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Storage companies report positive financial news | Network World

In the financial news of storage companies last week several news items made the list. IBM acquired database archiving and classification vendor Princeton Softech. Isilon, which went public in 2006, lost money, but the amount was less than previous losses. Data Domain announced its IPO. ONstor announced it may go public. And, Qlusters announced an investment from Network Appliance.

Establishing understanding and trust in your outsourcing relationship | Network World

Everyone likes a good "project gone bad" story. This may be in part why the market perception around outsourcing is that more than half of projects go bad. You don't have to look far to find an article that makes this statement.

A Swedish iTunes killer | Network World

Industries that go through big changes have always attracted startups, and the online music industry is no different. One of the more interesting ones is Spotify, which streams music to your computer.

The human side of net optimization | Network World

When I write about a new technology implementation, it’s easy to focus on the products rather than the staffing and operational resources that go into a project. In reality, it’s the proper combination of technology and manpower that makes a rollout successful.

Mystery around ‘Winfixer’ slowly unravels, lawyer says | Network World

A California attorney claims he has unraveled part of the mystery behind a questionable software program and is prepared to go to court.

CES 2013: Diary of a CES Noob, Day 2 | Network World

As old CES hands like our own Keith Shaw advised, Tuesday was orders of magnitude more busy than Monday. Now the show had a crush of people to go with its gargantuan physical scale. All the booths were put together and running, everyone's gear was on display - the effect was overwhelming.

Uganda official says e-waste efforts should expand | Network World

Efforts in e-waste recycling must go beyond computer refurbishment to include the recycling of electronic equipment, according to Uganda Green Computers Company Chairman Patrick Bitature.

How StuffIt stacks up against WinZip | Network World

If you want to squeeze the greatest amount of data onto your hard drive, compression is the way to go -- and the ZIP format has long been a trusted method that nearly any Windows user can invoke. SmithMicro's StuffIt Deluxe 12 is a file-compression utility on steroids: it can archive and compress files of all types (to the Stuffit format and even to ZIP itself). The real question is: How well does it hold up against a well-known and popular application such as WinZip?

Wiretapping the WAN: It’s the law | Network World

Bottom line: If you have issues with wiretapping, don't go after the carriers. Go after the folks who required it in the first place.

Sony expands e-book reader range | Network World

Sony is introducing a second electronic book reader to its range in the U.S. that comes with upgraded hardware and will go on sale in November.

How to limit what contractors can do on the network | Network World

We have contractors perform a number of critical services, such as managing our IBM blade servers. These staff have to be on the LAN, and they're long-time contractors, so trust levels run pretty high, but I know they shouldn't be able to go everywhere on the LAN. How can I limit their access while still letting them do their jobs, and most important, not making them feel like I don't trust them?

The rules of IT | Network World

Wherever you go and whatever you do, it is a given that some set of rules will be in force. Rules matter because they define how we get on with other people and what is considered normal.

Microsoft Xbox One to launch in November for $499 | Network World

Microsoft announced that Xbox One will go on sale in 21 markets this November for US$499.

Sony PlayStation 4 on sale this holiday for $399 | Network World

Sony's PlayStation 4 will go on sale the U.S. and Europe in time for the year-end holiday season and cost US$399, the company announced Monday at its E3 press briefing in Los Angeles.

How one IBMer rejuvenated his career | Network World

Darryl Solie spent 24 years at IBM developing the company's server and storage products. The people he'd communicate with every day were IBM people and he had little contact with customers. He'd gained broad technical knowledge in his role but he felt stagnant in his career. That was until 5 years ago when IBM set up a Engineering & Technology Services (E & TS) team where he became one of a few IBM engineers to go out onto customer sites and talk to them about potential ways in which the vendor could work

A cure for traffic transfer troubles | Network World

I’m trying to speed up TCP/IP based file transfers on one of our network segments. I replaced the 100MB Ethernet switch with a Gigabit switch and the connection lights show that all the workstations are connected at full speed. The problem is that traffic between the workstations is still going out to the main network router and coming back during file transfers. Is there a way to get the transfer traffic to go directly between the workstations?

Local developer aims to bring mobile apps to Myanmar | Network World

How do you build a blockbuster app in Myanmar, one of Asia's poorest countries? You go and ask a fortune teller for help, according to 25-year-old Htoo Myint Naung, a local developer.

Bill addresses consumer privacy protection | Network World

EDITOR'S NOTE: The name of this newsletter will change next month to "Security Strategies," reflecting its strategic approach. To complement it, Network World will also offer the "Security in Practice" semi-monthly newsletter, written by Mike Rothman. To sign up, go to our subscription page today.

How far could cyberwar go? | Network World

Regular readers may know that I have a longstanding interest in information warfare. I was reviewing materials that might be useful in a new elective graduate course for the Norwich University MSIA program that my friend and colleague Peter Stephenson is planning for us and ran across a couple of interesting articles that are available on the Web for anyone to read. I’ll review the first in this column and the second in the next.

10 things you need to know about VoIP | Network World

Anybody working on a VoIP project should stand on the shoulders of those who have gone before to avoid their mistakes and glean tips that can make their own deployments go more smoothly.

What’s Novell’s message for its legacy business? | Network World

Last week was the LinuxWorld Conference at which Novell was a major player. But if you go to Google News and search on "Linuxworld +NetWare" (without the quotes) you'll probably turn up the same six documents I did - and only one of those was by, or about, Novell. (It was mentioned in a news story in an explanation of what's in Open Enterprise Server.)

My beliefs about security | Network World

I'm a big fan of Tom Peters. Right - the Tom Peters who wrote In Search of Excellence and The Brand You. When Tom turned 60, he packaged up a list of 60 things he believes in in a book called Sixty. Many of the things are simple but frequently forgotten. It's useful to go back through these ideas every so often to remind ourselves what we should be focusing on. Because you are still getting a feel for this column, I thought I would discuss things I believe about security.

WEBCAST NEWSLETTER | Network World

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The appeal of managed WAN optimization services | Network World

Deciding whether to deploy and manage a new technology in-house using internal IT resources or go with an outsourcer is a common dilemma in the IT world, and the WAN optimization market is no exception.