Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Salesforce.com revs up mobile strategy with HTML5

  Google partners to provide cheap, Wi-Fi service in Nairobi | Cisco, NEC team up on LTE networks
 
  Computerworld Networking

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Salesforce.com revs up mobile strategy with HTML5
Salesforce.com is placing HTML5 at the forefront of its mobile strategy with an upcoming product, Touch.Salesforce.com. The new software will automatically render the company's applications on touch-enabled devices like Apple's iPad. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Avaya

Fit-for-Purpose Data Center Networking
Find out why the technology of choice for creating the foundations of network transparency will be that of Shortest Path Bridging (SPB). SPB masks devices, links and protocols and delivers a logically extended Ethernet LAN that provides connectivity for multiple end points. Learn more advantages of SPB and why it is a superior choice over TRILL. Learn More

WHITE PAPER: Rackspace

Understanding the Cloud Computing Stack
Through this year-long series of whitepapers and webinars, independent analyst Ben Kepes will be building a cloud computing curriculum designed for technologists and non-technical users alike. The mission is to build widespread knowledge about the cloud revolution and encourage discussion about the cloud's benefits for businesses of all sizes. Learn more.

Google partners to provide cheap, Wi-Fi service in Nairobi
A partnership between Google and an Internet service provider in eastern Africa launched Wazi Wi-Fi, a high-speed wireless broadband network in Nairobi, Kenya. Read More

Cisco, NEC team up on LTE networks
Cisco Systems and NEC will jointly sell LTE networks to carriers under a deal announced on Tuesday. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Riverbed

Map Critical Network Assets and Dependencies
Learn how Riverbed provided the International Herald Tribune with an end-to-end view of application delivery paths – from servers to desktops, and how advanced traffic analysis ensured faster problem resolution and more effective WAN management. Read now!

Darlene Storm: Will cyberthugs exploit Google Plus 'identity service' for spear phishing attacks?
After pseudonym bannings, Eric Schmidt admitted Google Plus is meant to be an 'identity service.' Bye-bye privacy, hello online surveillance. Does Google hope to someday issue your trusted online ID passport? But what if all that user data tempts cyberthugs for massive spear phishing attacks? Read More

Google one of many victims in SSL certificate hack
A Dutch company that issues digital certificates used to authenticate Web sites said late Tuesday that several dozen other sites in addition to Google have been affected by a security breach. Read More

Robert L. Mitchell: In Irene's wake: DSL chaos
Hurricane Irene kills DSL; a seemingly ill-timed "security update" keeps it from coming back. Read More

 
 
 

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SHARK TANK OF THE DAY

Just a bit short that day

It's half a century ago, and this pilot fish deals with 7-track tape drives -- those big reels spinning in refrigerator-sized cabinets that you see attached to computers in old movies. But something seems to be making the data unreadable.

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