TODAY'S TOP STORIES:
SERVER CENTER
Your free ride on the Moore's Law bandwagon is coming to an end. Now how are you going to speed up your apps?
Users can store up to 1 TB of data in a single instance of EBS and can scale to as many EBS instances as they need.
Companies creating virtual machines without governance and change management equivalent to physical servers are headed for trouble.
When released in about a year, Mac OS X 10.6 will be optimized for multicore processors and will focus more on speed and stability than new features.
IT groups rethinking the "save everything forever" approach find deletion and retention policies and tools must be razor sharp to cut through a morass of regulations.
Server Core provides a stripped-down and secure Windows build.
The virtual desktop and data center are here, but for this technology to continue taking over the enterprise, I/O and security issues need to be addressed.
Along with the flexibility and agility gained through virtualization comes a loss of visibility into network traffic.
The company touts its newly released Site Recovery Manager as an automation agent that takes over to shift workloads with existing data to the recovery site.
Sony Pictures Entertainment is the first customer of data center operator 365 Main to sign up for a new reusable energy program.
We set out to determine whether PowerShell is usable, and learnable, for the masses of Windows admins who prefer to point and click their way through daily tasks.
Desktone plans to sell "desktops as a service" through service providers like Verizon Businesss and European and Asian carriers; IBM is a partner.
Showing off their partnership, Citrix will equip XenDesktop with its ICA protocol that Microsoft's products can recognize and respond to.
There's now an SDK and API for Cisco's branch office routers, but customers will need to get apps approved by Cisco.
The startup's Web server-based software competes with larger vendors like Citrix, Microsoft, and VMware as well as thin client advocates like Sun and Wyse.