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InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 1 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"After weeks of speculation, it appears that
the general public will soon be able to a target="_blank"
href="http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/154479/windows_7_beta_on_hold_until_2009.html?tk=rel_news"get
its hands on the first beta/a of Microsoft#39;s follow-up to Windows Vista. A a target="_blank"
href="http://www.msdndevcon.com/pages/about.aspx#giveaways"message/a on the MDC (MSDN Developer
Conference) site states that all attendees of the upcoming MDC events, a series of
Microsoft-sponsored road shows running from early December through mid-February, will receive a
Windows 7 Beta 1 DVD in the mail quot;when they become available.quot;/pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Microsoft isn#39;t giving an exact delivery date for the Windows 7 beta, but
some reports a target="_blank"
href="http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasicamp;articleId=9122158"speculate/a
the disc will be ready before January 13./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"b[#160;InfoWorld#39;s
Randall C. Kennedy and OSNews#39; Thom Holwerda#160;a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/12/02/49FE-windows-7-great-debate_1.html"debated the best
way to assess Windows 7#39;s changes/a#160;]/b/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Some bloggers, the
few who#39;ve actually tested the pre-beta code, have voiced concerns about the Windows 7 feature
set. Infoworld#39;s Randall C. Kennedy, for instance, recently declared that Windows 7 was
essentially a a target="_blank"
href="http://www.pcworld.com/article/153624/under_the_hood_windows_7_is_vistas_twin.html?tk=rel_news"slightly
tweaked/a version of Vista. Other reports have praised-with some reservations-Windows 7#39;s a
target="_blank"
href="http://www.pcworld.com/article/152895/windows_7_first_look_a_big_fix_for_vista.html?tk=rel_news"interface
improvements/a, such as a vastly remodeled Windows Taskbar./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Microsoft has indicated that Windows 7 will likely be ready by late 2009 or
early 2010, and given the lack of spectacular new features in Vista#39;s replacement, there#39;s no
reason to think that Redmond won#39;t meet that timeline. Certainly, the average Vista user would
be thrilled if the hated a
href="http://www.pcworld.com/article/150735/vista_flaws_fixes.html?tk=rel_news"User Account
Control/a security feature would simply go away. Early indications are that it won#39;t, but UAC
will undergo some a target="_blank"
href="http://www.pcworld.com/article/152895-2/windows_7_first_look_a_big_fix_for_vista.html?tk=rel_news"major
changes/a in Windows 7./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"emPC World is an InfoWorld
affiliate./em/p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
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//a

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InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 1 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"IT vendors may be growing increasingly
desperate amid the global economic downturn, but customers must employ a range of tactics -- not
just bullying -- to extract cost savings from them, a group of Forrester Research analysts said
during a client teleconference Wednesday./pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Companies simply can#39;t use a shotgun-style approach and expect to succeed,
said software licensing analyst Duncan Jones: quot;Anything that is undifferentiated, like a
general letter that goes out [to vendors] saying we#39;ve got to cut everyone#39;s maintenance by
10 percent? That#39;s not going anywhere.quot;/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"b[#160;For more on
how to deal with the recession, check out#160;a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/archives/t.jsp?N=samp;V=113008amp;source=fssr"InfoWorld#39;s special
report: IT and the financial crisis/a.#160;]/b/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Analyst Paul Roehrig,
who focuses on outsourcing and IT services, said it is difficult and awkward to extract price
concessions on a signed contract./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;Either you#39;re begging or
threatening.... Those [tactics] tend to work, but only for a short time,quot; he said, adding,
quot;unless you#39;re really overpaying, there#39;s really not that much room in the provider#39;s
margin where they can lower the price point without changing the service level.quot;/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"And if a customer does succeed in lowering its services costs, quot;the vendor
is going to immediately substitute junior people,quot; said analyst John McCarthy, whose coverage
areas include offshoring./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Instead of begging for a rate cut,
customers could instead ask their vendors to assign more seasoned workers to their projects,
resulting in productivity gains and cost savings, McCarthy said./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Meanwhile, the tactics are different for software licenses and maintenance
agreements, according to Jones./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;One of the problems is,
you#39;re dealing with a software rep who has different goals than you. He needs to sell new
licenses and has no interest in helping you cut costs,quot; he said. quot;But if you get up higher
in the organization, there are going to be people who care more about the long-term relationship,
and there#39;s flexibility there.quot;/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"That said, now is the time to
push for bigger discounts on new licenses, as sales representatives quot;are desperate to meet
their number by end of the year,quot; Jones added./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Companies could
even indicate they#39;d be happy to let any outstanding deals float over into 2009, he said:
quot;That will probably be too late for the rep, so try it as a tactic and see how much flexibility
you#39;ve got.quot;/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Also, customers could use money they#39;re
prepared to spend on new software as leverage, Jones said: quot;Anything you#39;re trying to get,
like cutting maintenance on products you#39;re not using, you might be able to get that as a quid
pro quo for spending in another area.quot;/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Beyond maximizing their
buying power, companies should save money by determining which software assets no longer need a
maintenance contract, Jones said: quot;You save costs with minimal impact on the business, but you
put pressure on other vendors because it shows you#39;re seriously looking at everything.quot;/pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"A similar approach should be taken to IT services contracts, Roehrig
said. quot;If you#39;re asking for the highest levels of service, you#39;re going to be paying top
dollar, when the reality is that the enterprise can function just fine with not everyone having
gold-plated service.quot;/pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Companies should also try to get more
value out of outsourcing in general through strategic hiring, he said. quot;If I had money as a
client to invest in one thing ... I would get someone who really knows how to manage a service
provider. Some of the best outsourcing deals I#39;ve come up against have really good people who
know how to get a service provider to do what you want.quot;/pp page="2"
class="ArticleBody"Customers should also seek to lower the total number of service providers they
contract with, leading the way to bigger volume discounts, Roehrig said. But he noted that this can
be difficult for heavily federated organizations to accomplish./pp page="2"
class="ArticleBody"It#39;s also possible to save money by actually helping one#39;s vendor cut
