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Friday, September 11, 2009

Linux driver chief calls out Microsoft over code submission; World's weirdest portable computers; 6 easy laptop repairs

The World's Weirdest Portable Computers!; Six easy laptop repairs: Your step-by-step guide
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Spotlight Story
Linux driver chief calls out Microsoft over code submission

After a kick in the pants from the leader of the Linux driver project, Microsoft has resumed work on its historic driver code submission to the Linux kernel and avoided having the code pulled from the open source operating system. Read full story

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The World's Weirdest Portable Computers!
21 peculiar - and patented - portables. Kids, don't try this (or buy this) at home.

Six easy laptop repairs: Your step-by-step guide
We live and work in a cold, cruel world where our laptops take a lot of abuse. Regardless of how gentle we try to be, it's inevitable that sooner or later our notebooks will get dropped, spilled on and worse.

802.11n set for final approval
Sometime on Friday, at the sprawling Hyatt Regency hotel in New Brunswick, N.J., an IEEE group called the Standards Board is expected to approve the 802.11n wireless LAN standard.

Five Things You Need to Know About Smartphone Security
Smartphones share many of the same risks of laptops and are easier to lose. They need to be managed like PCs or laptops.

Network in budget lockdown? No problem for this prison system
State government IT budgets are as tight as ever, but the Nevada Department of Corrections is in a good position to hunker down and ride out the recession thanks to a recent network upgrade.

IBM's new CIO may already be its most powerful
IBM's new CIO has been given far more responsibility that his predecessors due to a centralization of the coompany's IT operations.

Oops, there goes another data-loss prevention vendor
In the latest sign of data-loss prevention (DLP) market consolidation, Trustwave announced it has acquired Vericept for an undisclosed amount.

Oracle breaks silence on Sun plans in ad
Oracle Corp. ended it silence Thursday on its post-merger plans for Sun Microsystems Inc.'s Unix systems in an advertisement aimed at Sun customers to keep them from leaving the Sparc and Solaris platforms.

Apple fixes Flash snafu in Snow Leopard, patches 33 bugs in Leopard
Less than two weeks after Apple launched Snow Leopard, the company today issued the new operating system's first security update. In a separate upgrade, Apple patched 33 vulnerabilities in 2007's Leopard, and about half as many in the even older Tiger.

Cloud and Virtualization and Core Network Services
Imagine a future of massive data centers with tens of thousands of servers dynamically allocating processing loads to meet demand and conserve energy.

Podcast: Are you doing what it takes to succeed at implementing SharePoint?
I talked with Dux Raymond Sy, author of O'Reilly's SharePoint for Project Management and Innovative-E SharePoint consultant, on this week's podcast about what we can learn from successful and failed SharePoint projects.

Microsoft Subnet is giving away training from New Horizons and 15 copies of Windows Server 2008 How-To. Cisco Subnet is giving away 15 copies of Interconnecting Data Centers Using VPLS. Google Subnet is hosting many new bloggers (watch for giveaway information soon.) Entry forms can be found on the Cisco Subnet and Microsoft Subnet home pages.

Network World on Twitter? You bet we are


10 sports technologies to love, 5 to hate
Sports technologiesMany technologies help fans enjoy sports. Others just annoy.

Apple disasters
Apple disastersApple has enjoyed huge success with the iPod and iPhone, but Apple has had a number of commercial flops, too.

Examining Netcordia's NetMRI 3.0
Sick of the spreadsheet? Download this whitepaper today and examine Netcordia's NetMRI 3.0, a user-centric upgrade to its network change and configuration management (NCCM) solution. IT research firm Enterprise Management Associates reports that NetMRI 3.0 "propels NCCM practices to new levels."
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Identity Management E Guide
Identity management cannot be ignored – it is the key to preventing data breaches. This Network World Executive Guide provides in-depth information on today's most pressing security issues.
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September 11, 2009

TOP STORIES | MOST DUGG STORIES

  1. 'Wiretapping' charges may be the silliest ever recorded
  2. Cisco fixes TCP denial-of-service bug
  3. Developer denies software to beat Chinese censors is malicious
  4. How to make yourself layoff-proof
  5. Faster 3G coming to six cities, says AT&T
  6. 7 reasons Web sites are no longer safe
  7. The history of steganography
  8. 20 goofy USB gadgets & gizmos you'll love
  9. 12 words you can never say in the office
  10. Microsoft confirms critical unpatched Vista, Windows 7 RC bug

Thinking Beyond Tape: The Case Against Tape Backup
Many companies are already backing up their main and branch office systems to tape, but what they don't understand is just how vulnerable their data and their business remains. This video whitepaper explores the high cost, complexity and potentially dangerous shortcomings of a strategy based only on tape backup.
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