IT Manager's Journal

Tracking the Evolution of IT

Eye on IT
  • SEC slaps admin order on IBM 3 days ago
    IBM has struck a deal with the SEC under which it promises not violate to security laws - not that it's admitting or denying that it’s ever done such a thing in the past.
  • Citrix: Business IT must innovate to survive 3 days, 2 hours ago
    Businesses must innovate in their use of IT to meet five major challenges in the coming years, or suffer the fate of history's other dinosaurs, according to Mark Templeton, chief executive of Citrix.
  • Palm plans resurgence 3 days, 4 hours ago
    Palm, which lost its footing in the competitive smartphone market this past year, is turning to private equity and some former Apple execs to help it reinvigorate its product lineup.
  • Chinese user sues Symantec over dodgy updates 3 days, 5 hours ago
    A Chinese user's attempt to sue Symantec for damage caused as a result of dodgy anti-virus signature update files is unlikely to succeed, according to security experts.
  • IT managers delaying switch to Vista 6 days, 9 hours ago
    Time and complexity are putting UK IT managers off migrating their organisation onto Microsoft's Vista operating system.
  • Bill Gates nicks Larry Ellison's health center 6 days, 13 hours ago
    The Bill Gates-Steve Jobs rivalry may have cooled, but the Microsoft Chairman is still going to toe-to-toe with Oracle CEO Larry Ellison. A year after Ellison backed out of his promise to fund a multi-million dollar public health institute at Harvard University, Gates has revived the project at the University of Washington.
  • Private investment firm greases Palm 6 days, 18 hours ago
    Struggling to regain its edge in the smartphone market, Palm has reached an agreement to sell a quarter of the company to a private equity firm and to place a former iPod guru in an executive seat.
  • Sony lops $100 off Blu-ray player price tag 1 week, 2 days ago
    Back in February, Sony said the Blu-ray player to be released this summer would sell for $599. On Monday, Sony said the BDP-S300, which is now shipping, will actually sell for $499 instead. The latest version is slimmer than the original, but with many of the same features.
  • Yahoo opens Panama search ad platform 1 week, 2 days ago
    Yahoo announced Monday that its Panama search advertising platform is now open to third parties.
  • Oracle extends lawsuit against SAP 1 week, 2 days ago
    Oracle has amended its theft lawsuit against SAP to include claims of infringed copyrights and breached contracts.
  • Private-equity firm buys into Palm 1 week, 2 days ago
    Palm is selling a 25 percent stake to private-equity firm Elevation Partners for $325 million and is bringing in Jon Rubinstein, who formerly ran the iPod division at Apple, as executive chairman of the board.
  • China's new weapon: Low executive pay 1 week, 2 days ago
    Will globalization someday stick it to the man? Excessive executive pay has been a hot-button issue in American politics for years, but worldwide factors could one day make it a liability on the balance sheet.
  • DRAM prices may have hit rock bottom 1 week, 3 days ago
    Shares of Asian chipmakers rallied on Friday as spot prices for computer memory chips gained, fanning speculation that the market may have bottomed out.
  • Google acquires Panoramio 1 week, 3 days ago
    Google continued its attempts to offer every service imaginable online by purchasing a Spanish photo-sharing website.
  • Dell calls on HP to investigate spying charges 1 week, 3 days ago
    A corporate shoving match has begun between HP and Dell following new allegations that HP robbed Dell of trade secrets.
  • More news »
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ITerating: A new twist on software comparison shopping

June 11, 2007 (9:02:53 PM)
By: Lisa Hoover

For IT managers researching software purchases, the Internet is both a blessing and a curse. While there is an abundance of information available on virtually every piece of software on the market, knowing which software -- or whose -- to trust is part skill and part luck. The process is also difficult because typical software review Web sites don't allow users to customize search criteria based on their unique needs, so Internet-based research is often painstaking and sometimes fruitless. Nicolas Vandenberghe, founder and CEO of the new site ITerating, hopes to ease the pain of software comparison shopping by blending the usefulness of user reviews with the power of wiki-based search functionality.

Kamloops school district gets an education in free software

June 05, 2007 (5:02:00 PM)
By: Bruce Byfield
The Kamloops/Thompson School District in British Columbia, Canada, is a free software success story. Gregg Ferrie, manager of information technology for the district, believes its infrastructure may be "the largest Linux on-the-desktop implementation in Western Canada" in public education. According to Ferrie, hardly a week goes by without another of British Columbia's more than 60 school districts consulting Kamloops. Currently, five other districts are considering or planning to implement the Kamloops district's custom-built thin client solution, and the department of education at the University of British Columbia is also investigating the possibility.

