Latest from todayThe agent security messHumans don’t use most of their granted permissions, but agents will—and the results will be disastrous.By Matt AsayMar 23, 20266 minsAccess ControlDevelopment ApproachesIdentity and Access Management The ‘toggle-away’ efficiencies: Cutting AI costs inside the training loopBy Jayachander Reddy KandakatlaMar 20, 20269 minsArtificial IntelligenceGenerative AITechnology Industry AI optimization: How we cut energy costs in social media recommendation systemsBy Gautam SikkaMar 20, 20269 minsArtificial IntelligenceSoftware DevelopmentTechnology IndustryCloud at 20: Cost, complexity, and controlBy David Linthicum Mar 20, 20266 minsIaaSManaged Cloud ServicesMulticloud Why AI evals are the new necessity for building effective AI agentsBy Priyanka Kuvalekar Mar 19, 202610 minsArtificial IntelligenceGenerative AISoftware Development We mistook event handling for architectureBy Sonu Kapoor Mar 18, 20267 minsDevelopment ApproachesSoftware DevelopmentWeb Development Markdown is now a first-class coding language: Deal with it By Nick Hodges Mar 18, 20264 minsCareersDeveloperRoles Update your databases now to avoid data debtBy Laura Czajkowski Mar 17, 20268 minsData ManagementDatabasesOpen Source Visualizing the world with Planetary ComputerBy Simon Bisson Mar 17, 20267 minsData ScienceData ScientistMicrosoft Azure Time for a change Windows Manager switches from print to e-mail in preparation for Microsoft's next act By Brian Livingston Apr 19, 2003 3 mins Small and Medium Business Software Development Technology Industry The open road ahead The Open Source concludes this week, but the open-source movement continues to gain momentum By Russell C. Pavlicek Apr 19, 2003 3 mins Small and Medium Business Software Development Technology Industry Site uses click analysis to increase ad sales 40 percent Some e-businesses are generating growing numbers By Brian Livingston Apr 18, 2003 4 mins Technology Industry There’s no power like low power Intel's Centrino appears to be all about Wi-Fi, but the real star is the Pentium M processor By Tom Yager Apr 18, 2003 6 mins Technology Industry Same great weekly, brand new package Next week's issue will arrive with a dramatic new look By Kevin McKean Apr 18, 2003 3 mins Technology Industry CPUC throws carriers for a curve Proposed pitch for wireless regulations has Verizon crying foul By Ephraim Schwartz Apr 18, 2003 3 mins Cloud Computing Small and Medium Business Technology Industry Unfinished business The latest on two ongoing cases that remain unresolved as I wrap up this version of The Gripe Line By Ed Foster Apr 18, 2003 5 mins Software Development Apple’s dead again How does an irrelevant, struggling company keep delivering new technology? By Tom Yager Apr 18, 2003 5 mins Small and Medium Business Software Development Technology Industry Contractual discord Gateway woes By Robert X. Cringely® Apr 18, 2003 3 mins Software Development No security secrets The secret to managing your company's security is that there is no secret — it all comes down to your employees By Wayne Rash Apr 18, 2003 3 mins Security Rounding third, coming home As Storage Insider rides into the sunset, a working SMI bodes well for interoperability By Mario Apicella, Scott Tyler Shafer Apr 18, 2003 3 mins OSPF for dialer redundancy Posting the Redundant Redundant piece reminded me of an OSPF-based ISDN dialer backup scenario I designed for a client about three years ago. I haven't seen this is practice since, but it's been a significant help to them, as it gets around By Paul Venezia Apr 15, 2003 2 mins 69/8 Jared Mauch said it as well as I could. Network administrators trying to add a little bit of protection at the firewall cause an entire /8 to be rendered unusable. I think this points back to my Au Revior, SMTP post, since this is related in essence By Paul Venezia Apr 15, 2003 2 mins Redundant Redundant The holy grail of peace of mind: network redundancy. What better way to make sure that hardware failures won't take the network down than to have two of everything? It stands to reason that if one is good, two are immediately better. In some sit By Paul Venezia Apr 15, 2003 4 mins Au Revior, SMTP With AOL and Earthlink now blocking all SMTP access from IP addresses deemed residential, a precedent has been set, and it's not a good one. This blocking doesn't affect every ComCast/RoadRunner/etc customer, but it does affect those that r By Paul Venezia Apr 14, 2003 5 mins How Matt Drudge’s two-man Web site nets $800,000 a year Will the gossip monger resent the gossip directed at him? By Brian Livingston Apr 11, 2003 5 mins Technology Industry Chink in the armor? Two readers burned by inconsistent service policies reveal weaknesses Cisco's relatively durable reputation By Ed Foster Apr 11, 2003 5 mins Technology Industry Do the simple things Following even 'trivial' rules can have healthy results By Jon Udell Apr 11, 2003 4 mins Software Development On the desktop Virtual desktops and evolving e-mail clients make Linux an increasingly viable desktop option By Russell C. Pavlicek Apr 11, 2003 3 mins Small and Medium Business Software Development Technology Industry Hah! You’re wrong! Good security advice isn't necessarily consistent — what's wrong for you is right for others By Wayne Rash Apr 11, 2003 3 mins Security The iSCSI iceberg The future is finally here for iSCSI SANs, and a lot of vendors are jumping on board By Mario Apicella, Scott Tyler Shafer Apr 11, 2003 3 mins Technology Industry Good office mates Intel's Centrino resists rising power consumption, noise, and heat By Tom Yager Apr 11, 2003 5 mins Small and Medium Business Software Development Technology Industry Taking collaboration to the masses Only companies that understand the basic requirements for collaborative platforms will succeed By Mark Jones Apr 11, 2003 3 mins Small and Medium Business Software Development Technology Industry Dead or alive? Falling for the 'Bill's gone' prank By Robert