Tuesday, June 18, 2013

The No. 1 place to work in IT: Quicken Loans

  Walmart taking the Chromebook mainstream | Facebook set to beef up Instagram with video?
 
  Computerworld First Look

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The No. 1 place to work in IT: Quicken Loans
IT employees enjoy the company's relaxed atmosphere and culture of innovation, but they're equally thrilled to be part of the revitalization of downtown Detroit. Read More


WHITE PAPER: EMC Corporation

Backup and Recovery Changes
This IDC Whitepaper provides an overview of the forces driving change within today's IT organizations and data centers and discusses how backup and recovery can enable or hinder broader IT infrastructure and business transformation. Learn more.

WHITE PAPER: 8x8

What Phone Features Should Every Small Business Have?
In this this informative eBook, USA TODAY small business columnist Steve Strauss explains in plain English why VoIP is such a good idea for small business and shows how the many powerful, affordable features available from 8x8 can make your business more efficient. Read Now.

Walmart taking the Chromebook mainstream
Walmart has begun selling the Chromebook in 2,800 of its approximately 4,600 U.S. stores, expanding the reach of this still-on-the-margins platform. Staples too. Read More

Facebook set to beef up Instagram with video?
Speculation abounds that Facebook Thursday will unveil tools to enable its popular Instagram app to take and share short videos. Read More

How Apple shook up the electronic book market
Apple didn't try to fix or raise the prices of electronic books when it entered into the market in 2010, according to Apple Senior Vice President Eddy Cue. Rather, he says, the company was only working to ensure a profit for itself. Read More

Yahoo discloses user data requests from US law enforcement agencies
Yahoo has received between 12,000 to 13,000 requests for user data from law enforcement agencies in the U.S. between Dec. 1 and May 31 this year, the company said Monday. Read More

AMD reboots server strategy with first ARM chips
Advanced Micro Devices is building its future server strategy around chips used in smartphones and tablets. The company said its first ARM server processors -- which will be released in the second half of next year -- will be faster and more powerful than its existing low-power x86 server processors. Read More


WHITE PAPER: SAS

BIG DATA ANALYTICS: Show Your Organization IT Means Business
Read this white paper from business analytics champion SAS to learn the key elements of a strategic Big Data analytics architecture and the criteria the business will use to evaluate such architecture. Read Now

Sprint sues Dish, Clearwire over takeover plan
Sprint Nextel sued Clearwire and Dish Network on Monday in a bid to block Dish from taking over Clearwire, Sprint's majority-owned network partner. Read More

Rambus, STMicroelectronics settle lawsuits, sign patent agreement
Much of Rambus' past is associated with lawsuits, but the company is moving forward with dispute settlements. Read More

Open Data Center Alliance tackles big data analysis
The Open Data Center Alliance, a customer group that shares tips about cloud deployments and tries to nudge vendors into supplying the products they want, has added big data to the list of IT topics it covers. Read More

Efficiency will hold down storage growth, IDC says
Lean storage techniques will keep a lid on storage investments over the next few years, though the world's enterprises still are on track to buy 138 exabytes of storage system capacity in 2017, IDC said. Read More

Greg Lambert: Single critical update fixes all versions of Internet Explorer
There is a lot going on with Patch Tuesday updates this month, even though with just five updates we have fewer than the usual monthly average of eight. Of the June updates, we see one marked as "Critical," and four rated as "Important." The first (and, ahem, worst) of Microsoft's June Patch Tuesday updates relates to Internet Explorer and covers all versions (6 right up to 10) and all platforms (32, 64-bit and the new RT platforms). Over the past month, I have been keeping an eye on some of the issues tracking IE on the Windows Update (WSUS) and security forums, and we have seen a number of issues and problems. Read More

Jeff Baxter: In era of sequestration, data storage optimization key for government agencies
Today, many government agencies – civilian and defense – find themselves in a technology quandary: the volume of data that must be stored is growing rapidly, while shrinking budgets are limiting capital expenditures (i.e. – servers, storage devices, etc.) required to store all of this data. Read More

 

DIGITAL SPOTLIGHT: CLOUD COMPUTING

In our in-depth report on cloud computing, we take a closer look at platform-as-a-service, security-as-a-service and back-end-as-a-service, weighing the benefits and challenges of each service and sharing tips from early adopters.

This free, 12-page magazine-style report is available now [Registration required]

To read the report, click here.

KEEP UP WITH THE LATEST NEWS ON CONSUMERIZATION
Our weekly Consumerization of IT newsletter covers a wide range of mobile hardware, mobile apps, enterprise apps and IT trends related to consumerization. We cover BYOD, smartphones, tablets, MDM, cloud, social and how consumerization affects IT. Stay up to date with news, reviews and in-depth coverage.

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.

DIGITAL SPOTLIGHT: THE CONSUMERIZATION OF TECHNOLOGY
In our in-depth report, we run the numbers on BYOD, document cool new technologies making their way into the enterprise, and share tips from top companies on how to cope with exploding demand. This free, 12-page magazine-style report is available now [Registration required]

CAST YOUR VOTE IN THIS WEEK'S QUICKPOLL
Although the National Security Agency's secretly collecting phone records of millions of Verizon customers may be nothing new, the current scope of the data collection is "breathtaking." Do you think the U.S. government be allowed to collect phone records and mine Internet data on citizens?

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

 

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