Cloud computing: Simply SaaS renamed?
Is cloud computing just a renaming of SaaS (software as a service) in today’s buzzword-prone IT landscape? After all, both involve accessing applications over the Internet, with those applications generally residing on third-party servers.
Microsoft confirms Windows 7 clean install trick is legal
Microsoft today confirmed that users can apply a workaround trick [...]
Is cloud computing just a renaming of SaaS (software as a service) in today’s buzzword-prone IT landscape? After all, both involve accessing applications over the Internet, with those applications generally residing on third-party servers.
Microsoft today confirmed that users can apply a workaround trick to do a clean install of Windows 7 on a blank hard drive as long as they toe the licensing line.
U.S. policies toward defending against cyber warfare need to take a different approach than the government has against other forms of attack, three cybersecurity experts said Thursday.
Facebook has abruptly decided to pull the plug on its Application Verification program, which let external developers pay to have their applications certified as exceeding certain requirements.
The company made the announcement on Wednesday evening, as it unveiled a road map of upcoming changes to its application development platform.
Microsoft today touted the new self-help support baked into Windows 7, even as its engineers continue to wrestle with an “endless reboot” problem that has crippled some computers being upgraded from Vista.
Microsoft says Windows 7 is the most secure version of the Windows operating system ever developed. Big deal, right? I am pretty sure that Microsoft has made that claim for every new version of Microsoft Windows in the past 15 years, and that it is a valid claim.
Even before the phones it is hinging its future livelihood on hit the market, Motorola posted a surprise profit and upped expectations for the current quarter.
File-sharing site The Pirate Bay should be closed, and if it isn’t, two of the founders will each have to pay a fine of 500,000 Swedish kronor ($71,500), according to a verdict in the Stockholm District Court on Wednesday.
Back in May, the entertainment industry — represented by companies such as Sony, Universal, Disney, and Paramount — filed a motion with the court to fine the people behind the Pirate Bay operation as long as the site’s users can access copyright-protected material.
New Net neutrality regulations, as proposed by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission, don’t make sense because some Internet traffic is already prioritized and needs to continue to be, two networking engineers said Thursday.
Oracle has provided new details about its plans for certain key Sun Microsystems technologies, including the GlassFish application server and the NetBeans application development toolkit.
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