logo at the stand of Huawei at the CeBIT trade fair in Hanover, in this file picture taken March 15, 2015. REUTERS/Morris Mac Matzen/File Photo
Western intelligence agencies have for years raised concerns about Huawei’s ties to the Chinese government and the possibility that its equipment could be used for espionage. But there has never been any public evidence to support those suspicions.
Huawei, the world’s largest maker of telecommunications network gear and the No. 3 smartphone supplier, has promised that Canberra will have complete oversight of 5G network equipment, which could include base stations, towers and radio transmission equipment.
That sort of oversight model has been accepted by other countries – notably the U.K., where a special laboratory staffed with government intelligence officials reviews all Huawei products.
Other Western countries, including the New Zealand, Canada and Germany, also say they have sufficient safeguards for assuring that Huawei equipment does not contain “back doors” or other mechanisms for secretly monitoring or collecting information.
But Australian intelligence agencies have told lawmakers that oversight will not allay their concerns, two political sources who have been briefed on the matter told Reuters.
“It is a Chinese company, and under Communist law they have to work for their intelligence agencies if requested,” said one of the government sources. “There aren’t many other companies around the world that have their own political committees.”
Both sources declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
FILE PHOTO: The logo of the Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. is seen outside its headquarters in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, April 17, 2012. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo
Huawei has already been mostly shut out of the giant U.S. market over national security concerns. Its business serving small, rural telecom operators is now at risk after new attacks on the company in recent weeks by some U.S. lawmakers. The move to ban Huawei in Australia comes as tensions mount over China’s growing power and ambitions in the region.
Relations between the two countries are at an all-time low after Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull last year accused Beijing of meddling in Canberra’s affairs, and China responded by slowing some Australian imports.
Australia’s 5G service will require a dense network of towers that would then be leased to mobile providers such as Telstra Corp (TLS.AX).
Mobile carriers typically have access to sensitive personal information, such as internet search history or emails. But in Australia and most other countries, there are strict laws governing when and how they can do so.
Australia’s intelligence agencies fear that if mobile operators rely on Huawei’s equipment, the Chinese company could develop a means of collecting data or even undermining the stability of the network. Chinese law requires organizations and citizens to support, assist and cooperate with intelligence work.
Huawei Australia’s chairman, John Lord, said that law does not apply to its operations outside of China.
“That law has no legitimacy outside of China,” Lord said. “Within that country, any information coming through us and any equipment we put into their national infrastructure is safe to the best of our ability, and it’s secure.”
AMERICAN INFLUENCE
In 2012, Australia banned Huawei from supplying equipment to the country’s National Broadband Network, which has been hampered by technological failures. Australia believes that the 5G network, which will provide mobile internet speeds 50 to 100 times faster than current technology, will be the cornerstone for future innovations such as driverless cars. That makes it crucial to keep the network secure.
Turnbull in February received briefings from the U.S. National Security Agency and Department of Homeland Security on the threat from Huawei, one source familiar with the meeting told Reuters.
“The U.K. and New Zealand, they have decided that the risk of Huawei is worth it for the benefits of the network. For the Australian Security and Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) and the U.S., it is not worth the risk,” a second political source said.
AUSTRALIA-CHINA TENSIONS
Although Australia’s intelligence agencies are unwavering in their advice, Turnbull has yet to formally sign off on the Huawei ban.
One of the sources familiar with the process said the government is “in no great rush to confirm the ban.” “It is going to highlight the anxiety that Australian lawmakers have about the rise of China, and it is not going to do any good for the Australian-China relationship,” said Adam Ni, visiting fellow in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National University.
Despite the trade pressure, Turnbull can ill afford to overrule the country’s security authorities amid a rise of Chinese hawks within Australia’s government. In rare public testimony, Australian Security Intelligence Organisation director general Duncan Lewis this year warned that foreign espionage, interference or sabotage could inflict “catastrophic harm” on the nation’s interests – remarks that were widely considered a thinly veiled reference to China. The warning spurred a backbench lawmaker, who sits on the country’s important parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee, on June 18 to urge Turnbull to reject Huawei, a source familiar with the details of the party-room meeting of the ruling government told Reuters.
