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- Could U.S. IT Pros Be Losing a Seat at the Strategic Table?: New study commissioned by Microsoft underscores the importance of IT innovation for business success.
- No Country For Old IT Guys on Flickr – Photo Sharing!
A motley crew of open source IT management people and some hack-analyst who snuck in.
- Nielsen Debunks Myths On Teens And Media – They Still Watch TV!
- Google seeks faster Web
- Intel and Nokia Announce Strategic Relationship to Shape Next Era of Mobile Computing Innovation
"Further uniting the Internet with mobile phones and computers, Intel Corporation and Nokia today announced a long-term relationship to develop a new class of Intel® Architecture-based mobile computing device and chipset architectures which will combine the performance of powerful computers with high-bandwidth mobile broadband communications and ubiquitous Internet connectivity."
- Eclipse worms into Apple Cocoa, iPhone
Some platform download numbers, and notes on Eclipse in mobile land.
- Parsing Intuit’s IPP: much to consider | AccMan
- Hartford – OWASP
Hmm, actually looks interesting if you're in the North East in Sep. 2009.
- Amazon.com: Cloud Application Architectures: Building Applications and Infrastructure in the Cloud (Theory in Practice (O'Reilly)): George Reese: Books
- Google Code Blog: Let's make the web faster
As I told Pail Krill, stuff like this helps Google because: "In the current state of things, business is easiest for Google if the web stays in HTML/Ajax world: indeed, if the web stays the most popular way to interface with the Internet. Because, of course, they can then sell their web ads. They don't seem to do too well in other ad markets, even things like video, with YouTube that are rumored/theorized to loose money. So, making sure web applications are always *the best* way to deliver applications (rather than desktop, RIAs, or something "non-web native") keeps Googles market massive. And without that massive market, Google can't get the huge take in web advertising that currently funds everything, including its mind-bogglingly high stock price."
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