Home > Intel Communities > Open Port IT Community > Intel Premier IT Professional Zone > Blog > 2008 > December
7

Earlier this month I was able to test out Absolute Software's Computrace service that utilizes Intel® Anti-Theft Technology.  You may have heard of Absolute Software's consumer service called LoJack for Laptops which enables you to track down a stolen laptop.  Computrace is the corporate version of that service that includes additional features for IT shops .  This month, Absolute announced a new version of Computrace that, as mentioned, uses the Anti-Theft technolgy found in new Intel® Centrino® 2 with vPro technology PCs from Lenovo.

 

According to Absolute, 88% of stolen laptops are never recovered.  For IT shops, this poses a couple of problems: loss of the asset and loss of the data.  With the Computrace service, you have a chance to address both of those.

 

When using Computrace, once a day your laptop will use the available internet connection to phone home to the Computrace servers on the internet.  Under normal circumstances, the laptop will receive an "all clear" signal from the servers and disconnect until the following day.  All this happens silently in the background without user intervention.

 

If the laptop is stolen or misplaced, the IT department can log into the Computrace website and mark that laptop as stolen.  The next time that laptop phones home, it is now informed that it is stolen and will execute a policy based sequence of actions.  One possible action is that it begins immediately wiping sensitive data from the hard drive.  It can also begin sending out packets that will allow Absolute Software to trace the location of the laptop and notify the authorities in the jurisdiction.

 

There are several layers of security available.  If a thief reformats the hard drive and installs a fresh copy of Windows, the Computrace software will automatically reinstall itself from the Computrace code embedded in the BIOS of the laptop.

 

You can also activate a "poison pill" that will prevent the laptop from booting at all.  This can be activated either when it phones home and receives a "stolen" signal, or you can set a threshold and if the laptop hasn't phoned home within a set number of days it will automatically lock up and prevent booting.  Once locked, the laptop is effectively useless.  You can't enter the BIOS and you can't boot to any device.  If the device is recovered, IT can produce an unlock code that will return the laptop to full functionality.

 

When paired with disk encryption, this is a powerful countermeasure to laptop theft.  If the data is protected by encryption and the notebook is unuseable because of the Intel Anti-theft technology, the laptop effectively has no value to anyone.  With the LoJack capability, a stolen laptop actually becomes a liability since it could be telling the local authorities where the stolen laptop is.

 

During my hands-on test, I repeated locked and unlocked the Lenovo T400 laptop using a variety of methods like reporting it stolen and having it phone home or entering too many incorrect passwords.  When it was locked, I received some simple text telling me that the laptop was locked and to contact my IT department.  Swapping hard drives wouldn't unlock it.  It was impossible to enter BIOS.  This brand new T400 laptop was completly unuseable.  And once I entered the IT unlock passcode, it sprang back to life as if nothing had happened.  I was hooked.  As this becomes widely adopted, I have to imagine that thieves will lose interest in stealing most corporate laptops.

 

You can start using this cool new technology today.  Lenovo is rolling out firmware upgrades for its T400, T500, X200, and X301 notebooks based on Intel Centrino 2 with vPro technology.  Absolute Software has the new Computrace service ready to go and it's a quick and painless installation.  As skeptical as I am, I was pleased with the results.

7 Comments Permalink
0

Has your organization’s IT team or an individual really made an impact in managing your client fleet or data center? If so, they may have an opportunity to be recognized for their efforts through the Intel Premier IT Knowledge Award from CIO and Intel. Honorees and their winning best practices will be prominently featured in an upcoming issue of CIO magazine. The deadline is January 28, 2009, so get the details now: http://www.premieritawards.com/IPIK_2009_application.html?AWARDID=1

0 Comments Permalink
3

The industrial revolution of the nineteenth century led to the pervasive replacement of manual labor with steel-based machinery powered by coal technology. The visible icons of this revolution are Thomas Newcomen and James Watt with their improvements to the steam engine design.

