Selasa, 25 Januari 2011

Inspired by Mustard--and Merlot

In late December, I went on a cookbook binge. I was not feeling inspired in the kitchen, and my cooking needs had changed from 'meals that can be done in thirty minutes' and might involve 28 minutes of standing at a hot stove to 'meals that can be thrown together in 5 minutes and then put in the oven for an hour while you answer your email.'

One of my great finds was Melissa Clark's In the Kitchen with a Good Appetite. ($27.50) I've made up many of the dishes from this book (and you'll be seeing more recipes from it on the blog), but one that immediately stood out as a 'cook me NOW!' selection was this one for chicken parts roasted in the oven on a bed of country bread with garlic, thyme, and mustard. These are some of my all-time favorite flavors, and the prospect of having bread made crispy with mustard and chicken drippings was too good to pass up.

As soon as I read the recipe, I knew that Merlot would be perfect with the dish. So I bought the ingredients, flung them into a heavy roasting pan, turned on the oven, and searched through the wine closet for a Merlot.

The bottle that I found was a 2007 Chateau Souverain Merlot Alexander Valley (suggested retail $17; available for $12-$19). This excellent QPR wine will make you remember what is great and good about Merlot. It's one of the best examples of the grape that I've had recently, with luscious blueberry, huckleberry, and plum aromas and flavors. There are hints of ground coffee in the midpalate and the aftertaste has a distinctive note of cedar.

Those rich, fruit elements, the dark coffee notes, and the cedary spice all went beautifully with the robust chicken and its mellow mustard and garlic flavors. It was the perfect, comforting pairing for a cold winter's night.

Full Disclosure: I purchased the cookbook, but received a sample of the wine for review.

Not All Rhônes are Red

I love red Rhône blends. They're zesty, spicy, and offer great value. Even wines from well-known appellations like Châteauneuf-du-Pape are relatively inexpensive when judged by the standards of Bordeaux and Burgundy.

Most wine drinkers are not as well-acquainted with the delicious white blends that are made with Rhône varietals such as Grenache Blanc, Viognier, and Marsanne. These whites are classy, elegant, and provide a welcome break from the Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc you might be drinking.

Rhône whites can be a bit pricey, in part because three quarters of the grapes grown in the region are red. But Rhône varietals are also grown in the US and in other parts of the world and can provide a good starting point if you want to learn more about these wines.

One great example of a Rhône white blend, for instance, is the 2008 Eberle Cotes-du-Robles Blanc from Paso Robles (suggested retail $24; available in the market for $20-$29). This delicious blend of Roussanne, Grenache Blanc, and Viognier has aromas and flavors that are reminiscent of a summer day, with lots of pear, Golden Delicious apples, and even a touch of apricot. Rhône whites typically have herbal notes as well, and in this case I was reminded of the grassy and floral flavor profile of chamomile tea. Even though the price of the wine is slightly more than $20, it represents excellent QPR.

Like most wines made with Rhône grapes, the white blends are excellent food wines, too. I especially like Rhône white blends when I'm making a dish that uses lots of herbs and spices, where the aromatics in the wine enhance the food. We had this with amazing Salsa Verde Chicken with Herbed Cornmeal Dumplings from Pam Anderson's Perfect One-Dish Dinners. This is an easy-to-prepare yet impressively tasty dish that has tomatillo and herb salsa--not the easiest thing to pair with a wine. Yet it was delicious with the white blend from Eberle.

If you are interested in learning more about check out the resources on the Hospice du Rhône website. And enjoy your adventures into the world of white wine made with Rhône grapes.

Full Disclosure: I received a sample of this wine for review.

WPA Cracked? Unlikely, Despite Headlines

A German security researcher snagged some great headlines today, but I suspect the impact is modest: Reuters ran a story today about Thomas Roth's claim that he can hack into WPA-protected networks by crunching passwords in Amazon's Elastic Computing Cloud (EC2) on-demand computing service. I have a query into Roth, but haven't heard back yet. The report says he'll release software after a Black Hat conference presentation later this month. I expect he's developed an approach that uses Amazon's preconfigured instances to produce vastly faster dictionary attacks than are commonly available. (Amazon allows users to tap into the graphics process or GPU, which can offer order of magnitude improvements in certain kinds of mathematical operations, including some forms of password cracking.)



The concept isn't new. In December 2009, 'Moxie Marlinspike' launched WPA Cracker, a fee-based dictionary and brute-force cracking service; see my write up at the time. Elcomsoft offers commercial desktop distributed password cracking for preshared WPA keys—along with a host of other types of passwords—with GPU support, too. I interviewed Elcomsoft's chief a few months ago for the Economist, and he provided me piles of information about how difficult it is even with his software to crack well-designed password systems.