OSS is the right solution for Voicelink Communications

May 18, 2007 (8:01:00 PM)
By: Peter Kaye
A chance encounter with a Linux-based laptop started South Carolina-based radio communications dealer Voicelink Communications on the path to replacing almost its entire range of Windows-based productivity and desktop software with free and open source software (FOSS).
Read more at: Linux.com - Post Comment

Source code auditing keeps organizations on the right side of licensing

May 15, 2007 (8:02:00 PM)
By: Tina Gasperson
In 2000, when Theresa Friday, Ray Waldin, and Jeff Luszcz were working for dot-com startup Cacheon, they saw firsthand the power of open source software to impact a business model. In Cacheon's case, it looked like open source had dealt a death blow to the company, but it was really careless use of third-party code that was the source of the trouble, Friday says. The three colleagues were so impacted by what they had seen that they launched a new business designed to help other companies prevent implosion from software licensing issues.

Eight common misunderstandings about GPLv3

May 10, 2007 (8:01:00 PM)
By: Bruce Byfield
The official release of the third version of the GNU General Public License (GPLv3) is still a couple of months away, yet already, the misunderstandings about it are almost as numerous as those for the second version (GPLv2).

Open source software spurs Roaring Penguin

May 07, 2007 (8:02:20 PM)
By: Tina Gasperson
Open source advocate David Skoll launched Roaring Penguin Software in 1999 because he was restless in his job as R&D project leader at Chipworks, Inc. Roaring Penguin started strictly as a consultancy, but the next year, after Skoll was commissioned to create software to help London's Royal College of Physicians stem the tide of email viruses and spam to its servers, he decided the world needed a better email filter. Skoll wrote the now ubiquitous MIMEDefang email filter, released it to the community, and proceeded to build a successful business on top of GPL software.
Read more at: Linux.com - Post Comment

Introduction to UML

May 03, 2007 (2:02:00 PM)
By: Chad Files
When you're designing and developing new software systems, it is often hard to see how all the pieces are suppose to fit together. Unified Modeling Language (UML) is one tool that allow developers and architects to ease the process and create a big picture before committing to a particular technology.

Napoleon's invasion of Russia and the challenges of managing large projects

May 02, 2007 (8:00:00 AM)
By: Bruce Byfield
Everyone knows that Napoleon's invasion of Russia failed because it ran into the Russian winter, right? But the truth is, saying that is as incomplete as saying that the cause of every death is heart failure. The winter may have been the final blow to Napoleon's grand design, but it need not have been. The campaign actually failed because of difficulties in scaling, combined with poor management by Napoleon himself. His example provides a case study on the pitfalls of planning a large project, making it an object lesson for the modern corporate world.

Car dealership uses Asterisk VoIP to stay on "cutting edge"

April 30, 2007 (5:02:00 PM)
By: Tina Gasperson
O'Brien Automotive Team is a large car dealership conglomerate based in Peoria, Ill. When the company built new headquarters recently, it needed a phone system flexible and cost-effective enough to satisfy the needs of 200 employees at the home office, and hundreds more staff at nine local dealerships in four states. After evaluating options and wrangling with incompetent vendors, O'Brien went with an open source Asterisk solution.

SimpleCenter hopes open source community will give back

April 27, 2007 (5:02:00 PM)
By: Tina Gasperson
Universal Electronics Inc. (UEI), best known for its line of universal remote controls, also sells SimpleCenter, an all-in-one application for Windows PCs that ties together in a single interface all of a user's multimedia devices and software. It streamlines the management of photos, music, and movies, and even acts as a Universal Plug and Play server so you can stream your files to any device on your home network, while the software converts files to the proper format for the device. Recently, UEI released the basic version of SimpleCenter under the terms of the GNU General Public License in order to take advantage of the community's ability to make the software better faster than the company can do it alone.

