Articles about : Speed
Laying the foundations for a Digital Economy
Stephen Conroy, the Federal Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, details the Rudd Government's plans for the Digital Economy. More...
Fast learners
By: Beverley Head
13/06/2008 14:22:53
We're in the midst of a revolution that is changing the way we teach and learn, with wikis, new approaches to e-learning, education mash ups, and virtual worlds the new order.
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Cover story: 20 ways to get promoted
By: Dan Tynan
13/06/2008 14:15:34
If you agree that there's no such thing as an ICT project, you may already be on your way up the ladder.
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Cover story: Hyperconnectivity or bust
By: Beverley Head
10/04/2008 15:19:32
Demand for fast mobile communications is growing, and network providers are jostling for your corporate business.
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The world's your oyster
By: Information Age staff
10/04/2008 13:13:01
Finding funding, the right staff and a viable business model are the common concerns for Australian entrepreneurs with big Web 2.0 ideas, even if the roads they take are vastly different.
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Apple growth will draw malware attacks
By: Matt Hines
19/02/2008 14:56:53
Mac OS X is safer today -- but not necessarily more secure for the long term -- than Windows
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A new approach to ICT
By: Kim Carr
19/02/2008 12:39:35
"You want to know the difference information and communication technologies make? Try to live without them."
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Five ways to roll out SOA
By: Galen Gruman
19/02/2008 12:27:07
Big-name companies from Comcast to United Airlines are jumping into SOA, changing the way organisations plan, develop, and deploy enterprise applications
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Internet security: just wishful thinking?
By: Information Age staff
19/02/2008 11:37:09
Malware, adware, viruses and spam continue to assail users everywhere as the Internet continues to be a dangerous place - and it's getting worse.
While security vendors struggle even to stay in touch with an accelerating tide of threats, professional criminals are gainfully exploiting millions of computers, governments and businesses are recruiting specialised hackers to wrest away others' secrets and malware writers are winning their war.
The extent of Australian computer crime is hard to gauge as there's no requirement for it to be reported.
However, the fact that more than a billion dollars was spent on trying to find and seal holes in the security fences here and in NZ shows that the problem has got industry attention.
In this survey our writers here and overseas look at the panoply of dangers out there, what is being done to create a bulwark against them - and where the battles have simply been lost.
There's little to cheer looking down the security road for the next year; elsewhere in this issue, Neil McAllister looks at the top 25 technoflops of all time. Security came out at the top of his list.
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Seven reasons why your software is so slow
By: Neil McAllister
04/01/2008 20:15:34
Ever wonder why your PC keeps choking on that slick, new corporate app? Here are the chief culprits bogging down the latest software's performance
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Down the technology track in 2008
By: Information Age staff
04/01/2008 04:29:53
We take a look over the horizon at what ICT might offer, what it means to those who use it, and those who have to care for it
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