Tuesday, June 24, 2014

10 CEOs who took drastic pay cuts

MIT experimental 36-core chip spurs speed experiments | Why Facebook's SDN switch won't affect Cisco's customers

Network World Network Optimization

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10 CEOs who took drastic pay cuts
Spectacular pay raises keep widening the gap between what CEOs earn and what average workers take home. But not all CEOs got a raise last year. We examined 62 tech CEOs' compensation -- including salary, bonuses, stock awards, and perks -- and found 10 who took big cuts. Read More


WHITE PAPER: BMC Software

MyIT- Consumer Cool for Business Apps
Rich Ptak discusses how BMC's MyIT combines the ease and familiarity of accessing today's consumer apps with the stability, security and strengths of the enterprise IT infrastructure. Learn More

WHITE PAPER: Dell

Achieve Deeper Network Security and Application Control
Next-generation firewalls (NGFWs) have emerged to revolutionize network security as we once knew it. Yet to safeguard an organization from today's ever-evolving threats, NGFWs must be able to deliver an even deeper level of network security. View Now

MIT experimental 36-core chip spurs speed experiments
Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have developed a 36-core processor in an effort to find new ways to eke more performance out of chips. Read More

Why Facebook's SDN switch won't affect Cisco's customers
Last week, Facebook announced a new product that's supposed to have the networking industry trembling. There were many news stories about Facebook's new homegrown SDN switch, known by the codename "Wedge" that's supposed to be the next big threat to Cisco and the traditional networking vendors. The operating system on the product runs Facebook's proprietary version of Linux called FBOSS. Read More

Gartner: Top trends in IT security technology
Gartner kicked off its annual Gartner Security and Risk Management Summit 2014 by pointing to the top threat challenges heading into next year — and added that in the future, the term IT security will give way to "digital security" to encompass newer challenges, such as the Internet of Things. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Network Instruments

4 Key Survival Tips for Planning Your Next Big Data Project
Big Data projects slam network performance. This paper offer survival tips to prepare your network before the Big Data projects hit, not after. Learn how to monitor and manage network performance for bandwidth, consistent low latency, scalable storage, processing power and security. Learn More

Government control emerges as central issue at ICANN meeting
France doesn't want to take part in ICANN's reform process until issues with Wine domains are resolved. Read More

Riverbed goes mobile with AppInternals 9.0
Riverbed, the company known best for its Steelhead WAN Optimization product, has beefed up its Application Performance Management (APM) suite. In 2012, Riverbed acquired OPNET for a cool billion to complement the network performance management (NPM) suite it inherited when it purchased Mazu. Read More

SDN system controls hundreds of Cisco routers; saves contractor time, money
A global environmental engineering company is turning to software-defined networking as a way to boost productivity and save money. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Netscout Systems Inc.

Enabling Unified Service Delivery Management With nGeniusONE
Today's IT organizations manage diverse business services comprising a host of applications running on many server farms within the data center. NetScout provides a highly scalable, unified approach to service delivery management that enables efficient, topdown performance management across complex application, server and network tiers. Learn More

Google tests domain registration service
If you fancy yourself as a .guru or any other newfangled Internet address, Google wants you to try out its new domain name registration service. The search giant quietly launched Google Domains on Monday as an invite-only beta service. It's being billed as an easy way to set up an address on the Web with simple management tools. Read More

Encrypted Web traffic can reveal highly sensitive information
Analyzing encrypted Web traffic can potentially reveal highly sensitive information such as medical conditions and sexual orientation, according to a research paper that forecasts how privacy on the Internet may erode. Read More

1 in 5 small businesses still use Windows XP, survey says
People still don't feel the impetus to upgrade from Windows XP, or maybe they can't afford it. Read More

Breaking down the wall between VMware vSphere and cloud
As infrastructure and operations professionals seek to broker cloud services for the enterprise, they are coming to terms with the need to "cloudify" existing vSphere infrastructure in order to make these environments more developer-friendly and support migration of workloads to AWS or other clouds as their needs evolve. Read More


SLIDESHOWS

5 potential Facebook killers

Outside of the obvious suspects – LinkedIn, Twitter and Google+ – who has the potential to unseat Facebook? Here are five possibilities.

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