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Why a Firefox fan became a Chrome convert
Stephen Shankland CNET News.com's Stephen Shankland explains how Chrome lured him away from Firefox, despite the shortcomings of Google's browser more
Who gains from Microsoft's free Morro antivirus?
Mary Landesman, ScanSafe The company is dropping its subscription-based antivirus software in favour of a free package, code-named 'Morro'. Internet-security expert Mary Landesman investigates Microsoft's motives more
Supercomputing budgets: Fighting the financial storm
Andrew Jones, NAG Steadily rising budgets for high-performance-computing projects are about to meet the chill winds of recession head on. The consequences could harm the real benefits this technology can offer, says Andrew Jones more
Blog Posts
Symbian keen to ignite USB development...
Monday 1 December 2008, 11:27 AM
0 commentsDiscussions
Compliance – Part 1: Software Licensing
Compliance, is rarely fun, more the very the essence of red tape. But ignore it and the consequences can range from a, sometimes public, ticking off to corporate manslaughter charges. In future...
Adrian Mars
Is Your Head (And Data) In The Clouds?
With Microsoft's recent launch of its Azure cloud platform, which bundles the company’s familiar software functions into an online service with your data stored remotely, cloud computing is set to...
christian harris
Piracy in the Clouds
Reading a blog here by Rupert Goodwins inspired an interesting issue. What's to prevent anyone from putting copyrighted material up in the cloud somewhere? Nothing. In some respects that's what...
Xwindowsjunkie
Microsoft Futures
Windows 7: Mixed reviews from PDC attendees
As developers received their copies of Windows 7 on Tuesday, they offered varied reactions to the Microsoft operating system update More
Microsoft floats clouds on Windows Azure
At the Professional Developers Conference, Microsoft announced the Azure Services Platform, the company's cloud-computing platform More
Ozzie: Success of Azure comes down to trust
In an interview, Ray Ozzie says businesses will be taking a risk by placing core operations in Microsoft's datacentre, but that the software giant has more to lose if things go bad More





