Thursday, August 29, 2013

11 things Microsoft is actually doing right

Tech CEOs' first jobs: Licorice maker, housekeeper, scuba diver | Bookmaker handicaps Microsoft CEO race

Network World Microsoft

Forward this to a Friend >>>


11 things Microsoft is actually doing right
From Office to Hyper-V to Azure, the much-maligned 'dying dinosaur' has a lot going for it as the Ballmer era winds down. Read More


WHITE PAPER: F5 Networks

5 Ways to Improve XenApp 6.5
If you are planning to migrate to XenApp 6.5 or improve upon XenDesktop then performance, security, and reliability are concerns for success. Citrix recommends that you use an ADC to address these concerns. Learn More

WHITE PAPER: OutSystems

11 Usability Rules for IT Developers
To deliver great enterprise applications, IT needs to deliver great User Experience (UX), which is critical to achieving broad application adoption, and significantly decreasing training and support costs. This eBook explores core Usability principles IT should remember when building applications. View Now

Tech CEOs' first jobs: Licorice maker, housekeeper, scuba diver
It can be a long climb to the top of the corporate ladder. With Labor Day in mind, we asked tech CEOs who've reached the highest rung to share their first job experiences. Some were entrepreneurs at an early age, offering lawn-mowing and scuba diving services. Others toiled in the fields and factories. Many got their hands dirty, scrubbing oil stains off asphalt, cleaning bathrooms, and shoveling monkey cages. Read More

Bookmaker handicaps Microsoft CEO race
Adding insult to injury after Wall Street boosted Microsoft's stock price when CEO Steve Ballmer announced he would retire, now a U.K. bookmaker is taking bets on Ballmer's replacement. Read More

Microsoft: Ballmer may be going but our direction remains the same
Microsoft promises to keep hammering away at same business principles that were forged during the tenure of CEO Steve Ballmer, who has announced he's leaving the company within a year. According to The Official Microsoft Blog the company will adhere to the core beliefs that it and Ballmer first articulated last fall. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Condusiv Technologies

Lab report: V-locity VM Accelerates Exchange 60% on VMs
For this briefing, openBench Labs tested the ability of V-locity VM to optimize I/O in a dedicated email service domain centered around a VM running Exchange 2010. Read Now!

Microsoft declares Windows 8.1 ready for OEMs even though work's not finished
Microsoft today declared Windows 8.1 ready for computer and tablet makers, saying the update had reached its RTM, or "release to manufacturing" milestone. Read More

Will Microsoft Office Finally Play Nice on the iPad?
For all the success the iPad has enjoyed, it's only big drawback has been that Microsoft Windows software - and Microsoft Office, in particular - doesn't perform well. However, now Parallels has unveiled an app that brings full versions of Windows desktop software to the touch-based iPad. Read More

Developers flay Microsoft for withholding Windows 8.1 RTM
Windows app developers today took Microsoft to task for the company's decision to withhold Windows 8.1 until mid-October. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Mitel Networks

Network World Report: Getting Ahead of BYOD
Organizations are being flooded with employee-owned gadgets and valiantly trying to accommodate requests to provide access to corporate resources while maintaining control enough to minimize risk and meet compliance requirements. Learn More

Ballmer's exit revives demands for Office on iPad, Android tablets
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's announcement last week that he will step aside in the next 12 months has renewed calls by analysts that the company offer Office on Apple's iPad and tablets powered by Google's Android. Read More

Windows 8 Update: Microsoft Windows 8 is not Ballmer's biggest regret
Even though Windows 8 incited hordes to call for Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's ouster, the operating system is not what he regrets most about his 33-year tenure at the company. Read More

PC, tablet makers get Windows 8.1, developers cry foul
Microsoft has started sending Windows 8.1 to its hardware manufacturers, hitting the so-called RTM milestone for the much-awaited update to Windows 8. Read More


SLIDESHOWS

Hot products from VMworld 2013

Click through to see all the latest from the show in San Francisco.

JOIN THE NETWORK WORLD COMMUNITIES

As network pros you understand that the value of connections increase as the number of connections increase, the so called network effect, and no where is this more evident than in professional relationships. Join Network World's LinkedIn and Facebook communities to share ideas, post questions, see what your peers are working on and scout out job applicants (or maybe find your next opportunity).

Network World on Facebook

Network World on LinkedIn

MOST-READ STORIES

1. Old electronics don't die, they pile up

2. Microsoft will craft XP patches after April '14, but not for you

3. Linus Torvalds celebrates 22 years of Linux with nostalgic message

4. Cisco in for a virtual fight

5. Microsoft Windows 8 is not Ballmer's biggest regret

6. 9/11 hero & Akamai co-founder Danny Lewin recalled in new book

7. Hot products from VMworld 2013

8. 12 seriously cool "toys" for big boys and girls

9. Is the rumored 64-bit Apple chip for iPhone 5S just wishful thinking?

10. Top 10 Amazon cloud challengers


Do You Tweet?
Follow everything from NetworkWorld.com on Twitter @NetworkWorld.

You are currently subscribed to networkworld_microsoft_alert as security.world@gmail.com.

Unsubscribe from this newsletter | Manage your subscriptions | Subscribe | Privacy Policy

If you are interested in advertising in this newsletter, please contact: bglynn@cxo.com

To contact Network World, please send an e-mail to customer_service@nww.com.

Copyright (C) 2013 Network World, 492 Old Connecticut Path, Framingham MA 01701

** Please do not reply to this message. If you want to contact someone directly, send an e-mail to customer_service@nww.com. **


No comments:

Post a Comment