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I Want You For My Server Survey


By Alexander Wolfe | 11:47 AM ET, Feb 2, 2010

In my quest to get a handle on where servers are headed in 2010, I've spent time thinking about architectural innovations from Intel and AMD. I've also been serially interviewing the server vendors themselves (see my new piece on HP). Now comes the next step--I'm pulling together a survey for InformationWeek Analytics. And I'm asking for your help.

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Sloppy Software Dev Exposes Google Hacker Holes


By Alexander Wolfe | 12:31 PM ET, Jan 21, 2010

I've ranted on the subject before, but it's worth sounding off again in light of the recent China hacker breaches of Gmail: Poor software development procedures are the big reason major firms are apparently running around scared witless that their products are vulnerable to cyberattacks. (The corollary, about which we haven't read anything, is that firms with buttoned-down dev rules are likely feeling, if not entirely safe, then at least free of the panic which plagues the cluelessly unprepared.)

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AMD Fields Triple Core Processor To Boost Mobile Graphics


By Alexander Wolfe | 10:19 AM ET, Jan 13, 2010

AMD is bring an interesting twist to the processor wars. The scrappy semiconductor maker will be offering a triple core--count 'em, three--mobile chip as part of its new "Danube" laptop platform.

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Servers 2010: Wonky Tech Trumps Hype Cycle


By Alexander Wolfe | 03:14 PM ET, Jan 8, 2010

I've spent the early days of the new year--I know; it seems like we've been back at work for a month already--delving into the server landscape. Talking with vendors this week, the big thing that jumped out at me is the discontinuity between what folks like me ask about and what they're working on. As in, we're chattering about the cloud-computing hype cycle, while they're striving to improve power-supply efficiency and build virtualization management dashboards.

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Obama Security Push Spurring Scanner Patents (IBM's Seeking One)


By Alexander Wolfe | 02:50 PM ET, Jan 5, 2010

The conventional wisdom, in the wake of the failed Christmas terrorist attack, is that the big beneficiaries will be Rapiscan Systems and L-3 Communications. The two are the companies which are TSA-qualified to provide airport scanners. But a quick USPTO search turns up a cornucopia of interesting patents, which could set off a security tech gold rush.

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Apple Tablet Success Riding On Touch-Panel Patents


By Alexander Wolfe | 10:46 AM ET, Dec 31, 2009

In my recent story on the Apple iSlate speculation, I pointed to Windows tablets to make the point that Steve Jobs and company don't invent things, they perfect them. But when I wrote that Apple doesn't have any tablet patents, a reader noted that what Apple does have is multi-touch interface patents. And those will be the key to the Apple tablet.

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Windows 7 Year In Review


By Alexander Wolfe | 11:00 AM ET, Dec 30, 2009

The operating-system buzz in 2009 may have been split 60/40 between Windows 7 and Google Chrome OS, but only the former is here today. As to whether a Web-centric OS like Chrome can ultimately edge out the most polished traditional desktop version ever, that's yet to be determined. During 2010, though, I expect that Windows 7 will increase its footprint, as enterprises initially wary of adoption begin to fold Win7 boxes into heterogeneous environments.

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Intel Recap: Atom, Nehalem Were 2009 Highlights


By Alexander Wolfe | 03:32 PM ET, Dec 28, 2009

For processor-architecture voyeurs of the Intel variety, 2009 was most interesting for the emergence of the low end as market segment with legs enough to compete with traditional laptops. (Read: Atom and netbooks.) At the same time, servers got a big kicker with release of the Nehalem line in April.

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AMD, Intel: Graphics To Trump Processors In 2010


By Alexander Wolfe | 03:06 PM ET, Dec 10, 2009

For the last few days, I've been mulling over the top semiconductor stories of the year. Clearly, the settlement by Intel and AMD of their ongoing antitrust and patent/licensing disputes is the biggest business news. Picking the tech champ is tougher, because it's not about where we've been in 2009, but rather where we're headed in 2010.

