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Can virtualization help when times get tough?

Dan Kusnetzky: When times get tough, many organizations look for new ways to reduce costs while still being able to provide their customers with the products and services they need. Virtualization can be part of the solution.

Gartner: The Net killed media; Financial services, healthcare next

Between the Lines by Larry Dignan

The Internet has killed the basic economics of the media industry and healthcare and the financial services industry may be next. That's the message from one of Gartner's so-called...

<font size="5">Larry Dignan, Sam Diaz, Tom Steinert-Threlkeld</font>

Lead, Melamine, and Backdoored Routers

Zero Day by Adam O'Donnell

It seems that not a day goes by without a new media alert regarding bad things in the chinese supply chain. First it was lead in our toys, then it...

<font size="5">Ryan Naraine, Dancho Danchev & Adam O'Donnell</font>

Raw meat iPod case

The Apple Core by Jason D. O'Grady

Now I've seen everything. This raw meat iPod case is from a Japanese company called Solid Alliance. It's not made of actual raw meat but it sure looks convincing. (Tip:...

Jason D. O'Grady & David Morgenstern

Google ignores some reported security problems?

Googling Google by Garett Rogers

Aviv Raff posted a public disclosure of a minor security risk that could be a major problem if used in conjunction with another type of problem. It's true that his...

Garett Rogers

Zmanda launches open source backup, recovery solutions for Windows

Linux and Open Source by Paula Rooney

Open source backup and recovery independent software developer (ISV) Zmanda formally announced two new products tailored for Windows users. Zmanda, of Sunnyvale, Calif. announced Zmanda Recovery Manager Enterprise Version 3.0...

Dana Blankenhorn & Paula Rooney

Deloitte laptop stolen: Clients at risk

IT Project Failures by Michael Krigsman

A stolen laptop belonging to consulting firm Deloitte contained confidential personal data belonging to 150,000 UK railway workers and all UK Vodafone staff with pensions. How ironic.

Michael Krigsman

Egnyte: using and sustaining Enterprise 2.0

Enterprise Alley by Zack Whittaker

Egnyte, in a nutshell, is a software as a service, cloud storage application. But it's a lot more than just that. It feels like your online home of files, storage...

Dennis Howlett & Zack Whittaker

Entellium's lost millions

Irregular Enterprise by Dennis Howlett

Larry Dignan outlines the main points of the Entellium fraud. Regardless of the final outcome, there are three glaring questions: How did the CFO and CEO overstate revenues across THREE...

Dennis Howlett

And the new name is ... Windows 7

Microsoft Report by Ed Bott

Last week I wondered whether the product currently code-named Windows 7 would get a new name for its release. The answer, made official a few minutes ago, is no. In...

Ed Bott

Techies choose Obama - by a landslide

Storage Bits by Robin Harris

If techies could choose the next President, Obama would win in a landslide. Checking donors from 10 large tech companies, including Apple, Dell, Google and Microsoft, over 90% of the...

Robin Harris

A few financial home truths

Software as services by Phil Wainewright

Does it take the world's worst financial crisis since the South Sea Bubble to drive home perennial truths that have always been at the core of successful businesses? Generate cash...

Phil Wainewright

Apple lifts iPhone NDA to dull Android's edge

Dev Connection by Ed Burnette

Responding to a crescendo of criticism from the developer community, which saw books canceled, long time fans lose enthusiasm, and some calls for defections to Android, Apple finally relented Wednesday:...

Ed Burnette

Using your voice to pilot your computer

Emerging Technology Trends by Roland Piquepaille

According to The Seattle Times, an interdisciplinary team of scientists of the University of Washington (UW) has developed Vocal Joystick, a software which enables people with disabilities to control their...

Roland Piquepaille

Laptops with mobile WiMax now available

Laptops & Desktops by John Morris

The first laptops with built-in mobile WiMax wireless broadband are now available in the U.S. Sprint, Intel and the computer companies announced the new WiMax configurations at an event in...

John Morris

Digging into the Silverlight 2 announcement

The Universal Desktop by Ryan Stewart

(Update: It also looks like you can grab the final bits as of 12:01 this morning: http://www.microsoft.com/silverlight/resources/install.aspx?v=2.0) After listening to the Q&A from the press conference today (recording here), digging...

Ryan Stewart

The Secrets of CEOs

Collaboration 2.0 by Oliver Marks

I just finished reading an advance US manuscript of 'The Secrets of CEOs - 150 Global Chief Executives lift the lid on business, life and leadership' by Steve Tappin, who...

Oliver Marks

You know a trend has gotten broad when..

Virtually Speaking by Dan Kusnetzky

The New York Times, a well-known font of information in the area of information technology, published Revived Fervor for Smart Monitors Linked to a Server, an article by Ashlee Vance...

