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Monday, August 02, 2010

Arguing (or not) over WPA2 and Wi-Fi security

Microsoft: Gmail like a Jaguar with 'vinyl seats' | Are you as tired of lazy vendors as I am?

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Arguing (or not) over WPA2 and Wi-Fi security
When I was growing up, our front door and back door were never locked. Was that a vulnerability? Did it create an attack vector? Were we at risk? Read More


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802.11n and Higher Education WLAN Opportunities
The introduction of 802.11n provides a holistic opportunity for universities to upgrade the network edge. Discover how higher education institutions can: * Maximize the value of their wireless networks. * Significantly reduce CapEx and OpEx. * Remain confident in their wireless LAN performance, security and reliability Read more!

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Setting Up a Seven-Figure IT Cost Avoidance at JEA
Learn how storage acquisition costs are 67% lower, performance is faster, recovery takes minutes instead of days, and a seven figure cost avoidance lies ahead. Read Now

Microsoft: Gmail like a Jaguar with 'vinyl seats'
Turner showed his audience of analysts for various investment firms an ad in Business Week magazine of Google's "Gone Google" campaign boasting how the luxury car and SUV makers Jaguar and Land Rover had converted to Google Mail, presumably from Microsoft Exchange. Then Turner showed quotes from a Business Week article of employees of those firms, including this: "It's funny. At Jaguar and Land Rover, we sell ourselves as best-of-breed, but we install the IT equivalent of vinyl seats." Zing! Read More

Are you as tired of lazy vendors as I am?
Dealing with vendors can be maddening to say the least. One of the reasons is because whenever you find a problem with their DB code they're very reluctant to change it. And to a degree I understand that because they've got regression testing to do to make sure it doesn't break anything else, but very seldom do vendors bother updating their DB code at all. Read More


WHITE PAPER: HP

Implementing Tiered Storage:
IDC: Enterprises that are investigating deploying a tiered storage architecture should consider using an external services provider to assist with the migration. Of critical importance is the ability to offer a range of services from the initial planning all the way through to ongoing support and management. Read Now

How Does Your ISP Rate?
Like politics, all Internet performance is local. Given this axiom, we bear excellent news for folks interested in tracking last mile ISP performance. For the first time, you can get up-to-date Internet performance statistics by state, by city, and by ISP -- as well as by country of course. This data is great for regional, head-to-head, ISP comparisons. Read More

Why OpenStack matters to the rest of us
RackSpace's well-coordinated public announcement of OpenStack last week was a refreshing, if not surprising, bit of news. Since the open source movement gained momentum, there has regularly been a viable free alternative in most important software sectors. The industry was just begging for an honest-to-goodness open source presence in the IaaS space, and OpenStack seems prepared to deliver. Read More


WHITE PAPER: HP

Virtualize your end-to-end IT infrastructure
A virtual storage infrastructure available only from HP can double your capacity utilization and cut management costs in half with innovations that unlock trapped capacity in individual servers or in enterprise disk arrays. Learn how. Read Now

It's Time to Start Loving Tunnels
I wrote a blog two years ago about how I could fix anything with a tunnel. Yes, it was a tad tongue in cheek, but it also had some truth to it. Tunnels are a weapon to use when faced with a difficult network design issue. However, as with any weapon, there can be collateral damage. Read More

Facebook, nannying, and objectives
Gibbs ponders the problems with employees and social networking and suggests that nannying won't cut it. Read More

What's in a License?
Most people never take the time to read an End User Licensing Agreement (EULA) when installing or updating their software. For example, here is a link to the Microsoft Vista EULA that you probably skipped right over and a great article on how the EULA prevents people from using their purchased Windows operating system the way they wish. Read More

Shimel's 10 Commandments For Open Core
There has been a lot of discussion recently over so called "open core" business models. Many people don't like the term, but the underlying principles whether called commercial open source, open core or something else are still valid. Here are my 10 Commandments for a successful open core / commercial open source business. Read More



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Mobile deathmatch: Apple iOS 4 vs. Android 2.2
Apple's iOS has been wowing users for four years in the iPhone and now the iPad. Available in smartphones and now tablets from various vendors going on two years, Google's Android has proven itself to be a strong contender that has the only real chance to surpass iOS.

15 summer vacation ideas for geeks
From Star Trek and Space Camp to baseball minutiae, vintage video games, anime, pirates, Harry Potter and They Might Be Giants, there's a vacation option for any type of geek this summer.

MOST-READ STORIES

  1. 'Unhackable' Android phone can be hacked
  2. ATM hack gives cash on demand
  3. Black Hat gets its video feed hacked
  4. Happy SysAdmin Day (despite the pay)
  5. FBI rings organizers over Defcon contest
  6. WPA2 vulnerability found
  7. Microsoft's 2010 software 'most complicated lock-in decision in years'
  8. Microsoft: Gmail like a Jaguar with 'vinyl seats'
  9. Bad guys could read RFID passports at 217 feet, maybe more
  10. New Zealand pizza lovers suffer information theft from Hell

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