costs, according to Jones./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"If four divisions within a company are
negotiating separately with a vendor, they should consider consolidating those relationships, he
said: quot;I would go to the vendor and say, how can I earn cost reductions by dealing with you in
a centralized fashion?quot;/p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
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border=0 height=1 width=1 alt=/

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InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 4 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"a target="_blank"
href="http://www.networkworld.com/subnets/microsoft/?tnav=_l5001_t13_s"Microsoft/a on Wednesday
unveiled a free plug-in for Firefox to translate Open XML documents, an update to its document
translator, and a toolkit for Java developers that was built under the umbrella of its Document
Interoperability Initiative./pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The
group released the a target="_blank" href="http://www.codeplex.com/OpenXMLViewer"OpenXML Document
Viewer/a as an open source project on its Codeplex Web site. The viewer translates documents in the
Open XML format, which became an ISO standard in April after much contentious a target="_blank"
href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/011608-microsoft-defends-open-xml.html"debate/a , to
HTML so they can be viewed on a browser. The viewer, which is still in the preview stage,
eliminates the need for a user to install Microsoft Office or any other productivity tool set./pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"b[ Discover the top-rated IT products as rated by the a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/testcenter/?source=fssr"InfoWorld Test Center/a. ]/b/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"The first implementation developed by MindTree and Microsoft works with Firefox
3.0 running on Windows or Linux and translates font types, images, text styles, diagrams, tables,
and hyperlinks. In early to mid-2009, the project will add support for Opera and add server-side
features./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The software was released during a Document
Interoperability Initiative (DII) meeting this week in Belgium./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Microsoft created DII in March with the help of Novell, Mark Logic, Quickoffice,
DataViz, and Nuance Communications. The goal was to foster interoperability between document
formats, most notably Open XML and the Open Document Format (ODF)./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"quot;Basically this is Microsoft sincerely going out and following up with what
they did with OpenXML,quot; said Peter O#39;Kelly, principal analyst with O#39;Kelly Consulting./pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"As part of that follow-up, Microsoft plans to support ODF in Office
2007 SP2, which is slated to ship next year./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"On top of the Firefox
plug-in, DII released a target="_blank" href="http://odf-converter.sourceforge.net/"Version 2.5/a
of the a target="_blank"
href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2007/020207-open-xml-translator-for-microsoft.html"Open
XML/ODF Translator/a , which supports Office 2003, 2007 and XP. The new version includes a set of
ODF 1.1 compatible templates and chart enhancements for spreadsheet programs./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"The templates provide preformatted documents, such as a business letter or fax
sheet, that are based on either ODF or Open XML and allow predetermined conversions between
formats./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"DII also introduced an software developer kit for Java
developers that aids in working with Open XML documents. The project aligns with the a
target="_blank" href="http://poi.apache.org/"Apache POI/a project, which provides Java libraries
for reading and writing in Microsoft Office formats./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"All the DII
software was released as open source projects./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;We have been
seeing that a lot of people now understand that what is most important is the end user,quot; said
Jean Paoli, general manager of interoperability strategy for Microsoft. quot;Since for maybe a year
now, we are seeing far less passion about the format issue and more rationality.quot;/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"ema target="_blank" href="http://www.networkworld.com"Network World/a/em emis an
InfoWorld affiliate/em/p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
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InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 5 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"Scotland is to host two pioneering
datacenters, with plans being announced to build an eco-friendly cloud centre in Inverness, and the
world#39;s largest computing facility in Lockerbie./pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"A new
business park, a quot;sustainable villagequot; with hundreds of homes and what is claimed to be the
world#39;s largest datacenter, are to be built in the south-west of Scotland under an ambitious
#163;800 million development plan./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"strong[ Find out more on being a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/08/01/PC_owners_urged_to_manage_power_use_and_save_money_1.html?source=fssr"environmentally
responsible while saving money/a. And stay/strong bup to date on green tech with a
href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/sustainableit/"InfoWorld#39;s Sustainable IT blog/a, with our a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/topic-center/green-tech/"Green Tech Topic Center/a, and with the a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/newsletter/subscribe.html"Green Tech newsletter/a. ]/b/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"The Peelhouses datacenter in Lockerbie, which is being built by Scottish firm
Lockerbie Data Centres, will use green energy generated from wind turbines and a new bio-mass power
station./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The entire facility will be spread over 250,000 square
metres, including the development of 800 new homes in#160;the village. Waste heat generated by the
banks of computer servers will be reused to heat the new village as well as the existing town, and
the business park/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Scottish IT services company Alchemy Plus, with
backing from Microsoft, has revealed plans to build a #163;20 million cloud computing center on the
Inverness harbour. Inverness was chosen as an ideal site for the large computing facilities because
of its cold climate, which Alchemy intends to harness to reduce the need for cooling./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"b[ Learn more about what cloud computing really means from a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/04/07/15FE-cloud-computing-reality_2.html?source=fssr"InfoWorld#39;s
cloud computing primer/a. ]/b/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The 20,000-square-foot facility is
billed as Scotland#39;s first eco-friendly computing facility, with the heat created by the center
being used to warm nearby businesses, including a nearby hotel./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The
Inverness center will operate on a cloud computing model, enabling users to subscribe on a monthly
basis for the IT resources their businesses uses. Alchemy claims this companies that took part in
an 18-month pilot saw an average cost savings of 28 percent./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Lockerbie Data Centres still waiting for planning permission of its plans, but
chief executive John Hume said he had already received interest from a number of IT firms keen to
