Recent Articles
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Brightstor ARCServe Backup r11 Features Advanced Multi-Plexing
Computer Associates today rolled out its BrightStor ARCserve Backup Release 11 for Windows with support for Direct Attached Storage (DAS), Network Attached Storage (NAS) and Storage Area Network (SAN) environments. Release 11 offers offers cross-platform support for Windows, NetWare, Linux, UNIX, and MAC OS X servers and clients and features a sophisticated high-speed multiplexing capability…
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Verio Announces Fed-Focused Partner Program
Federal spending on information technology is expected to reach $59.7 billion this year, according to IT analysts at Gartner Inc., based in Stamford, Ct. With an eye on grabbing a substantial portion of that pie, Verio, a leader in global IP solutions, today announced a new vertically–focused channel initiative aimed at recruiting and supporting partners…
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CA: It’s Time to Join the Linux Generation
NEW YORKFirst we had the PC generation. Then the Internet generation. And now we’re in the midst of the Linux generation. And it’s not too soon too join. That was the message of Computer Associates International Inc.’s Senior Vice President and Chief Architect Sam Greenblatt, who delivered the LinuxWorld keynote here Thursday morning. “Linux is…
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Microdrives Make Headway
Increasing power and falling prices are not just computing trends, they’re a way of life for the industry. Not every tech sector rides the waves of these continuing trends at once, though. Judging from recent announcements, the microdrive’s turn atop the crest has come. Several miniscule but high-capacity drives from different manufacturers have been produced…
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Sun Lays Out Further Linux Support
Sun Microsystems Inc. is using LinuxWorld to highlight its plans this year to expand its support for the open-source operating system in its Java Enterprise System and across its Java development tools. Sun, of Santa Clara, Calif., on Wednesday previewed its plans to add Linux support by the middle of 2004 to the Java Enterprise…
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Xen and X#: One and the Same
After news broke more than a year ago regarding Microsoft’s plans to develop an XML programming language, company officials abruptly stopped talking about the so-called X# language. Some claimed Microsoft had killed the language. Others said Microsoft had temporarily shelved it. It turns out that X# is alive and well and is now going…