Turnbull did not directly address the comment, the source said, leaving his own party uncertain of his leanings.
In legislation seen as aimed at China, Australia will soon require lobbyists to declare connections to foreign governments.
Canberra has also called for increased international aid to the Pacific to counter what it says is Beijing’s attempt to exert greater influence.
Reporting by Colin Packham in Sydney; Editing by Gerry Doyle
The post Australia prepares to ban Huawei from 5G project over security fears appeared first on World The News.
from World The News https://ift.tt/2KYoMQx via Everyday News
0 notes
dani-qrt · 7 years ago
Text
Australia prepares to ban Huawei from 5G project over security fears
SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia is preparing to ban Huawei Technologies Co Ltd from supplying equipment for its planned 5G broadband network after its intelligence agencies raised concerns that Beijing could force the Chinese telco to hand over sensitive data, two sources said.
FILE PHOTO: A worker adjusts the logo at the stand of Huawei at the CeBIT trade fair in Hanover, in this file picture taken March 15, 2015. REUTERS/Morris Mac Matzen/File Photo
Western intelligence agencies have for years raised concerns about Huawei’s ties to the Chinese government and the possibility that its equipment could be used for espionage. But there has never been any public evidence to support those suspicions.
Huawei, the world’s largest maker of telecommunications network gear and the No. 3 smartphone supplier, has promised that Canberra will have complete oversight of 5G network equipment, which could include base stations, towers and radio transmission equipment.
That sort of oversight model has been accepted by other countries – notably the U.K., where a special laboratory staffed with government intelligence officials reviews all Huawei products.
Other Western countries, including the New Zealand, Canada and Germany, also say they have sufficient safeguards for assuring that Huawei equipment does not contain “back doors” or other mechanisms for secretly monitoring or collecting information.
But Australian intelligence agencies have told lawmakers that oversight will not allay their concerns, two political sources who have been briefed on the matter told Reuters.
“It is a Chinese company, and under Communist law they have to work for their intelligence agencies if requested,” said one of the government sources. “There aren’t many other companies around the world that have their own political committees.”
Both sources declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
FILE PHOTO: The logo of the Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. is seen outside its headquarters in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, April 17, 2012. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo
Huawei has already been mostly shut out of the giant U.S. market over national security concerns. Its business serving small, rural telecom operators is now at risk after new attacks on the company in recent weeks by some U.S. lawmakers. The move to ban Huawei in Australia comes as tensions mount over China’s growing power and ambitions in the region.
Relations between the two countries are at an all-time low after Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull last year accused Beijing of meddling in Canberra’s affairs, and China responded by slowing some Australian imports.
Australia’s 5G service will require a dense network of towers that would then be leased to mobile providers such as Telstra Corp (TLS.AX).
Mobile carriers typically have access to sensitive personal information, such as internet search history or emails. But in Australia and most other countries, there are strict laws governing when and how they can do so.
Australia’s intelligence agencies fear that if mobile operators rely on Huawei’s equipment, the Chinese company could develop a means of collecting data or even undermining the stability of the network. Chinese law requires organizations and citizens to support, assist and cooperate with intelligence work.
Huawei Australia’s chairman, John Lord, said that law does not apply to its operations outside of China.
“That law has no legitimacy outside of China,” Lord said. “Within that country, any information coming through us and any equipment we put into their national infrastructure is safe to the best of our ability, and it’s secure.”
AMERICAN INFLUENCE
In 2012, Australia banned Huawei from supplying equipment to the country’s National Broadband Network, which has been hampered by technological failures. Australia believes that the 5G network, which will provide mobile internet speeds 50 to 100 times faster than current technology, will be the cornerstone for future innovations such as driverless cars. That makes it crucial to keep the network secure.
Turnbull in February received briefings from the U.S. National Security Agency and Department of Homeland Security on the threat from Huawei, one source familiar with the meeting told Reuters.
“The U.K. and New Zealand, they have decided that the risk of Huawei is worth it for the benefits of the network. For the Australian Security and Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) and the U.S., it is not worth the risk,” a second political source said.
