Monday, October 11, 2010

Cisco bilkers get lengthy prison terms; 10 reasons to fear Google's self-driving car

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10 reasons to fear Google's self-driving car | The compute stars align

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Cisco bilkers get lengthy prison terms
The couple who defrauded Cisco out of $20 million are getting lengthy prison terms. Mario Easevoli, 33, and his wife Jennifer, 29, were sentence to 12 and 9 years, respectively, for duping Cisco into sending replacement parts for routers and switches, which they then sold. Read More


E-GUIDE: IBM

5 Tips for Getting BI Right
Due to improvements in Business Intelligence (BI) technology and the way CIOs are implementing it, BI has the potential to transform organizations by delivering the information executives need in order to facilitate accurate decisions and provide relevant performance metrics. Learn more.

WHITE PAPER: Oracle

Data Warehousing and Business Intelligence
This paper is an overview of Oracle's capabilities for data warehousing, including the Oracle Exadata Database Machine, and discusses the key features and technologies by which Oracle-based business intelligence and data warehouse systems easily integrate information, perform fast queries, scale to very large data volumes and analyze any data. Read Now

10 reasons to fear Google's self-driving car
Not to slow the wheels of progress or anything but …Google's research into self-driving cars received a world of attention over the weekend because, well, because it's Google. And while the concept of autonomous vehicles is not new, allow me this opportunity to ask if we have thought enough about: self-driving 18-wheelers. And what happens when one self-driving car can't resist texting the other wicked cute self-driving car? Read More

The compute stars align
IBM's recent acquisition of Blade Networks is an endorsement of what Cisco has been claiming as it pushes its Unified Computing System: that integrating switching changes the blade server/cloud game. Read More

1 in 4 babies on Internet before they're born
The average child has an online presence by the age of 6 months, thanks to their parents' Facebooking and other online activities, and nearly a quarter of kids make their Internet debut before they're even born. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Fluke Networks

Field Testing Installed Optical Fiber Cabling
As traffic over networks expands and expectations of reliability increase, testing optical fiber cabling after installation is more important than ever before to assure the end-user that the installation was done properly and that the cabling will support Local Area Networks (LAN) into the future. Read now!

Death, taxes and bandwidth growth
Despite modest economic growth, 2010 marks a year of pent-up demand for WAN bandwidth, although IT professionals seem leery of predicting wholesale increases. Read More

Windows 7 migration for the little guy
The market has been filling up with migration tools to help IT managers upgrade to Windows 7 from XP and many of our pages have been devoted to helping smooth the migration process. A Seattle company called Prowess offers one advantage over those of other comers because its solution is free. Read More

The US offshore wind energy technology conundrum
If wind is ever to be a significant part of the energy equation in this country we'll need to take it offshore -- into the deep oceans. Large offshore wind objects could harness about more than 4,000 GW of electricity, according to a massive report on wind energy out this week. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Iron Mountain

Top 10 Reasons for Using Server Online Backup and Recovery
Data protection solutions that combine the latest advancements in disk-based backup with secure, integrated online technologies offer the fast, assured data recovery. Read now

Microsoft buys dozens of smartphone patents, many by Palm
Microsoft has licensed 74 "foundational" smartphone patents, including many originated by Palm, now part of HP, accord to a report in The Wall Street Journal. The goal seems to be to avoid the patent battles embroiling smartphone vendors, including makers of Android handsets. Read More

Opera to Microsoft's IE: 'We're still here.'
Each month when the media report on browser market share numbers from Net Applications, Opera Software doesn't make the cut. We usually focus on Internet Explorer, Firefox and Chrome. But you don't have to slide your finger too much further down the list before you find Opera (for desktops) and Opera Mini (for mobile). For September, they held places five and six right after Apple's Safari. Read More

Will I lose customers if I enable IPv6 on my web site?
A common question for webmaster about going dual-stack: Will I lose users? I have heard rumors about bad quality of IPv6. Here's the status of the problem and some well-known proposals. Read More

Microsoft refuses to reveal cloud e-mail customer numbers
Tech companies love to play games with numbers -- especially when they don't want to admit that a product isn't being adopted by as many customers as they'd like. That's an essential truth to keep in mind when trying to figure out how many people actually use the cloud e-mail services offered by Microsoft and Google. Read More

Virtualizing the wireless LAN controller: The start of a trend
Bluesocket's vWLAN architecture continues the evolution of (and debate surrounding) the architecture of enterprise-class wireless LANs. Virtualizing the controller has some real benefits in distributed-data implementations. Read More



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SLIDESHOWS

Ig Nobel honors world's wackiest researchers: 2010 winners
The 20th annual Ig Nobel Prizes were awarded Thursday night for "achievements that first make people laugh, and then make them think." The prizes commemorate the world's funniest research, and sometimes the world's biggest villains (BP is a winner this year). Here's a list of the 2010 prizes.

Eight hot commercial space projects
The recently passed NASA Authorization Act of 2010 was generally seen as a huge nod toward developing commercial space projects. NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said the authorization "launches a commercial space transportation industry." Indeed there are a number of interesting commercial space projects underway.

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