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Get Your Free Trial of Diskeeper 2011 Professional
Give your business desktops and laptops a boost. Diskeeper 2011 Professional prevents the majority of fragmentation before it can happen and brings data flow up to peak speed for the best possible...
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TED Conference: Gates, Gore, robot wars
At the TED Conference, Bill Gates released mosquitoes into the audience, Naturally 7 recreated the sound of musical instruments with their voices, and Al Gore admonished the coal industry for its...
Additional Results
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IFS releases Applications 8; updated ERP suite for big industry
IFS' new enterprise resource management app suite aims to please manufacturers, IT departments and any big business that has assets to track or a supply chain to check.
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IBM's Intelligent Clusters - an old idea done well
IBM's pre-configured, pre-tested clusters take the uncertainty out of multi-system deployments. Regardless of how good the idea, IBM didn't think of this first. It is yet another legacy of Digital...
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Sony, Samsung limiting discounts on their HDTVs. An act of desperation?
The two electronics giants are limiting retailers' ability to discount their televisions, which should help the Best Buys of the world who often can't match the sale prices of online retailers.
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The curse of free cloud services: a cautionary tale
Cloud services have their failings, and I'm not talking about the usual crashes and cyberattacks. No, sometimes the service just goes away.
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Nuance launches in-car voice-activated platform
Nuance has launched 'Siri for cars' -- a new voice-activated in-car system --- that includes Nuance's trademark 'intelligent' natural language search technology.
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Anonymous hacks Bureau of Justice, leaks 1.7GB of data
Anonymous has apparently hacked the United States Bureau of Justice Statistics and posted 1.7GB of data belonging to the agency on The Pirate Bay. This is a Monday Mail Mayhem release.
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Pakistan censors Twitter: all may not be what it seems
Was the Pakistani Twitter shutdown just about squelching free speech over an art contest, or was there potentially something more?
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Iran to sue Google in map naming dispute
Google has removed the tag identifying the Persian Gulf from its popular mapping service, angering the Iranian government. Tehran says it will sue the search giant.
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India investing $3.1 Billion in defense network, to build cyber defense system
A $3.1 Billion investment to give defense forces their own OFC powered communications infrastructure that will let Department of Telecom lease freed spectrum bringing in nearly $17.9 Billion.
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Tech health care and the problem with targeting Gen-Y
Is Gen-Y's reliance on mobile technology detrimental to their health?
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Court directs Google to take down blog against cult leader
The Delhi Court has found blogger Jitender Bagga's blogs against Art of Living leader Sri Sri Ravi Shankar to be defamatory and has asked Google to take them down.
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OpenStack's prospects: Red Hat, VMware agree to disagree
OpenStack will either change the cloud computing universe or be a muddled mess. Red Hat and VMware execs square off.
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Queen's speech unveils UK's 'Patriot Act' Web monitoring plan
The Queen has officially lifted the lid on plans for the British government to monitor all U.K. Web, email and phone traffic.
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Here's why the media industry hates apps...
Software development and media don't mix. But can HTML5 replace high cost apps with high quality experiences?
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A Banner day for health records management
Congratulations to 17 facilities who have achieved the final stage of electronic medical record adoption.
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IT executives: we're getting busier, and we're hiring
Two IT executive surveys find a bullish attitude toward IT operations and corporate growth.
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Why your consumer smartphone (and tablet) is a threat to the enterprise
Motorola Solutions' Gary Schluckbier explains why consumer mobile devices are, from a security standpoint, not fit for the enterprise -- and why Android is a particular threat.
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Australia to question Microsoft, Apple, others in 'price gouging' probe
Australia's parliament will hold an inquiry to determine why major digital content providers are charging significantly more for content than elsewhere in the world.
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Chip industry seeing 'modest' uptick thanks to tablets, phones
Even if tablet sales are suddenly picking up, the semiconductor industry is actually only getting a "modest" boost in revenue, according to a new report.
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