AUSTRALIA-CHINA TENSIONS
Although Australia’s intelligence agencies are unwavering in their advice, Turnbull has yet to formally sign off on the Huawei ban.
One of the sources familiar with the process said the government is “in no great rush to confirm the ban.” “It is going to highlight the anxiety that Australian lawmakers have about the rise of China, and it is not going to do any good for the Australian-China relationship,” said Adam Ni, visiting fellow in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National University.
Despite the trade pressure, Turnbull can ill afford to overrule the country’s security authorities amid a rise of Chinese hawks within Australia’s government. In rare public testimony, Australian Security Intelligence Organisation director general Duncan Lewis this year warned that foreign espionage, interference or sabotage could inflict “catastrophic harm” on the nation’s interests – remarks that were widely considered a thinly veiled reference to China. The warning spurred a backbench lawmaker, who sits on the country’s important parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee, on June 18 to urge Turnbull to reject Huawei, a source familiar with the details of the party-room meeting of the ruling government told Reuters.
Turnbull did not directly address the comment, the source said, leaving his own party uncertain of his leanings.
In legislation seen as aimed at China, Australia will soon require lobbyists to declare connections to foreign governments.
Canberra has also called for increased international aid to the Pacific to counter what it says is Beijing’s attempt to exert greater influence.
Reporting by Colin Packham in Sydney; Editing by Gerry Doyle
The post Australia prepares to ban Huawei from 5G project over security fears appeared first on World The News.
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party-hard-or-die · 7 years ago
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Australia prepares to ban Huawei from 5G project over security fears
SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia is preparing to ban Huawei Technologies Co Ltd from supplying equipment for its planned 5G broadband network after its intelligence agencies raised concerns that Beijing could force the Chinese telco to hand over sensitive data, two sources said.
FILE PHOTO: A worker adjusts the logo at the stand of Huawei at the CeBIT trade fair in Hanover, in this file picture taken March 15, 2015. REUTERS/Morris Mac Matzen/File Photo
Western intelligence agencies have for years raised concerns about Huawei’s ties to the Chinese government and the possibility that its equipment could be used for espionage. But there has never been any public evidence to support those suspicions.
Huawei, the world’s largest maker of telecommunications network gear and the No. 3 smartphone supplier, has promised that Canberra will have complete oversight of 5G network equipment, which could include base stations, towers and radio transmission equipment.
That sort of oversight model has been accepted by other countries – notably the U.K., where a special laboratory staffed with government intelligence officials reviews all Huawei products.
Other Western countries, including the New Zealand, Canada and Germany, also say they have sufficient safeguards for assuring that Huawei equipment does not contain “back doors” or other mechanisms for secretly monitoring or collecting information.
But Australian intelligence agencies have told lawmakers that oversight will not allay their concerns, two political sources who have been briefed on the matter told Reuters.
“It is a Chinese company, and under Communist law they have to work for their intelligence agencies if requested,” said one of the government sources. “There aren’t many other companies around the world that have their own political committees.”
Both sources declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
FILE PHOTO: The logo of the Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. is seen outside its headquarters in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, April 17, 2012. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo
Huawei has already been mostly shut out of the giant U.S. market over national security concerns. Its business serving small, rural telecom operators is now at risk after new attacks on the company in recent weeks by some U.S. lawmakers. The move to ban Huawei in Australia comes as tensions mount over China’s growing power and ambitions in the region.
Relations between the two countries are at an all-time low after Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull last year accused Beijing of meddling in Canberra’s affairs, and China responded by slowing some Australian imports.
Australia’s 5G service will require a dense network of towers that would then be leased to mobile providers such as Telstra Corp (TLS.AX).
Mobile carriers typically have access to sensitive personal information, such as internet search history or emails. But in Australia and most other countries, there are strict laws governing when and how they can do so.
Australia’s intelligence agencies fear that if mobile operators rely on Huawei’s equipment, the Chinese company could develop a means of collecting data or even undermining the stability of the network. Chinese law requires organizations and citizens to support, assist and cooperate with intelligence work.
Huawei Australia’s chairman, John Lord, said that law does not apply to its operations outside of China.
