Thursday, July 15, 2010

NextIO's rolls out vCORE GPU appliance; Imperva adds NAS firewall

  Imperva adds NAS firewall to line-up | Microsoft punches Cisco, VMware in the eye with Windows Azure Appliance
 
  Network World Storage

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NextIO's rolls out vCORE GPU appliance
NextIO introduced the vCORE consolidation appliance recently – a shared resource appliance that congregates GPUs in a single external enclosure. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Diskeeper

A New Look at Defragmenting
While advanced storage infrastructures add additional layers of abstraction between applications and devices, they do not eliminate the need to solve fragmentation. This paper reviews different strategies for eliminating fragmentation and details a new approach that prevents fragmentation from occurring in the first place. Read Now

WEBCAST: IBM

3 Reasons You Need a Comprehensive Smart Archive Strategy
Learn how enterprises can combine SAP and IBM's Smart Archive to craft content collection, archiving and compliance strategies. Learn More

Imperva adds NAS firewall to line-up
Security company Imperva has announced a software firewall that protects and monitors access to files sitting on network-attached storage (NAS) servers. Read More


E-BOOK: IBM

The IBM Guide to Smart Archive
The IBM Guide to Smart Archive is an interactive collateral and video tool that helps explain in a unique way IBM's Smart Archive strategy. Learn More

Microsoft punches Cisco, VMware in the eye with Windows Azure Appliance
The Windows Azure Appliance that Microsoft announced on Monday combines cloud services and virtualization with an on-premises flexible server, networking, storage. Partners for the device include Dell, HP, Fujitsu. Sound familiar? It should. Read More


WEBCAST: IBM

Take a Smarter Approach to Archiving
Examine strategies and tactics for unifying data and content. View an e-discovery calculator and go inside a 3-year ROI model. Learn More

LaCie XtremKey survives heat, cold, pressure, water
You want your data with you everywhere you go, but at the same time you don't want to risk damaging it—how do you handle the conundrum? Storage purveyor LaCie has one solution: its new rough-and-tumble XtremKey flash drive is designed to withstand even the harshest environments. Read More

Freecom Mobile CLS drive comes with sticky labels
Freecom has come up with the hard drive system for the user who feels compelled to physically label everything. Read More

 
 
 

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Books for you from Microsoft Subnet and Cisco Subnet

Throw your name in the hat for a complete CompTIA Security+ study guide and the SharePoint bible, Essential SharePoint 2010. Deadline July 31. Enter today!

SLIDESHOWS

Robocop ran DOS
Virtually no sci-fi or action flick these days is complete without a computer scene showing a few screens of mysterious scrolling text and a 3D wire-frame model. But where does this vaguely tech-looking stuff come from? Well, more often than not, it comes from a Website, app, or startup screen from the real world at the time the movie was made. Read on for some of the most unexpected tech cameos in movies.

Top Russian spy ring technology screw-ups
Alleged Russian spies arrested last month in cities around the United States seemed to be lacking in spycraft and in urgent need of some IT expertise, based on some of the gaffes they made. They also used some technologies effectively. Here is a summary of their efforts as revealed in court filings against them.

MOST-READ STORIES

  1. Researchers find privacy flaws in Chatroulette
  2. Bluetooth at heart of gas station credit-card scam
  3. Newest attack on your credit card: ATM shims
  4. 8 amazing things you'll do with Windows 8
  5. Social network sites: Block or not?
  6. Microsoft punches Cisco, VMware in the eye
  7. Cisco rival Brocade for sale again?
  8. Apple's iPhone 4 fiasco: There's no good way out
  9. VMware says: Windows still matter ... sort of
  10. Windows XP SP2 and 7 other things Microsoft has killed this year

 

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