NEWS
Dell Pays $67 Billion for EMC
Huge purchase will help Dell face off with huge competitors like Microsoft, HP, and IBM.
Dell has announced that it is buying the storage and enterprise technology giant EMC. The $67 billion price tag is considered the largest tech purchase in history. According to the press announcement, "The combination of Dell and EMC will create the world's largest privately controlled, integrated technology company …. The transaction combines two of the world's greatest technology franchises with leadership positions in servers, storage, virtualization and PCs, and it brings together strong capabilities in the fastest growing areas of the industry, including digital transformation, software-defined data center, hybrid cloud, converged infrastructure, mobile, and security."
Dell got its start selling home and small office PCs, but hardware vendors have known for years the real money is in corporate contracts with enterprise clients. The company has succeeded in bringing itself into the enterprise space, but it is behind some of its larger competitors in recent technologies such as virtualization, private cloud, and Big Data-style storage solutions. This deal should keep them in the conversation with competitors such as Microsoft, Oracle, IBM, and HP.
Some experts, however, are baffled by the announcement and warning of risks associated with combining two such large and disconnected companies. The biggest prize in the EMC portfolio is the popular VMware virtualization solution and its surrounding technologies. VMware will fit well into the pitch Dell needs to make with large enterprise clients.
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Christiann MacAuley's cartoon, "An Upgrade Is Available for Your Computer" has been making the uncredited rounds of social media sites for the last few years. The cartoon shows the reactions of users on different computers to the news of an upgrade: The Linux user is enthusiastic, the Windows user groans, and the Mac user is glad it will only cost him $99.
Open FOSS Training Needs Donations
Technical documentation was my bridge from academia to journalism and remains a concern of mine. Free software frequently lacks documentation, and even more frequently, it lacks documentation for complete beginners.
Linus Torvalds and the Three Stages of Celebrity
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Krill: News Filtered
Overwhelmed by the news stream in your regular RSS aggregator? Try Krill. It may look like yet another text-based RSS aggregator, but this nifty little application has a few clever tricks up its sleeve. For starters, Krill can handle not only RSS and Atom feeds, but also Twitter.
DIY GPS Tracking for Your Android Device
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http://www.admin-magazine.com/
OpenSMTPD Makes Mail Server Configuration Easy * Tobias Eggendorfer
The OpenBSD origins of the OpenSMTPD mail transfer agent makes SMTP easier to implement and manage and more secure.
Improving Docker Security Now and in the Future * Sebastian Meyer
The focus for container solutions such as Docker is increasingly shifting to security. Some vulnerabilities have been addressed, with plans to take further steps in the future to secure container virtualization.
Analyzing Large Volumes of Data with Apache Storm * Holger Reibold
We take you through the installation of a Storm cluster and discuss how to create your own topologies.
Managing Networks in Windows Server vNext * Thomas Joos
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Successful Protocol Analysis in Modern Network Structures * Matthias Hein
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