get involved with the project./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Hume said: quot;The worldwide
shortage of suitable data storage and the high demand for local affordable housing presents a
unique opportunity for Scotland and local residents.quot;/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;With
global demand for data storage expected to double by 2012, demand already outstrips supply.quot;/pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"Chief executive of Alchemy Plus, Peter Swanson, echoed similar
sentiments on the demand for datacenter space. quot;The current economic downturn is driving a
rapid shift towards cloud-based services which offer greater economy and flexibility.quot;/pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"a target="_blank" href="http://www.computerworlduk.com/"emComputerworld
UK/em/a emis an InfoWorld affiliate./em/p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
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InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 5 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"VMware has introduced View 3, the updated
version of its virtual data infrastructure (VDI) offering. The company claimed that the new product
would reduce desktop storage demands by as much as 70 percent./pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"In
addition, the company said that it could #39;decouple#39; a desktop from specific locations to
create a personalized view of that desktop, accessible from any other device -- so that a desktop
could now be visible from a laptop in another office./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"b[ Read
about#160;a
href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/virtualization/archives/2008/10/vmware_vdi_stor.html?source=fssr"VMware#39;s
VDI Storage Considerations guide/a. And stay up to date on the latest virtualization developments
with InfoWorld#39;s a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/virtualization/?source=fssr"Virtualization
Report blog/a and a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/newsletter/subscribe.html?source=fssr"newsletter/a. ]/b/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Jocelyn Goldfein, VMware#39;s global manager for its desktop business said that
the move supported the current trend towards mobile working quot;Users are no longer tied to a desk
quot; she said. quot;they use PCs, thin clients, notebooks or even smartphonesquot;/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Goldfein said that View3 was part of the vClient initiative announced at
VMWorld. She said that the company was now looking at the desktop in the same way that it had
looked at the datacenter. quot;The problem with desktop virtualization is that you still need a
device. When you consolidate in a datacenter, you can get rid of 90 percent of the servers, you
can#39;t do that with the desktop.quot; She added that View 3 would help bring virtualized desktops
to devices./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The main element in View3 is View Composer. This uses a
new technology called Linked Clone to generate many virtual desktops from a master image. Only
desktops could be created in seconds and centrally controlled by View Manager./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Tommy Armstrong, VMware#39;s senior marketing manager for enterprise desktops
said that View 3 users would be able to provision many machines with common software -- for
example, Windows, with that quot;golden masterquot; as VMware calls it. He said that this could
also be used for patch management./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"In addition, the company has
released Offline Desktop, a feature that provides the means to securely move virtual desktops
between the datacenter and a local laptop or desktop. The company claimed that this would enable
users to quot;check outquot; a virtual desktop onto an ordinary PC, such as a laptop, run the
virtual desktop locally and then check it back in to the datacenter./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"a target="_blank" href="http://www.techworld.com/index.jsp"emTechworld/em/a emis
an InfoWorld affiliate./em/p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
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InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 6 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"Dell believes that customers do not
necessarily need to build new datacenters, and is now offering to show customers how to optimize
their existing ones to extend their life span./pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Dell
says that its expertise in this area came about two years ago, when it discovered it had reached
the capacity limits of its two datacenters in Austin Texas. Rather than going to the expense of
simply building a new datacenter, the company instead looked at whether it was possible to squeeze
more life out of its existing ones./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"b[ Check out these#160;a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/11/18/Eleven_tips_for_datacenter_efficiency_1.html?source=fssr"11
tips for datacenter efficiency/a. And keep up on green IT trends with InfoWorld#39;s a
href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/sustainableit/?source=fssr"Sustainable IT blog/a and a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/newsletter/subscribe.html?source=fssr"Green Tech newsletter/a.
]/b/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;Michael Dell looks at building new buildings in order to
make money, and not making money in order to build buildings,quot; explained Rick Becker, VP,
Software and Solutions Enterprise Product Group at Dell./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Becker was
one of the men charged with overseeing the redevelopment of Dell#39;s datacenter resources. Dell
estimates that its own datacenter optimization has internally reduced costs by more than $29
million./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;When we optimized our own datacenters, we learnt a lot
of lessons,quot; Becker told Techworld. quot;And now we want to share these lessons with our
customers,quot; he added. To this end, Dell is offering customers a datacenter optimization
service./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Alongside the service, Dell is offering some simple advice,
in line with the company#39;s established policy of a target="_blank"
href="http://www.techworld.com/storage/news/index.cfm?newsid=105618"simplifying IT/a . This
includes the decommissioning old servers, consolidate existing equipment; virtualize as much as
possible, and re-equipping with new kit in order to take advantage of much better energy-efficient
technology./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"On the consolidation point, Dell points out that many
companies have unnecessary servers running in their DCs, legacy of past projects, but which are not
shut down because managers don#39;t know what they are used for./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Becker said that with a 70 percent server volume reduction, coupled with an
equipment refresh with energy-efficient products, a typical datacenter would see 50 to 70 percent
less energy use./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Becker also makes it clear that he is also a big
fan of virtualisation, and believes that this is one of the most important ways for companies to
reduce their server sprawl and optimise their server resources. quot;At Dell in 2006, we only had
543 virtual machines. Now the number is over 5,000,quot; he said./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"quot;We will also ask customers to raise the temperature of their
datacenters,quot; said Becker, pointing to the fact that most datacenters are currently too
cool./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Dell equipment can run at 25 degrees Celsius (77 Fahrenheit).
