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Thursday, November 18, 2010

Microsoft says Lync is ready to replace PBXs; 10 free Microsoft products for IT and home users

10 free Microsoft products for IT and home users | Microsoft's Ballmer kills call for break-up

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Microsoft on Lync launch: The PBX era is over
Microsoft says its renamed unified communications and collaboration (UC&C) platform  – Lync – is ready to replace corporate PBXs, generating savings by centralizing call control and other phone features to reduce the number of devices that need to be maintained. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Riverbed

An In-Depth Look at ROI
In this whitepaper, Riverbed discusses its compelling and powerful return on investment in hard dollars, and a way to leap past the obstacles preventing you from reaching your IT objectives. Read now!

WHITE PAPER: VMware

EMC Runs Its Business-Critical Oracle E-Business Suite
Learn how EMC built their infrastructure using VMware software running on Intel-powered hardware and how they plan to move towards 100 percent virtualization within the organization. Read Now.

10 free Microsoft products for IT and home users
Microsoft is no stranger to offering freebies in a bid to increase customer loyalty. Read More

Microsoft's Ballmer kills call for break-up
Microsoft's CEO Steve Ballmer dismissed a call that he should do what the federal government failed to do more than 10 years ago: break up the company. Read More

Microsoft's Lync fills gaps in VoIP
Despite the name change and hype around its dramatic release candidate and RTM version, the net significance of Microsoft's Lync 2010 release is that it brings the company's unified communications and collaboration (UC&C) platform up to par in some areas with competitors – though it doesn't slingshot past them, experts say. Read More


WEBCAST: CA

Business Service Assurance
In an attempt to keep its proverbial head above water, IT has traditionally worked in a break-fix mode within operational silos. View Now

Microsoft launches Lync: 70 new devices supported now, Kinnect integration in 2011
Microsoft officially launched its next generation audio/video conferencing "PBX replacement" dubbed Lync. The company lined up an impressive array of over 70 hardware devices certified to support Lync. It also promised that support for Lync on the iPhone, Windows Phone 7 and the Xbox with Kinnect would be coming later this year. Read More

Microsoft Lync: Take to the cloud or keep it in-house?
Cloud-based Lync won't be immediately available, but could eventually be a viable alternative to in-house software. Read More

Verizon Business wants to be your link to Lync
Among the many Microsoft partners queuing up product or service announcements tied to today's launch party for Lync is Verizon Business, which thinks the ideal delivery method for Microsoft's unified communications and collaboration (UC&C) suite is on a Verizon network. Read More


WEBCAST: Emerson Network Power

Hands-on DC management shouldn't give you paper cuts
This webcast demonstrates how field-proven Avocent MergePoint® Infrastructure Explorer software is already providing substantial ROI for data centers up to 500 racks. Its dynamic, graphic interface gives a deep view of your data center to help you more efficiently plan changes, lower operating costs, and deliver on-target capacity planning. Watch Now.

Microsoft's Mehdi: Google is a hard habit to break
Unseating an entrenched market leader is tough, even when one pours hundreds of millions of dollars into product development and marketing. That's what Microsoft has found with its aggressively marketed and technologically improved Bing search engine. Read More

Windows powering one in ten HPC clusters, but not top supercomputers
Windows is powering more than one out of every 10 newly installed HPC clusters, but the success of Microsoft is mainly being seen with low-end customers while IBM and HP dominate the largest supercomputers. Read More

Microsoft turns Windows Azure into cloud-based supercomputer
Windows HPC Server customers will soon be able to run high-performance computing workloads on Windows Azure, Microsoft says. Read More

Microsoft's IE exec downplays JavaScript scores
Microsoft's top executive for Internet Explorer today dismissed browser speed trials as 'at best, not very useful, and at worst, misleading.' Read More

Facebook messaging rolls in Microsoft Office
Facebook's major messaging announcement may not have been the direct frontal assault on Gmail that many had anticipated, but that doesn't mean that Google doesn't have reason to be concerned. The new e-mail capabilities, combined with the integration of Microsoft Office Web Apps make Facebook a more complete business tool and a more direct competitor for Google Apps. Read More



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Goodies from the Subnets
We've got SharePoint 2010 training for up to three people from Webucator up for grabs. There's an iPad available, too. Enter to win one!

SLIDESHOWS

Microsoft Windows after 25 years: A visual history
More than nine out of 10 computers run some version of Windows. But no one could have predicted that would be the case when Windows 1.0 launched 25 years ago as a graphical front end for MS-DOS. Here's a look at Windows through the years and some thoughts on what the future might hold.

Cool Yule favorites: 15 techie gifts we like
Ho Ho Ho, it's time again to get our holiday wish lists together. Here are our 15 favorite products from the 140+ products submitted and tested in this year's Cool Yule Tools holiday gift guide.

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