| Old Articles: <Older 2221-2230 Newer> |
 |
PC Magazine November 16, 2004 Larry J. Seltzer |
Limited User Accounts Here's a clever way to bolster Windows PC security--with some catches.  |
InternetNews October 29, 2004 Ryan Naraine |
It's Bagle Day, Again Anti-virus firms have raised the alarm after spotting three new strains of the Bagle virus rapidly spreading through e-mail inboxes.  |
InternetNews October 29, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Toolkit, Heal Thyself IBM is rolling out an update to its Autonomic Computing Toolkit featuring more operating system support and the latest Eclipse platform.  |
Bank Systems & Technology October 28, 2004 Katherine Burger |
Career Is Outstanding It wasn't long ago that people regularly joked about how CIO really stood for "Career is over." Today, even though accountability and transparency are the watchwords for any bank IT initiative, CIOs seem to be somewhat less vulnerable.  |
Bank Systems & Technology October 28, 2004 Ivan Schneider |
No Static at All One-time passwords mitigate online banking security risks.  |
InternetNews October 28, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
Report: ARAD Gets Results Architected Rapid Application Development tools have a dramatic impact on productivity and ROI, according to a new study by Gartner Group.  |
IndustryWeek November 1, 2004 John S. McClenahen |
RFID's ROI Within a few years, radio frequency identification tags on pallets and products could be as ubiquitous as bar codes now are, providing the manufacturing supply chain with more production and distribution data. But the benefits and costs of this technology still are being defined.  |
Inc. November 2004 Michael Fitzgerald |
Can You Hear Me Now? Entrepreneurs attracted to Internet phone systems to save money are surprised by the superior features.  |
InternetNews October 27, 2004 Michael Singer |
IT Heavies Unveil Mobile Spec NTT DoCoMo, Intel and IBM introduce a new open and secure architecture for future wireless data services.  |
InternetNews October 27, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
M2M: A Mobile Uprising Is Brewing Contactless Machine-to-Machine interactions are expanding everywhere, from retail to Homeland Security.  |
| <Older 2221-2230 Newer> Return to current articles. |