Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Drive-in ditches MPLS for cellular; Android an alternative to Windows in netbooks, says Gartner

Twitter "twitpocalypse" affects iPhone apps; Nokia to offer Life Tools for rural mobile users
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Spotlight Story
Drive-in ditches MPLS for cellular

A chain of drive-in restaurants trolling for a new branch office router settled on a lower-cost, higher-performing option: a remote wireless LAN access point with a cellular module. Read full story

Related News:

Android an alternative to Windows in netbooks, says Gartner
Google's Android mobile phone software worked well on mini-laptops at the Computex Taipei 2009 electronics show and, backed by the strong Google brand, may be headed for prime time, two Gartner analysts said Monday.

Twitter "twitpocalypse" affects iPhone apps
The surging popularity of the Twitter messaging service has broken some or all of several Twitter client applications as a part of what is being called "the Twitpocalypse."

Nokia to offer Life Tools for rural mobile users
Nokia plans to roll out its Life Tools group of services to more emerging markets following a successful pilot program in India, a company executive said Monday.

June Giveaways
Cisco Subnet and Microsoft Subnet are giving away training from Global Knowledge to two lucky readers and 15 copies each of books on IPv6 security, the Cisco Secure Firewall Services Module, and Active Directory Domain Services 2008. Deadline for entries June 30.

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June 17, 2009

TOP STORIES | MOST DUGG STORIES

  1. Data center derby heats up
  2. 68-degree data centers becoming a thing of the past
  3. The 10 dumbest tech products so far
  4. National broadband happy talk papers over net neutrality fight
  5. China dominates NSA-backed coding contest
  6. Cisco says it's not eating its SAN young
  7. Sprint starts divesting iDEN network
  8. Cisco expected to be more aggressive after Q1 share losses
  9. Google unveils plug-in to marry Outlook, Gmail
  10. Future proofing your router purchases

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