Mike Wheatley

Mike Wheatley is a senior staff writer at SiliconANGLE. He loves to write about Big Data and the Internet of Things, and explore how these technologies are evolving and helping businesses to become more agile. Before joining SiliconANGLE, Mike was an editor at Argophilia Travel News, an occassional contributer to The Epoch Times, and has also dabbled in SEO and social media marketing. He usually bases himself in Bangkok, Thailand, though he can often be found roaming through the jungles or chilling on a beach. Got a news story or tip? Email Mike@SiliconANGLE.com.

Latest from Mike Wheatley

Zillow-Trulia merger will create boundless new Big Data opportunities

The two titans of online real estate plan to join forces, meaning that overnight they’ll literally own the world of real estate data. Zillow, Inc.’s planned acquisition of Trulia, Inc., which was announced earlier this week as a $3.5 billion stock deal, means that for the first time the online real estate world will be ...

Red Hat teams up with 64-bit ARM server vendors

Red Hat has moved a little closer to being able to support ARM-based servers by kicking off a new partner program for 64-bit ARM data center vendors. Called the Red Hat ARM Partner Early Access Program, it’s open to both server builders and chip makers. So far, early members include AMD, AppliedMicro, American Megatrends, Broadcom, ...

China probes Microsoft: More Middle Kingdom misery for Redmond

Microsoft has been placed under investigation in China for possible breaches of anti-monopoly laws, according to various media reports. China’s State Administration for Industry and Commerce (SAIC) posted a statement to its website on Tuesday (forgive the machine translation here) which said it had raided several Microsoft offices in the country as part of an ...

Israel defence firm denies being hacked by China’s Comment Crew

A defence contractor that works on Israel’s Iron Dome missile shield system has come out to deny it was a victim of Chinese hack attack two years ago that allegedly stole classified information about the technology. Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) issued a statement to a number of media outlets, saying that the reports were incorrect. ...

Cisco warns that network virtualization does have its downsides

Cisco has just posted a new whitepaper online, in which it suggests that virtualization of networks can be somewhat counterproductive, resulting in reduced productivity. The paper notes that while virtualization is hardly a new concept, people have recently started applying it to network functions like routers, switches and other appliances. But while the “early days ...

The Internet of deadly things: IoT security almost non-existent

The Internet of Things has the potential to transform our lives, but the security vulnerabilities it introduces have the potential to derail our lives, too. According to a freshly baked Hewlett-Packard Co. study, a worryingly high 70 percent of Internet of Things devices, including sensors and connected infrastructure, possess vulnerabilities that hackers could easily exploit. HP’s ...

Lightweight Linux distro CoreOS gets production-ready

Developers of the stripped-down CoreOS Linux distro have delivered its first ever production-ready release with version 367.1.0 of the platform. CoreOS is a radical departure from other popular Linux distributions. Designed to be extremely lightweight, each version ships as a single unit, rather than as a collection of add-on packages. As a result, CoreOS takes ...

VMware patent reveals worries about Docker incursion

The rapid rise of Docker and its containerization technology has proponents of virtualization quaking in their boots, and there may be good reason. While no one is denying that virtualization is powerful, it does have its downsides. The biggest one is that every app requires its own operating system, and that adds complexity and overhead. ...

GlobalFoundries reportedly pulls out of deal to buy IBM’s chip business

IBM’s hopes of pulling off another fire-sale of one of its businesses look to have been dashed, with reports suggesting that GlobalFoundries, Inc. has pulled out of a deal to buy IBM’s loss-making semiconductor division. Bloomberg says that GlobalFoundries refused to budge on its valuation of the business, which was reported listed for sale last February ...

Rackspace powers up bare-metal cloud servers

Rackspace, Inc. has just revealed pricing for its new OnMetal servers, which are now generally available following a limited trial phase. The dedicated, single-tenant bare-metal machines are designed for applications that can run without hypervisors. They be spun up in less than a minute using the Rackspace cloud OpenStack API, the company said. Rackspace used ...