Indeed, Dell#39;s equipment is certified to run at 29.4 Celsius (85 Fahrenheit), but Becker says
that at 25.6 Celsius (78 Fahrenheit), it found that its fans ran at a greater speed and started
impacting on energy cost savings./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"By its own estimate, Dell believes
it can help companies increase their DC computing capacity by 270 percent within the same power and
space footprint, using less hardware. Its message then to the market is spend now, in order to save
down the road./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"But will anyone buy in to this argument considering
the current economic climate?/pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Becker disagrees somewhat with the
gloomy forecasts touted by a target="_blank"
href="http://www.techworld.com/applications/news/index.cfm?newsid=107022"IDC/a and a
target="_blank"
href="http://www.techworld.com/midsizedbusiness/news/index.cfm?newsid=105682"Gartner/a . While
everyone seems to agree that the industry won#39;t experience the extreme cuts it suffered in 2001
after the dot-com bust, Becker feels that customers will not be holding off all their spending
plans, especially if Dell can demonstrate real ROI (return on investment) within a 12 to 18 month
period./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"quot;Post September, IT has suddenly become the key enabler
on how companies can remain viable,quot; said Becker. quot;We can show the ROI that customers can
achieve, plus we have financing options available./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"If companies can
reduce the amount of people needed (by adding in more automation), as well as trimming their real
estate costs, there is much less expense. The finance guys absolutely get that. That is what we
mean when we say, simplify and save,quot; he said./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"a target="_blank"
href="http://www.techworld.com/index.jsp"emTechworld/em/a emis an InfoWorld affiliate./em/p/divbr
style=clear: both;/ a
href=http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=21b6cc01434d35cc7989c74d8e38ab04p=1img alt= style=border:
0; border=0 src=http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=21b6cc01434d35cc7989c74d8e38ab04p=1//a img
src=http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=21b6cc01434d35cc7989c74d8e38ab04 style=display: none;
border=0 height=1 width=1 alt=/

|
InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 6 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"The first round of registrations for the new
TLD (top-level domain) .tel will open Wednesday./pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The new
TLD isn#39;t a run of the mill domain like, for example .com or .org. It#39;s not about Web content
-- instead it will allow both individuals and companies to store all their contact information in
the DNS (Domain Name System) without the need to build, host, or manage a Web site, according to
Telnic, which is in charge of operating .tel./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"b[ Related:#160;a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/06/05/15/78315_HNdottel_1.html?source=fssr"ICANN gives .tel
domain thumbs up/a. And keep up on the latest tech news headlines at a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/news/?source=fssr"InfoWorld News/a, or subscribe to the a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/newsletter/subscribe.html?source=fssr"Today#39;s Headlines
newsletter/a. ]/b/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody".Tel is about making it simple for people to get
in touch with a domain owner, according to Justin Hayward, communications director at Telnic./pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;That might be listing a traditional telephone number or it may be
about a Web site, but it can incorporate any and all forms of digital communications as it stands,
including location records and also textual keywords that enable the .tel to be search-engine
optimized,quot; said Hayward./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"He has decided to include, for
example, phone numbers, his Twitter page, a Google Maps location, and a Skype address at his
domain, justin.tel./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;I have made it publicly available, but it
could easily be privatized to protect the contact information from spammers,quot; said Hayward./pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"Solving privacy issues is one of the reasons it has taken so long for
.tel to get off the ground -- Telnic was awarded the .tel domain in May 2006 -- but those issues
have now been resolved, according to Hayward./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Information associated
with .tel addresses will be available to any device that is connected to the Internet. The user
types in the address and a page with all the available contact information will come back,
according to Hayward./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Users can then click on the information to
start, for example, a chat session or a phone call. That will only work, of course, if the right
application or functionality is in place./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;We#39;ve also created
a number of different applications, both for the PC and mobile devices that enable you to bypass
the Web completely and access .tel information from the address book,quot; said Hayward./pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"Applications have been created for the iPhone and BlackBerry and
Windows Mobile devices and for Microsoft Outlook./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Using these will
make it even cheaper and quicker to access information from the DNS. It will also make the address
book a very live and dynamic application, rather than static and having to be manually updated,
according to Hayward./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The applications have been open sourced to
attract developers to do more with the domain. One developer has, for example, created a plug-in
for the Wordpress blogging platform, according to Hayward./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"To make
searching for information easier, Telnic also plans to launch a directory service called
telpages.com during next year. It will only search .tel domains for relevant information./pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"The launch is backed up by 120 registrars worldwide spanning 29
countries, according to Telnic./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"From 3 p.m. Greenwich Mean Time on
Wednesday only trademark owners will be able to apply for a domain -- the so-called sunrise
period./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"That period will end Feb. 2 and will be immediately followed
by a period during which anyone who is willing to pay a premium price can get their hands on a
domain. On March 24 registrations will be open to everyone, at a lower cost./pp page="2"
class="ArticleBody"Three-year registrations made during the sunrise period will cost between $300
and $400, according to Hayward./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"During the second period,
Domainmonster.com will charge #8364;120 ($150) for a single domain./pp page="2"
class="ArticleBody"Generally, after March 24, Telnic expects domain registrations to cost around
$15 to $25./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"The domain will go live on Feb. 3./p/divbr style=clear:
both;/ a href=http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=42562b440074431d50df8019e63dc16bp=1img alt=
style=border: 0; border=0
src=http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=42562b440074431d50df8019e63dc16bp=1//a img
src=http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=42562b440074431d50df8019e63dc16b style=display: none;
border=0 height=1 width=1 alt=/

|
InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 7 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"A technical problem in a license management
