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| InfoWorld: Columnists |
RSS Feed URL : http://www.infoworld.com/rss/columnists.rdf Category : Media Total Views : 5 |
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Is Desktop Linux for real? A year ago, InfoWorld wouldn't have published an article describing how to switch from Windows to desktop Linux like this one by Neil McAllister. The operating system's installation glitches hadn't been smoothed out, app and basic utility support was still too spotty, and peripheral device support lagged. Oh, yeah, there was one more thing: The demand simply wasn't there. File sharing beyond the firewall Conventional storage systems work well for local file sharing, but no system I can think of can help you share files outside your organization, unless you commit to cobbling together an in-house solution. Computer security's dubious future As longtime readers already know, I?m a big fan of Bruce Schneier, CTO and founder of BT Counterpane. Besides being a cryptographic and computer security authority, cryptographic algorithm creator, and author of many best-selling books on security, Bruce produces some of the most relevant conversations on computer security. I consider his books, his Cryptogram newsletter, and his blog must-reads for anyone in computer security. Getting entrepreneurial in 2008 When I wrote my first InfoWorld article back in December 2001, I had absolutely no clue what I was talking about. Reading back over that masterpiece, "Dawn of the real-time enterprise," is scary. I didn't understand the technology, the acronyms, or how to filter out the inevitable vendor hype. I called friends to ask, what's J2EE? What's JMS? What's OLAP? And when they explained it, I pretended to understand, but still didn't. Eight great Microsoft reviews and analyses Oliver Rist is gone, but his memory will live on, both in our hearts and in the databases of InfoWorld.com. While you may very well have read each and every Enterprise Windows column he wrote over the years, it's possible that you missed some of the great Windows-oriented product reviews and analyses the InfoWorld Test Center has done, many penned by Oliver.
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ADV: Shenval Bed & Breakfast Pierre and Christiane Lebrun warmly welcome you to Shenval organic Bed & Breakfast near Loch Ness and Glen Afric in the Highlands of Scotland Sulfur In Marine Archaeological Shipwrecks -- The 'Hull Story' Gives A Sour Aftertaste Sulfur in marine archaeological shipwrecks -- the "hull story" gives a sour aftertaste. Advanced chemical analyses reveal that, with the help of smart scavenging bacteria, sulfur and iron compounds accumulated in the timbers of the Swedish warship Vasa during her 333 years on the seabed of the Stockholm harbor. [in ScienceDaily Headlines: Fossils & Ruins] New Tool To Understand Evolution Of Multi-domain Genes Developed Computational biologists have for the first time tackled the dilemma of how to study the ancestry of multidomain genes, which encode an important class of proteins called multidomain proteins that are crucial to human health. They found that standard methods for analyzing gene evolution, are critically flawed when applied to multidomain genes, mutations of which often are associated with cancers. [in ScienceDaily Headlines: Fossils & Ruins] El Niño May Have Been Factor In Magellan's Pacific Voyage Archaeologists show that Ferdinand Magellan's historic circumnavigation of the globe was likely influenced in large part by unusual weather conditions -- including what we now know as El Niño -- which eased his passage across the Pacific Ocean, but ultimately led him over a thousand miles from his intended destination. [in ScienceDaily Headlines: Fossils & Ruins] Mitochondrial Eve' Research: Humanity Was Genetically Divided For 100,000 Years Humanity was genetically divided for as much as 100,000 years, according to new findings. Climate change, reduction in populations and harsh conditions may have caused and maintained the separation. [in ScienceDaily Headlines: Fossils & Ruins] Climbing As Easy As Walking For Smaller Primates Smaller primates expend no more energy climbing than they do walking. This surprising discovery may explain the evolutionary edge that encouraged the tiny ancestors of modern humans, apes and monkeys to climb into the trees about 65 million years ago and stay there. [in ScienceDaily Headlines: Fossils & Ruins] |
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