• ATH-ANC9 crop
    Goondu review: Audio Technica ATH-ANC9 QuietPoint
  • Dell XPS 13-crop
    SME Toolbox: Basic IT gear for a new business
  • Samsung Galaxy S III crop
    Hands on: Samsung Galaxy S III stars as new flagship phone
  • GALAXY S III top
    Samsung bets on bigger screen, smarter features in new Galaxy S III
  • 600-Lenovo-A720-top
    Hands-on: Lenovo IdeaCentre A720 is like the Surface for your home
Latest Stories
Nokia Lumia 900 comes to Singapore on May 26, costs S$849
Sony Walkman Z1050 hands-on: finally, a solid iPod touch alternative
Massive crowds turn up for Diablo III launch
Kronicles offers on-site and off-site backup for SMEs – at a monthly cost
 
 
 

GeekBuy : HiMedia HD600B-TV – Digital Media Player with HD (DTMB) TV tuner

By:
7 Aug
2010
10 Comments
 

Over here in Hong Kong, all you need is a high definition (HD) set top box (that’s of the DTMB standard) and you can receive free HD broadcasts – so you can watch your TVB serials in full HD glory. When my freebie HDTV box literally went out with a pop, I went about looking for a digital media player that would be able to stream music, photos and videos from my Synology DS210j network attached storage (NAS) AND integrate the HDTV receiver into a single box.

And my search ended with the HiMedia (海美迪) HD600B-TV – which is a squarish looking do-it-all box that’s the localised-for-Hong Kong version of the HD500D-TH.

HiMedia HD600B-TV

HiMedia HD600B-TV

 
Tagged in: Audio-visual, Featured, Geek Buys, Hong Kong, HDTV, Hong Kong, UPnP,  
 

Commentary: DBS failure should not be attributed to “human error”

By:
7 Aug
2010
No Comments
 

Two bungling engineers and a faulty cable brought down Singapore’s biggest bank DBS — all of the ATMs, internet banking — for about 7 hours last month on 5th July.

Or so that was the narrative painted by the Straits Times two days ago on Thursday that it was all due to human error. (There’s a far lengthier version in the printed Straits Times version than the gimped version online). The big headline inside the paper on page four was this: “It was definitely a human error”.

Really? Is that the best narrative that explained why the system crashed that day? Everything was due to “human error”, and two “bungling” IBM engineers were to blame?

If Singapore’s biggest bank could so easily be brought down by “human errors”, then I find it genuinely shocking. Surely IBM’s 10-year S$1.2 billion outsourcing contract — about S$120 million per year to maintain the IT infrastructure — details a stringent process for disaster recovery?

Doesn’t DBS and IBM have SLAs that spell out how IT failures should be recovered from, with a detailed escalation process? And seriously, a single misplugged cable can bring down your entire storage system? I don’t buy this at all. You’re not talking about a start-up servicing a bank; you’re talking about a maintenance contract deal worth millions.

Thus, the main point is not about “human error” — a totally wrongheaded slant that ST took, in my opinion — but the fact that DBS’ business process screwed up along the way. Yes, human error may have started this, but the recovery process screwed up and failed to kick in.

The blow-by-blow account of how engineers triggered this failure is not interesting. What’s interesting would have been how and why DBS’s disaster recovery process failed to kick in.

 
Tagged in: Enterprise, Singapore, Storage, DBS, IBM,  
 

1.5m copies of Starcraft II sold in first 48 hours

By:
5 Aug
2010
8 Comments
 

Starcraft II, the much-sought-after sequel to the 90s real-time strategy hit, sold more than 1.5 million copies in the first 48 hours, placing it as one of the biggest PC games this year, though it is still some way off the all-time big hitters in video games sales.

 
Tagged in: Featured, Gaming, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, GTA IV, sales, Starcraft II,