Apple (NASDAQ – AAPL) kicked off 2011 with a series of highs and lows: The company announced it had shattered sales records, joined forces with Verizon and opened a new app store, but it also said CEO Steve Jobs was taking a medical leave and found itself embroiled in a slew of new lawsuits and controversies.
Western Digital is rolling out a new drive format that squeezes up to 11% more capacity from a hard disk by consolidating disk management information and using the resulting space for data storage.
The week before the 2010-11 school year began at Indiana University, Sue Workman, associate vice president for communication and support, was preparing for the onslaught -- not just returning students, but their wireless devices, too.
In 2006, Chris Loope was working as a consultant implementing a new ERP system for a client. The 18-month project required Loope to clock 80-hour work weeks and to travel frequently between his home in Dallas and his client's office in Atlanta.
NDoors (Representative Jo Seong-won) announced on November 11 that they successfully completed the "GNGWC 2009 Atlantica Thai Final Round" held last weekend in Bangkok, Thailand.
The Hoover Dam is one of the great wonders of American engineering and in addition it is an important part of our nation's critical infrastructure. Here's a look at how the Bureau of Reclamation, a part of the U.S. Department of Interior, protects this national icon.
Companies with operations in Japan are repairing factories and accounting for employees as recovery continues in the aftermath of a devastating earthquake and tsunami that struck the country's eastern coast on March 11.
Texas Instruments anticipates between four and six months of disruption to its chip manufacturing operations in Japan following the massive earthquake that struck on March 11.
Japanese high-tech exports dropped sharply last month as a result of disruption caused by the massive earthquake and tsunami that hit the country on March 11, according to government trade statistics published Wednesday.
Microsoft unloads 11 updates for 25 vulnerabilities on Patch Tuesday while Adobe also gets IT managers' attention with its security advisory for Adobe Reader and Acrobat.
Network components manufacturer Emulex Corp. today announced that its board of directors had unanimously rejected Broadcom Corp.'s revised cash offer to acquire it for $11 per share and recommended that shareholders not tender their shares into the offer. Broadcom, which had already indicated this latest offer would be its last, said it is dropping all efforts to acquire Emulex.
In light of the overall economy and Nortel’s particular situation, the former telecom giant had little choice but to liquidate its assets as it attempts to restructure under Chapter 11, analysts say.
Microsoft's XML-based office document format, OOXML, does not meet the requirements for governmental use, according to a new report published by the Norwegian Agency for Public Management and eGovernment (DIFI).
Microsoft today released the final version of Windows Phone 7 developer tools, opening the way to what the company hopes will be flood of applications for the revamped smartphone platform. At the same time, Microsoft is becoming more visible in what promises to be a huge marketing effort to generate consumer excitement for the October 11 launch of Windows Phone handsets.
When Y2K came and went without a major upheaval of the world’s IT infrastructure, it left a legacy of complacency that may come back to haunt IT departments when changes to daylight-saving time take effect on March 11, according to Forrester researchers who have issued a new report titled “Echoes of Y2K in Daylight-Saving Time Changes.”
Bill Gates probably will not sing the praises of Keith Curtis, a programmer with Microsoft for 11 years who's now left the fold and written a book about why the Redmond way will fail. Oh yeah, Curtis is not afraid to speak his mind as a Linux guru, either.