X
Business

News to know: Red Hat, Amazon; Net neutrality; Malware with your news

Notable headlines:Robin Harris: The governmental-communications complex: net neutrality now.Dana Gardner: Red Hat partners with Amazon for Enterprise Linux fabric in Elastic Compute Cloud.
Written by Larry Dignan, Contributor

Notable headlines:

Robin Harris: The governmental-communications complex: net neutrality now.

Dana Gardner: Red Hat partners with Amazon for Enterprise Linux fabric in Elastic Compute Cloud. Larry Dignan: Red Hat puts Enterprise Linux in Amazon’s cloud. Dana Blankenhorn: Can Red Hat ever make open source advocates happy? Paula Rooney: Red Hat, Sun deal reflects power shift driven by open source. Roland Piquepaille: 800,000 computers to fight cancer.

David Morgenstern: What Mac hardware do you need for Leopard's "good, better or best" iChat conferencing?

Leopard file move bug zaps data.

Adrian Kingsley-Hughes: Is the iPod/iTunes link monopolistic?

Gallery: Turning a profit in Second Life (above).

Valleywag: Digg close to $300 million sale? Heather Clancy: IBM: Energy concerns are translating into green-tech action among smaller businesses. Ryan Naraine: MSNBC Turkish site caught serving malware.

Dan Farber: True Knowledge enters the semantic search ring. Wink creates 'Winkipedia' for people profiles.

Paul Murphy: Smart storage.

Some sites back online after NaviSite goof.

In Finland shooting, fallout for YouTube?

Web ad spending expected to double by 2011.

Mary Jo Foley: Windows 7 Server and other new Microsoft server releases in the pipeline. Microsoft moving closer to Centro.

AOL: Let’s become an ad network before this really unravels. Techmeme.

Larry Dignan: HP wants out of digital camera manufacturing. Cisco bests estimates in first quarter.

Matthew Miller: Opera Mini 4 delivers the Web to your mobile phone. Dana Gardner: Enterprise mobile remains up for grabs despite Google, Android and OHA.

Gallery: FogScreen features breakthrough projection technology (right).

Computerworld: 'America's Most Wired College' dives in to 802.11n wireless networking.

Dana Blankenhorn: Chip makers get serious about medical technology. Corporate or personal models in open source.

Adrian Kingsley-Hughes: Is the update burden getting to be too much? When it comes to releasing operating systems, Ubuntu have it figured out.

Caroline McCarthy: Eisner's advice to striking writers: Blame Steve Jobs, not the studios.

Microsoft aims to make Xbox more family-friendly.
174348-525-394.jpg
Sony to pull out of 32-nano research.

Images: MIT's stackable electric car.

Dan Kusnetzky: Active Response - Cassatt's Take on Green Computing.

Larry Dignan: Maybe Google should fear Facebook's ad system. Bits: Log off and get to work.

Typewriter's last word not written yet.

Editorial standards