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Windows 7 Upgrades Drop Ball On Data Migration


By Alexander Wolfe | 09:00 AM ET, Dec 8, 2009

Today's experience of upgrading one's PC to a new operating system is qualitatively different from that of a decade ago. It's no longer so much about the OS. You've already got something decent; you're mostly adding new bells and whistles. What's different now is there's a lot more user data--pictures, e-mails and music/video files--to move over. And that experience, quite frankly, stinks.

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Intel Floats Cloud Computing On A Chip


By Alexander Wolfe | 08:32 AM ET, Dec 4, 2009

InformationWeek readers were the first to learn about Intel’s efforts to pack a data center onto a single chip, via my recent interview with Intel chief technology officer Justin Rattner. (See Intel CTO Envisions On-Chip Data Centers.) Now, the chip behemoth has taken things one step further, formally announcing its single-chip cloud research project.

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Podcast: Panda Security CEO Juan Santana


By Alexander Wolfe | 03:22 PM ET, Dec 2, 2009

I sat down recently to chat with Juan Santana, chief executive of the largest security vendor you might not be familiar with. Yet Panda Security, founded in Spain in 1990, is huge in Europe and no slouch either in the United States, where it competes against the likes of Symantec, Trend Micro, Kaspersky, and McAfee. I talked with Santana amid the launch of Panda Cloud Protection Service, which moves threat analysis to the cloud and installs with a very small footprint on the client.

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Microsoft Seeks Patent For Cloud Data Migration


By Alexander Wolfe | 11:36 AM ET, Nov 30, 2009

On the cusp of launching its Azure cloud computing service, Microsoft is also making a savvy bid to lock up a patent for one of the main worries--vendor lock-in--of cloud users. (The other big concern is security.) The folks from Redmond have filed a patent application for migrating data to a new cloud, which is what you'd have to do when leave your first vendor.

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Encryption Is Cloud Computing Security Savior


By Alexander Wolfe | 03:36 PM ET, Nov 16, 2009

I'm beginning to think that fears about cloud security are overblown. The reason: an intellectual framework is already in place for protecting data, applications, and connections. It's called encryption. What's evolving now, and isn't anywhere near fully baked, is a set of agreed-upon implementations and best practices. Today's post talks about some relevant and interesting work from Trend Micro and from IBM.

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Cloud Security In Focus Amid Data Theft Fears


By Alexander Wolfe | 03:23 PM ET, Nov 11, 2009

Yeah, I know, this is another one of those "everything changes" moments where we're prodded into frenzied activity--as opposed to effective action--because an emerging technology has surged ahead of our ability to properly manage it. I'm talking about cloud computing, and the attendant fears not just of data theft, but of breaches of SaaS computing resources themselves. Fortunately, there are a bunch of below-the-radar efforts attempting to address these worries.

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Admiral Warns Cybersecurity Threat Looms For U.S.


By Alexander Wolfe | 03:33 PM ET, Nov 10, 2009

This week's 60 Minutes broadcast should make everyone afraid, very afraid, of the real, looming specter of cyberwarfare attacks. As I recently blogged, government agencies are already going full-bore to come up with guidelines to protect federal networks. So when an Admiral goes on national television to say hackers have the ability to take down our power grid, he's doing it to deliver a warning.

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Facebook Security Crisis Could Derail Social Nets


By Alexander Wolfe | 04:32 PM ET, Nov 6, 2009

There's a security problem on the horizon, which could derail the progress of social networking has made in breaking down the barriers between business and personal Internet usage. (Whether that's a good thing or not is a separate argument.) I'm speaking of the rising tide of fake Facebook messages, phishing threats, and malware.

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Cisco: It's All About Bandwidth, Stupid!


By Alexander Wolfe | 09:38 AM ET, Nov 4, 2009

Analysts who've lately focused on a Cisco's decade-long buying binge will surely weigh in on the networking powerhouse's Monday announcement that it plans to acquire Hong Kong set-top-box maker DVN. Yet most of these financial musings, which focus on Cisco's stock price, are missing the point. It's all about bandwidth, stupid.