server at SonicWall created havoc Tuesday for users of the company#39;s e-mail security products,
leaving many customers temporarily unprotected against spam, a target="_blank"
href="http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/security/story/0,10801,89096,00.html"phishing/a
and a target="_blank"
href="http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasicamp;articleId=9082058"malware/a
threats while others were unable to log into their own systems./pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Colleen
Nichols, a spokeswoman for a target="_blank"
href="http://www.computerworld.com/action/inform.do?command=searchamp;searchTerms=SonicWALL+Inc."SonicWall/a
, said Tuesday evening that the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based vendor had resolved the server issue as of
noontime PST and that affected customers could quot;resynchronize their licensesquot; by visiting
the a target="_blank" href="http://www.sonicwall.com/us/11087.html"customer support section/a of
the company#39;s Web site./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"b[ Learn how to secure your systems with
Roger Grimes#39; a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/securityadviser/?source=fssr"Security Adviser
blog/a and a href="http://www.infoworld.com/newsletter/subscribe.html?source=fssr"newsletter/a,
both from InfoWorld. ]/b/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"It wasn#39;t immediately clear how many
customers were affected by the license server glitch. But numerous users posted angry messages on a
forum on the SonicWall site during a period that lasted for several hours./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"According to a user who reported the problem to Computerworld via e-mail, the
glitch affected all customers of SonicWall#39;s ES series of a target="_blank"
href="http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasicamp;articleId=9118299"e-mail
security/a appliances, based on what he was told by a person he described as the vendor#39;s
quot;general support ticket-taker.quot;/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The user, who asked not to
be identified, said that during the overnight hours from Monday into Tuesday, SonicWall#39;s
license manager erroneously reset the license keys for products installed on his systems and those
of other customers, thereby making the licenses appear to be invalid./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"quot;Very early this morning,quot; Nichols confirmed via e-mail, quot;one server
in SonicWall#39;s licensing server pool that handles distribution of [digital] signatures and
license keys malfunctioned.quot; The malfunction caused quot;somequot; license keys to be reset,
requiring them to later be resynchronized with SonicWall#39;s servers, she said./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"The company shut off the problematic license server quot;shortly after it began
malfunctioning, and at the same time proactively stopped automatic license key updates while we
verified the integrity of the rest of our licensing servers,quot; Nichols wrote. During that
period, customers were still able to manually download updates and resynchronize their licenses
through the company#39;s Web site, she added./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Nichols said that
SonicWall was working to contact customers believed to have been affected by the problem to ensure
them that the technical issues had been resolved./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"In posts on the
user forum, a person named Jody Spoor who identified herself as a senior technical support engineer
at SonicWall said that the company had been alerted about the problem quot;as early as we could
bequot; and had taken immediate steps to prevent the issue from spreading further./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Typically, a problem with a license server shouldn#39;t result in local
product-registration information being lost, Spoor said in one post. But for some reason, the
registration information was lost quot;for a number of units,quot; she added. Spoor recommended a
manual work-around for affected customers while SonicWall worked to fix the technical snafu./pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"The glitch sparked outrage among some SonicWall customers who vented
their frustrations on the user forum, which can be accessed from the company#39;s a target="_blank"
href="http://www.sonicwall.com/us/Support.html"main support page/a but requires registration./pp
page="2" class="ArticleBody"quot;I#39;ll say it to whoever I need to say it to. This is
unacceptable,quot; wrote a customer using the handle rhouseholder. quot;We are a 100 million dollar
#39;technology#39; defense contractor with serious security considerations, and I can#39;t just
have SPAM and VIRUSES pouring into my network for half a day because your license server went
down.quot;/pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"One forum poster, who works at an educational institution
that has nearly 30,000 students and is hit by more than 2 million spam messages daily, fumed at the
fact that the manual work-around recommended by SonicWall didn#39;t work for the school./pp
page="2" class="ArticleBody"That user also complained that e-mails and phone calls to
SonicWall#39;s tech support department had gone unreturned for hours. quot;There comes a time when
you need to stop waiting for tech support to call you back and just call your own internal legal
department,quot; the user wrote./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Another customer said several
schools that rely on SonicWall products for content filtering had decided to disconnect their
Internet access until the license server problem was resolved./pp page="2"
class="ArticleBody"quot;Say goodbye to one customer ? I will not be renewing,quot; wrote another
user who was identified as pcicanada on the forum. In that post, pcicanada added that although the
problem eventually was resolved, the entire episode was completely inexcusable./pp page="2"
class="ArticleBody"quot;What exactly is it,quot; pcicanada wrote, quot;that I am paying for? My
systems spent most of the day completely exposed because the wizards at Sonicwall have no
mechanisms in place for dealing with something like this!quot;/pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Other
users also lamented about the apparent lack of a backup plan at SonicWall for handling the crisis,
and blasted the company for leaving them exposed to e-mail threats for a prolonged period of time
because of a license server glitch. Some demanded a prompt and complete explanation of what had
happened so they could tell their managers why their companies had been left completely open to
e-mail security threats./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"One user, who said his SonicWall system had
been down for more than eight hours, called the situation quot;ridiculousquot; in a forum post.
quot;I had no idea they were running real-time licensing, but since they were, they should have
some redundancy,quot; the user wrote. quot;This is BS. I#39;m livid.quot;/pp page="2"
class="ArticleBody"a target="_blank"
href="http://www.computerworld.com/index.jsp"emComputerworld/em/a emis an InfoWorld
affiliate./em/p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
href=http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=129e6a19e4bf36521628f1942a583443p=1img alt= style=border:
0; border=0 src=http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=129e6a19e4bf36521628f1942a583443p=1//a img
src=http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=129e6a19e4bf36521628f1942a583443 style=display: none;
border=0 height=1 width=1 alt=/

|
InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 8 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"A support page on Apple#39;s Web site
recommending users purchase antivirus software for their Macs a target="_blank"
href="http://www.macworld.com/article/137241/2008/12/antivirus.html"received a lot of attention/a