“That law has no legitimacy outside of China,” Lord said. “Within that country, any information coming through us and any equipment we put into their national infrastructure is safe to the best of our ability, and it’s secure.”
AMERICAN INFLUENCE
In 2012, Australia banned Huawei from supplying equipment to the country’s National Broadband Network, which has been hampered by technological failures. Australia believes that the 5G network, which will provide mobile internet speeds 50 to 100 times faster than current technology, will be the cornerstone for future innovations such as driverless cars. That makes it crucial to keep the network secure.
Turnbull in February received briefings from the U.S. National Security Agency and Department of Homeland Security on the threat from Huawei, one source familiar with the meeting told Reuters.
“The U.K. and New Zealand, they have decided that the risk of Huawei is worth it for the benefits of the network. For the Australian Security and Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) and the U.S., it is not worth the risk,” a second political source said.
AUSTRALIA-CHINA TENSIONS
Although Australia’s intelligence agencies are unwavering in their advice, Turnbull has yet to formally sign off on the Huawei ban.
One of the sources familiar with the process said the government is “in no great rush to confirm the ban.” “It is going to highlight the anxiety that Australian lawmakers have about the rise of China, and it is not going to do any good for the Australian-China relationship,” said Adam Ni, visiting fellow in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National University.
Despite the trade pressure, Turnbull can ill afford to overrule the country’s security authorities amid a rise of Chinese hawks within Australia’s government. In rare public testimony, Australian Security Intelligence Organisation director general Duncan Lewis this year warned that foreign espionage, interference or sabotage could inflict “catastrophic harm” on the nation’s interests – remarks that were widely considered a thinly veiled reference to China. The warning spurred a backbench lawmaker, who sits on the country’s important parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee, on June 18 to urge Turnbull to reject Huawei, a source familiar with the details of the party-room meeting of the ruling government told Reuters.
Turnbull did not directly address the comment, the source said, leaving his own party uncertain of his leanings.
In legislation seen as aimed at China, Australia will soon require lobbyists to declare connections to foreign governments.
Canberra has also called for increased international aid to the Pacific to counter what it says is Beijing’s attempt to exert greater influence.
Reporting by Colin Packham in Sydney; Editing by Gerry Doyle
The post Australia prepares to ban Huawei from 5G project over security fears appeared first on World The News.
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peptideforsale-blog · 7 years ago
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Next-Generation Distributed Converged Data Warehouse
Huawei Launches FusionInsight LibrA, Its Next-Generation Distributed Converged Data Warehouse
Hannover, Germany, June 13, 2018] At Hannover CEBIT 2018, Huawei launched its next-generation enterprise-class distributed converged data warehouse solution, FusionInsight LibrA, which can help customers build unified, scalable, and high-performance data analysis platforms. LibrA supports parallel computing, mixed row-column storage, vectorized execution, and automatic resource scaling. It can perform association analysis and full-text retrieval of trillions of records in only seconds, significantly accelerating data analysis and mining.
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Fan Ruiqi, VP of Marketing & Solution Sales, Huawei Enterprise Business Group, Western Europe, launches FusionInsight LibrA
LibrA is an essential component of Huawei's FusionInsight Big Data solution. It provides PB-level enterprise-class data warehousing capabilities, offering the ultimate in performance, reliability, scalability, security, and ease-of-use. Its massively parallel processor (MPP) and non-sharing architecture allow LibrA to scale out automatically, without service interruption or awareness, even in the face of explosive data growth. Customers can use x86 servers to scale out the system without increasing its total cost of ownership (TCO). LibrA leverages parallel computing, mixed row-column storage, and vectorized execution technologies to perform association analysis of trillions of data records in seconds. All of its components are redundant to ensure its enterprise-class reliability and to eliminate single points of failure (SPOF). LibrA also supports real-time full-text data retrieval on the Big Data platform without requiring any additional components.
Fan Ruiqi, VP of Marketing & Solution Sales, Huawei Enterprise Business Group, Western Europe, said:" The world is constantly changing, and the quantity of data being generated by financial companies, carriers, and large enterprises is growing every day. As cloud, Big Data, and artificial intelligence (AI) technologies are evolving equally rapidly, our customers need Big Data analytics more than ever. Huawei's next-generation enterprise-class distributed converged data warehouse, FusionInsight LibrA, will help our customers analyze massive amounts of data in real time, generating increasing value for their businesses as their data grows."
