Email Alerts
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Networking technology key to data center efficiency
CIOs want their data centers to be more energy efficient and kinder to the environment, according to a survey. The possible answer? A unified fabric network. Article | 04 Sep 2008
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WAAS gives an indispensable CAD/content management system new life
Jeremy Gill, CIO of civil engineering firm Michael Baker Corp., was faced with an increasingly common conundrum: how to centralize and not suffer the latency consequences. His solution: WAN acceleration technology from Cisco. Article | 31 Jul 2008
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American Apparel makes radio frequency identification tags sexy
American Apparel rolls out a radio frequency identification (RFID) system to track every T-shirt, boy beater, brief, bra and everything else in real time. Article | 16 Apr 2008
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Web services gateway solution offers security, compliance benefits
A nontraditional security vendor says its network solution, which guarantees the right people can get information, could change the way firms think about security and compliance. Article | 09 Jan 2008
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WAN optimization solves latency issue for growing law firm
CTO Ralph Barber could have added more T1 lines to ensure performance as his employer expanded rapidly. Instead, he was taken with a clever WAN optimization device. Article | 20 Nov 2007
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New monitoring technology helps university find mobile users
With students and professors so mobile on his campus, a university CIO adopted a new monitoring technology to identify users and better understand network behavior. Article | 07 Aug 2007
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DoD takes cue from U.S. businesses, blocks YouTube, MySpace
Experts say that controversy aside, the U.S. Department of Defense's decision to block social networking sites mirrors what businesses have been doing for years to protect networks. Article | 15 May 2007
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CIOs: Monitoring employees thwarts Internet abuse
CIOs are increasingly deploying Web filtering and content monitoring tools to keep their networks safe from malware. Big Brother may be watching, but CIOs say too bad -- it's working. Article | 01 Feb 2007