Dan Kusnetzky & Paula Rooney

Touchscreen Asus Eee PC available for UK preorder

The ToyBox by Andrew Nusca

Look! There it is, on preorder in the UK: Asus' all-in-one Eee PC is available for £399.99, and seems sluggish to boot: 1.6GHz Intel Atom processor, 1GB RAM, 160GB hard...

Josh Taylor and Andrew Nusca

LaCie's 5big Network offers five drive bays, up to 7.5TB storage

SOHO Networking by Sean Portnoy

LaCie is bringing its distinctive aesthetic sense to small business networked storage with its new 5big Network device, which offers—surprise—five drive bays and up to a whopping 7.5 terabytes of...

Sean Portnoy

Report: Three Intel Nehalems in November

The Core Truth by John Morris

Intel will launch its first three Nehalem processors on November 17, according to a report on the site Expreview.com. These Bloomfield high-end chips will include the 3.2 GHz Core i7-965XE...

John Morris

Facebook as social rule of thumb?

iGeneration by Zack Whittaker

This new course I'm taking introduces sociology, and I assure all you budding sociologists who read that this new-found knowledge isn't going to my head. It seems for many, especially...

Zack Whittaker

The WOA story emerges as better outcomes sought for SOA

Enterprise Web 2.0 by Dion Hinchcliffe

Over the summer the enterprise IT blogosphere was swept up in a conversation around the concepts that many are calling Web-Oriented Architecture, or WOA. A different way to think about...

Dion Hinchcliffe

Open source protectionism?

A Developer's View by John Carroll

I just caught a rather interesting piece by fellow blogger Dana Blankenhorn on the subject of the "value and values" found in open source ecosystems. Near the end, he references...

John Carroll

Intel Tops Dow Jones Sustainabilty Index (again)

On Sustainability by James Farrar

The Dow Jones Sustainability Index (DJSI) results for 2008 are out, and although I’m not a huge fan of corporate sustainability beauty pageants, this one is probably the most credible...

James Farrar

Why You Want WebEx Connect or Beehive

Team Think by Dave Greenfield

First there was Notes and then Exchange. This week the collaboration suite space got a lot more competitive with both Cisco and Oracle introducing new collaboration suites.  This morning...

David Greenfield

What's a Little Money Between Friends?

Software & Services Safari by Brian Sommer

Gaming Incentive Systems Joel Spolsky (www.inc.com/keyword/spolsky) wrote a nice piece in the October 2008 issue of Inc. magazine. The article, Sins of Commissions, provides a cautionary tale to executives who...

Brian Sommer

Digital Web Business News: Weekly Report - Oct. 8, 2008

Feeds by Jennifer Leggio

There are an incredible amount of startups and established companies who are releasing tools and practices for digital Web strategies for businesses on a weekly basis. Since I cannot cover...

Jennifer Leggio

Desperate times, desperate job hunting tactics

The IT Grind by Deb Perelman

In a recent post about tactics to help land a job in an uncertain economy I included a cartoon of a sorry-looking fellow wearing a "Will work for food" billboard...

Deb Perelman

Bureaucracy and open source: Do they mix?

Community, Incorporated by Joe Brockmeier

Another high-profile departure from Sun, this time MySQL's David Axmark is taking wing -- citing a dislike for working in a large organization: I have thought about my role at...

Joe Brockmeier

Uncov is back, and you can write for it

The Web Life by Andrew Mager

The rantalicious tech blog Uncov took a brief hiatus from the Internet, but now it's back. Former Googler software engineer and current CTO of Pressflip Ted Dzubia will be doing...

Andrew Mager

Stealth Company decloaks... as Siri

The Semantic Web by Paul Miller

Silicon Valley stealth-mode startup, Stealth Company, revealed a little more about itself overnight and rebranded as Siri. Stealth Company's website has proved vague at best over the past few months,...

Paul Miller

Symantec Goes Into The Cloud With Email Filtering

Forrester Research by Ted Schadler

Symantec today announced its acquisition of MessageLabs, a 520-person UK-based email filtering and security vendor. Given the cost and hassles that information & knowledge management professionls (IKM Pros) have keeping...

The View from Forrester Research

And speaking of Sun Microsystems

Education IT by Christopher Dawson

Sun Microsystems is not a name we often associate with education outside of high-end technical fields at the university level. Of course, Sun is responsible for OpenOffice and has recently...

Christopher Dawson

Judge order Palin to preserve Yahoo emails

ZDNet Government by Richard Koman

It's been a source of contention on this blog and others whether Sarah Palin used her Yahoo accounts for any state business, or whether it was all family pictures and...

Richard Koman

More confusion on vitamin D

Healthcare IT by Dana Blankenhorn

Doctors are going to have to come up with some good explanations why God's way of giving us Vitamin D is bad and the chemist's way is better.

Dana Blankenhorn
  • Managing L'unix

    Paul Murphy

    A free-ranging daily blog on issues related to Unix - including Linux, BSD, and Solaris - with a particular focus on enterprise-level decision-making.

  • On Su