Network World reports on the most significant news for infrastructure and operations professionals.
Phones make up about one-quarter of Wi-Fi devices, and more will soon sport 802.11n
China's foreign ministry offered no immediate reaction to Google's move to stop censoring Internet search
Human rights groups also chimed in on Google's side, blasting China's Internet censorship
The search giant did not infringe trademark law, the European Court of Justice concluded
It is also insisting on security clearance for equipment purchased by local telecommunications service providers
News analysis: After drawing a line in the sand, Google's image gets a bit of polish
Tom Online ended a search engine pact with Google and now uses Baidu.com
China did not immediately block any Google sites after the company stopped censoring search results
Analysts say Google polished its image a bit with Chinese censorship move
Seattle No. 1, Boston, DC, San Francisco, Raleigh round out top five
The new technology will be used in services later this year, according to Alcatel-Lucent
Broadcast TV makes up the biggest chunk, but FCC takes from other areas as well
FathomDB, Cloudscale look to solve database problems
New Zealand wants more transparency but has to respect the views of member countries, says commerce minister Simon Power
"Top 10 Riskiest Online Cities" according to Symantec's Norton
Registrars such as Network Solutions and Go Daddy haven't committed to launch dates for emerging Web security standard
Some say they need better resources and that business students require more tech savvy
TurboHercules accuses Big Blue of freezing out smaller companies
Carrier faces tough battle ahead against AT&T, Verizon's planned use of rival LTE
IE, Firefox and Chrome users can check for outdated, vulnerable add-ons
Windows Phone 7 finds no shortage of opinions in blogs
Texas university explores evaluates mobile, digital learning; 'ubiquity matters'
But representatives of large broadband providers also praise large portions of the document
The U.S. is ahead in mobile broadband but faces threats, they said at CTIA
MEP: Europe should pull out of talks if it fails to open up the process
The data format would allow entities to exchange information on cybercrimes faster
Company says it's handling cases individually, offering refunds, license extensions
An effort to create another international treaty would complicate matters
Introduced at CTIA, the phone will run Android and have a 1GHz processor
Cybercrime organizations often run like corporations, staffed by experts in specific jobs
Under the law, the White House would track countries that are soft on cybercrime
iPad edition of Opera Mini may be next, says company's co-founder
First announced in February, the application becomes available later this week
Tightening up the domain name system would greatly help police battle cybercriminals
Tim Berners-Lee will head up government-funded institute to move the Semantic Web into the business world
Previously called the Supersonic, it will be released this summer
Some e-mail messages never make it from Gmail servers to Outlook PC clients
"Alpha" companies at DEMO are self-funded, run by part-time CEOs
Even with an innovative idea, raising venture capital is tough these days
Software tool could help detect bias, some say
State media accused Google of political motives behind its moves in China