What if you could take data elements from multiple websites and mash them together into a single, integrated view? Intel Mash Maker gives you a radical new way to browse the Internet. Whether you’re a novice or a power user, with Mash Maker it’s easy, fast, and fun to create personalized, intelligent mashups on-the-fly.
The burgeoning NoSQL community, made up of Web and Java developers, promote building your own data storage. But can enterprises take open-source alternatives Hadoop, Voldemort seriously?...
At the MDM Summit in Toronto last Friday, an oil and gas exploration company shared how its engineers have better faith in data. SAS Institute Canada describes the journey that is MDM, and the MDM Institute names vendors who will monopolize the market in 2009...
20 degree data centres becoming a thing of the past, APC says
(22 Jun 2009)
Servers, storage and networking gear are often certified to run in temperatures exceeding 37 degrees, and with that in mind many IT pros are becoming less stringent in setting temperature limits...
IBM will provide IT services and support, Rogers anticipates data centre upgrades, but customers are unlikely to notice any difference for at least 12 to 36 months...
On-demand CRM vendor Salesforce.com hopes to attract more programmers to try out its development platform by offering limited no-fee access to Force.com. Developers can create applications faster on Force.com than on Java or .Net, according to a report...
With so much valuable and confidential information in our inboxes, it's no wonder 81 per cent would recover that data first. There's a strong legal argument for better backup, too...
Pitney Bowes tracks 1978 Mini as it drives around the world
(25 May 2009)
Duncan Mortimer and his 31-year-old Mini will drive 36,000 miles around the world for charity. Lead sponsor Pitney Bowes is tracking the tour with a GPS system and location intelligence software. WITH VIDEO...
Big Blue's stream computing technology is being used to detect subtle physiological changes in preemies at UOIT. An AMD Inc. executive talks of the chipmaker’s own ATI stream technology...
Open Text cautioned against killing off Vignette products
(07 May 2009)
The Canadian enterprise content management vendor has to be careful that its Vignette purchase does not cause Open Text to lose sight of the bigger ECM picture, according to analysts...
For many applications, an entry-level workstation will provide mind-blowing performance in comparison with a desktop PC. Still, not everyone needs a workstation. A typical office worker running standard office applications will get all the performance they need from a standard business PC. Anyone running more demanding applications, however, can expect to be more productive, creative and satisfied using a workstation. Designers, engineers, financial analysts, researchers, and even office “power users” will most likely find that the benefits of an entry-level workstation far exceed the small additional cost.
How quickly can you change complex data into actionable information? Workstations based on the new Intel® Microarchitecture, codenamed Nehalem, are designed or intelligent performance, new levels of energy efficiency, and flexible expandability giving workstation users unprecedented time-to-results in quieter, cooler and potentially smaller form-factors. Result: Users can iterate and innovate faster and compress the time between the idea and a product.
Intel and CXO Media have teamed up to recognize and reward organizations that have led the way with best practices for data center management and client fleet management. The Intel Premier IT Knowledge Awards Program will spotlight organizations that leverage innovation and solid best practices to make a substantive impact on their business. We invite you to participate by sending us your story.
Application performance is critical for day-to-day business operations, as well as creating new products and services, increasing competitiveness, and reaching new customers. For the past decade, IT has rapidly added low-cost hardware to accommodate business growth, and many data centers are now stretched to capacity in terms of power, cooling, and floor space. By refreshing data center infrastructure with higher performance, more adaptive, and power-conscious servers, you can deliver additional capability and scalability within the same energy and space footprint, staying ahead of increasing business demands.
Description: Energy demands in the data center are compromising business agility. In a recent survey, 42 percent of data center owners said they would exceed power capacity within the next 12-24 months, and 39 percent said they would exceed cooling capacity in the same timeframe.1 And IDC estimates that for every dollar IT spends on hardware to support new users and applications, they spend another 50 cents on power and cooling for existing hardware.2 As data centers reach the upper limits of their power and cooling capacity, efficiency has become the focus for data center design and extending the life of existing data centers.
Server virtualization is helping IT organizations improve data center productivity in fundamental ways. It lets you consolidate multiple operating systems and applications per physical server, reducing the size and costs of your IT infrastructure, while enabling you to deploy new applications in minutes. Virtualization also lets you move running applications from one server to another without downtime, for flexible workload management, high availability during planned maintenance or unplanned events. Investment in virtualization solutions is an intelligent business decision: the benefits in utilization, energy savings, manageability, service levels and cost models can be dramatic.