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10 ResultsSponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
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Simplified Management in the Real World with VMware vCenter Operations
With so much of your network becoming virtual, it can be difficult to visualize and manage things. Check out this webcast to learn more about simplified management in a virtualized world.
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Google announces Public DNS
Designed to replace the DNS services provided by ISPs or companies, Google says that its DNS will be faster and more secure than many other DNSs, and won't filter content.
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Steve Ballmer and licensing: The video
ZDNet UK was at Microsoft's London HQ yesterday, listening to Steve Ballmer talk about Windows 7, Server 2008 R2 and pertaining matters.
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Intel: SSDs are coming
An Intel researcher said mass corporate take-up of solid-state disk drives is almost upon us. He predicts SSDs will cross the floor price of hard disks, driving mass adoption into the corporate...
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Intel brings Nehalem to notebooks
Intel has moved its latest desktop and server chip architecture to the laptop with the announcement of its 45nm Core i7 mobile processor.
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ARM targets Intel with 2GHz multicore chips
ARM announced the development of dual-core, quad-core and eight-core Cortex-A9 processor designs explicitly aimed at markets currently served by Intel's x86 chips and IBM's PowerPC.
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How Intel turned failure into success
After its management shakeup, Intel's Dadi Perlmutter is again on the rise - just nine years after his Timna system-on-a-chip project fell flat.
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Gelsinger out in Intel reshuffle
Intel confirms a major reshuffle of its top-level executives. Sean Maloney and Dadi Perlmutter will lead the new Intel Architecture Group, while former CTO Pat Gelsinger is leaving.
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Orange, T-Mobile merge to create UK's largest carrier
Orange and T-Mobile are to merge their British operations to create the UK's largest mobile carrier, their parent companies.
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Canonical offers human help for Ubuntu
Canonical has introduced a new class of support for enterprises using Ubuntu - the Premium Service Engineer or PSE. They are to provide direct contact between corporations and the Ubuntu...
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Sony to ship Chrome with Vaio PCs
After promising earlier this year that a major OEM would start to ship its Chrome browser, Google has done a deal with Sony that will see all its Vaio-brand PCs so equipped.
Additional Results
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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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Last-minute gifts for grads? Check out the ZDNet Edu Gift Guide
It's easy to find creative gifts for grads that will be appreciated for years to come.
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UK 'cookie law' takes effect: What you need to know
Let's be honest: The U.K. has made a right hash-up of implementing the cookie law from start to finish. It came into force on May 26. Here's everything you need to know.
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Sex Tech: Faceporn win, Parental revenge porn, Google: No Porn Filter
Google opposes UK porn filters, a fake porn profile nets felony charges, Faceporn trumps Facebook and iPads are for porn.
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London's thriving cloud start-up scene
There's a sudden flourishing of cloud start-up talent in the UK. What's brought it about?
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Sex Tech: IsAnyoneUp, UK ISP filter conspiracy theories, no porn for Coke
Hunter Moore investigated by FBI, UK porn filter conspiracy theories, Coca Cola vs. porn cybersquatters and Big Porn is sued for patent infringement.
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Another ZDNet Great Debate lost, still not giving up on Windows Phone
I win the popular vote, but can't seem to win the argument as I continue to support the Windows Phone platform in ZDNet Great Debates. I'm sticking with Windows Phone for the long haul though.
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UK ISPs must block The Pirate Bay by May 30
Two of the five U.K. ISPs have already enacted site-blocking to prevent access to The Pirate Bay. More than a quarter of the U.K. population will see the site blocked by May 30.
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UK government staff caught snooping on citizen data
What a surprise: the U.K. government was forced to reveal under Freedom of Information laws more than 1,000 civil servants have 'snooped' on British citizens' private data.
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21-year-old gets 12 months for hacking Facebook account
After pleading guilty to breaching the the UK's Computer Misuse Act 1990 on two counts, a UK man has been sentenced to a year in prison for hacking into an American's Facebook account last year.
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