over the past couple of days, but on Tuesday Apple removed the page from its Web site./pp
align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;We
have removed the KnowledgeBase article because it was old and#160;inaccurate,quot; Apple spokesman
Bill Evans, told Macworld. quot;The Mac is designed with built-in technologies that provide
protection against malicious software and security threats right out of the box.quot;/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"b[ Read the related story quot;a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/12/02/Apple_quietly_recommends_using_antivirus_software_1.html?source=fssr"Apple
quietly recommends using anti-virus software/a.quot; And learn how to secure your systems with
Roger Grimes#39; a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/securityadviser/?source=fssr"Security Adviser
blog/a and a href="http://www.infoworld.com/newsletter/subscribe.html?source=fssr"newsletter/a,
both from InfoWorld. ]/b/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The Web page seemed to go against
Apple#39;s newest ad campaigns that suggested only the PC needs antivirus software. Even though the
page has been removed, Apple did not telling customers to absolutely not protect themselves./pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"quot;Since no system can be 100 percent immune from every threat,
running anti-virus software may offer additional protection,quot; said Evans./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"ema target="_blank" href="http://www.macworld.com/"Macworld/a/em is an InfoWorld
affiliate./p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
href=http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=919e5eaa6c92a4b596f42a8c9c219dbdp=1img alt= style=border:
0; border=0 src=http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=919e5eaa6c92a4b596f42a8c9c219dbdp=1//a img
src=http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=919e5eaa6c92a4b596f42a8c9c219dbd style=display: none;
border=0 height=1 width=1 alt=/

|
InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 9 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"Nvidia officials on Tuesday reiterated the
company#39;s interest in the mini-laptop space but said it would wait for the market to mature
before jumping in./pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Earlier
this year, the company made#160;a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/03/26/Nvidia-to-make-graphics-chipsets-for-Via-processors_1.html"a
deal with Via Technologies/a #160;to make graphics chipsets to work with Via#39;s Nano processors,
which are designed for laptops and mini-laptops. Mini-laptops, also called netbooks by Intel, are
inexpensive laptops with screens of 10 inches or less./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"b[ For more
on products in the hot mini-notebook category, check out our hands-on looks at a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/07/03/Hands_on_with_Asuss_Eee_PC_901_and_1000_1.html?source=fssr"Asus#39;
Eee PC 901 and 1000/a and the a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/11/14/Hands_on_with_the_Asustek_N10_netbook_1.html"N10
netbook/a, the a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/07/02/Hands_on_with_the_Cloudbook_Max_netbook_1.html?source=fssr"Cloudbook
Max netbook/a, a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/06/30/Hands_on_with_Elitegroups_G10IL_minilaptop_1.html?source=fssr"Elitegroup#39;s
G10IL mini-laptop/a, a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/06/19/Hands_on_with_MSIs_Wind_lowcost_laptop_1.html?source=fssr"MSI#39;s
Wind low-cost laptop/a, a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/07/09/Hands_on_with_Gigabytes_M912X_minilaptop-IDGNS_1.html?source=fssr"Giga-byte#39;s
M912X mini-laptop/a, a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/08/07/Hands_on_with_HPs_MiniNote_netbook_1.html?source=fssr"HP#39;s
Mini-Note netbook/a and a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/07/14/Hands_on_with_Acers_Aspire_one_netbook_1.html?source=fssr"Acer#39;s
Aspire one/a. ]/b/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"The netbook market is growing, and it could branch
out into product categories such as smartphones and multimedia netbooks that can handle graphics
effectively, said Marv Burkett, the company#39;s chief financial officer, on a webcast from the
Credit Suisse annual technology conference being held in Scottsdale, Arizona./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"quot;We#39;re not saying we#39;re not interested; it#39;s a matter of how the
market will evolve,quot; Burkett said./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Most netbooks today contain
Intel#39;s Atom processor and are not capable of handling video games or multimedia effectively,
said Michael Hara, vice president of investor relations at Nvidia. Netbooks offer good battery life
and are good for basic programs like Web applications, but they don#39;t have the graphics
capabilities to effectively play video games or video files, he said./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Netbooks could have integrated graphics in the future to better handle graphics,
Hara said. Though they were tight-lipped about plans for the netbook space, Nvidia executives said
the company prefers to watch the market evolve before getting involved./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"The company#39;s most likely move in the netbook arena would be to provide
integrated chipsets with better graphics than most netbooks offer now. The graphics giant already
provides integrated chipsets for laptops and next year will ship the Tegra system-on-chip for
smartphones. Tegra puts an Arm processor core, a GeForce graphics core and other components,
including a high-definition video decoder, onto a single chip./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Integrated chipsets is just one focus of the company as it tries to grow in
these tough economic times. Nvidia also is trying to push further into the supercomputing space
through its Tesla platform, which includes graphics processing units (GPUs) with 240 cores as well
as the CUDA (Compute Unified Device Architecture) programming architecture, a set of development
tools that allows programs to be executed on its graphics processors./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"The company is now developing Tesla-based quot;personal supercomputersquot; in
partnership with PC makers including Dell and Lenovo. It already offers such systems with Penguin
Computing and Velocity Micro. Nvidia claims the systems can process data as much as 250 times
faster than standard PCs, with 960 processing cores in four GPUs./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"#160;/p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
href=http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/ht.php?t=camp;i=fed9af52d78f59cda5ab4db748f7bfd7amp;p=1img
style=border:0;
src=http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/ht.php?t=vamp;i=fed9af52d78f59cda5ab4db748f7bfd7amp;p=1 border=0
//a

|
InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 9 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p page="1" class="ArticleBody"Microsoft has come up with a faster, cheaper
way to build its datacenters over the next five years, and it says other companies could use its
methods too./pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"Microsoft#39;s approach, described by General Manager Michael Manos in a a
target="_blank"
href="http://loosebolts.wordpress.com/2008/12/02/our-vision-for-generation-4-modular-data-centers-one-way-of-getting-it-just-right/"blog
post/a Tuesday, uses a modular design in which standard units of computing, cooling, and electrical
equipment are delivered to a facility on the back of a truck and assembled on site. The system,
which Microsoft calls its quot;Generation 4quot; design, will allow its datacenters to become
operational more quickly and cut the cost of building traditional, brick and mortar facilities./pp
