nick kall
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Introducing the New VMware Management Solution Portfolio
Check out this webcast to learn more about the New VMware Management Solution Portfolio.
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Service-Oriented Security Architecture: Part 1
For Web services to succeed in extending the remarkably successful "document" Web into a "trusted business services" Web that reliably spans the globe, designers must apply service-oriented...
Additional Results
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Study Refutes Nick Carr, Shows Data & IT Do Matter
Lots of people have debated Nicholas Carr's argument that IT Doesn't Matter Anymore in the last 7 years, but few have offered new empirical evidence one way or the other. Now there is some - and...
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On hyperlinks, visionary Nick Carr is totally regressive
Nick Carr made his deep thinker reputation with two ahead-of-the-curve books last decade. On his opposition to the ubiquitous practice of embedding hyperlinks in Web pages, however, Carr seems to...
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Nick Carr's Big Switch
Nicholas Carr, amongst the most incisive and profound critic of information technology, will be in Silicon Valley tonight (7.00 pm), at Campbell's Barnes and Noble bookstore in conversation with...
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Vista dropped for Windows 7 midway through upgrades
Several UK businesses that had begun to upgrade their systems to Microsoft's Vista OS are switching to Windows 7 before the installation is complete.
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Acorn co-founder talks early computers
Acorn co-founder Andy Hopper told silicon.com that he believes the BBC Micro - with its easy to grasp Basic programming language - offered an experience that is missing today.
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Are IT grads learning the right skills?
A UK jury of CIOs are asked for their verdict about whether universities are producing IT graduates who have learned the right skills to produce in the business world.
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Mobile apps changing the future of air travel
Your mobile phone could become your concierge, reminding you to check in the minute you arrive at the airport or automatically ordering a taxi for you when your plane lands.
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Red Hat releases Fedora 11
Fedora 11 comes with new virtualization features, support for fingerprint readers and the promised ability for any email client to tap into Microsoft Exchange.
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Is Facebook an unsafe environment for business?
Developers continue to vent their frustration at Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and the direction he's taking his iconic social networking site. Zuckerberg’s vision for Facebook is to become the...
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Tech that Gen Y will sweep away
There's a new generation of people, raised in the Internet era, who don't see the need for many of the technology tools that once seemed irreplaceable.
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Five ways Gen Y will change the way you work
Author forecasts a "big conflict" in the office, sparked by the generation of 11- to 30-year-olds who are determined to reshape the workplace in their own image. Here's how to manage, or not...
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Can the Internet change your brain?
The relentless bombardment of video, music and information online could permanently alter our brains and trigger neurological disorders, according to an eminent neurologist.
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Outsourcing: Less money-saving, more time-saving
Despite the recession and the associated belt-tightening around enterprise IT budgets, cutting costs isn't front and center for many companies when it comes to outsourcing, according to one of...
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Stopping corporate IT break-ins
The Corporate IT Forum has published an identity-management guide designed to help companies keep track of who is accessing what.
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Downturn may turn techies to crime, say reports
PricewaterhouseCoopers and security vendor Finjan expect insider fraud and cybercrime to rise as IT jobs are lost.
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Virtualization to put consumer tech in the workplace
Industry observers say virtualization will enable staff to use their own devices at work, while keeping corporate data safe.
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The weirdest computing disasters of 2008
Roasted laptops, panthers savaging memory sticks and angry fishermen throwing computers overboard top the list of the year's weirdest computing disasters.
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Net bombarded by heaviest ever attacks this year
Online networks suffered their heaviest brute force attacks to date this year, with more sites than ever coming under sustained assault.
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Cloud-computing zombies for $299 per month
RSA says cloud-computing crimeware means networks of zombie machines can be hired to steal online-banking details for as little as $299 a month.
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