Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Pentagon to add thousands of new cybersecurity jobs

  Forrester predicts slower IT spending growth for Asia-Pacific | Unseen, all-out cyber war on the U.S. has begun
 
  Government IT

Forward this to a Friend >>>


Pentagon to add thousands of new cybersecurity jobs
The Pentagon is planning to expand its cyber security force nearly five fold over the next several years in a bid to bolster its defensive and offensive computer capabilities. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Red Hat

Network-Attached Storage in the Public Cloud
In this paper, after reviewing the key requirements for an enterprise-grade cloud storage system, we introduce Red Hat Storage Server and review the architectural characteristics that make it the storage system of choice for enterprise users. Learn More

WHITE PAPER: Research In Motion

Call Recording with BlackBerry Smartphones
In this resource, uncover how mobile communications fit into your call recording strategy, and what it means for your enterprise. Learn More

Forrester predicts slower IT spending growth for Asia-Pacific
IT spending growth in the Asia-Pacific region is expected to slow as countries including China and India grapple with emerging economic issues as a result of the world economic crisis, according to research firm Forrester. Read More

Unseen, all-out cyber war on the U.S. has begun
Security pros and government officials warn of a possible cyber 9/11 involving banks, utilities, other companies, or the Internet Read More


WEBCAST: VMware

Disaster Recovery for Exchange Using VMware
Learn how customers use VMware solutions to increase performance and maintain uptime. View Now!

Anonymous hits US government site, threatens release of secrets
Hackers working under the name of the Anonymous hacktivist collective hit a U.S. government website on Saturday, replacing its home page with a 1,340 word text detailing its frustrations with the way the American legal system works and a threat to release "secrets" gathered from U.S. government websites. Read More

Government data requests to Google continue to rise
Governments continue to ask Google for more data about its users, with more than two-thirds of requests in the U.S. made through a subpoena, which usually doesn't require asking a judge for a search warrant. Read More

 
JOIN THE COMPUTERWORLD CONVERSATION ON GOOGLE + Be sure to add Computerworld to your Google+ circles to keep track of breaking news, features, blogs, tech reviews and career advice. http://plus.google.com/+computerworld/posts

NEW COMPUTERWORLD JOB BOARD
Search multiple listings now and get new job alerts as they are posted.

 

Get more IT peer perspective online:
LinkedIn Group | Facebook | Twitter

You are currently subscribed to computerworld_itgovernment as jonsan98@gmail.com.

Unsubscribe from this newsletter | Manage your subscriptions | Subscribe | Privacy Policy

If you are interested in advertising in this newsletter, please contact: bglynn@cxo.com

To contact Computerworld, please send an e-mail to online@computerworld.com.

Copyright (C) 2013 Computerworld, 492 Old Connecticut Path, Framingham, MA 01701

** Please do not reply to this message. If you want to contact someone directly, send an e-mail to online@computerworld.com. **

 

 

ads

Ditulis Oleh : Angelisa Vivian Hari: 6:51 AM Kategori:

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 

Blog Archive