page="1" class="ArticleBody"b[ Find out more on how#160;a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/10/13/Google_Microsoft_spark_interest_in_modular_datacenters_1.html?source=fssr"Google
and Microsoft are sparking interest in modular datacenters/a. ]/b/pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"quot;Our #39;Gen 4#39; modular datacenters will take the flexibility of
containerized servers -- like those in our Chicago datacenter -- and apply it across the entire
facility,quot; Manos wrote, referring to servers that are delivered and run in self-contained
shipping containers. quot;Think of it like #39;building blocks,#39; where the datacenter will be
composed of modular units of prefabricated mechanical, electrical, security components, etc., in
addition to containerized servers.quot;/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Some companies already use
modular computing and cooling systems for specific jobs, but Microsoft is taking the idea a step
further. Its clout as a big customer means it can persuade equipment makers to build products that
meet its specifications, and it is developing common interfaces for computers, power supplies and
generators that manufacturers will be able to quot;plug into,quot; it said./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"quot;In short, we are striving to bring Henry Ford#8217;s Model T factory to the
datacenter. ... Gen 4 will move datacenters from a custom design and build model to a commoditized
manufacturing approach. We intend to have our components built in factories and then assemble them
in one location (the datacenter site) very quickly. quot;/pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"It would
be a big change in how datacenters are built and one that#39;s important for Microsoft as it looks
for a cost effective way to expand the infrastructure for its online services. Microsoft plans to
build 20 quot;supersizequot; datacenters in the coming years at a cost of up to $1 billion each,
according to a recent a target="_blank"
href="http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/nov2008/tc20081121_382269.htm?chan=rss_topEmailedStories_ssi_5"BusinessWeek
article/a. Manos said the Gen 4 design will cut the time it takes Microsoft to build a datacenter
in half, to one year, and reduce its capital costs by up to 40 percent./pp page="1"
class="ArticleBody"The containerized equipment allows Microsoft to take other radical steps, like
building datacenters with no roofs. Besides cutting construction costs, this makes it much easier
to use outside air for cooling systems, one of the costliest areas of a datacenter. Microsoft said
it is working with server vendors to develop systems that can operate in wider temperature ranges
-- 10 to 35 degrees centigrade -- so that in some cases it can eliminate chiller equipment
completely./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"It posted a short a target="_blank"
href="http://video.msn.com/video.aspx?mkt=en-usamp;vid=b4d189d3-19bd-42b3-85d7-6ca46d97fe40"video/a
to give a high-level view of its plans./pp page="1" class="ArticleBody"Bob Seese, chief architect
with Advanced Data Centers, a San Francisco company that leases datacenter space, applauded
Microsoft for sharing the information. Companies are typically secretive about what goes on in
their datacenters, but along with Google and some other large companies, Microsoft has been opening
up recently to discuss its best practices./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Pressuring vendors to
design more flexible and standardized equipment could benefit all companies, Seese said. quot;One
of our biggest struggles in the industry has been the tail wagging the dog -- the manufacturers
telling IT departments what they need. Having someone push back against the vendors could by itself
change this industry tremendously,quot; he said./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Datacenter
operators are risk averse, he noted, because their jobs depend on keeping things running, and the
research being done by Microsoft and others should help everyone. quot;As a result of their
successes and failures, other companies are going to benefit,quot; he said./pp page="2"
class="ArticleBody"Others were less convinced. Ron Croce, the COO at datacenter infrastructure
provider Validus DC Systems, said Microsoft and Google are unique in their requirements.
Microsoft#39;s online services are mostly Web-based applications running on x86 servers, he said,
and don#39;t need the level of uptime and security as firms in, say, the financial services
sector./pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"Building traditional datacenters may not be cost-effective
for Microsoft, but for other companies it#39;s still a necessity, he said. quot;A lot of the
requirements are driven by regulatory mandates. If you#39;re a financial services company, you
can#39;t have a datacenter with no roof.quot;/pp page="2" class="ArticleBody"quot;It#39;s certainly
a valid concept but I don#39;t see it as suitable for everyone,quot; said Christopher Johnston,
vice president of critical facilities at Syska Hennessy Group. quot;I think people will have to
make a judgment depending on the type of industry they are in.quot;/p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
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0; border=0 src=http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=bccc1d62453b39787bc5e13ade4e4683p=1//a img
src=http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=bccc1d62453b39787bc5e13ade4e4683 style=display: none;
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InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 11 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p class="ArticleBody" page="1"Everyone knows that techies love "Dungeons
amp; Dragons," where they can prowl the bowels of a castle and cast spells on clueless managers,
er, mages. After all, it's just a game./pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"Or is
it? Many tech staffers are also hard-core PC gamers. For good reason: In virtual worlds like "a
href="http://www.gamepro.com/games/pc/135523/world-of-warcraft-wrath-of-the-lich-king/"
target="_blank" class="regularArticleU"World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King/a" and "a
href="http://www.gamepro.com/games/pc/109782/civilization-iv/" target="_blank"
class="regularArticleU"Civilization IV: Beyond the Sword/a," you can show off your awesome mental
powers and flex the most feared fingers in the universe. You can hone the problem-solving skills
that make you good at IT, take out frustrations from your day-to-day work, and celebrate the
technology that you so love./pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"b[ Check/b bout InfoWorld's slideshow
of the a href="http://www.infoworld.com/slideshow/2008/12/188-infoworld_s_per-1.html?source=fssr"
class="regularArticleU"six perfect PC games for IT/a. | Looking for other cool techie stuff? Peruse
our a href="http://www.infoworld.com/slideshow/2008/11/185-2008_geek_gadge-1.html?source=fssr"
class="regularArticleU"2008 geek gadget gift guide/a. ]/b/pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"So what,
exactly, does a kick-ass shooter game like "a
href="http://www.gamepro.com/games/pc/132121/call-of-duty-4-modern-warfare/" target="_blank"
class="regularArticleU"Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare/a" or the beautifully rendered role-playing
game "a href="http://www.gamepro.com/games/pc/109692/fallout-3/" target="_blank"
class="regularArticleU"Fallout 3/a" really say about tech life? Well, saddle up your
Mechano-strider and watch as the Blade of Vaulted Secrets carves deeply into the tech-worker
psyche./pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"bThe techie-gamer relationship is rooted in
"Civilization"br/ /bAh, the early days of "Civilization," or "Civ" in tech-speak. This classic Sid
Meier game ran on PC DOS -- no games ran on Windows 3 in the early 1990s -- which basically locked
out mere mortals from playing it./pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"That is, you needed to know how to
reconfigure autoexec.bat and config.sys to load extended memory and mouse drivers so that "Civ"
