Behold, the false securities of the BYOD bubble
Work on your own machine? Using cloud applications? Sure, it's a new day! Until things break. Then you're on your own. (A lesson from ZDNet HQ.)
Work on your own machine? Using cloud applications? Sure, it's a new day! Until things break. Then you're on your own. (A lesson from ZDNet HQ.)
As the pace of change in technology continues to accelerate, the most valuable information companies have are their roadmaps.
The consumerisation of business IT is well established, so it's no surprise that ZDNet's reporters discovered products and technologies at this year's CES show that may change the way you work in the future.
A whopping 82 percent of companies expect to support tablets for employees - welcome to the anytime, anywhere information workplace, writes Simon Yates.
When it acquired Skype two years ago, we wondered if Microsoft would fully appreciate the consumerization values of the product. This week, it became apparent the company is on the right track.
David Gewirtz explores how consumerization scales. Can mixing off-the-shelf parts with unique methodology or secret sauce be used successfully in the world of government and military innovation?
On this, the anniversary of the events of 9/11, we spotlight how readily-available consumer technology might extend the reach of terrorists in new and disturbing ways. Plus, what DARPA's doing about it.
In an attempt to forge a new path, Research In Motion has taken the name of its most popular brand, BlackBerry. What does it stand for?
We hear it all the time now, the drumbeat of consumerization. But what makes it different than tech revolutions of the past? It turns out, it's those very differences that make it more liable to forever change how we acquire and use information technology in the enterprise.
Shoppers now have greater expectations when it comes to in-store shopping experiences – so brands should prepare themselves for a change in spending habits