Monday, April 14, 2014

Why is Heartbleed like bananas and did the NSA know?

Network World Voices of Networking - Newsletter - networkworld.com
My Two Cents on the Security and Market Implications of the End of Windows XP | iPhone 6 to come in 4.7 and 5.5-inch flavors; Will include NFC functionality, much larger battery, and more

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Why is Heartbleed like bananas and did the NSA know?
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WHITE PAPER: Dell Software

Protect your organization while supporting mobility and BYOD
Check out this new white paper to learn how Dell Mobility Solutions for security can help protect your organization's information, systems and networks while simplifying administration and supporting employees with forward-thinking mobility initiatives for a range of devices and operating systems. Learn more

WHITE PAPER: SAS

The Intersection of Big Data, Data Governance & MDM
From ownership of decisions made during development to protection of data as an enterprise asset, every aspect of your company's big data rollout can benefit from entrenched data governance and master data management processes. Learn more in this article. Learn more

My Two Cents on the Security and Market Implications of the End of Windows XP
I know there have been a substantial number of articles on the end of Windows XP and its implications, but I couldn't resist chiming in. Hey, maybe I was destined to do so since I was one of a few thousand people at the Windows 95 introduction in Redmond (back in the summer of 1995 of course). Here are my thoughts on this transition, I'll try to take a bit of a different angle on the topic. ... Read More

iPhone 6 to come in 4.7 and 5.5-inch flavors; Will include NFC functionality, much larger battery, and more
Tim Cook promised a busy 2014 and it's sure looking like that might indeed pan out, according to a recent research report from the typically accurate Ming-Chi Kuo. In a research note that made the rounds on Wednesday evening, Kuo laid out all of Apple's alleged 2014 product roll-outs, spanning everything from the iWatch to the iPhone and more. Read More

Research: Attacks on HTML5-based apps infect smartphones, spread like a 'worm'
By 2016, experts estimate that over 50% of mobile apps will be based on HTML5 technology and coded, at least partially, in JavaScript. Apps are usually written in a language native to a specific platform, but developers only need to create one HTML5-based app and it runs on any platform. While that's handy for app developers, it's also "just a disaster waiting to happen," according to Syracuse University... Read More


WHITE PAPER: 8x8, Inc

When Disaster Tests Your Business, Cloud Can Save It
Find out why the survivors of Hurricane Sandy and other recent calamities say they wish they'd had cloud-based business VoIP communications, rather than "the vulnerability and limitations of the premises-based communications we had in place." Read Now

Want to be Bond or Snowden? Swann's HD RemoteCam is for you
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iWatch may be on track for 2014 launch, may include UV light exposure sensor
The WWDC lottery is over and we can now start looking ahead to what we can only hope are exciting product announcements from Apple down the road. While new iPhones are all but a given for 2014, there remains a lot of speculation surrounding Apple's now mythical and long-rumored iWatch. Read More

Managing IT Risk Associated with Mobile Computing Security
When BYOD was coming to fruition a few years ago, it had a sudden and deep impact on IT risk. Why? Many CISOs I spoke with at the time said it was purely a matter of scale. All of a sudden, large enterprises had thousands of additional devices on their networks and they struggled to figure out what these devices were doing and how these activities impacted organizational risk. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Dell Inc.

10GbE in the Data Center
Improvements in 10GbE technology, lower pricing, and improved performance make 10GbE for the mid-market a viable and cost-effective strategy. This white paper discusses a multitude of reasons why moving to a 10GbE infrastructure today makes sense. View Now

Cisco's mixed messages
In positioning its OpFlex policy protocol and the declarative policy programming model in which it operates, Cisco marketing officials noted repeatedly how it was an optimal southbound protocol alternative to OpenFlow, OVSDB and the imperative network programmability model preferred by many others in the industry, including VMware - sans OpenFlow. Read More

HBO's Silicon Valley: The one critical thing they left out
Hollywood has been paying a lot of attention to Silicon Valley lately. But despite large-scale ambitions, most of its attempts to nail techie culture have failed as miserably as WebVan or MySpace. Read More

Social engineer tag teams to capture the flags at Def Con 22 contest
Want to learn how to con people? Perhaps you want to become a politician or penetration tester? Or maybe you'd like to learn which eye cues and micro-expressions can warn people that you are lying? Whether you want to be a spy, scammer or sales person - or study how to spot one - the social engineer framework is where you can learn everything from psychological to physical aspects of social engineering.... Read More

QFabric vs MetaFabric: What's the difference?
I believe Juniper was the first mainstream network vendor to use the term "fabric" aggressively to describe its next-generation network architecture when the company announced QFabric back in early 2011. There may have been another vendor that used it first, but Juniper made it mainstream. Since then, almost every network vendor uses the term "fabric" broadly, and Juniper itself announced its next... Read More

What's Next for Enterprise Wireless LANs?
I've had several interesting conversations with attendees at recent Network World Wireless Infrastructure events regarding the future of enterprise-class wireless LAN systems. I've been theorizing that the advent (really a landslide at this point) of 802.11ac represents the last "big" advance in 802.11 standards, and, almost by definition, this implies a slowing in the rate of underlying innovation... Read More


SLIDESHOWS

9 reasons users won't ditch Windows XP

Yet many people are determined to hold on -- you'll have to pry Windows XP from their PC's cold, dead hard drive.

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