could run. "You had to know technology to even play games," says George Jones, editorial director
of a href="http://www.gamepro.com/" target="_blank" class="regularArticleU"GamePro/a, an InfoWorld
sister publication. "Back then there was no Internet resource to help you, and so you had had to
figure it out on your own. It was crazy."/pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"When PC games finally
reached the masses, thanks largely to Windows 95, techies were already masters of "Doom," "Quake,"
"Counterstrike," and "World of Warcraft." (Let the jocks play "Madden NFL" -- why throw a football
for a touchdown when you can toss a flash grenade through a window and storm the door for a
beat-down?)/pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"Today, Jones figures more than half of all hard-core PC
gamers work in tech. Jerald Block, a psychiatrist specializing in the gamer lifestyle, agrees:
"There's a large overlay between people who game and people who chose technology for work," he
says, adding, "Some people can read people, others can understand ? a computer."/pp
class="ArticleBody" page="2"bStupid users are lost in the virtual worldbr/ /bThe single experience
nearly every tech worker shares is that, at some point in their career, they've had to deal with a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/06/04/13/77021_16FEusergoofs_1.html"
class="regularArticleU"stupid users/a, a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/07/05/07/19FEuserintro_1.html" class="regularArticleU"more
stupid users/a, and a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/06/16/25FE-stupid-users-part-3-admins_1.html"
class="regularArticleU"even more stupid users/a. These users rarely respect the unsung tech worker
-- and PC games can provide an opportunity for a little payback./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="2"Let's face it: There's a tinge of happiness when one of these smug users creeps around the
corner and right into your sniper crosshairs. It's your "Call of Duty" to put the poor sap out of
his misery. Even better, the next day you can chuckle at him in the cafeteria line./pp
class="ArticleBody" page="2"Indeed, users should thank techies for creating an industry of
sophisticated games. When users look at a game screen, they probably wouldn't notice poorly
overlapping 3-D images if a Hammer of Judgment hit them over the head./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="2"But best-selling games such as "Fallout 3" don't have shoddy graphics rendering or crude
artificial intelligence because "top game developers know their work will be scrutinized by trained
eyes," explains Jones. "You can't fool them."/pp class="ArticleBody" page="2"bSolving problems with
bloody executionbr/ /bMany tech workers are fervent problem solvers. Some are strategic, some
tactical. Some solve problems through reverse engineering, others by invention, and a few by sheer
luck. PC games play smartly into the many aspects of this problem-solving passion./pp
class="ArticleBody" page="2"In "a href="http://www.gamepro.com/games/pc/109782/civilization-iv/"
target="_blank" class="regularArticleU"Civilization IV: Beyond the Sword/a," a player spends days,
weeks, or maybe months shaping a civilization from the beginning of time to the modern era. The
goal is to emerge as the leader, and there's not just one solution or path to success. "It's the
ultimate problem-solving experience," Jones says, "and epitomizes the mind frame of the tech
worker."/pp class="ArticleBody" page="2"Of course, many tech workers don't have weeks or even hours
to solve a problem. That's where "StarCraft" i/comes in. In this game, you're a military leader of
an alien species. The game calls for quick thinking and some serious team management during short
missions./pp class="ArticleBody" page="2""StarCraft" perhaps best mirrors the challenges and
successes of life in IT. "'StarCraft' i/is firefighting," says Jones. "Things are crumbling, and
you have to figure out how to fix it in 25 minutes. It's the nature of IT work." (FYI, "a
href="http://www.gamepro.com/games/pc/131341/starcraft-ii/" target="_blank"
class="regularArticleU"StarCraft II/a" is planned for release next year.)/pp class="ArticleBody"
page="2"bPerfect PC games for ITbr/ /bOK, now that it's clear why techies and gaming go so well
together, which games are the ideal fit for IT? InfoWorld has picked the ideal game for six kinds
of tech staffers. Check them out in our a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/slideshow/2008/12/188-infoworld_s_per-1.html"
class="regularArticleU""Perfect techie games" slideshow/a./p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
href=http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=efb778efbd7d728fdea775b87bbdd901p=1img alt= style=border:
0; border=0 src=http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=efb778efbd7d728fdea775b87bbdd901p=1//a img
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InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 18 hours ago
div class="rxbodyfield"p class="ArticleBody" page="1"Microsoft this week is proceeding with an
update to a href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/03/17/12TC-vista-versus-xp_1.html"
class="regularArticleU"Windows Vista/a and Windows Server, making available a beta-level service
pack featuring capabilities for virtualization and power savings./pp align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"The
company on Tuesday began offering the Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008 SP2 (Service Pack 2)
Beta release to MSDN and TechNet subscribers and will extend it to the public via TechNet on
Thursday. Offering a single service pack minimizes deployment and testing complexity, Microsoft
said./pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"Included in the service pack, according to the a
href="http://blogs.technet.com/windowsserver/default.aspx" target="_blank"
class="regularArticleU"Windows Server Division blog/a, are Hyper-V bits in the
release-to-manufacturing stage, meaning the bits are completed. Hyper-V is Microsoft's
hypervisor-based server virtualization technology enabling multiple operating systems to run on a
single physical machine. This enables workload consolidation across multiple underutilized servers
onto a smaller number of machines./pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"Also highlighted in the service
pack are changes to the power profile to yield more power savings. The service pack also addresses
reliability and performance issues and supports new types of hardware. The 64-bit CPU from Via
Technologies is supported and performance is improved for Wi-Fi connections after resuming from
sleep mode./pp class="ArticleBody" page="1""We are tracking to ship SP2 in the first half of 2009,"
said Justin Graham, senior product manager for Windows Server, in the blog./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="1"With the release, Microsoft is looking for developers and IT professionals to have an early
look at the technology and offer feedback. The beta is being offered via a Microsoft Customer
Preview Program (CPP)/pp class="ArticleBody" page="1""The CPP is intended for technology
enthusiasts, developers, and IT pros who would like to test Service Pack 2 in their environments
and with their applications prior to final release. For most customers, our best advice would be to
wait until the final release prior to installing this service pack," said Mike Nash, corporate vice
president for Windows Product Management at Microsoft, in The a
href="http://windowsteamblog.com/blogs/windowsvista/archive/2008/12/02/announcing-the-windows-vista-and-windows-server-2008-service-pack-2-customer-preview-program-cpp.aspx"
target="_blank" class="regularArticleU"Windows Blog/a on Tuesday./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="1""Windows Vista SP2 builds on the solid foundation of Windows Vista SP1, and represents our
ongoing commitment to Windows Vista today," Nash said./p/divbr style=clear: both;/ a
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