| Idearc's Jeff Torgerson: Taming the M-Marketing Frontier
"I think back to the old browser war days when you had Netscape and IE as the two main browsers," said Idearc's Jeff Torgerson on the challenges of mobile advertising. "You'd try to visit a Web site and you'd get the error message saying, 'This site is optimized for IE.' At least, in those days people were telling you what they were optimized for, and you really only had a couple choices." The Spyware problem is bigger than you think. Spyware is more insidious and costly than viruses because it's designed to go undetected. Learn about a better way to protect your company. Click here for a free trial of Webroot� AntiSpyware Corporate Edition - the standard in anti-malware solutions. .
Archive for: December, 2007
Paul Murphy Latest Post | Last 10 Posts | Archives Trying to predict 2008 Posted in: Linux Enterprise Policy Government Apple E-voting Sun The IT word for 2008 will, I think, be either "continuation" or "consolidation" as existing trends become more obvious to more people and little new enters the market. Herewith, however, some predictions I hope not to be apologizing for next December. At the top of the list of continuations is SCO. No matter how the legal action pans out, it will continue to dominate direction setting in the Linux community - and until or unless IBM gets its collective head straight on the issue and cleans house, the polarization this case has led to will continue to undermine Linux legitimacy.
'E-pizzas' bulk up Domino's bottom line
Online sales have boosted profits at Domino's Pizza, with almost one in eight pizzas now sold over the web in the UK. Total sales at Domino's rose by 19.7 per cent to �240.1m during the year ended 31 December 2006, with profits up by 28 per cent to �14.3m. The bright spot in those figures was Domino's ecommerce channel, which includes the internet and digital TV. Ecommerce sales rose by 43.8 per cent during 2006 to �20.1m, accounting for 13 per cent of overall sales. Stephen Hemsley, CEO at Domino's, said ecommerce sales have grown by another 36.2 per cent in the first two months of 2007, boosted by Ireland, which also started offering online pizza orders this month. Domino's claims improvements to its website have made it faster and easier for customers to order online, including making local deals available which weren't previously an option on web orders.
Green Technology Revolution, Part 2: Easing the Burden With ...
"While virtualization does mean a greener IT, my understanding is that not many organizations pursue it keeping environmental concerns in mind. Rather, they look at the plain economics of running their data centers. With virtualization, it's always less expensive to run them, and in the process they end up contributing to a greener IT," said Ravi Shekhar Pandey at Springboard Research. You don't have to break the bank to own powerful server technology. The HP Proliant DL380 G5 Server with Systems Insight Manager (SIM) comes equipped with everything your business needs to succeed - including a smaller price tag. Learn more. .
Filed under: CollegeFootball
Certainly celebrate, and don't hang your head, but certainly a little respect for your opponent regardless of the score would be nice, but when you are down by over two touchdowns, you just look foolish. As for the Chris Jessie episode, I am a little torn. There is no doubt that it was a bonehead maneuver, but certainly understandable given the play. He wasn't paying attention and thought the ball was dead. Given the score, no doubt ESPN was trying to find a little excitement. There is a difference however, from covering it, and holding the camera on the guy for the next two quarters to see if he breaks down. As a staff member, he is not a player and has no chance to redeem himself on the field. Trying to further humiliate him was going a bit far. The fact that ESPN had people combing the sidelines to the point where Texas players refused to give his name so they could not further embarass him was a bit much.
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Mark Shuttleworth, Ubuntu founder and head of Canonical, took to his blog earlier this year to express his distaste for the covenant principle. "A promise by Microsoft not to sue for infringement of unspecified patents has no value at all and is not worth paying for," Shuttleworth wrote. "It does not protect users from the real risk of a patent suit from a pure-IP-holder." Access Free B2B Videos and Win a Free Dell XPS Notebook!Learn industry trends, compare solutions, and research vendors. Free access to B2B webcasts and videos on E-Commerce, Networking, CRM, Security & more� And chance to win a Dell XPS Notebook. Register now! .
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