Archive for the ‘News’ Category
Posted in E-Week on February 9th, 2012 by E-Week
WorkSimple, a social goal performance tool that competes with SuccessFactors and Rypple, is now available from the Google Apps Marketplace. -
WorkSimple, a startup in a performance
management space that is heating up, has seeded its Free Forever goal performance
application in the Google Apps Marketplace, the search engine's online store
for apps that hook into Google Apps.
WorkSimple competes with SuccessFactors and Rypple, both
...
Tags: News |
Posted in E-Week on February 9th, 2012 by E-Week
Microsoft will host a Windows 8 Consumer Preview event in Barcelona Feb. 29. Thats likely the launch date of Windows 8 beta. - Microsoft will almost certainly use this years Mobile World
Congress in Barcelona as the venue for whipping back the curtain from its
Windows 8 Consumer Preview. The company has sent eWEEK and other media an
invitation to a “Windows 8 Consumer Preview”-themed event at 3:00pm Feb. 29 at
the Hotel...
Tags: News |
Posted in SANS on February 9th, 2012 by ISC Handler
One of our handlers posted this to our list and I though I would share (thanks Swa). The CVE has concluded that the NDSS Conference presentation of Revoked Yet Still Resolvable [1] to be verifiable but due to the protocol. [2]
[1]http://www.internetsociety.org/events/ndss-symposium-2012/symposium-program/feb08
[2]https://www.isc.org/software/bind/advisories/cve-2012-1033
Richard Porter
--- ISC Handler on Duty
(c) SANS Internet Storm Center. http://isc.sans.edu Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.
Tags: News, sans |
Posted in Blog, hack, hacker, hacking, News, security, security_blogs, Security_News, software, system:unfiled on February 9th, 2012 by vleite
Posted in SANS on February 9th, 2012 by ISC Handler
(c) SANS Internet Storm Center. http://isc.sans.edu Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.
Tags: News, sans |
Posted in E-Week on February 8th, 2012 by E-Week
Microsoft is prepping Windows 8's beta also known as the "Consumer Preview" for release later in February. Although the Developer Preview gave people the chance to play around with a rough draft of the upcoming operating system, that beta will provide a much better idea of what users can expect when the release version arrives sometime in the second half of 2012. Many of Windows 8's features will be instantly familiar to anyone who's used previous versions of Windows. The traditional desktop is still there, accessible via a "Start" screen of big, colorful tiles linked to applications (the better to port Windows 8 onto tablets). The new operating system has even borrowed a few design cues from other Microsoft products like Office: There is, for instance, a "ribbon" user interface for Windows Explorer (albeit a minimized one, which could come as a relief to those who dislike that way of navigating through options). But the biggest system changes tie into Microsoft's expectations that Windows 8 will find its way onto tablets and other ultra-mobile devices: The ability to mark a wireless network as metered or unmetered is just one example of this. In a time where users are abandoning traditional PCs as their main computing device in favor of smartphones and tablets, the need is greater than ever for Microsoft to adapt with the times, lest it be left behind. The following are some new Windows 8 features designed to make the platform more portable and easier to operate once users find a space to sit down and work. - ...
Tags: News |
Posted in E-Week on February 8th, 2012 by E-Week
Everyone in the enterprise is now talking about how to leverage big data, and a good chunk of that discussion includes the evolution of NoSQL database technologies. Experts are saying that 2012 is the year when IT departments start adopting NoSQL in earnest, but is the enterprise ready yet? What needs to happen in NoSQL's evolution to make it prepare it for highly complex data requirements? To find out, eWEEK asked Robert Greene, vice president of technology at Versant and a 20-year veteran of the database industry, to break down what needs to happen for NoSQL to become enterprise-ready. Versant is an object-oriented database provider, and the company is taking its own approach to the NoSQL movement. For instance, Greene said that NoSQL solutions need to leverage more of the classic database techniques for concurrency control and design their internals to take full advantage of modern multi-core hardware architecture. In addition, Greene said NoSQL is learning what the object database industry learned several years ago as it sought to deal with soft schema over a relational storage engine. However, enterprises will not change all their internal processes and replace existing systems for the sake of NoSQL. To evolve, NoSQL must address interoperability with existing systems, to couple through ETL, to facilitate data manipulation through enterprise tools, and it needs to present itself as a well-defined resource to existing monitoring and management processes. - ...
Tags: News |
Posted in E-Week on February 8th, 2012 by E-Week
Nokia will cut thousands of jobs related to phone manufacturing, as it shifts production from Europe to Asia by the end of 2012. - Nokia will
shift phone production from Europe to Asia by the end of 2012, a move that will
result in 4,000 job cuts.
The cuts will
occur at three factories in Finland, Mexico and Hungary. On its Website,
Nokia suggested it would provide financial support and assistance with local
re-employment...
Tags: News |
Posted in E-Week on February 8th, 2012 by E-Week
LG Electronics has a 5-inch LG Optimus VU "phablet" planned, possibly for a Feb. 21 release. Like Samsung, LG is betting the time is right for the 5-inch tablet-phone. - LG Electronics has released a teaser video
showing off the sharp, clean lines of what it's calling the LG Optimus VU, a
quot;phablet quot; with a 4:3 aspect ratio and a 5-inch display, on the
diagonal.
A photo of the device of the
Japanese site Datacider
shows a date stamp on the device of F...
Tags: News |
Posted in Network World on February 8th, 2012 by NetworkWorld
Google plans to remove online certificate revocation checks from future versions of Chrome, because it considers the process inefficient and slow.
Tags: News |