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Tuesday, March 22, 2011

US government sides against Microsoft in Supreme Court patent case

Will AT&T's T-Mobile buy lead to a duopoly? | Force10 data center switch delivers impressive performance

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US government sides against Microsoft in Supreme Court patent case
The U.S. government itself has come out against Microsoft in a Supreme Court case that may decide the way patents are protected. The U.S. solicitor general, which represents the federal government in the highest court, on Friday filed an amicus brief in support of i4i. Read More


WHITE PAPER: F5 Networks

Load Balancers Are Dead!
Get Gartner's take on: * Which vendors are leading the ADC market * Key recommendations on what you should do today * How to find a feature-rich ADC View the Gartner report, compliments of F5 Networks! Read now!

RESOURCE COMPLIMENTS OF: Netezza

Get Proof. Not Promises.
Take the Netezza TestDrive. Your site. Your data. Our technology. Experience the high-performance and operational simplicity of the IBM Netezza data warehouse appliance firsthand. Our open Proof of Concept allows you to test a Netezza appliance with your most demanding, real-world analytics challenges. Learn More.

Will AT&T's T-Mobile buy lead to a duopoly?
AT&T's acquisition of T-Mobile this week continued a decade-long trend of consolidation in the wireless industry and raised questions about whether the industry will inevitably turn into a duopoly. Read More

Force10 data center switch delivers impressive performance
High port density, high throughput, and very low latency are bedrock requirements in the data center, and Force10's new S4810 top-of-rack switch delivers on all counts. Read More

The 20 strangest celebrity tech endorsements
Celebrities and technology don't always go hand in hand. Just look to these 20 odd endorsements for the proof. Read More

Wi-Fi group plans to simplify hotspot access
The Wi-Fi Alliance plans to make getting onto a public hotspot as easy as connecting to a cellular network, a change that mobile operators are likely to welcome as they look to shift more data traffic onto Wi-Fi. Read More


WHITE PAPER: PC Mall

Server Virtualization: Branching Out of the Data Center
A typical lean branch office has a significantly different server infrastructure than a data center, but despite the differences, multisite organizations have much to gain by deploying server virtualization in their branch offices. Read More

Adobe patches Flash zero-day bug in Reader
Adobe Monday made good on its promise to patch a zero-day bug in Adobe Reader, and promised to ship a fix for Flash later today. Read More

Cisco has long history with VPNs
In 1999, Network World tested a dozen VPNs, with a product from Altiga Networks coming in tied for second place. Our main complaint was the lack of split-tunneling capability, a feature that was quickly added. Read More

The network's role in improving application security, reliability and efficiency
Access to data center resources needs to be fast, secure and reliable, a significant challenge for the data center network infrastructure. Read More

Strong-arm tactics alleged in Oracle, reseller dispute
Oracle explicitly said that it planned to sell products directly to its largest accounts after it acquired Sun Microsystems last year. But reseller Innovative Technology Distributors is claiming Oracle set about doing so in a way that "destroyed" ITD's business through unfair dealings, according to a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Sprint

Gearing Up for IPv6
Do you have your checklist to get ready for IPv6? Iyad Tarazi, Vice President of Network Development & Engineering for Sprint, discusses what it's going to take for you to make the transition. Read Now

Man who stole Goldman Sachs code gets 8-year sentence
A former Goldman Sachs computer programmer has received a stiff prison sentence for stealing source code used in the company's high-frequency trading system. Read More

Study: IT shops running way too many applications
Nearly two-thirds of enterprises are supporting more or "far more" applications than they actually need to run their operations, according to a survey released Monday by Hewlett-Packard and Capgemini. Read More

Apple sues Amazon for trademark infringement over "App Store"
There are plenty of places where users can download mobile apps today, but there's only one App Store. Well, that's how Apple sees it at least. Read More

Microsoft sues Barnes & Noble over Android
Microsoft files a patent lawsuit against Barnes & Noble, alleging its Android-based e-reader infringes Microsoft patents. Read More



GOODIES FROM THE SUBNETS
Up for grabs from Microsoft Subnet: a Windows 7 Enterprise Technician class for three people. From Cisco Subnet: 15 copies of VMware ESXi books. Enter here.

SLIDESHOWS

Perks drive up pay for tech CEOs
Many tech vendors have shied away from extravagant perks, but there are still plenty worth highlighting. Like a $1.5 million tab for home security. Or how about the $36,619 one company paid to reimburse its CEO for the taxes he had to pay on the $106,589 he gained by using company aircraft for personal flights? Read on to find out which tech CEOs enjoyed the priciest perks in 2010 and which ones went to work perk-free.

First look at Microsoft Internet Explorer 9
Microsoft has a real competitor once again with IE9, released at midnight Monday night on Windows 7 and Vista after several months of beta testing. The focus is on speed, privacy and simplicity, with a stripped-down interface, tracking protection, pinned sites, jump lists and enhanced support for HTML5.

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  6. Cell phones are 'Stalin's dream'
  7. AT&T's takeover of T-Mobile creates largest U.S. carrier
  8. Four steps to take if you depend on RSA SecurID tokens
  9. RSA's SecurID breach: What should you do?
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