- Windows Phone 8, or 'Apollo,' debuts next month at San Francisco conference
- Extreme BYOD: When consumer tech goes to unexpected places
- iPhone display rumors galore
- Supercomputer to connect to 400PB of storage via Ethernet
- Tech's $20 million CEOs
Cloud computing disrupts the vendor landscape
If you think cloud computing is a disruptive force within the enterprise, just imagine what the cloud is doing to the vendor landscape.
Juniper offers fabric for high-performance clouds
Juniper has a three-pronged cloud strategy that includes selling networking gear in the data centers of most major IaaS players, providing secure connections between virtual data centers and cloud customers, and orchestrating how virtualized resources get allocated to cloud application services.
CA weighs in with Cloud 360
CA Technologies addresses the public cloud in three ways: helping enterprises understand how to use it; enabling service providers to build it; and, managing customers' expectations about how operating in the cloud will change how they do business.
Citrix targets virtualization, orchestration layers
Were they guilty of "cloudwashing" - slapping the cloud label on existing products? Were they ignoring the cloud and risking getting left in the dust? Were they scrambling to re-invent themselves as cloud service providers?
Cisco sees UCS as key cloud building block
The only place Cisco plays directly in the cloud is in the SaaS arena with its WebEx collaboration, video and telepresence services, which account for about $1 billion of Cisco's $40 billion in annual revenue.
Don't expect Woz to bid on this Apple contract
News last week that Sotheby's will auction off "The Contract That Founded Apple" - a partnership signed April 1, 1976 by the late Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Ron Wayne -- no doubt caught the eye of techie collectors and even sparked speculation that Apple might buy the document.
How stupid can cell carriers be? Really Stupid.
The recent revelation that most of us are carrying around smartphones with embedded rootkits is both surprising and not so surprising. It's surprising because it makes you wonder, "How stupid can the carriers be?" It's not surprising in that we know the answer to that.
America's critical infrastructure security response system is broken
The flap over the reported water utility hack in Illinois begs the question: Is the reporting system that the U.S. has set up to identify cyberattacks on critical infrastructure broken and in need of re-thinking?
Two Android tablets, different goals
Shaw reviews the Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus and the Motorola Xoom 4G LTE.
Cracking MD5 ... with Google?!
The MD5 algorithm has a new vulnerability: Google!
CIO Q&A: How Citrix supports more workers with lower IT budget
Citrix CIO Paul Martine is the poster child for everything that Citrix markets to other CIOs.
RIM to offer multiplatform device management
Research In Motion is taking on mobile device management for Android and Apple iOS devices as well as its own products, introducing the BlackBerry Mobile Fusion product on Tuesday.
Cisco to introduce larger Cius tablet next year
Cisco Systems in the first half of next year will release a tablet with a larger screen than the current Cius, the first move in the company's long-term plans to introduce tablets in multiple sizes, an executive said this week.