 

One aspect that has received little attention is the role of the underlying industrial processes. Railway robber barons did not start from ground zero; they were able to build their empires without having to own coal or iron mines, or having deep knowledge about the extraction technologies. Different grades of steel with known properties became available to build locomotives and steam engines. Manufacturing became more efficient due to a number of standards. Standardized screw sizes in nuts and bolts made these parts interchangeable not only lowered the cost of building the railroad infrastructure, but also made possible the large scale production of firearms that the tycoons needed to defend their lairs.

 

A similar transformation is happening with the information technology industry. This transformation is being driven by the synergistic interaction of three technologies, virtualization, service orientation and grid computing. As in the industrial revolution, this trio of technologies allows an efficient division of labor. The payoff of this efficiency comes in reduced cost of the delivery of IT services and in their reach across market segments and across geographies. IT services will no longer be the exclusive privilege of large organizations that can afford a sizable in house IT organization; these services will be affordable to small businesses and even individual consumers, and not only in advanced economies but also in developing countries across the world.

 

There are three essential components to that drives an IT service: the application that defines the service, the data providing the user context, and the computing engines that power the application. Sixty years ago all the pieces were tightly integrated: software was custom built for a specific target machine, and data was essentially an appendage of the code. The industrial evolution analog would be a locomotive manufacturer having to mine the iron ore, doing materials research, making the different kinds of steel and even machining the bolts. This would be an expensive proposition. Since bolts would be unique, the user would be forced to purchase replacement bolts from the locomotive manufacturer. Industries in their initial stages tend to be vertically integrated in this manner, and their products are expensive, limiting their market reach.

 

An individual consumer can get connected to the world through e-mail in just 10 minutes through a Web mail provider. Fifteen years ago a similar user would have needed expertise to build a TCP/IP stack on top of Windows 3.1, and even with that expertise it would have taken a couple days to set up an ISP account and research and integrate the necessary components. Thirty years ago the user would have had to write a SMTP client or even purchase at least a PDP-11 computer and integrate a Unix stack. It would not have been that easy; it might have been necessary to start by compiling the source code and configuring it specifically for the target machine. A corporate or university research environment would have been necessary to start with a running system to run the compilation.

 

It is useful to draw an analogy with a mature industry to see this pattern at work. Let's look at the processes used by an automobile insurance company with national coverage to fix a fender bender for a client.InsuranceEcosystem.png

Unless the accident happened in a large city, the company may not even have a local office. The customer calls a toll-free number to file a claim. The insurance company assigns the case to a different company, a settlement company with local presence. An adjuster for the settlement company assesses the damage and refers the case to body shop to have the the repairs done. Meanwhile, the customer is given a temporary replacement vehicle from a car rental company while the repairs are made. We can trace the economic chain ten or twelve more steps until the point where raw materials are extracted. The insurance company can make a business, not because it has expertise in the myriad steps that it takes to deliver their automobile collision service, but because it can rely on a pre-existing infrastructure of services, each one with predictable time and cost. The level of predictability is such that the insurance company can come up with the cost of the insurance policy and reasonably predict what the profit margin will be.

3 Comments Permalink
0

A few months ago, Josh Hilliker blogged about a must attend event in Portland, OR. He was referring to our Intel Premier IT Professional event. They are free and we host them in a variety of cities throughout the year. Join the program to get invites to the our 2009 events. https://ipip.intel.com/kmembership_info/join/

 

Today, I'm in San Diego and I must say if you're not here you are missing out. There are so many great topics - client and data center virtualization, social computing, and wargaming to name a few. Another hot topic centered on solid state drives. IT managers love it because its so easy to delpoy and it offers immediate savings on energy efficiency and extended battery life.

 

But the great news is if you're not here, you can still access all of the content by going to our Event Center http://ipip.intel.com/go/event-center/?event_short_name=IPIP-SanDiego-08 on our web site. So, check it out and let us know what you think. We're always looking for new hot topics.

 

Wendy

0 Comments Permalink