X. Cringely® Apr 11, 2003 3 mins Software Development Dawn of the dynamic enterprise With rapid, unpredictable change as a constant threat, complexity is IT's silent killer By Tom Yager Apr 11, 2003 10 mins Software Development Technology Industry CDPD premortem CDPD's pending demise should force companies not to get locked into one wireless technology By Ephraim Schwartz Apr 11, 2003 3 mins Technology Industry How much is my time worth? The story is long, I'll save you the gory details. The gist is that my Nokia 6360 decided to start displaying the text on the LCD as a mirror image. Literally. The words were actually backwards. Needless to say, this wasn't suitable, and th By Paul Venezia Apr 10, 2003 3 mins Drowning in a Sea of Logic Given any suitably complex structure, when does the application of a logical and orderly layout collapse in on itself when met with the realities of every day use? Can an emphasis on logical address or namespace layouts become a hindrance rather than By Paul Venezia Apr 10, 2003 4 mins Patch Weary Not the patches you might think. If there was a Robert's Rules of Networking, it would have some harsh language for patch cables longer than 15'. Besides the obvious headache of managing dozens or hundreds of 50'-100' patch cables By Paul Venezia Apr 7, 2003 2 mins What value certification? RedHat Linux 7.3 was released in May of 2002. I took my RHCE test a few weeks after, and the test was already updated to 7.3. I passed, and was given RHCE ID 807302814505848. According to RedHat, the RHCE certification is good for two full releases f By Paul Venezia Apr 6, 2003 2 mins Better Broadband Bandwidth Management Dan Hartmeier's article on selective ACK prioritization producing better performance on async circuits is extremely interesting. His explanation focuses on OpenBSD's pf/ALTQ traffic filter/QoS framework, but the concept escapes the examples By Paul Venezia Apr 6, 2003 1 min Whack-a-mole The RIAA continues to prove that they aren't experiencing the same reality as the rest of us. The Detroit Free Press noted that the RIAA suit against 5 college students is for $150,000 per song, or 97.8 billion dollars… for one defendant. It m By Paul Venezia Apr 5, 2003 1 min It’s all about timing While checking the mesh VPN this morning, Matt and I discovered that we can, in fact, talk to each other directly via RR now. Something must've changed in the past week. Interesting. Wish I'd checked that before reconfiguring the PIX. So, w By Paul Venezia Apr 5, 2003 1 min Of my own making Decided at 11:30pm to re-IP my home network to permit a meshed VPN layout through the office…. About 2.5 hours later, all was well. What a pain. About 8 years ago, I decided that 10.1.1.0/24 was a great IP range to use for my own network. This has By Paul Venezia Apr 5, 2003 2 mins Suspicious behavior The machine's coming undone By Robert X. Cringely® Apr 4, 2003 3 mins Small and Medium Business Software Development Technology Industry Natural selection Junk technology, engineering, marketing, and management evolve out of existence By Tom Yager Apr 4, 2003 5 mins Software Development Enterprise update Microsoft's Software Update Services are free, but competitors say you get what you pay for By Brian Livingston Apr 4, 2003 3 mins Small and Medium Business Software Development Technology Industry Your loss, their gain Think you're lightening the financial load by divesting business assets? If they include Microsoft 6.0 volume licenses, think again By Ed Foster Apr 4, 2003 5 mins Small and Medium Business Software Development Technology Industry Happy birthday, Mr. Cell Phone Thirty years have been good to the cell phone, but it still has a ways to go By Ephraim Schwartz Apr 4, 2003 3 mins Small and Medium Business Technology Industry Open source and global development Software projects closely connected to those who work on them By Jon Udell Apr 4, 2003 5 mins Small and Medium Business Software Development Technology Industry Keeping jobs at home Open source can helpU.S.companies retain American programmers By Russell C. Pavlicek Apr 4, 2003 3 mins Small and Medium Business Software Development Technology Industry Marketing experiments can strongly impact your bottom line Some words and phrases work better than others By Brian Livingston Apr 4, 2003 5 mins Technology Industry Is knowing better? Recently, a friend asked me to help him determine what was up with a T1 to a remote office. The link felt sluggish, videoconferencing was suffering, and users were complaining about server and client slowness. Using ntop, MRTG, and Etherpeek NX, we d By Paul Venezia Apr 4, 2003 1 min Forward thinking from the backseat Don't surrender control as pragmatic IT strategies take hold By Mark Jones Apr 4, 2003 3 mins Software Development Prevent or deter? Whether intrusion prevention is reality or just marketing-speak, it all comes down to a matter of trust By InfoWorld Apr 4, 2003 6 mins Careers Security The cyberwar begins Information warfare could hurt your company By Wayne Rash Apr 4, 2003 3 mins Security Tape libraries aren’t dumb Going beyond the ‘dumb peripheral,’ ADIC gets head start in tape library race By Mario Apicella, Scott Tyler Shafer Apr 4, 2003 3 mins Severe lack of clue When will the madness end? It's no secret that an object in motion tends to stay in motion, but how much force must be exerted on the massively backwards RIAA and MPAA to show them the blatantly obvious? Trying to legislate the continuation of t By Paul Venezia Apr 4, 2003 1 min Beautiful and educational If only I had the eye to design pages like this. Eric Meyer's great CSS/edge guide, accompanied by some stunning examples. Of course, beauty and functionality come as a price. As mentioned, these pages don't render correctly in IE6. Safari By Paul Venezia Apr 3, 2003 1 min It happens every year We've seen the coffeepot RFC, IP via carrier pigeon, and now a new header flag for IPv4. 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