News (33)

  • Microsoft hands out green cash as Sun gets thin

    Microsoft has this week handed out US$500,000 to four universities doing research into efficient computing, while rival Sun has stepped up its green IT marketing efforts.

  • Skype makes enterprise inroads

    The Internet telephony software Skype has found its way into the business world, as corporate road warriors and remote workers use it to reduce long-distance and mobile phone costs.

  • Optical networking: The next generation

    A new showcase for optical networking technology is beginning to light up, offering a test bed for research that could help spark a fire under the moribund industry.

  • Worm's spread shows holes in patch system

    This week's MSBlast outbreak is raising old questions about the effectiveness of software patches that are intended to secure computers.

  • Study: Software piracy on the wane

    The latest report from the Business Software Alliance (BSA) concludes that software piracy declined in the United States during 2002.

Features and Case Studies (9)

  • Joe Biden's tech voting record

    US vice presidential candidate Joe Biden has a mixed record on technology, spending most of his Senate career allied with the FBI and copyright holders. His anti-privacy legislation was actually responsible for the creation of PGP.

  • LinkedIn: Lloyd Taylor, VP of Technical Operations

    Lloyd Taylor, vice president of technical operations at LinkedIn talks about facilitating online communications between its 17 million business professionals. He also discusses his past experience building and scaling data centres at Google and how it differs from his new role.

  • Caught in a phishing trap?

    The rise in online identity fraud has companies on the hook: Either educate customers or lose them.

  • Optical networking: The next generation

    Forget Internet2. The National LambdaRail is the most ambitious network research project going. But can it save the optical networking industry?

  • RFID: Proceed with caution

    Radio frequency identification has the potential to revolutionise supply chains of retailers the world over. However, for a 20-year-old technology, it still has significant teething problems.

Reviews (5)

  • Microscopic 'Braille' points to new storage

    Scientists experiment with a molecular-scale storage device that can be read like Braille and could lead to systems that hold nearly 100 gigabits of data per square inch.

  • Experiment puts new spin on storage

    A pixel pattern made up of 1,024 bits is the largest set of data written onto and read from a molecule to date.

  • The Google gods

    Does the power of the world's most popular search engine pose a threat to the Web's independence?

  • Apple releases iSync beta

    Apple Computer has released a beta, or testing version, of iSync, the company's latest "i" application.

  • Companies plan for XP upgrades

    Once you've decided to make the move to XP, there are plenty of deployment issues to consider. You'll have to decide where and how Windows XP will work best in your organisation.

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