a blog

  • A New Deal for the Desktop

    “Do more with less” has been the official mandate for IT departments every where for some time now, and considering our economic climate, that refrain will ring more loudly than ever in the year to come. However, before we return from the holiday break and set ourselves to work busily doing more of the same,…

  • What Is Anti-virus Worth?

    Microsoft recently announced plans to discontinue OneCare, the company’s consumer-oriented, subscription-based anti-malware product. Instead, Microsoft will offer a free-of-charge anti-malware offering called Morro. I know that conventional wisdom, certain government and industry regulations, and Windows’ “Danger, Will Robinson” Security Center alert shield all disagree with me, but I’m not convinced that anti-virus products (as we…

  • Microsoft, Webkit and Cashing In on Open Source

    Earlier this month, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer made blogosphere headlines by mentioning that Microsoft might look at embracing Webkit, the open-source Web browser rendering engine that powers Apple’s Safari and Google’s Chrome. I think that a Microsoft move to Webkit—not only for the company’s mobile platforms but for the full-size version of Internet Explorer—makes great…

  • Everyone in the pool

    A few weeks ago, managed hosting provider Rackspace bolstered its cloud hosting division with a pair of major new acquisitions—cloud storage vendor JungleDisk and virtual server provider Slicehost. I was struck by the announcements Rackspace made that day, but the part of the event that stuck most stubbornly in my head was the old news…

  • Questions for the Cloud

    Over the past year or so, I’ve been pretty breathless in my enthusiasm for cloud computing, and my enthusiastic writings around the topic have prompted a pile of reader mail containing many valid concerns over a possibly cloudy IT future. I’ll admit that I’m an unabashed cloud cheerleader–I view it as an IT game-changer with…

  • Open vs. Closed in the Cloud

    The impending announcement of Microsoft’s cloud operating system at the company’s Professional Developers Conference has me thinking about how the struggle between open source and proprietary software models will play out in the cloud. There’s been much chatter about how the relocation of code from one’s premises to the virtual skies might threaten, render irrelevant…

  • Does OpenOffice.org Still Matter?

    For the past six years or so, my office productivity suite of choice has been OpenOffice.org. In that time, I’ve watched the suite progress slowly but steadily toward the goal of being “just as good” as Microsoft Office. And yet, for my needs, the free software suite has been Office-like enough since Version 1.0. In…

  • The Good and the Bad of BlackBerry Storm

    Earlier this week, I had the opportunity to get my hands on Research In Motion’s much-anticipated touch-screen device, the BlackBerry Storm. The new device, which had been known in rumor mill circles as the Thunder, offers up an ingenious solution to the thumb keyboard versus virtual keyboard dilemma: The Storm’s touch-screen is built atop a…

  • Toward a More Idiot-Proof Internet

    Recently, Cameron Sturdevant and I waded into the world of application whitelisting–a set of products and technologies aimed at ensuring the integrity of Windows clients by enforcing control over which applications are allowed to run. I think that whitelisting, when combined with diligent paring of user and application privileges, can go a long way toward…

  • Apple’s Heavy Hand

    Recently, eWEEK Labs has been putting a handful of high-profile smartphones through their paces, which has led us to consider what elements would comprise the ideal business smartphone. While it’s easy to get caught up in the physical characteristics of a device, there’s more to an effective device than the slimness of its chassis or…