Network World reports on the most significant news for infrastructure and operations professionals.
Glue Networks and Avi Networks unveil SDN updates
Magic Leap's 'mixed reality' breakthrough is a welcome relief to the boredom of hyping Uber and AirBnB as technology companies just for using the internet and cloud computing.
Before Cisco Live 2015 even kicked off, startup Avi Networks announced integration with Cisco ACI.
New Cisco 802.11ac access point puts fresh focus on Wave 2 Wifi
With Microsoft's Windows 10 launch approaching fast, here's what you can expect in terms of new features and old features that won't make it to the new OS.
CTO, Services, Solutions chiefs out; Nine elevated internally, one from outside
More organizations are turning over certain IT functions to managed service providers, freeing internal IT staff to focus on strategic IT projects.
The Piston Cloud Computing acquisition will help Cisco execute its Intercloud strategy.
NASA research aims at developing quieter, greener, supersonic aircraft.
Google is bringing Project Loon to the U.S., which means we'll get to deal with more of the internet balloons' crash landings.
OpenStack market is consolidating around big vendors as M&A flurry continues in the cloud market
Joint marketing, sales arrangement aimed at shared customers
Piston Cloud is Cisco’s second OpenStack buy in less than a year
Many companies have ghosts in their systems, employees who've gone on to a better place
Platform helps filter out the noise from security alerts, provide forensics to figure out what happened
Here’s your shocker of the day…
Data furnaces heat homes with dispersed cloud servers. The first eRadiators are getting installed now.
Outside the free upgrade offer, it prices Windows 10 as it did Windows 8 -- and Windows 7 before that
Acquisitions work as a stop-gap strategy, but at some point mobile innovation has to come from within Microsoft, says analyst
Using the cloud is one thing, managing it is another
Our guesses as to who will help guide company under new CEO Robbins
A presentation at last week's Velocity conference in Silicon Valley showed that much has changed at the software giant—but the company still doesn't get 'cool.'