Thursday 24 March 2011

Cloud offers comfort in wake of Japan earthquake

Network World Storage - Newsletter - networkworld.com
MySQL gets live schema updating with Tokutek engine | On the company dime: Rogue game server admins tell all

Network World Storage

Forward this to a Friend >>>


Cloud offers comfort in wake of Japan earthquake
One of the biggest benefits of cloud storage became clear last week when cloud storage provider Nirvanix, in the aftermath of the Japan earthquake and Tsunami, offered its customers the ability to relocate their data from a data center in Tokyo to one in another location. Read More


WHITE PAPER: HP

6 Key Dedupe Challenges
The deduplication market is the fastest segment ofthe storage industry, per IDC. Accordingly, every vendor is telling their version of the deduplication story. With emerging technologies, it is difficult for IT managers to determine what the true IT benefits vs. marketing spin are. Read More Today!

WHITE PAPER: Splice Communications

The Benefits of Outsourcing Telecom Management
Choosing the right network solutions provider (NSP) will help businesses improve network reliability, service quality, operating efficiency, billing accuracy and better allocation of resources – all reducing the total cost of ownership of your network infrastructure. Many companies have realized the benefits of working with an NSP. Read now!

MySQL gets live schema updating with Tokutek engine
Tokutek offers an alternative MySQL storage engine for on-the-fly schema changes Read More


WEBCAST: Oracle

How Oracle Exalogic and Exadata Deliver Extreme Java
View this webcast to learn why Exalogic and Exadata are the definitive engineered platforms for enterprise application and database consolidation, with added advantage of extreme Java and database performance, unmatched reliability and scalability, and cloud-enabling elastic capacity. Register Today!

On the company dime: Rogue game server admins tell all
Back in January, Scandinavian gamers hijacked a New Hampshire medical center's server to host "Call of Duty: Black Ops" sessions. When asked about that incident, Stephen Heaslip of the gamer site Blues News told Network World that hackers are not the most likely individuals to commandeer corporate servers for illicit gaming: Such appropriations are more often the work of IT administrators, he said. Read More


WEBCAST: Dell - Intel

Get Mobile Right…Or Else!
This Webcast will probe the business-critical challenges swirling around the fast-evolving mobile infrastructure challenges most companies face. Register Now

Brocade unites IPv4 and IPv6
Brocade this week unveiled software for its application acceleration switches that enables them to function as gateways between existing IPv4 networks and new ones built on IPv6. Read More

Brocade touts IPv6 experience with Hurricane Electric
Brocade Networks announced last week that it provides the routers and switches that underpin the network backbone operated by Hurricane Electric, a leader in next-generation Internet services using the emerging IPv6 standard. Read More

Hot technology at the annual CTIA wireless show in Orlando
From HTC's HD7 Windows Phone 7 handset to Sprint's HTC EVO View 4G, CTIA attention grabbers Read More



GOODIES FROM THE SUBNETS
Up for grabs from Microsoft Subnet: a Windows 7 Enterprise Technician class for three people. From Cisco Subnet: 15 copies of VMware ESXi books. Enter here.

SLIDESHOWS

Perks drive up pay for tech CEOs
Many tech vendors have shied away from extravagant perks, but there are still plenty worth highlighting. Like a $1.5 million tab for home security. Or how about the $36,619 one company paid to reimburse its CEO for the taxes he had to pay on the $106,589 he gained by using company aircraft for personal flights? Read on to find out which tech CEOs enjoyed the priciest perks in 2010 and which ones went to work perk-free.

First look at Microsoft Internet Explorer 9
Microsoft has a real competitor once again with IE9, released at midnight Monday night on Windows 7 and Vista after several months of beta testing. The focus is on speed, privacy and simplicity, with a stripped-down interface, tracking protection, pinned sites, jump lists and enhanced support for HTML5.

MOST-READ STORIES

  1. U.S. Patent Office finds Google Doodle dandy
  2. Linux Torvalds: Android copyright violation claim is "bogus"
  3. Google funds tools to expose gov't attempts to shut down 'Net
  4. First look at Firefox 4
  5. Firefox 4 performance lags behind Chrome 10 and IE 9
  6. Industry split on data center network standards
  7. On the company dime: Rogue game server admins tell all
  8. Want to get ahead in IT? Make yourself uncomfortable
  9. Does RSA SecurID have a U.S. gov't-authorized back door?
  10. Cell phones are 'Stalin's dream,' says free software movement founder

Do You Tweet?
Follow everything from NetworkWorld.com on Twitter @NetworkWorld.

You are currently subscribed to networkworld_storage_alert as lisab509.pcnews@blogger.com.

Unsubscribe from this newsletter | Manage your subscriptions | Subscribe | Privacy Policy

If you are interested in advertising in this newsletter, please contact: bglynn@cxo.com

To contact Network World, please send an e-mail to customer_service@nww.com.

Copyright (C) 2011 Network World, 492 Old Connecticut Path, Framingham MA 01701

** Please do not reply to this message. If you want to contact someone directly, send an e-mail to customer_service@nww.com. **


No comments:

Post a Comment