Blogroll
Apache Cordova lets developers create Android apps from third-party WebViews
Help is on the horizon for mobile developers dealing with the nuances of the numerous Android OS ver
Can a machine detect sarcasm? Yeah, right
Natural language is a wonder. Like the best poetry, everyday speech often expresses overlapping meanings in tightly wrapped verbal packages.
At the most fundamental level, the linguistic mechanisms for coding, decoding, and distinguishing these packed meanings are built into our brains. But they're also calibrated on the fly by the cultures in which we live. This mental processing spans the range from conscious to unconscious, with most of us barely aware of all the verbal vibrations we're putting out and absorbing as we move through the day.
11 signs you've been hacked -- and how to fight back
In today's threatscape, antivirus software provides little piece of mind, and antimalware scanners on the whole are horrifically inaccurate, especially with exploits less than 24 hours old. Despite modern heuristics, virtualized environments, system monitoring, and network traffic detection, hackers still reach us on a regular basis.
Nginx's Web server update beefs up security and load balancing
Nginx Plus, the commercial edition of the open source Web server that's elbowed out Apache HTTPD on many top-traffic sites, unveiled its fourth major version today.
Free data visualization tool brings clarity to analytics
Having a ton of data at your disposal isn't much good if you can't make sense of it, so users of big data analytics systems like Hadoop are also making use of data visualization tools.
The best new features in OS X Yosemite (so far)
Money before innovation: Why Wall Street loves tech giants these days
The giants are back. The classic tech companies that make computers, hard drives, and productivity software are soaring on Wall Street.
The truth about big data: It's more than technology
Hey, it must be hard to be the only person on the planet who doesn't understand big data.
Actually, that's far from true: You're in good company. While Gartner finds that 64 percent of enterprises are investing in big data, a similar chunk (60 percent) don't have a clue as to what to do with their data.
The real problem isn't one of technology, but of process. The key to succeeding with big data, as in all serious IT investments, is iteration. It's not about Hadoop, NoSQL, Splunk, or any particular vendor or technology. It's about iteration.
Business leaders know: Let in the smartphones, tablets, laptops
Kraft Foods, a forward-thinking giant when it comes to consumer taste, was anything but when it came to IT. Simply put, the company was mired in the old-school culture of rigid centralized information technology. Not anymore.
Kraft was one of the first major enterprises to recognize the value that consumer devices could produce for business — and it recognized that value early. Kraft began deploying the iPhone back in 2008, well before smartphones had become must-carry devices.
XML co-founder Tim Bray: Beware of spies in your software
Credit: iStockphoto
Developers must address the serious issue of software-based threats, which leave users vulnerable to intruders, particularly governments, XML co-founder Tim Bray said Wednesday.
Midyear jobs outlook: What you need to know about IT hiring, skills, and benefits
IT staffing firms and employment researchers released a flurry of data as the first half of the year came to a close. The bottom line? The second half of 2014 is looking good for job-hunting IT pros, particularly if they possess coveted skills. IT employment numbers are rising, employers are forging ahead with hiring plans, and CIOs are confident about hiring budgets. Here come the numbers.
Facebook to release open source library for iOS interface development
Facebook, within a few weeks, plans to release an open source library intended to help developers build native Apple iOS apps with smooth, responsive user interfaces.
Step away from the button! 6 touchy tech disasters
Review: Apache Hive brings real-time queries to Hadoop
Apache Hive is a tool built on top of Hadoop for analyzing large, unstructured data sets using a SQL-like syntax, thus making Hadoop accessible to legions of existing BI and corporate analytics researchers. Developed by Facebook engineers and contributed to the Apache Foundation as an open source project, Hive is now at the forefront of big data analysis in commercial environments.
Microsoft's new mega tech conference: The pros and cons
For the last several years, Microsoft has sponsored a series of technology events for enterprises, each focused on a different part of the Microsoft technology stack.
This is the golden age of open source
Matt Asay is dead wrong to call the current era of the software industry "post open source," as he did in InfoWorld last week.
Apple reports huge profit but sales disappoint
Apple has racked up another hugely profitable quarter on sales of iPhones and Macintosh computers, though its revenue growth was slower than expected.
Apple on Tuesday reported a profit of $7.7 billion for the April-to-June quarter, up 12 percent on the same period last year and ahead of analyst estimates of $7.5 billion, according to Thomson Reuters.
Aphid brings embeddable scripting to .Net
Aphid is bringing embeddable, cross-platform scripting to the .Net world.