Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Whatever happened to the IPv4 address crisis?

 

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  Most U.S. voters would pay more for faster school broadband | Cisco profit halved as revenue falls

 
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Whatever happened to the IPv4 address crisis?
In February 2011, the global Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) allocated the last blocks of IPv4 address space to the five regional Internet registries. At the time, experts warned that within months all available IPv4 addresses in the world would be distributed to ISPs. Read More
 


WHITE PAPER: Nasuni Corp
 
Increasing Productivity of Distributed Teams
The Walsh Group, with close to 20 offices worldwide needed a global file share that could deliver the same information to all their offices without sacrificing performance or data security. Learn More

WHITE PAPER: Mitel Networks
 
A Day In The Life Of A Mobile UCC User
What's a typical day like for your employees? It's probably summed up in two ways: on the move and constantly communicating with co-workers and myriad other parties. How do they do it? Mitel's MiVoice and MiCollab solutions support busy sales execs throughout their days. From routine meetings to clienc crises, they're always connected. Learn More

Most U.S. voters would pay more for faster school broadband
Nearly seven in 10 U.S. voters would pay a higher tax on their mobile phone bills if the money went toward wiring schools with faster broadband networks, according to a new survey. Read More
 

Cisco profit halved as revenue falls
Cisco Systems reported another tough quarter on Wednesday, saying profits in its fiscal second quarter fell by more than half and revenue declined by nearly 8 percent. Read More
 

Consumer groups oppose Comcast-Time Warner Cable deal
Antitrust enforcement agencies should reject a proposed $45.2 billion acquisition of Time Warner Cable by Comcast, because it would give the combined company huge market power in the broadband and cable TV industries, a handful of consumer and digital rights groups said. Read More
 

Your next smartphone is now closer to wireless charging
The Alliance for Wireless Power and the Power Matters Alliance joined forces this week, which should help hardware makers settle on a wireless charging standard for their devices. Read More
 

Darlene Storm: Don't look now but the LED light fixtures are spying on you
If you feel like you're being watched at Terminal B in the Newark Liberty International Airport, then that's real and not paranoia. It's not the TSA this time, but covert airport surveillance via LED light fixtures capable of taking video, identifying suspicious activity, as well as collecting and data-mining mountains of data about 'ordinary citizens.' Read More
 


WHITE PAPER: IBM

Streamline Data Protection with Storage Manager
IBM Tivoli Storage Manager (TSM) has been an industry-standard data protection solution for two decades. But, where most competitors focus exclusively on Backup and Restore, TSM is a far more comprehensive data-protection solution. Read Now

'The Moon' worm infects Linksys routers
A self-replicating program is infecting Linksys routers by exploiting an authentication bypass vulnerability in various models from the vendor's E-Series product line. Read More
 

Comcast-Time Warner deal may impact broadband customers
Comcast's proposed acquisition of Time Warner Cable is partly a grab for negotiating power in the fast-changing video content business, but it might affect broadband users, too. Read More
 

Fujitsu makes glove that uses NFC, sensors to speed hands-free work
Fujitsu Laboratories has developed wearable technology in the form of a glove and a head-mounted display that could help speed up maintenance work and other applications where NFC tags are widely used. Read More
 

Ericsson readies mobile unified communications push
  Enterprises will in the future get hosted unified communication services via mobile networks, according to telecom vendor Ericsson, which has developed the underlying platform to make that possible. Read More
 

Review: 4 NAS appliances deliver big storage cheap
  12-bay rack-mount systems from QNAP, Netgear, LenovoEMC, and Infortrend combine huge storage capacities, business-grade features, smooth setup, and easy administration Read More
 

John Martin: The future of storage is software-defined
  The Storage Networking Industry Association recently hosted an industry summit, "The Future of Computing – The Convergence of Memory and Storage through Non-Volatile Memory (NVM)." For a glimpse into the future, from some of the industry's true thought leaders, check out the presentations and audio recordings. This view into the rapid developments in flash memory and other NVM technologies has given me a new-found appreciation for the concept of a software-defined data center (SDDC). Read More
 

 

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