Thursday, March 31, 2011

Samsung cleared of laptop keylogger accusation

Earth to HP: Cisco's UCS is being sold here | Google building fiber network in Sprint's backyard

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Samsung cleared of laptop keylogger accusation
Samsung Electronics' laptops do not contain a secret program that logs keystrokes, security researchers have found, chalking the problem up to a mistake by an antivirus program. Read More


RESOURCE COMPLIMENTS OF: Cisco

Drive Collaboration and Business Value with Video
This Network World Seminar will bring you peer and expert insights into how and where video fosters true collaboration and brings tangible business results. Click to continue

WHITE PAPER: CA

Forrester: The Emergence of Service Assurance
Forrester interviewed more than 150 IT professionals to understand the fundamental issues around managing the performance of business application and business services and their underlying transactions. Read their key findings and expert recommendations. Read Now

Earth to HP: Cisco's UCS is being sold here
Cisco has responded to assertions that it's selling its Unified Computing System on planets other than our familiar home, Planet Earth. As you recall, HP CEO Leo Aptoheker said HP never sees UCS in competitive data center bids despite Cisco's assertions that sales of UCS grew 700% year-over-year in its second fiscal quarter. Read More

Google building fiber network in Sprint's backyard
Sprint and Google are apparently going to working more closely together in more ways than one. Read More

6 outrageous office pranks
Nothing livens up the work day or gets HR's attention better than a good old office prank. Here's a collection of some of the best, or worst, depending on your perspective. Read More


WEBCAST: CA

Success Story: DonorsChoose.org Moves to the Cloud
Oliver Hurst-Hiller, CTO of DonorsChoose.org talks about why they moved to the cloud. Learn More

Google gets more social with its search engine
Google is enabling users to give and get recommendations on search results. Called +1, the new service lets people share their recommendations with friends, as well as strangers. Read More

HTC EVO 3D: Hands On With Sprint's Hot New 3D Phone
Take a visual tour of the hottest phone announced at the CTIA Spring 2011 mobile show. Read More

Fire sale on Windows Phone 7
AT&T this week cut the price of two Microsoft Windows Phone 7 handsets after having already cut the price in half a few months earlier, another bad sign for the beleaguered mobile OS. To be sure, discounting is par for the course in the mobile handset market and retailing in general, but it's also a common indicator of a problem: We've gotta move this stuff. Read More


WHITE PAPER: IBM

Five Imperatives to Maximize Customer Value
This white paper from IBM describes how a set of five predictive imperatives can help ensure that your company maximizes the value of its customer relationships and sustains higher levels of revenues and profits. Read Now

Red Hat - Last of the Mohicans
Matt Asay, a well-known open source leader, has posted a new article on The Register about Red Hat making it to $1 billion in revenue and how he doubts that any other truly open source company can make it to $1 billion in revenue. Read More

Destroyed hard drives kill off UK National ID Cards
If you enjoy watching hard drives packed with personal data being destroyed, then you might be amused by Britain's mass destruction of drives which made up a centralized database. Read More

You Can't Use a Smartphone for Everything
The types of devices you give your colleagues and the way you deliver data have an impact on how they understand information. Business-focused CIOs learn how people in their organizations think, so they can apply the right technology to spark better decisions. 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

Tech's youngest billionaires
The nine youngest billionaires in technology run the gamut from a social networking entrepreneur to the creator of the online coupon company, groupon.com. Think you know them all? Let's find out.

No joy for would-be baby shakers and drunk drivers
In this slideshow we'll take a look at some of the most notorious applications that were banned or removed from the big-name app stores.

MOST-READ STORIES

  1. FBI wants public help solving encrypted notes for murder mystery
  2. Samsung installs keylogger on its laptop computers
  3. Cisco data center revamp cuts across switches, servers, storage
  4. Health provider wants algorithm that can predict illness
  5. 'Apple doesn't break,' declares healthcare CIO
  6. FBI: How to be an expert at the black art of cryptography
  7. How to quit your job the right way
  8. McAfee's Web site full of security holes, researcher says
  9. BP employee loses laptop containing data on 13,000 oil spill claimants
  10. No conspiracy theory needed: Tor created for U.S. gov't spying

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