Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Red October raises lots of security questions | Dumbest CES products

  The dumbest products of CES 2013 | IT leaders for Boston sports teams talk playoff readiness
 
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Kaspersky Lab's "Red October" cyber-espionage saga leaves lots of questions unanswered
Moscow-based anti-malware firm Kaspersky Lab says it's uncovered a years-long cyber-espionage campaign using phishing to target individuals in business, research and government offices mainly in Russia and Eastern Europe to steal sensitive data. This cyber-spy operation is also suspected to be run by Russian speakers. More about all of this is expected in the next day or so from Kaspersky Lab, which has lent an aura of drama to it all by calling the malware and its use "Red October." Read More


WHITE PAPER: Riverbed

Steelhead Cloud Accelerator Solution Brief
Learn how enterprises must tackle these challenges for SaaS applications to remain a viable option. Read now.

WHITE PAPER: Raritan, Inc

The Distributed Enterprise: Remote Access and IT Management
For IT managers, remote offices can cause any number of headaches. Fortunately, Raritan offers solutions to help manage remote office control, security and budgetary issues. This white paper examines and analyzes the increases in uptime and security provided by out-of-band access and control tools. Learn more.

The dumbest products of CES 2013
Maybe these companies should've thought twice about showing off their wares Read More

IT leaders for Boston sports teams talk playoff readiness
Sunday's AFC Championship game between the New England Patriots and visiting Baltimore Ravens will be the fourth at Gillette Stadium since 2001, so the host's IT department knows the drill just as well as the players and coaches. Read More

Oracle trying to quell certification exam voucher fraud
Oracle is cracking down on the use of counterfeit vouchers for its certification examinations, a move that could have significant implications for the unwitting as well as willful violators. Read More

INSIDER
IT pros reveal the best career advice they ever received
In today's culture, advice on nearly any topic - relationships, health, career - is just a mouse click, touchscreen tap or Siri query away. There's even a Web site called shouldidoit.com that promises to help you make decisions in your daily life. But while you can get some good insights on the many expert and general discussion forums that pop up on the Web, there's often a sense that something is missing from that experience. Call it the human touch. Read More

Review: Seagate Wireless Plus
The scoop: Wireless Plus mobile storage, by Seagate, about $200 (1TB capacity) Read More

RIM gets Visa approval for mobile payments via NFC
Research in Motion announced Wednesday that credit card company Visa has approved RIM's security management system for use in mobile payments made with smartphones or tablets that use a Near Field Communication chip. Read More

Bankers comparing bonuses? There's an app for that
A mobile app available in the iTunes App Store is designed and marketed specifically to bankers who'd like to compare their bonus checks with one another. Read More

First look: Facebook's new Graph Search
The social network's getting even more social. Read More

Microsoft supports unified management for Cloud OS
Microsoft is upgrading System Center so businesses can manage data-center resources under a single platform regardless of whether those resources are spread out across private, public and hybrid clouds or within Microsoft's Azure cloud service. Read More

Walmart, jobs and the rise of self-service checkout tech
Walmart this year plans to install 10,000 self-service kiosks in hundreds of stores. But even as it moves ahead, other retailers are bailing on the technology. Read More

How to provide Mac help from far away
It happens to me a lot. It happened just a couple weeks ago when Dad bought a new iMac. And it happened just a couple days ago when Uncle Mort found that Firefox was bizarrely loading with a bunch of extra tabs that he didn't want and couldn't get rid of. And it happened when my sister-in-law Sam wanted to get access to music she'd purchased with an older Mac. Read More

United Airlines to offer satellite Wi-Fi on long-haul flights, beating Delta to the gate
United Airlines became the first U.S. carrier to offer satellite-based Wi-Fi on long-haul international flights after it added Ku-band satellite Wi-Fi from Panasonic Avionics to a Boeing 747. The Wi-Fi-equipped plane serves trans-Atlantic and trans-Pacific flights; United has also added satellite Wi-Fi to two Airbus 380 aircraft that serve U.S. domestic routes. Read More

Lucrative Windows crapware market is exactly why we need app stores
Even as Microsoft tries to popularize its Windows Store for PC apps, the market for Windows crapware remains alive and well. Read More

Best of CES 2013: In pictures
Here's what's grabbing our attention right now at the sprawling CES 2013 gadget show in Las Vegas Read More

 
 
 

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