2010年1月22日星期五

HP, Vatican bring Apostolic Library online

HP, Vatican bring Apostolic Library online


Hewlett-Packard Co. (HP) has been tapped by Pope John Paul II to provide public online access to the Vatican's Apostolic Library, which will include posting images of manuscripts that have only been accessible to professional scholars and professors, Hp laptop battery HP said in a joint statement with the Vatican Tuesday.


As part of its philanthropy program, HP of Palo Alto, California, has been providing its infrastructure technology to assist the Vatican with adding Apostolic Library access to its existing Web site, as well as building faster access to the Vatican Library site and facilitating navigation of the bibliographic database, according to the statement.


"The Library is open to the general public over the Web site today as part of the latest update and upgrade to what we've been doing with the Vatican. You can now see things such as a manuscript from Michelangelo, and there will be more information and images available online as time goes on," said Didier Philippe, director of strategy and corporate development for HP EMEA (Europe, the Middle East and Africa) and chairman of the board for HP EMEA philanthropy, education and intellectual property.


The Apostolic Vatican Library, founded by Pope Nicholas V (1447-1455), houses 1.6 million antique and modern printed volumes specializing in the fields of paleography, history, art history, classical literature and philology. It also contains 8,300 incunabula (books printed before 1501, of which 65 are printed on vellum), 150,000 manuscript and records volumes, 300,000 coins and medals, and more than 100,000 prints.


"HP has been providing the Vatican with hardware, equipment support, Web consultancy and even Web design help since the project began in February 2001. HP Presario NX9010 Battery, Hardware includes servers, mainly HP-UX," Philippe said.


As part of the partnership, HP has also supplied high-resolution imaging and printing devices, including the DesignJet 5000,HP Presario NX9010 Battery, HP Presario NX9000 Battery
HP F2299A Battery, HP F3172A Battery, and digital cameras to the library for the purposes of reproducing manuscripts and publications, Philippe said.


Last November, the Vatican demonstrated what it called the Catholic Church's commitment to modern forms of social communication when it published an official document over the Internet for the first time. Specifically, copies of the Pope's apostolic exhortation "Ecclesia in Oceania" (The Church in Oceania) -- normally delivered by the Pope in person -- were sent by e-mail to dioceses around the region, which also includes Australia, New Zealand and a host of island states dotted over the Pacific Ocean.


The Vatican has had its catalogue of modern printed volumes available online since 1985 and has worked with such companies as IBM Corp., and for the last 10 years, HP, to update and refine its Web site.


"Because of the value of some of the manuscripts, only professional scholars and professors could physically see them after asking in writing for permission from the Vatican to do so. Though there will be the same restrictions to see these works in person, people can now see the Library's collection online. We are doing similar work with museums throughout Europe and Africa, and there will also be enhancements and developments to the Vatican's Web site as is needed," Philippe said.


The Apostolic Library information will be available on the Vatican Library's existing Web site starting tonight, European time.

HP sends letter to muzzle Sun's Schwartz


Sun Microsystems Inc.'s high-profile President and Chief Operating Officer Jonathan Schwartz has struck a raw nerve with his inflammatory Weblog entries which has led to Hewlett-Packard Co. HP Presario NX9000 Battery (HP) sending a letter of demand to Sun to put an end to the commentary.


HP has confirmed a letter was sent earlier this week demanding Schwartz stop using his blog to comment on HP's strategic direction.


The HP spokesman declined to provide any details about the content of the letter except to say it specifically refers to Schwartz's Weblog commentary about HP.


Schwartz has not been shy with his statements about HP's strategies, particularly regarding its Unix operating system, HP-UX.


In a blog entry, dated August 18, Schwartz referred to HP-UX as a "dying" operating system.


"To me, HP's problems spawn from the death of... their operating system, HP/UX," Schwartz wrote. "Like IBM, they've elected to ask their customers and ISVs to move to Red Hat Linux or Microsoft Windows on x86 systems. And if you're an ISV, how does that differentiate HP? -- they're a box vendor. If you're a customer, where does that leave you with your HP/UX investments? Facing untimely change -- with a vendor no longer in charge of their OS."


Naturally, HP vehemently denies such claims and views them as verging on defamation to the extent that it feels a formal letter is in order. Schwartz is also of the opinion that "our commitment to Solaris highlights the demise of HP/UX".


"HP/UX won't even run on HP's own industry standard servers," he wrote. "As an ISV told me last week, HP F2299A Battery, HP F3172A Battery,'I come to Sun, you tell me to write to Java, then write to Solaris. Clear as a bell'. If you're an HP customer or ISV, have some fun, ask your HP rep the same question: what should I write to?"


This comes at a time when HP has announced that it has gained more than 200 Sun server customers over the past 18 months.


"In financial services alone, HP has won more than 40 significant deals from Sun Microsystems,"HP Presario NX9010 Battery, HP Presario NX9000 Battery
HP F2299A Battery, HP F3172A Battery, a HP media release stated. "The 200 HP customer wins include Bank of Bolivariano of Ecuador, Belkin, Dynamic Net, Forbes.com and The University of Hong Kong."


Belkin's CEO Chet Pipkin said in the release: "When we replaced Sun Solaris with HP to run our business-critical systems, we were able to significantly reduce our total cost of ownership and deliver an average performance increase of 250 percent."


Schwartz has also taken aim at HP's decision to move to Intel as its standard architecture.


"While HP tells its customers to 'change' (we're still not sure 'to' what, I'm more comfortable with the 'from' part)," he wrote. "Because no matter what the ads say, what customers don't want is unnecessary... change."

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