Monday, January 31, 2011

Cisco, Gartner story stirs debate

Apple's e-wallet won't replace the one I'm sitting on | Saying no to smartphones: most mobile users will buy new 'dumb' phones

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Cisco, Gartner story stirs debate
Our story on market research firm Gartner's view on single vendor network procurements has sparked quite a debate. Read More


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Apple's e-wallet won't replace the one I'm sitting on
Today's flurry of reports that Apple's iPhone 5 and iPad 2 will support Near Field Communications technology has sparked yet another round of nonsense about how so-called e-wallets soon will be the death knell of the leather variety. Read More

Saying no to smartphones: most mobile users will buy new 'dumb' phones
With all the media attention smartphones and their apps have gotten, you'd think they were universally loved. Turns out the next mobile device most wireless service subscribers will buy will be yet another "dumb" phone. Read More

Security in the Cloud? It's a Matter of Position
UCOne of the biggest challenges facing network architects is in crafting a security architecture that protects internal network resources from external attack -- typically in the form of denial of service (DoS) attacks against public-facing servers. These kinds of attacks can range from a nuisance, to one that threatens to disrupt overall business operations. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Riverbed

Application-Aware Network Performance Management
According to industry analyst Enterprise Management Associates (EMA), Riverbed® Cascade© stacks up extremely well against the competition. How well? In particular, Cascade outperforms other application-aware network performance management solutions in such important areas as product strength and cost efficiency. Read Now.

Egypt: Cisco and Juniper won't go there
Cisco and Juniper aren't touching Egypt. Both companies declined comment when asked if they are in communication with their service provider customers there after Egypt threw the "kill switch" on its Internet communications in the wake of political unrest in that country. Read More

Do investors have a right to know more about Jobs's health?
A week after news of his medical leave became public, the first sentence of a Wall Street Journal story this morning asks: "How sick is Steve Jobs?" The underlying questions are whether Apple investors have a right to know and whether Apple's board has an obligation to tell them. Those questions are being debated anew by investors, corporate directors and regulators. Read More

Palin e-mail snoop got prison because he's too smart?
So now we know the real reason - or at least the official reason - why the college student who snooped into Sarah Palin's Yahoo e-mail account got sent to prison instead of the halfway house recommended by the judge who oversaw his trial and conviction. It's primarily because he was a college student. Read More


WEBCAST: IBM

How much network downtime can your business tolerate?
Join this IBM broadcast to learn how to manage and improve network configuration activity to keep your networks running, in compliance and generating revenue. View Now

Should Walking While Distracted be a Crime?
You have been found guilty of texting while walking. That'll be $100, and we're not talking iTunes credit. Read More

Open Source FAIL
I recently read an interesting blog on Open Source and ERP from Derek Singleton, titled "Can Open Source ERP Succeed?" His blog focused on the ERP segment of the market and why no open source solution has succeeded. Read More

Cisco would welcome this survey's findings
In the News That Will Please Cisco Dept., most large enterprises are gearing up for technology refreshes in their data centers this year, while a large percentage are prioritizing around data center consolidation. Read More

So much anger over such a minor matter
Yesterday I was swapping e-mail with a longtime journalist friend and we drifted into the evergreen topic of online incivility. This morning I scan the comments on my post pooh-poohing "e-wallets" as a replacement for the regular kind... and up pops an example of what we'd been talking about. Read More

Are mentors dead?
IT isn't exactly the friendliest atmosphere for the traditional master/apprentice approach. Or is it America that's the problem? Read More



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SLIDESHOWS

Panic time quiz: How prepared are you for IPv6?
With IPv4 addresses projected to dry up this year, it's inevitable that IPv6 adoption will accelerate. Here are a few questions that can help determine how much or how little you know about IPv6 and whether you ought to spend more time studying it.

The Mac App Store's hottest productivity apps
The Mac App Store debuted this month and hit 1 million downloads in the first 24 hours. The App Store launched with 1,000 or so apps, many of which were already available on the pre-existing Mac downloads Web site. The store is filled with stuff that's fun but also has plenty of apps that make you more productive. Let's take a look at the 10 most downloaded free productivity apps on the Mac App Store, and then we'll look at the 10 most popular paid productivity apps.

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