Monday, April 05, 2010

Here comes the iPad; 4G wireless essentials

4G Essentials | Meet the new (shorter) Windows Phone operating system

Network World Wireless

Forward this to a Friend >>>


Here comes the iPad
IPad fever has begun. The Apple tablets, in versions with just 802.11n connections or both 802.11n and 3G links, are hitting the store shelves as we speak. They even made an appearance on the network sitcom "Modern Family," further fueling iPad fervor. The iPad tablet, announced in January, has been optimized as a consumer device, but, like its cousin, the Apple iPhone, could wreak havoc on enterprise mobility management and security efforts as users bring them into the enterprise. Read More


ARTICLE: AirMagnet, now part of Fluke Networks

Professional Spectrum Analysis in USB Form Factor
AirMagnet Spectrum XT combines in-depth RF analysis w/ real-time WLAN information for quicker & more accurate troubleshooting of performance problems. The solution replaces legacy spectrum analyzer solutions that are expensive; can be used only on legacy PCs; & provide a myopic view on solving WLAN network performance problems due to interference. Click to continue

WHITE PAPER: Qwest

Connecting to Better Customer Service
Less than a third of surveyed IT executives believe their companies are "highly effective" at adapting to changing customer needs and priorities. Businesses that build a robust voice and data network infrastructure can achieve a high level of responsiveness, and transform customer information and feedback into actionable results. Click here.

4G Essentials
There is plenty of hype around 4G technologies but beyond the rhetoric are happening. 4G technologies basically represent the next stage of wireless data technologies and generally deliver average download rates of 3Mbps or greater. In contrast, today's 3G networks typically deliver average download speeds about one-tenth of that rate. Here's a roundup of the latest coverage of the 4G world. Read More

Meet the new (shorter) Windows Phone operating system
It's not quite the nerd equivalent of a chocolate Easter Egg, but it's welcome nonetheless. In a single tweet today, Microsoft announced it has officially shortened the name of its redesigned, and renamed, mobile operating system. At its February unveiling, the OS was called "Windows Phone 7 Series" an awkward mouthful that fueled a fair amount of Internet flaming, snarking, and complaining. Read More

Get Things done on the iPad
Whether you're already a user of the app or new to it, Cultured Code's Things can help you manage your to-do list with ease and style. The new iPad version runs $20 and is a slick-looking app, as you'd expect from an Apple Design Award-winner. Read More

Network World launches Open Source Subnet
I'm pleased to announce our news. Network World has launched a new Subnet community, the Open Source Subnet. Open Source Subnet will showcase news and blogger opinions for enterprise users of open source software. Read More

Access and share remote files with SugarSync for iPad
Online backup, storage, and sharing service SugarSync has released an official client for the iPad. The free, existing iPhone app has been reworked to turn it into a Universal app that will work on both the iPad and the iPhone. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Splunk

Make IT Data a Strategic Asset
This paper outlines the struggles organizations face managing silos of IT data and how, using Splunk, users are changing the way they do their jobs and elevating the role of IT in their organizations. Learn More!

Guinness World Records comes to iPad
If you like to be dazzled and amazed by some of the most outrageous human accomplishments and oddities of nature, the Guinness World Records app might be for you. Designed specifically for the iPad and with a fancy pseudo-3D look, the app looks positively futuristic. Read More

Super Monkey Ball 2: Sakura Edition rolls onto the iPad
Other Ocean Interactive and Sega of America have partnered to launch on Saturday Super Monkey Ball 2: Sakura Edition exclusively for the iPad. This latest edition of the addictive primate ball-rolling series is available now on the App Store for $13. Read More

The iPad's here, now what?
The iPad is nearly here. It goes on sale Saturday and arrives at the doors of the hundreds of thousands of customers who pre-ordered the tablet. Here are answers to opening day questions about Apple's new tablet. Read More

Top 10 Smartphone Easter Eggs
For the un-initiated, the term Easter eggs is geek parlance for secret gags and goofs buried deep inside software. Google's been laying Easter eggs for years. Now as cell phones have hit mass appeal, perhaps it's no surprise that Easter eggs have snuck into our handhelds. Read More

