IBM clocks in with new Linux watch
Big Blue creates a second-generation Linux wristwatch, this one smaller than the original and sporting a gleaming golden display, but still just as impractical.
Big Blue creates a second-generation Linux wristwatch, this one smaller than the original and sporting a gleaming golden display, but still just as impractical.
In a few weeks, a new "buddy" will appear on instant messaging lists worldwide to answer fans' questions about a new Radiohead album--and it just might change the Net.
IBM has just launched its 400 V5R1 operating system for iSeries servers - the most widely-used in Latin America, with the exception of Brazil, where Sun leads.
The use of instant messaging by businees is skyrocketing, but there's a huge need for products to secure the transmissions.
Two IBM researchers are proposing a new method of canning spam that would force unfamiliar senders to donate to charity if they want to reach you.
Want a PC that's 100 times more powerful than a 1,000MHz desktop? Then meet the army of microprocessor engineers hell bent on multiplying speed and performance.
Closing the Linux credibility gap.
Two engineers who created the formula that will become the U.S. encryption standard are just regular guys -- and the pride of their country.
As large-scale mainframe integrations shift focus from the front to the back end, we look into the essential ingredients and stages for project success.ContentsQLD Transport -- working back to frontWestpac -- single customer view NirvanaSt George makes it work with middlewareHCF's mainframe mergers and acquisitionsANZ's trans-Tasman mergerExecutive summaryOn April 7 of this year the mass-produced mainframe tuned 40.
Corporations are still hesitant about embracing instant messaging in the workplace, according to a survey conducted by market research firm Osterman Research. Over a third of companies surveyed felt neutral about adding IM capabilities into their networks. Twenty-three percent still block IM communication in their servers. The study also showed that most employees are using popular consumer services such as AOL Instant Messenger, MSN Messenger and Yahoo Messenger instead of secure corporate software. About 65 percent of companies that have settled with an IM standard chose IBM's Lotus Sametime technology. --Jim Hu, Special to ZDNet News