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Bio-IT World July 11, 2002 Judith N. Mottl |
Learning to Love Linux Hungry for computing power, life science companies are turning toward Linux clusters as the preferred high performance solution.  |
Bio-IT World July 11, 2002 Salvatore Salamone |
P2P's Powerful Promise Systems management remains difficult, but the payoff is getting teraflop computing from a sea of commodity PCs. Just ask Entelos and Novartis.  |
Salon.com July 11, 2002 Farhad Manjoo |
Can we trust Microsoft's Palladium? Critics say Redmond's new security initiative will imprison users. But why would Bill Gates want to do that? Palladium could have serious consquences for open-source software, digital rights management, and privacy.  |
PC World August 2002 Stuart J. Johnston |
Bugs and Fixes: Serious Security Holes in Internet Explorer Microsoft says it has fixed six problems--but one wasn't repaired completely.  |
PC World July 2, 2002 Andrew Brandt |
Klez: The Virus That Won't Die? Brace yourself for another round: A variant of the resilient worm is wriggling alive this week.  |
| Knowledge@Wharton |
Debate over Scarcity -- and Skills -- of IT Workers According to the Information Technology Association of America's May study, U.S. companies will be short nearly 600,000 qualified IT professionals over the next 12 months.  |
Information Today August 2002 Hugh McKellar |
On Conferences, Cabbies, and KM Getting systems to talk coherently to each other and deliver information to the right people at the right time is the very heart of knowledge management.  |
CIO July 1, 2002 Abbie Lundberg |
Do the Right Thing Does your company have clearly defined data privacy guidelines? It should.  |
CIO July 1, 2002 Scott Berinato |
Take the Pledge Data has no ethics. Data doesn't care how it's used. But the use and misuse of data has become the critical issue for today's information-intensive enterprise. And now CIOs are working to develop a code for ethical data management.  |
CIO July 1, 2002 Abbie Lundberg |
The IT Inside the World's Biggest Company Long publicity shy, Wal-Mart opens its doors for an exclusive CIO interview with CIO Kevin Turner, who shares the secrets behind Wal-Mart's global growth, what's happened since Sept. 11 and which technologies the retailer is eyeing for the future.  |
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