Blogroll
Another botched Microsoft patch: Office 365 ProPlus says 'Something went wrong'
This is the second month in a row where we've seen a botched automatic Office patch. As is the case with so many Office patches these days, there's no KB number and no warning that a patch is being applied.
Top 25 free tools for every Windows desktop
Why one developer switched from Java to Google Go
While Java may be a good choice for building business software, Google's Go language has advantages when it comes to building systems software, says a Java developer at Pivotal who has become a Go advocate.
Top 25 free tools for every Windows desktop
Who's managing your managed services? You, ultimately
With all of the hubbub surrounding cloud services, application hosting, managed services, and the like, the reality of offloading the management and administrative burden of applications and business services is often overlooked.
11 questions for MongoDB's CTO
NoSQL is the darling of the millennial tech community -- and MongoDB is the leading NoSQL database, with a valuation of more than $1.2 billion.
The cellphone unlocking bill is about to become law -- but there's a catch
A bill to restore consumers' rights to unlock their cellphones is one step from becoming law now that it has cleared Congress.
Why one developer switched from Java to Google Go
While Java may be a good choice for building business software, Google's Go language has advantages when it comes to building systems software, says a Java developer at Pivotal who has become a Go advocate.
BYOD morphs from lockdown to true mobility
Many companies that have had BYOD policies for a while have matured their thinking. They've grown from looking at employees' personal devices as something to lock down to allowing them in a limited fashion to fully embracing them.
They have moved from allowing only company-provided phones to supporting "COPE" devices (which are corporate-owned, personally enabled tools) to sanctioning true bring-your-own device setups, says Chris Marsh, an enterprise mobility analyst at Yankee Group.
11 offbeat battery chargers: Portable power with a twist
Oracle's new database patch could cost you $23,000 per processor
If Oracle's licensing terms never struck you as invidious before, you might soon change your mind.
What we know about the next versions of Windows
With all of the rumors, fakes, and howling inaccuracies floating around, it's time to step back, take a deep breath, and look at what we really know about forthcoming versions of Windows.
What we know about the next versions of Windows
With all of the rumors, fakes, and howling inaccuracies floating around, it's time to step back, take a deep breath, and look at what we really know about forthcoming versions of Windows.
Broadband bullies: Cable companies, lawmakers gang up on local providers
You love your broadband provider, don't you? Right down to the Netflix slowdowns and inscrutable surcharges. You'd never, ever consider switching to faster, cheaper public broadband run by your local municipality.
The mobile health apps gold rush may already be over
The new gold rush is mobile health apps, both to track medical conditions and fitness.
11 Android tools for Web developers
Amazon can no longer take its cloud leadership for granted
Good news for Microsoft: "Strong sales of cloud products to businesses helped lift Microsoft's revenue by 18 percent last quarter, though its profits declined," reports Reuters. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said in a call with financial analysts that commercial cloud revenue grew almost 150 percent year over year to $4.4 billion annually, driven primarily by sales of Office 365, the Azure IaaS and PaaS products, and Dynamics CRM Online.
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.