Why does crapware still exist? Follow the money
If you used Oracle's fix for the Java hole, you know that it's probably making millions off this with the included crapware .
ZDNet goes behind to scenes to learn more about the tech that is used to support the Australian Open.
India's department of telecommunications is looking at taking over some powers of sector regulator TRAI, including the monitoring of service quality and parameters for telecom network.
Tata Consultancy Services will hire 10,000 more staff in its fourth quarter ending March 2013 on top of its original 50,000 target as it looks to capitalize on strong business growth in the past quarter.
Meet some of the people who will be taking part in the NextGen CIO program.
The company charged with rolling out Australia's National Broadband Network has removed the role of head of construction in a restructure.
After a "thorough and robust search process," the networking vendor has found a replacement for long-time CEO Michael Klayko.
End-user generated passwords continue to have little defense against hackers, according to Deloitte Canada.
AMD believes that a former vice-president and three managers handed trade secrets to Nvidia, after they jumped ship to join a rival hardware-making firm.
There is a lot of discussion about guns at the moment after the recent horrific mass murders in Newtown, CT. The NRA is part of these discussions and a new iPhone application that focuses on gun safety was released that maybe should have been shelved for another month or two.
The security and anti-malware giant has put Altiris up for sale, according to reports, for an undisclosed sum, and is drawing interest from private equity firms, sources say.
What's Microsoft's role in Facebook's just-announced Graph Search effort?
Some say Macromedia-developed Flex framework and Adobe Flash are now irrelevant. But not current steward of Flex, Apache Software Foundation, which this week elevated the Flash SDK to a top level project and updated the code for Flash 10.2-11.5 and Java 7
Facebook doesn't usually have too many mystery announcements like Google and Apple, so the world was eagerly watching Menlo Park this morning.
It took its own sweet time, but the latest version of Red Hat's community Linux distribution, Fedora 18, is finally here and ready for you to use.
The mobile market needs a third player to keep iOS and Android on its toes, but as it stands Microsoft's Surface tablets don't cut it. But with a few tweaks the platform has a chance of being a serious player.
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