Thursday, February 28, 2013

General Dynamics aims to offer government-level security on smartphones

  Industrial sapphire might be your next smartphone display | Micron unveils high-endurance, data center SAS SSD
 
  Computerworld Hardware

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General Dynamics aims to offer government-level security on smartphones
General Dynamics is looking to bring U.S. government-level security to consumer smartphones, allowing organizations to benefit from the type of strong data protection only available on expensive and clunky mobile terminals. Read More


RESOURCE COMPLIMENTS OF: EMC

Announcing exciting new server flash products
You don't want to miss this live broadcast featuring extreme flash product testing! Join EMC on Tuesday, March 5 when we announce exciting new server flash products. Find out how your environment can benefit from extreme flash performance. Get real-time answers to all your product questions from our flash technology experts.

WHITE PAPER: Red Hat

Introduction to Red Hat Storage Architecture
Over the past ten years, enterprises have seen enormous gains in scalability, flexibility, and affordability as they migrated from proprietary, monolithic server architectures to architectures that are virtualized, open source, standardized, and commoditized. Unfortunately, storage has not kept pace with computing. Learn More

Industrial sapphire might be your next smartphone display
Sapphire could someday be used in some smartphone displays instead of the toughened Gorilla Glass popular today Read More

Micron unveils high-endurance, data center SAS SSD
Micron released today announced a new SAS SSD that it said is aimed at tier one, mission critical applications. The SSD can withstand up to 10 full data fills per day for five years, Micron says. Read More

Dell releases first wireless ultrabook docking station
Dell has taken the wraps off the Dell Wireless Dock, which allows the company's Latitude 6430u Ultrabook to connect to peripherals wirelessly using the WiGig standard. Read More

Tokyo court rules Apple doesn't violate Samsung patent
A Tokyo court ruled Thursday that Apple did not infringe a Samsung patent, a small win for Apple in the continuing legal wrangling between the two companies. Read More

Cisco joins top 5 server vendors for the first time, IDC says
Cisco Systems has entered the list of the top 5 server vendors for the first time, drawing level with Fujitsu and Oracle in a tie for fourth place, research firm IDC said on Wednesday. Read More


WHITE PAPER: Service-now.com

Guide to Social IT Basics
When IT organizations utilize social media, it can efficiently help more people inside and outside the data center quickly access more services and knowledge. Read Now!

Chromebook Pixel review: A luxury laptop for life in the cloud
A deep-dive review of Google's new Chromebook Pixel laptop, which has high-quality hardware and an amazing touch-based display -- and a few limitations. So at $1,300, is it the laptop for you? Read More

LTE smartphone prices dropping surprisingly fast, analyst says
Products from several smartphone vendors and processors from the likes of Nvidia are helping drive down the cost of LTE-enabled devices. Read More

ARM still drives design for smartphones -- 1 billion in 2013
ARM creates the intellectual property used in the designs used to run more than 95% of the smartphones in the world, but the company had only a small booth at the edge of Hall 6 at Mobile World Congress this week. Read More

HP shareholder revolt targets two directors, auditor over Autonomy purchase
An investor advisor group is asking shareholders of Hewlett-Packard not to re-elect two long-standing board members and to oppose the ratification of the company's audit firm in connection with the continuing controversy over the company's purchase of Autonomy. Read More

Dell Latitude 10 gets some attitude with 20-hour battery, fingerprint reader
Dell has bolstered security features on its Latitude 10 tablet and offers an extended life battery, all in the hope these add-ons will appeal to large institutional users like the government, healthcare operations and the financial services industry. Read More

Small-cell chip, network rollouts point to a diverse future
In Star Wars terms, the small cells that mobile carriers and vendors will be talking up this week at Mobile World Congress are more like the odd-couple androids R2-D2 and C-3PO than like their foes, the Empire's phalanxes of identical storm troopers. Read More

 

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