
YEAR IN REVIEW: December 2010
The month featured a new Google OS, the continuation of the WikiLeaks story, and talk of another wireless spectrum auction. Plus, rumours swirled around Microsoft’s next move in the tablet market
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YEAR IN REVIEW: November 2010
This month saw Novell get bought by a relatively unknown tech firm from Seattle, Apple discontinuing its Xserve product line, and a slew of Toronto-based tech events. Plus, the Industry Minister gives an update on the Canada’s telecom foreign ownership rules
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YEAR IN REVIEW: October 2010
The month was marked by Microsoft’s new mobile OS, the appointment of a bunch of new CEOs, and some major announcements from Canada’s privacy czar. Plus, ComputerWorld Canada’s first ever IT Leadership Awards
Read More ...
Supercomputing 'arms race' could prove costly: Obama
The White House searches for better ways to make sure supercomputers ‘address our current national priorities.’ But how is supercomputing performance best measured across countries?
Read More ...
Four myths busted in the printing business
A Xerox Canada exec lists the printing myths that are preventing businesses from running efficiently. Is your business plagued by legacy thinking and bad habits?
Read More ...
YEAR IN REVIEW: August 2010
RIM faces trouble in the Middle East, Oracle takes Google to court, and HP CEO Mark Hurd steps down. Plus, Dell and HP get into a bidding war
Read More ...
YEAR IN REVIEW: September, 2010
This month Research In Motion made it clear there'd be a Canadian entry in the tablet computer race, we found how spooky spooks can be and how smart Cambridge, Ont. is
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YEAR IN REVIEW: July 2010
Apple deals with iPhone 4 reception flaw with free case, Dell buys Scalent, EMC buys GreenPlum, OpenSolaris governing board threatens to quit. What went down in July 2010
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Websense’s five security predictions for 2011
The security vendor advises enterprises be prepared against these five threats in 2011. Don’t overlook smart phones. Stuxnet was targeted, but there’s a lesson. Corporate Facebook pages will fall victim to manipulated search algorithms. And more
Read More ...
Man used neighbor's Wi-Fi to threaten U.S. VP Biden
A Minnesota man hacked a Wi-Fi network to e-mail death threats to several U.S. politicians. He used Aircrack Wi-Fi cracking software to gain access to his neighbor's WEP-encrypted network, according to prosecutors
Read More ...
DDoS attacks threaten free speech, says report
Attacks hammer human rights and dissident media sites, which often don't have the resources to fend off take-downs
Read More ...
RBC launches new iPhone, BlackBerry apps
The bank says the apps were built specifically to run on the two popular smart phone operating systems. Android and Windows Phone 7 versions are still being developed
Read More ...
Microsoft set to announce tablet version of Windows
Rumors swirl around the company preparing a tablet version of Windows for the CES show, according to various reports
Read More ...
Why a small insurance firm moved to fibre optic
The DSL connection 'wasn't awful' -- it just wasn't good enough. But recently the price of fibre has come down enough for an increasing number of companies to switch
Read More ...
Outercurve Foundation adds collaboration project
The open source venue accepts the ConferenceXP project, which originated at Microsoft and features an extensible e-learning and collaboration platform
Read More ...
YEAR IN REVIEW: December 2010
The month featured a new Google OS, the continuation of the WikiLeaks story, and talk of another wireless spectrum auction. Plus, rumours swirled around Microsoft’s next move in the tablet market
Read More ...
YEAR IN REVIEW: November 2010
This month saw Novell get bought by a relatively unknown tech firm from Seattle, Apple discontinuing its Xserve product line, and a slew of Toronto-based tech events. Plus, the Industry Minister gives an update on the Canada’s telecom foreign ownership rules
Read More ...
YEAR IN REVIEW: October 2010
The month was marked by Microsoft’s new mobile OS, the appointment of a bunch of new CEOs, and some major announcements from Canada’s privacy czar. Plus, ComputerWorld Canada’s first ever IT Leadership Awards
Read More ...
Supercomputing 'arms race' could prove costly: Obama
The White House searches for better ways to make sure supercomputers ‘address our current national priorities.’ But how is supercomputing performance best measured across countries?
Read More ...
Four myths busted in the printing business
A Xerox Canada exec lists the printing myths that are preventing businesses from running efficiently. Is your business plagued by legacy thinking and bad habits?
Read More ...
YEAR IN REVIEW: August 2010
RIM faces trouble in the Middle East, Oracle takes Google to court, and HP CEO Mark Hurd steps down. Plus, Dell and HP get into a bidding war
Read More ...
YEAR IN REVIEW: September, 2010
This month Research In Motion made it clear there'd be a Canadian entry in the tablet computer race, we found how spooky spooks can be and how smart Cambridge, Ont. is
Read More ...
YEAR IN REVIEW: July 2010
Apple deals with iPhone 4 reception flaw with free case, Dell buys Scalent, EMC buys GreenPlum, OpenSolaris governing board threatens to quit. What went down in July 2010
Read More ...
Websense’s five security predictions for 2011
The security vendor advises enterprises be prepared against these five threats in 2011. Don’t overlook smart phones. Stuxnet was targeted, but there’s a lesson. Corporate Facebook pages will fall victim to manipulated search algorithms. And more
Read More ...
Man used neighbor's Wi-Fi to threaten U.S. VP Biden
A Minnesota man hacked a Wi-Fi network to e-mail death threats to several U.S. politicians. He used Aircrack Wi-Fi cracking software to gain access to his neighbor's WEP-encrypted network, according to prosecutors
Read More ...
DDoS attacks threaten free speech, says report
Attacks hammer human rights and dissident media sites, which often don't have the resources to fend off take-downs
Read More ...
RBC launches new iPhone, BlackBerry apps
The bank says the apps were built specifically to run on the two popular smart phone operating systems. Android and Windows Phone 7 versions are still being developed
Read More ...
Microsoft set to announce tablet version of Windows
Rumors swirl around the company preparing a tablet version of Windows for the CES show, according to various reports
Read More ...
Why a small insurance firm moved to fibre optic
The DSL connection 'wasn't awful' -- it just wasn't good enough. But recently the price of fibre has come down enough for an increasing number of companies to switch
Read More ...
Outercurve Foundation adds collaboration project
The open source venue accepts the ConferenceXP project, which originated at Microsoft and features an extensible e-learning and collaboration platform
Read More ...
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