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Linux AWOL From Desktop Upgrades


By Alexander Wolfe | 04:19 PM ET, Nov 2, 2009

It hit me the other day that something's missing amid the Windows 7 launch hoopla. Last time around--indeed, during every prior upgrade cycle--we've witnessed the fanboys pop up like Whack-A-Mole survivors to hector us about the big mistake we're about to make and to proffer the open-source operating system as the better option. This time, nada. Why?

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Should Your Enterprise Network Be An Internet Hot Spot?


By Alexander Wolfe | 04:18 PM ET, Oct 21, 2009

Thursday's Windows 7 consumer launch finds me wondering about a seemingly radical idea suggested by a chief technology officer. Namely, enterprises should open up their networks, effectively turning them, as far as users are concerned, into Internet hot spots. The emergence of both cloud computing and Windows 7 could push this forward, though one will be able to argue that this is simply conventional networks in hot-spot clothing.

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Big Brother Looking To Control Your Smart Grid?


By Alexander Wolfe | 04:02 PM ET, Oct 14, 2009

Is Big Brother about to muck about with your toaster? That's that latest concern--out of left field though it may be--which is being raised about Smart Grids, the technological push du jour to update our creaking electricity transmission infrastructure with efficiency inducing digital controls. Or, as I call it, the utility is the network.

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SocialCalc Could Help Wikis Grow Up


By Alexander Wolfe | 12:02 PM ET, Oct 7, 2009

Have you been wiki-ized? I don't know if that's a word, but if you work at a tech company, you know exactly what I'm talking. Mostly it's been Clearspace which has provided the platform that's doubled your e-mail load, even as it has genuinely helped us all grope towards greater levels of collaboration. But there are other innovators in the wiki space, notably Socialtext, which has just advanced the cause of group-wise spreadsheets. In the process, they could push wikis towards better real-world usability.

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Windows 7 Virtual Event Post-Game: Serious Tech Time


By Alexander Wolfe | 10:22 AM ET, Oct 1, 2009

The big takeaway that surfaced at the successful Windows 7 Virtual Event we held on Wednesday is that many CIOs and admins are moving beyond the big-picture question of "should we upgrade or not" and are now focused on technical point issues, mostly related to performance and compatibility. (For those who couldn't attend, we'll have a replay archive posted within 48 hours, and I'll put up the link.)

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Join Our Windows 7 Wednesday Virtual Event: Path To Enterprise Adoption


By Alexander Wolfe | 10:28 AM ET, Sep 30, 2009

In getting ready for Wednesday's 10 am eastern Windows 7 Virtual Event, hosted by the InformationWeek Business Technology Network (i.e., us, and you can register here), I've been trying to get a feel for just how rapidly enterprises will adopt the new operating system.

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Microsoft DRM Patent Could Revive Peer-to-Peer Music Nets


By Alexander Wolfe | 02:42 PM ET, Sep 22, 2009

Here's an odd twist that might give new life to the dying horse of music digital-right management. Microsoft has just been awarded a U.S. patent for a distributed DRM system -- it works over peer-to-peer networks -- which uses encrypted public and private keys as the licensing mechanism. This is significant because, while centralized music stores like Apple's iTunes have forsaken DRM, the Microsoft patent would enable peer-to-peer networks to reemerge as viable, albeit protected, content sources.

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MDOP Smoothes Path For Windows 7 Deployment


By Alexander Wolfe | 09:07 AM ET, Sep 18, 2009

Microsoft is firing on all marketing guns as it moves to create an adoption groundswell for Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2. For enterprise users, another key piece of the ecosystem is about to fall into place. That would be the Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack (MDOP) 2009 R2, a multi-tentacled toolkit containing virtualization technologies and a bunch of management tools.