WPA/WPA2's weakness is in passphrase choice, something that's been known for years. Researcher Robert Moskowitz gave me permission way back in 2003 to publish a paper on this issue. It remains the most popular article in every year since. Because of how the passphrase conversion routine takes the text you enter for a WPA/WPA2 Preshared Key (PSK) "password" and turns it into a long hexadecimal key, it's susceptible to cracking—but only when the starting passphrase is very short or comprised of only words found in dictionaries (along with common substitutions, like zero for the letter o). The passphrase is combined with the network name (SSID), which has allowed various groups to create large, precomputed cracks of common words (so-called rainbow tables) using default SSID names. (Moskowitz had wanted every access point to ship with a uniquely created name to increase entropy. Apple does this.)



Based on Reuters description, we may have lost a character with Roth's method. That is, a formerly secure eight-character randomly created passphrase, a mix of letters, numbers, and punctuation, may now need to be nine characters for the next several years to assure unbreakability. I'm looking forward to more news.

Copyright ©2011 Glenn Fleishman. All rights reserved. Please notify us if you find this content anywhere but at wifinetnews.com or wimaxnetnews.com. Reproduction of full articles from RSS feeds is prohibited without permission.

Microsoft investigating third-party troubles in WP7; Apple sues Nokia yet again

Quick news from across the Web


@FierceWireless: RT @IntoMobile: Fan-made Android video ad shows too much time on hands. Article | Follow @FierceWireless


> Google is testing an offering that would allow users to port their existing numbers onto the company's Google Voice service. Article


> Microsoft said it is investigating a "third-party solution" in its Windows Phone 7 devices that could "potentially cause larger than expected data downloads." Article


> Samsung acquired display company Liquavista. Release


> HTC is reportedly planning a tablet to launch in March. Article


> NEC is looking to boost its network equipment sales. Article


> AT&T stores nationwide are now selling mophie's juice packs for the iPhone 4. Release


> AT&T is reportedly preparing new text messaging rate plans. Article


> Ceragon Networks announced it acquired Nera Networks AS in a deal worth around $45.5 million. Release


> Apple sued Nokia over patents for touchscreen scrolling. Article


Mobile Content News


> T-Mobile USA is pushing an Android app aimed at promoting safe driving. Article


> Nuance released a software development kit that will allow developers to offer applications that include speech-recognition technology. Article


> Qualcomm invested in mobile search firm ChaCha. Article


> Facebook introduced an application for feature phones. Article


> Google banned the Kongregate gaming app from its Android Market. Article


> Rhapsody will offer its music service through Sprint Nextel's Sprint Zone. Release


Broadband Wireless News


> A Canadian satellite company announced plans to launch a network of 78 inexpensive, small, low-flying satellites. Article


> Should Motorola have received a broadband stimulus award? Commentary


> Research from Bytemobile indicates mobile video traffic made up more than 40 percent of worldwide wireless network data traffic volume in 2010. Article


European Wireless News


> Ericsson is expected to report next week that its fourth-quarter core profit climbed to $1.23 billion. Article


> A new study claims that femtocell applications will open the technology to a much wider usage model. Article


> The ongoing surge in mobile data traffic will force operators to transform the way they conduct business, claims the market research firm Ovum. Article


> Europe's leading mobile operators reportedly have set up an expert panel to scrutinize OS developments and unfair practices. Article


And finally... Duffy is headed to Mobile World Congress. Article

Top wireless stories of the week

Check out this week's most-viewed stories across Fierce's wireless publications:


FierceBroadbandWireless
1. T-Mobile's Ray discusses HSPA+ 42, spectrum refarming and backhaul deployment
2. Report: Interest in Clearwire's spectrum dwindling
3. Should Motorola have received its broadband stimulus award?


FierceDeveloper
1. What the Verizon iPhone means for developers
2. RIM's Lessard on the PlayBook, the enterprise market and QNX
3. Android Gingerbread NDK r5 touts support for fully native apps


FierceMobileContent
1. Microsoft extends OneNote to iPhone
2. Apple's iTunes revenues top $1.1 billion in Q1
3. Google bans Kongregate gaming app from Android Market


FierceWireless
1. The data tsunami, and why Sprint increased its data charges
2. To throttle data or not to throttle: Sprint straddles the fence
3. Verizon to offer $200 iPhone credit to recent smartphone buyers


FierceWireless:Europe
1. Analysts: Nokia struggles, will produce poor Q4 results
2. NSN facing more uncertainty, as Siemens CFO kills IPO for 2011
3. LTE: Fastest-developing system in history of telecoms?