WolframAlpha cuts iPhone app price to just $2
The WolframAlpha iPhone app is now considerably more affordable. The company announced on Thursday that it has dropped the iPhone app from its launch price of $50 (and occasional sale price of $20) to a more App Store-friendly $2, effective immediately. WolframAlpha is the "computational knowledge engine" that launched last year to copious quantities of hype. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Dell

Automating Processes to Optimize a Windows 7 Deployment
Experts state that it is critical that planning for Windows 7 starts in the first half of 2010. With the cost per PC deployment estimated at $527-$700 per client, automating processes and leveraging outside expertise can reduce deployment costs and free your staff. Learn More Now

Home wireless vendors aim to simplify routers
If it's been a while since you've purchased or upgraded your home wireless network equipment, you're not alone. Sales of home wireless gear have been pretty flat, leading to several theories about the reason why. Some feel that the current technology of 802.11g and/or 802.11n products is good enough for most home setups, and others suggest that the complexity of setup prevent new users from buying and installing these products. Read More

University to issue freshmen iPads and MacBooks
Next fall's freshman at Seton Hill University will not only be handed a brand new Apple iPad but a MacBook laptop as well. Read More

Consumers warned about smartphone data loss
The iPhone and the Blackberry is as big a threat to personal data security as the home PC, a new government-backed campaign plans to tell people. Read More

Verizon Wireless chops Palm smartphone prices by 60%
[This is a copy of a news story appearing elsewhere on our Website] Read More

Play iBall! Awesome iPhone and iPad baseball apps
On Sunday night, the start of the 2010 Major League Baseball season kicks off in Boston at Fenway Park with the New York Yankees (I still can't say "World Champion New York Yankees") visiting. If you're a baseball fanatic, spectator, coach or player, there's a ton of cool iPhone and iPad apps that can enhance your love of the game even more. Here's a list of my favorites: Read More



Join us on LinkedIn

Discuss the networking issues of the day with your colleagues, via Network World's LinkedIn group. Join today!
- Jeff Caruso, Executive Online Editor

The Future of Big Iron
Do your IT plans include mainframes? Participate in this Aberdeen survey and see how your plans stack up to those of peers in terms of on what core applications are staying on mainframes and where the industry is headed in operating and software architecture. The goal is to get an accurate picture of the opportunity for expanded utilization, the role of 3rd-party support, and overall objectives with respect to distributed, outsourced, heterogeneous and centralized computing paradigms. Aberdeen will also establish a baseline for performance and a set of best practices for improving the efficiency and utilization of mainframe computing technologies. All survey respondents will receive a free copy of the resulting research.

Today from the Subnet communities

15 copies of CompTIA A+ study kits (book, video, flash cards) are available from Cisco Subnet.Deadline April 30. 15 books on Microsoft Systems Center Enterprise suite are available, too.

SLIDESHOWS

5 things we love/hate about Novell's SUSE Studio
Users might have a love/hate relationship with Novell's SUSE Studio. Here are five things we love and five things we disliked about the product.

CEO payday: What tech's top execs made in '09
The recession took its toll on tech CEOs' compensation in 2009, but not everyone lost.

MOST-READ STORIES

  1. Google cracks animal translation riddle ... for Android
  2. Google's April Fools hoaxes in 2010
  3. How Google wants to change telecom
  4. Verizon gets the iPhone!
  5. 10 funny April Fools' pranks
  6. Will the iPad live up to the hype?
  7. Silicon cockroaches, 'dirty' IPv4 addresses, other Internet oddities
  8. Endpoint security gets complicated
  9. The oddest places to find Linux
  10. Hotel chain starts using child porn detection

Do You Tweet?
Follow everything from NetworkWorld.com on Twitter @NetworkWorld.

You are currently subscribed to networkworld_wireless_alert as security.world@gmail.com.

Unsubscribe from this newsletter | Manage your subscriptions | Privacy Policy

If you are interested in advertising in this newsletter, please contact: bglynn@cxo.com

To contact Network World, please send an e-mail to customer_service@nww.com.

Copyright (C) 2010 Network World, 492 Old Connecticut Path, Framingham MA 01701

** Please do not reply to this message. If you want to contact someone directly, send an e-mail to customer_service@nww.com. **


No comments:

Post a Comment