Products released this year show vendors and IT how to alleviate common pain points. ESJ's editorial director highlights four areas to focus on in the coming year -- which may provide a strong return on your investment.
Few storage technology products invent a market. Rather, they respond to market requirements.
IBM managers look at key events and company strategy from 2009 and explain what it means for customers in 2010.
What kept security administrators awake nights this year, and where should they focus their attention next year?
From the Sun/Oracle acquisition to radical changes in the server market, it's been a topsy-turvy year in IT. We take a look at the highlights.
If recent market research is correct, computing in the clouds could achieve a breakthrough of sorts in 2010.
Experts report the Unix market is slipping by between one-fifth and one-quarter in Q3 -- at a time when other server segments seem to be stabilizing.
Google's previously under-wraps operating system is now available to developers as open source code, the company announced on Thursday.
Green IT is no fad. Paying attention to how resources are used to deliver information services in an energy-efficient, environmentally, and economically-friendly manner to boost efficiency and productivity is here to stay.
Can a company that promotes its products with "green" benefits actually demonstrate those benefits in its own shop? At Symantec, the savings were, indeed, impressive.
IT employers aren’t so much looking to fill specific jobs as trying to stock up on specific IT skill sets. The upshot is that some skills are safer than others.
This year, spammers are more proactive than ever, and that has some security researchers worried.
Rich Internet applications and their brainchild, software-as-a-service, are expensive to build. Today they represent the most challenging development process yet.
We’re on the threshold of witnessing a convergence of data security initiatives that may be the only real choice some enterprises will have to ensure consumer privacy and organizational confidentiality.
Without an open standards-based management framework, the current flirtation with storage clouds will likely move to the footnotes of tech history much as storage service providers did a decade ago.
With Windows XP's looming end-of-life -- and with pent-up demand --Windows 7 seems to have a clear on-ramp into the enterprise.
Cloud computing has changed as high-speed connectivity has improved and virtualization adoption has grown. We explore the current state of the technology and where it's headed.
Some steps to "going green" can be as simple as finding simple alternatives to paper.
A new survey finds that IT organizations are thinking strategically about the implications of "going green."
The prevalence of spam-based malware increased dramatically in September, surging by 900 percent.