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Cryptographic Keys Focus Of Next-Gen Net Security


By Alexander Wolfe | 08:36 AM ET, Sep 12, 2009

Against the backdrop of rising malware threats and organized cybercriminal rings, a national cybersecurity initiative is taking shape which will bring a "locked down" mentality to the way we authenticate users, apps, and anyone or anything that touches a network. I'm talking about the Cryptographic Key Management (CKM) project that is being run out of the National Institute of Standards and Technology's Computer Security Division.

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IBM, Dell, HP Top Tight Server Market


By Alexander Wolfe | 08:45 AM ET, Sep 10, 2009

While server technology is proceeding apace -- see my column, "AMD, Intel Remake Servers From Processor Up" (here) -- shipments themselves are being challenged by the overall economic environment. That picture is apparent in the latest worldwide server market report from Gartner, with results from the second quarter of 2009. One bright spot is that blades sagged less than any other segment.

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Wolfe's Den Vlog: SAP BusinessObjects Explorer Brings BI To Masses


By Alexander Wolfe | 11:02 AM ET, Sep 5, 2009

I caught up with SAP recently during their customer tour to roll out their hot new, intuitive Business Intelligence product, and shot a short video demo. SAP BusinessObjects Explorer is billed as a venture into real-time BI. What that means is it enables non-power-users -- as in, sales and marketing folks looking for quick data runs -- to extract useful information via simple, Google-like queries.

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Trend Micro Rips Lid Off Estonian Cybercrime Hub


By Alexander Wolfe | 03:00 PM ET, Aug 26, 2009

An important Trend Micro paper, spotlighting a cybercriminal hub operating out of Estonia, has surfaced on Slashdot. The racket here is that a seemingly legitimate Internet Service Provider is in reality the headquarters for a rogue network, which extends into Europe and the United States. The breadth of the deception outlined in the paper is scary; doubly so because cybercrime is emerging as the single biggest security threat of the next decade.

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Paging AIM: Why Does Software Always Get Worse?


By Alexander Wolfe | 02:50 PM ET, Aug 25, 2009

Two unpleasant bouts with updated software have led me to formulate Wolfe's First Law of Programming: An upgraded, enhanced, or otherwise supposedly improved software release will always perform more poorly than the rev which it replaces. My two cases in point are AIM 6.9.15.1 -- you gotta love their configuration control -- and Time Warner Cable's latest electronic programming guide.

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HP CEO Mark Hurd On R&D: 'Show Me The Money'


By Alexander Wolfe | 03:24 PM ET, Aug 21, 2009

I wanted to share with you an insider comment I received in response to my Wednesday column, Recession Or Bust, R&D Spend HP Must. According to my correspondent, Hewlett Packard CEO Mark Hurd is a "show me the money" kind of guy. Which is not a criticism -- it simply means that company's research engineers have to earn their stripes every day.

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AMD Revs Quad Core With Phenom II X4 965


By Alexander Wolfe | 09:55 AM ET, Aug 20, 2009

The quad-core processor battle between Intel and AMD remains the most exciting arena in PC technology, where consumers can get the latest stuff at what amounts to cut-rate prices. The newest entry is AMD's Phenom II X4 965 Black Edition. The 3.4-GHz quad-core chip, which modders are already overclocking to 3.9-GHz, goes for $245.

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Cybersecurity Guidelines Point Way To Network Protection


By Alexander Wolfe | 09:40 AM ET, Aug 18, 2009

Recent criticism of NIST's cybersecurity guidelines for federal agencies raises the logical question: If government networks are at risk, how do I ensure that my operation is protected? One place to start is US-CERT's IT Security Essential Body of Knowledge.

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Microsoft Word Ban Spotlights Software Patent Insanity


By Alexander Wolfe | 08:43 PM ET, Aug 16, 2009

I'm in the unenviable position of defending Microsoft, but dive into the United States Patent and Trademark Office's database, and see if you don't agree with me that last week's court decision banning Microsoft from selling Word is nuts. The i4i patent Microsoft supposedly infringes seems loosely applicable to Word at best, and obvious enough software-wise to make you wonder why there are software patents at all. Plus, Microsoft holds some seemingly applicable XML patents of its own.