LightSquared agrees to solve GPS interference issues

In a letter to the FCC, LightSquared CEO Sanjiv Ahuja promised to work with the commission to ensure that the company's proposed integrated satellite-terrestrial broadband network will not interfere with GPS satellites and other maritime and aeronautical emergency communications. Ahuja promised to not offer commercial service until the FCC is satisfied with LightSquared's resolution of the interference claims.


Ahuja's letter comes just days after the National Telecommunications and Information Administration told the FCC that federal agencies are worried about LightSquared's proposed LTE network interfering with GPS satellites and other emergency communications. In the letter, NTIA Administrator Lawrence Strickling said that a fully terrestrial network would require more base stations than a terrestrial/satellite combination network, thereby increasing the likelihood of interference.


Overcoming this obstacle is critical to LightSquared, which is backed by Philip Falcone's Harbinger Capital Partners hedge fund. The company needs the FCC to issue a waiver allowing it to offer terrestrial-only services to customers. LightSquared initially agreed to build a wireless network with both satellite and terrestrial technology. The company has since said it needs the waiver so it can meet its deadlines by offering some devices without satellite technology.


LightSquared is conducting LTE trials in Baltimore, Denver, Las Vegas and Phoenix, with commercial launches planned by the third quarter of this year. The company, which has access to 59 MHz of spectrum, has said its network will consist of around 40,000 cellular base stations covering 92 percent of the U.S. population by 2015.


LightSquared inked a $7 billion contract with Nokia Siemens Networks in July to design and build the network, and analysts have speculated that NSN might provide LightSquared with vendor financing to defray the cost of building the network. However, analysts noted, LightSquared likely will need more money than that to meet its buildout timetable. In October, LightSquared inked new device deals with Nokia (NYSE:NOK), Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) and other companies, but did not announce any specific devices. The company has yet to publicly name wholesale partners.


For more:
- see this letter from LightSquared to the FCC (PDF)
- see this Reuters article
- see this Bloomberg article

Related Articles:
NTIA concerned LightSquared service could cause interference
Falcone's big bet continues to rattle investors
LightSquared inks LTE device deals with Nokia, Qualcomm
LightSquared pledges to shake up industry with LTE network

Harbinger's Falcone defends LightSquared's financing
LightSquared: Can it live up to its wholesale aspirations?
LightSquared 4G buildout plans leak
Harbinger forges $7B LTE pact with Nokia Siemens

Schmidt leaves with $100M; Motorola Xoom could go for $800

Quick news from across the Web


@FierceWireless: RT @BGR: Deutsche Telekom says Windows Phone 7 sales are ‘excellent' Article | Follow @FierceWireless


> Google's Eric Schmidt is leaving the CEO post with $100 million. Article


> RadioShack's CEO is planning to retire. Article (sub. req.)


> New documents indicate an $800 price for Motorola's forthcoming Xoom tablet. Article


> Sprint Nextel and T-Mobile USA filed a new proposal with the FCC for inter-carrier compensation. Filing (PDF)


> Research In Motion detailed its new program that will help users separate their work data from their personal data in their BlackBerry phones. Article


> Sprint Nextel said it will reduce on-network coverage in Montana, North Dakota and Wyoming. Article


Mobile Content News


> Sony said it plans to extend its new Music Unlimited digital service to iPhone and Android devices. Article


> On-demand social music service Rdio introduced MusicMapper. Article


> Social gaming behemoth Zynga has acquired independent developer Area/Code. Article


Broadband Wireless News


> Craig Settles checks in on the state of mobile broadband. Commentary


> AT&T is reportedly offering free femtocells to eligible customers. Article


> Alvarion could get a boost in India. Article


> The UMTS Forum predicts 1 billion mobile devices will connect to the Internet by 2016. Article


European Wireless News


> O2 UK inked a deal with the giant retailer Marks & Spencer. Article


> Vivendi wants a quick resolution to the deal to acquire the 44 percent holding in SFR that is currently owned by Vodafone. Article


> Unilever, Tesco and Sainsbury have warned that their brands are being damaged by the poor quality of the information being served to consumers. Article


> O2 UK has doubled its infrastructure capital expenditures as it migrates subscribers across to its refarmed 900 MHz spectrum. Article


> Vodafone is said to be looking to gain 100 percent control of its Indian joint venture Vodafone-Essar. Article


> French wireless users say "non" to mobile payments. Commentary


And finally... The Verizon and AT&T iPhones, together at last in Apple's new TV ad. Video