The Red Hat Summit in Boston kicks off in less than a week.
People Problem Can Compromise a perfectly good ITIL implementation
ITIL implementation seems like a piece of cake after you complete an ITIL Certification program or after a discussion with a consultant. But when you get down to the actual implementation, you’ll find a lot of hurdles, which hinders the proper process implementation
This Week’s Five: The Changing Role of CIOs
This Week’s Five is the column where we bring to you a collection of five interesting reads from all over the web, with a different topic every week. This week, we are exploring the changing role of Chief Information Officers (CIOs) in the enterprises. Gone are the days when the CIOs were largely responsible for practices supporting the flow of information
ManageEngine at GISEC 2013!
ManageEngine is participating in GISEC (Gulf Information Security Exhibition and Conference) next week. We would love to see you there! GISEC offers cutting-edge IT solutions via a dedicated exhibition concentrating on keeping you safe. The increase in targeted industry attacks reflect an escalation in sophisticated and sustained cyber attacks in the Middle East.
Blackberry CEO Vs Market experts on Tablets growth
In the early and mid-2000’s, the word “BlackBerry” was symbolic of smart phones but now, it’s a foregone story due to their delayed response to the market. Add to that a recent statement by BlackBerry CEO Thoris Heins that made their market understanding questionable. According to the CEO: “In five years I don’t think there’ll be a reason to have a tablet anymore
This Week’s Five: Entrepreneurs flying into the cloud
This Week’s Five is the column where we bring to you a collection of five interesting reads from all over the web, with a different topic every week. This week, we are exploring the benefits of cloud computing for entrepreneurs and small business owners with regards to their website and server monitoring. We’re putting together some interesting articles about cloud computing solutions we’ve come across in the past few days, Ø Cloud Computing Boosts Next Generation of Startups, Survey Shows Cloud computing isn’t just potentially delivering savings and flexibility for existing organizations.
Google Glass Is Half Full
Technocrats have been lining up in a virtual line by the thousands to get their hands on the first release of Google Glass. Google started shipping the much anticipated computing spectacles to developers, industry analysts and early technology adopters a few weeks back.
What’s today’s magic wand?
Around the same time a hundred years ago, chemistry was the most happening thing in the world largely due to the circumstances several nations were going through at that point of time. Governments invested heavily in the field of chemical research and a country that possessed rich chemical expertise was seen to be powerful and that which had an edge over the others. The use of chemical weapons in World war I led nations to victory and empowered them with wealth, influence and power
ManageEngine in the News!
A round up of the global coverage ManageEngine has received in the last three weeks. Privileged Password Management Software for MSP’s : At Infosecurity Europe, ManageEngine launched the industry-first solution, developed specifically to address the unique privileged identity management challenges faced by MSP’s. Industry First ‘Enterprise Search’ for IT teams : Sridhar Iyengar, vice president of product management, ManageEngine shares the benefits of IT360′s unified search console that is capable of searching databases of any third-party IT management and business applications, without requiring the user to understand the underlying database architecture or write SQL queries
If Big Data’s too scary, try Little Data (it’s free)
Here are some stats that will blow your mind: Every minute of every day, 48 hours of video content is uploaded to YouTube, Google receives over 2 million queries, over 100,000 tweets are sent and nearly 600 new websites are created. Perhaps most shocking is that quietly in the background, all of this data is tracked and stored. But what happens to it after that?