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Microsoft Virtual Hard Disk (VHD) Gets Boost From Windows 7


By Alexander Wolfe | 11:24 AM ET, Aug 14, 2009

Interest in Microsoft's Virtual Hard Disk (VHD) format is heating up as Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 move out into the marketplace. So here's some VHD news you can use in the form of pointers to two free online user guides.

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Ready For Windows 7 RTM


By Alexander Wolfe | 11:27 AM ET, Aug 13, 2009

The way I read it, Windows 7 is launching not with a bang, but a whimper. Which is a good thing. Unlike Vista, whose January 2007 debut was accompanied by Microsoft protests that it really, truly was great (even if the WDM display drivers clearly weren't), Windows 7 simply works. Anyone who has test-driven the beta gets that. Now that I'm about to install the final, release-to-manufacturing version, it's time for a quick OS recap. Click ahead for a video and some MS PowerPoints.

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First Photo Of Microsoft Retail Store Surfaces


By Alexander Wolfe | 07:57 PM ET, Aug 9, 2009

Here's the first image of one of Microsoft's planned retail stores, as tweeted by the corporate communications team at Redmond. Actually, it's a shot of the drywall in front of the store, which is presumably still under construction.

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Cisco At The Tipping Point?


By Alexander Wolfe | 05:05 PM ET, Aug 6, 2009

Cisco CEO John Chambers took a glass-half-full approach to Wednesday's earnings report, which saw fourth-quarter profits at the networking behemoth slide 46% compared to the year-earlier period. Undaunted, Chambers issued a statement saying he saw a number of positive signs this quarter and thinks the business might be at the "tipping point," which precedes a rebound.

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No More Laptops: End Of Road For Enterprise Notebooks?


By Alexander Wolfe | 07:28 PM ET, Aug 5, 2009

Here's a radical -- but eminently business-sensible -- idea for enterprises wondering why they've got to eat thousands of dollars each year per employee for PC support costs: No more laptops. Hey, if cloud and SaaS mean anything, it should be big savings by bagging the self-hosted software paradigm. How about you give your workers $500 each to buy a netbook instead, and they can support themselves? Workers tethered to an office can use a thin client, or -- perish the thought -- a desktop computer.

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iPhone Smackdown: TechCrunch's Arrington Versus Forrester's Colony


By Alexander Wolfe | 10:46 AM ET, Jul 31, 2009

I hate to dive into the traffic-trolling antics of TechCrunch's Michael Arrington, but I will (and not just because I'm chasing clicks, too). In his post about why he's abandoning the iPhone, he's apparently coming around to the view I've espoused for years. Namely, there are better options out there. He's opting for an Android; I say Blackberry's better.

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Enterprises Iffy On Windows 7 Migration


By Alexander Wolfe | 09:25 AM ET, Jul 28, 2009

Being a big fan of Windows 7, I was surprised to find that there's no mad rush by enterprises to migrate to the new operating system, and that Microsoft's ending of support for XP is the biggest factor in pushing businesses to upgrade. These are the early results of a just-completed InformationWeek Analytics survey on Windows 7, of which I'll offer a partial peek, if you click ahead.

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Wolfe's Den Vlog: Build A Liquid-Cooled Intel Core i7 PC


By Alexander Wolfe | 01:23 PM ET, Jul 26, 2009

A liquid-cooled PC is like the Hummer of computers, which is why I've always wanted to build one. (Plus, it provides ample thermal support for overclocking.) This latest project came about because I wanted to top my last two quad-core builds -- 2008's QX9770 and 2007's QX6850 box -- and also because I wanted to check out the new Intel Core i7 processor. Click ahead to see a short video of the project's first phase, where I unbox the Thermaltake BigWater 760is liquid cooler.