Huawei began to research data warehousing in 2012, and is committed to providing industry-leading big data solutions based on leading data management and database technologies. Till now, LibrA has been used in enterprise data warehouse projects and operation analysis systems in a wide array of sectors including finance, telecom, government, public utilities, and energy.
By the end of 2017, half of the domestic TOP20 financial enterprises chose Huawei FusionInsight Big Data platform. Libra helps major financial institutions of the overall IT architecture cloud transformation, effectively reduce operating costs, and make breakthroughs in real-time credit, query history details, and precision marketing and so on. Huawei will continue to work with its partners to develop more industry applications.
Huawei's FusionInsight Big Data solution has entered Gartner's Magic Quadrant for Analytical Data Management Solutions for two consecutive years (2017 and 2018) and has been ranked as the leading Big Data Management Platform in China by IDC MarketScape. By the end of March 2018, the FusionInsight Big Data solution is used by over 1200 customers in 55 countries and has more than 300 partners. Huawei has set up OpenLabs in multiple regions around the world to support collaborative innovation with its customers and partners in the cloud and Big Data fields.
For more information about Huawei's Big Data and AI solutions, visit http://e.huawei.com/en/cloud-computing/big-data.
Huawei’s booth is at Area C01 in Hall 13, Hannover Exhibition Center, Germany. For more information about Huawei at CEBIT, please visit http://e.huawei.com/topic/cebit2018-en/index.html. To learn more about Huawei’s worldwide customer cases using "Leading New ICT", please visit http://e.huawei.com/topic/leading-new-ict-en/index.html. 
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vitaly-the-photography · 7 years ago
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2012/03/09
Germany, Hannover - CeBIT 2012
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baillieslf-blog · 7 years ago
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航空级润滑剂!GAMDIAS两款散热配件发布:1680万色RGB
GAMDIAS是2012年成立于台湾的一家新兴的专业电竞外设厂商,曾多次在CeBit、CES等展会上崭露头角,获得了不少玩家的喜爱。
在2018年的CES大会上,GAMDIAS推出了两款散热配件,其中一款为AEOLUS P1风扇,另一款为CHIOME M1-240C一体式水冷散热器。
AEOLUS P1风扇配备18颗LED灯,每颗LED灯都具有1680万色并可通过AEOLUS Box控制器进行自定义调节,AEOLUS Box控制器配备8个端口,每个端口提供不同的灯效及亮度控制。此外,风扇还使用了航空级润滑剂可以更好地防止磨损、腐蚀,延长风扇使用寿命。
CHIOME M1-240C一体式水冷散热器拥有特氟龙管、铜��基板以及两个具有航空级润滑剂的AEOLUS P1风扇,提高水冷散热器耐用性与导热性的同时降低了风扇的噪音,当然水冷散热器也支持PWM温度控制功能。
GAMDIAS宣布两款散热配…
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moneyhealthfinance-blog · 8 years ago
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Gilead just bought a cancer immunotherapy company for $12 billion (GILD, KITE) Cancer cells seen on a large screen connected to a microscope at the CeBit computer fair in Hanover, Germany, in 2012.Reuters Business Insider
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telecomupdate · 8 years ago
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Deutsche Telekom Selects Radiflow as Strategic Partner for Securing Industrial Facilities
HANNOVER, Germany, March 24, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Deutsche Telekom announced at Cebit earlier this week that it has entered a strategic partnership with Radiflow to collaborate in the field of securing industrial networks. Radiflow was chosen by T-Systems, a subsidiary of Deutsche Telekom, after a thorough evaluation of ICS/SCADA security vendors.
Deutsche Telekom's move to expand into securing the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) stemmed from the increasing importance of securing industrial systems and critical infrastructures, as they become more and more interconnected.
