open-source developer
2 ResultsSponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
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24 Technical Considerations for a Defragmentation Solution
Read this white paper for 24 technical considerations for evaluating a defragmentation solution on enterprise workstations. You'll learn all about the steps you'll need to take in order to make...
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Do open source developers deserve a premium?
It's just possible that open source developers make more because they're the people who are most anxious, and willing, to seek new skills and new challenges.
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Images: Comcast gets Zimbra zing
Cable giant picks the open-source developer to power its subscribers' Web-based e-mail, contacts and calendar services.
Additional Results
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Microsoft's Windows 8 Release Preview looks to hit on May 31
Microsoft may be set to deliver the near-final release preview of Windows 8 to testers as early as May 31, according to an accidentally posted blog entry.
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2012's Best Linux desktop: Linux Mint 13
The Linux Mint distribution keeps getting better and better with its own take on GNOME, the Cinnamon Linux desktop
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Wikileaks' Assange loses UK Supreme Court extradition appeal
Wikileaks founder Julian Assange can be extradited from the U.K. to face charges in Sweden, the U.K. Supreme Court has ruled.
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Setting up Mint 13: 2012's Best Linux desktop
Mint 13 with Cinnamon may well be the best Linux desktop of all for expert users.
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Xamarin abandons its Silverlight for Linux technology
Moonlight, the open-source implementation of Silverlight for Linux and Unix, is no more.
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Fedora 17 boasts OpenStack, JBoss, oVirt support
The Red Hat-sponsored Fedora project has announced a significant release of its open source Linux distribution with added support for open cloud and open virtualization technologies as well as...
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How freebies are ruining Google I/O
The Law of Unintended Consequences claims another victim as Google's largesse threatens to undermine the purpose of Google I/O.
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Open source and the National Security Agency, together again
Open-source software and the National Security Agency go together like peanut-butter and jelly. No, they really do!
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New York's anonymity ban: Why should the Web be any different?
New York wants to outlaw anonymous comments to prevent cyberbullying and other online abuse. This criminologist examines why this plan, despite its controversy, may not be such a bad thing.
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Microsoft is serious about open source: 10 proof points
Microsoft has come a long way in its acceptance of open source. And its motto doesn't seem to be (this time) to embrace and extinguish.
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Post 'social' improved speed to information and context
Facebook IPO hype and dramas obscured Google's launch of their Knowledge graph contextual extensions to search, which may prove to be the foundation for future digital networking and a solution to...
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Fortune on how Tim Cook is changing Apple
A FORTUNE cover story on Apple CEO Tim Cook tackles his leadership style (and how it differs from Steve Jobs), Facebook, product development and Apple's top-secret Top 100 meetings.
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HP's latest do-over: Skepticism abounds
Analysts reserve praise for HP's restructuring. Why? HP has repeatedly restructured to no avail.
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There's trouble with three major Linux desktop application developers
An old myth is that the Linux desktop doesn't have the applications most users need, but lately some companies that have long supported Linux are pulling back from the Linux desktop and that's a...
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Disaster recovery needs leading SMBs to cloud
At least one-third of small businesses in a Symantec study pointed to data backup as a big consideration for their move to the cloud, echoing other research.
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Visual Studio LightSwitch: Will it emerge from sleeper status?
The first version of Microsoft's Visual Studio LightSwitch dev tool has achieved only modest traction in the market. Here's a set of recommendations from an ardent supporter of the product.
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Ex-Twitter CTO tapped by Cornell, NYC
Ex-Twitter CTO Greg Pass will be working at the new Cornell Technology campus, NYC.
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A litigator's view: Three things I know about Oracle v. Google
Google may have prevailed, but fundamentally it seems reasonable for the owner of Java to expect to profit when others profit from Java.
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