Getting things done with Tracks

April 26, 2007 (5:02:00 PM)
By: Nathan Willis
I broke down and read Getting Things Done (GTD) in February (after letting the book sit unopened on the couch for a month). When I finished, I was determined to adopt the popular organizational method. I searched for a solid software tool to track projects and next actions, and found dozens of desktop-oriented applications to choose from. One of the GTD axioms is to collect all of your tasks, projects, and lists in one place; since I regularly use four PCs and laptops and a mobile phone, finding a GTD-aware tool that would run as a Web app was paramount. I settled on Tracks; it is open source, easy to use, and accessible from anywhere.
Read more at: Linux.com - 1 comment

How to avoid IT project failure

April 24, 2007 (8:00:00 AM)
By: Ken Myers and Indira Guzman
Both IT folklore and current events are full of examples of institutions that fruitlessly expend enormous energy and financial resources to create or improve some element of their information technology. As an IT manager, it's your responsibility to help preserve institutional resources as well as add organizational value with IT projects. In many cases you can do this by facilitating selection of the most worthy projects, then insuring their successful implementation and management. Consider these tips to avoid scheduling your next project for failure.

Processes aren't all good

April 20, 2007 (8:00:00 AM)
By: Wayne Turk
Good, strong, repeatable processes can be the cornerstone of successful IT projects. Processes can make the pieces of the project puzzle fit together. Knowing that things are done the same way every time gives project team members and customers confidence that nothing is missed and that the results are trustworthy, useful, and usable. But at the same time, processes can be a pitfall when they are overly rigid, poorly structured, or have a negative impact on cost, schedule, or quality. Here are some common-sense ideas about how to make process work for you, not against you.

CentOS 5 is a solid enterprise OS

April 18, 2007 (2:02:00 PM)
By: Gary Sims
Last week, two years since its last major release, the CentOS project released version 5 of its enterprise-focused Linux distribution. I downloaded it and put it to the test, and found that CentOS 5 has maintained its tradition of robustness and reliability while adding new features like virtualization.
Read more at: Linux.com - 1 comment

Zenoss builds a competitive advantage with open source infrastructure

April 17, 2007 (5:02:00 PM)
By: Tina Gasperson
A few years ago, Erik Dahl was a network manager who knew that administrators needed a flexible network monitoring solution. In 2002, he began development of what would become Zenoss, an open source network monitoring product that runs on multiple platforms. Dahl found that the best way to deliver a product that is affordable and customizable is to use open source, and in the process he also discovered that using open source internally is the best way to build a successful business from scratch.
Read more at: Linux.com - 1 comment

Webtop software development: Combining the desktop and the Internet

April 16, 2007 (8:02:00 AM)
By: Chad Files
Adobe recently created a media buzz with the announcement of a cross-platform Web-enabled runtime environment, code named Apollo. The environment allows developers to create applications that run directly on the desktop while using content from the Web. Adobe has built Apollo to leverage existing technologies such as Flash, Flex, HTML, and AJAX. Apollo is an amazing concept, but it is not a new idea. Sun Microsystems released Java Web Start in 2001, and the Mozilla Foundation invented XUL when it created Firefox. There are also several startups entering the market. All of their products are geared do the same thing: bring Web applications to the desktop.
Read more at: Linux.com - 1 comment

Open source Mule takes the "donkey work" out of ESB

April 12, 2007 (5:02:00 PM)
By: Tina Gasperson
Mule is an Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) -- the "glue" between different enterprise applications in different company departments that allows IT managers to move information back and forth seamlessly. Think of disparate enterprise applications as ribs, with the ESB as a backbone that connects everything. Mulesource founder Ross Mason says open source is the best way to make an ESB that is customizable and affordable.

IT security firm trusts open source inside and out

April 09, 2007 (8:02:00 PM)
By: Tina Gasperson
An Atlanta IT security company is finding success by employing open source software, not just in the network security appliance it sells, but on its own desktops and servers.
Read more at: Linux.com - 1 comment

Open source SplendidCRM a sweet alternative for ".Net-centric" SAAS provider

April 06, 2007 (8:01:00 PM)
By: Tina Gasperson
A "Microsoft-centric" call center solution provider called Promero worked mostly with proprietary applications, offering them as hosted software-as-a-service products. When it decided to create a custom replacement by cobbling together an existing CRM package and its own lead-generating application, CTO Roman Schepis quickly discovered that the only way to go was to use an open source CRM application.

Use a wiki to integrate your information systems

April 02, 2007 (2:02:00 PM)
By: Chad Files
Managing documentation and support requests and collaborating effectively are difficult tasks for many organizations. Most companies have separate systems to track customer information, handle support, and manage a general knowledge base, but when someone needs a 360-degree view of a project, or needs to find all of the information on a client, the task can be next to impossible. Why not glue all of your separate systems together using wiki software?
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