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Death Of DRM Means Rise Of Anti-Counterfeiting Wars


By Alexander Wolfe | 12:54 PM ET, Jul 21, 2009

You think the drug wars are bad? Then just wait until we've got SWAT teams, empowered by the upcoming ACTA anti-counterfeiting trade agreement, taking down the local DVD duplicating operation. It'll make anti-DRM advocates long for the grandma-suing ways of the RIAA.

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Video: Google Chrome OS Isn't Challenge To Microsoft


By Alexander Wolfe | 01:00 PM ET, Jul 16, 2009

The significance of Google's Chrome OS announcement is not the OS itself -- remember, it's not an actual product yet. Rather, it spotlights the shift away from laptops to netbooks and smartphones. Laptops are still corporate tools. But once applications and data are in the cloud, enterprises will ditch the costlier computers and get with true lightweight platforms.

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Wolfe's Den Vlog: SAP BI Goes Social With Clearspace


By Alexander Wolfe | 09:08 AM ET, Jul 1, 2009

I've just posted a short video about SAP's deal with Jive Software, which lets you embed dynamic analytics widgets inside your blog posts. I mean "dynamic" not in the sense of multicolor whiz-bang (which usually aren't) charts. I'm talking serious Crystal Reports graphics, so you can showcase Business Intelligence (BI) with multiple data slices before your entire company, right there on the corporate Clearspace wiki.

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Enterprise 2.0: Confronting Social Media's Dirty Little Secret


By Alexander Wolfe | 11:22 AM ET, Jun 24, 2009

I'm encouraged that the dirty little secret of Web 2.0 and social media technologies is finally being openly addressed by early adopters and vendors alike. At the Enterprise 2.0 Conference in Boston, there's been frank discussion this week of the question average users have been whispering (so that their bosses don't hear them): Namely, what can this stuff do for me that's actually useful?

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Twitter Offers Mixed Verdict On Apple iPhone 3GS


By Alexander Wolfe | 03:41 PM ET, Jun 8, 2009

The infinite, self-referential loop which is the modern Web came into relief Monday, on the occasion of Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference. Fanboys gathered in San Francisco at WWDC's keynote for the introduction of the iPhone 3GS. So many people were tweeting, though, that I felt more plugged in online than I would've if I'd been there live. The tweets gyrated wildly between tweeters bored with the phone and those who were fanboyishly enthusiastic.

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Apple's New 'iPhone Video': I Told You So


By Alexander Wolfe | 02:35 PM ET, Jun 5, 2009

I hate to be a whiny blogger -- I know; are there any other kind? -- but with news swirling that Apple is set to call its third-generation funky mobile device the iPhone Video, what can I say except I told you so? Back in February, I was first to uncover hints about video, in a patent document, and posted the news in Apple Planning Video-Call iPhone.

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What's Behind Intel's $884 Million Wind River Acquisition


By Alexander Wolfe | 09:59 AM ET, Jun 4, 2009

On the face of it, Intel's announcement that it's going to buy embedded-software vendor Wind River Systems for $884 million is just another ho-hum corporate acquisition. But the back story is much more interesting: This Intel's umpteenth attempt to diversify beyond PC processors. This time they hope they've got it right, by acquiring a company with expertise in the software which powers emerging mobile devices like handheld Web browsers.

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Go on to the weblog archives...

 

  1. Massive Parallelism Has a Name ... Extreme Scale Computing
  2. Intel Turbo Boost Technology Monitor: A Windows Gadget to Understand Dynamic Frequencies
  3. Two-Stage Input Parallel Pipeline: Part 2


Join The InformationWeek Group On LinkedIn


  1. Google's Universal Translator
  2. Google Reduces Nexus One ETF, But Not Enough
  3. Google's Buzz Skips webOS?


  1. IntrinsiQ Sharpens Cancer Treatment Analysis
  2. Barnes & Noble Ships Nook E-Reader
  3. Security Breach Exposes Healthcare Recipients' Data
  4. Glide OS Sees Cloud Computing Surge
  5. Global CIO: An Open Letter To SAP Chairman Hasso Plattner
  6. Microsoft Fixes 26 Vulnerabilities In Windows, Office

 

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