Telekom Security, a new business unit within Deutsche Telekom, now offers Industrial Network Protect Pro (INPP), a distributed firewall for industrial networks based on Radiflow's portfolio. With INPP, companies can subdivide their networks into protected zones, and subsequently monitor and control data flows between these zones. Radiflow's secure gateways are especially optimized for remote sites, in which they serve both as distributed attack detection sensors for its central Industrial IDS (iSID), and as access protection devices.
"We're honored to partner with Telekom Security and glad that we were able to convince Deutsche Telekom of the value of our innovative, best-in-class technology in protecting industrial networks," said Ilan Barda, CEO of Radiflow.
Dirk Backofen, Head of Telekom Security, added, "Radiflow enables Telekom Security's customers to expand their use of digitized infrastructure in their industrial applications while maintaining their operational resilience. With Radiflow's expertise, the strategic partnership enables Telekom Security to offer a mature, field-proven solution."
About Radiflow 
Radiflow is a leading provider of cyber security for critical infrastructure networks. The Radiflow solution provides operators visibility and control of their OT network; including both non-intrusive Industrial IDS to monitor real-time networks and security gateways to secure access to devices in critical zones.
Radiflow was founded in 2010 as part of the RAD group, a family of ICT vendors with over $1Bn in annual revenues. Since 2012 Radiflow has sold more than 10,000 systems used by major utilities world-wide and validated by leading research labs in the US.
Contact: Amit Slutzky  [email protected] Tel: +972-507547607
Read this news on PR Newswire Asia website: Deutsche Telekom Selects Radiflow as Strategic Partner for Securing Industrial Facilities
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ebizupdate · 8 years ago
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Deutsche Telekom Selects Radiflow as Strategic Partner for Securing Industrial Facilities
HANNOVER, Germany, March 24, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Deutsche Telekom announced at Cebit earlier this week that it has entered a strategic partnership with Radiflow to collaborate in the field of securing industrial networks. Radiflow was chosen by T-Systems, a subsidiary of Deutsche Telekom, after a thorough evaluation of ICS/SCADA security vendors.
Deutsche Telekom's move to expand into securing the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) stemmed from the increasing importance of securing industrial systems and critical infrastructures, as they become more and more interconnected.
Telekom Security, a new business unit within Deutsche Telekom, now offers Industrial Network Protect Pro (INPP), a distributed firewall for industrial networks based on Radiflow's portfolio. With INPP, companies can subdivide their networks into protected zones, and subsequently monitor and control data flows between these zones. Radiflow's secure gateways are especially optimized for remote sites, in which they serve both as distributed attack detection sensors for its central Industrial IDS (iSID), and as access protection devices.
"We're honored to partner with Telekom Security and glad that we were able to convince Deutsche Telekom of the value of our innovative, best-in-class technology in protecting industrial networks," said Ilan Barda, CEO of Radiflow.
Dirk Backofen, Head of Telekom Security, added, "Radiflow enables Telekom Security's customers to expand their use of digitized infrastructure in their industrial applications while maintaining their operational resilience. With Radiflow's expertise, the strategic partnership enables Telekom Security to offer a mature, field-proven solution."
About Radiflow 
Radiflow is a leading provider of cyber security for critical infrastructure networks. The Radiflow solution provides operators visibility and control of their OT network; including both non-intrusive Industrial IDS to monitor real-time networks and security gateways to secure access to devices in critical zones.
Radiflow was founded in 2010 as part of the RAD group, a family of ICT vendors with over $1Bn in annual revenues. Since 2012 Radiflow has sold more than 10,000 systems used by major utilities world-wide and validated by leading research labs in the US.
Contact: Amit Slutzky  [email protected] Tel: +972-507547607
Read this news on PR Newswire Asia website: Deutsche Telekom Selects Radiflow as Strategic Partner for Securing Industrial Facilities
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reginaperes157 · 8 years ago
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server-wires-getty
Gov-auctions.org – #1 Government & Seized Auto Auctions. Cars 95% Off!
A worker connects IBM Intelligent Cluster modules, including servers and data storage devices, of a Data Center at the IBM stand the day before the CeBIT 2012 technology trade fair officially opens to the public on March 5, 2012 in Hanover, Germany. CeBIT 2012, the world’s largest information technology trade fair, will run…
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