Oracle Blasts SAP in Amended TomorrowNow Suit
August 1, 2008
Contrary to SAP’s claim, Oracle says no firewall existed between SAP and its now defunct subsidiary.
Article taken by RSS feed.
Read more
Alcatel-Lucent Loses Its Leadership
August 1, 2008
Working to put the merger and its business troubles behind it, the networking vendor is set to shed its CEO and chairman.
Article taken by RSS feed.
Read more
Oracle WebLogic Server Rates a 10 for Big Flaw
August 1, 2008
For the first time in more than three years, Oracle releases an out-of-cycle patch security alert.
Article taken by RSS feed.
Read more
NetApp Dedupes the Competition
August 1, 2008
NetApp’s primary storage deduplication technology can now be used on competitors’ arrays.
Article taken by RSS feed.
Read more
Data Demand to Drive 4G Broadband Forward
August 1, 2008
New report shows explosive growth ahead for high-speed wireless — yet WiMAX may emerge a loser.
Article taken by RSS feed.
Read more
Surprise! Motorola Turnaround Yields Small Profit
August 1, 2008
The handset maker beats device sales expectations, and points to signs of success in revamping its business.
Article taken by RSS feed.
Read more
Making a Case for an Android-Symbian Merger
August 1, 2008
Analyst suggests Google’s Android and Nokia’s Symbian will merge open source operating systems.
Article taken by RSS feed.
Read more
Social Networking Meets the Mainstream
August 1, 2008
Consumers fast becoming regular users, but is business catching up?
Article taken by RSS feed.
Read more
Is Google's Knol Already Becoming a Den of Spam?
August 1, 2008
Linux Journal: “But so far Knol looks to me like the biggest risk might be to Google itself. That’s because it provides one more way for spammers to game Google’s advertising monoculture.”
Article taken by RSS feed.
Read more
Insanely Securing Your Unix or Linux Systems
August 1, 2008
The Linux and Unix Menagerie: “2. Take the idea of making generic accounts su-only one step further and start restricting access to the su binary as much as possible. If you can get away with it, ensure that your /usr/bin/su file is chowned to root:special and chmod’ed to 4750. Now only root and users who belong to the “special” group can even use su to do anything. Everyone else will get an error just for trying to run it.”
Article taken by RSS feed.
Read more










