It was a watershed year for cloud computing, but what lies ahead?
The issues posed by near-exponential growth in enterprise storage needs present formidable challenges.
The top three risk trends in 2010, and what lies ahead for security professionals in 2011.
Virtualization and cloud computing present a blind spot: traiditional IT management and automation tools don’t offer the necessary visibility and control. What can IT do?
This year the desktop ruled. Desktops will continue to lead the trends in 2011, but in a direction no one would ever have imagined two years ago.
Reduces hardware costs by up to 80 percent.
During 2010, enterprises were figuring out and defining the cloud; in 2011, they’ll be putting clouds into action.
Extends COBOL and Java modernization solution to popular OpenVMS platform.
In this year's "50 Best Careers" list, four IT-related jobs made the cut: computer software engineer, computer support specialist, computer systems analyst, and network architect.
Provides toolkit for key stakeholders to implement, assess security of cloud environments
New release accelerates business process automation, cloud integration, mobile-enablement, business intelligence, data collection, and content migration.
Enterasys vendor agnostic, open data center architecture supports all virtualization platforms.
Microsoft questions the use of overseas data centers in GSA deal.
The General Services Administration is moving e-mail and collaboration tools to the cloud, becoming the first federal agency to move e-mail to a cloud-based system agencywide, GSA officials said.
Data virtualization confers advantages that simply aren’t achievable by means of federation alone.
Next-gen DI player Expressor says it tackles integration problems that SQL Server and other conventional RDBMS systems weren’t designed to address.
With the world losing one or more entire species of animal or plant life every 20 minutes, a conservation group in the UK is using analytical software from IBM to untangle the complex factors contributing to a particular species' decline.
New version can alert authorities to suspicious data downloads such as those by WikiLeaks of classified information
What’s so big about Big Data? It’s probably bigger than you think.
A BI analyst and TDWI faculty member takes issue with a BI This Week article about the state of BI platforms.