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June 7th, 2010 by michael.frier

Daily News – 04/06

The Register – Vince Cable: Feel my mighty SME love

New Coalition government biznovation minister Vince Cable has set out his stall in a speech given yesterday at a business school in London. He pledged to cut the red tape stifling small businesses, and said he would compel banks to lend to SMEs.

SC Magazine - IT security professionals hack their own networks for penetration testing

Half of IT security professionals have admitted that they hack their own networks, with 73 per cent doing so to test the strength of their own network defences.

Computing.co.uk – Broadband customers buy on price, switch on speed

The main reason why consumers switch broadband supplier is because of disappointment with connectivity speed, but when they choose a new provider, they do so based on price, a recent survey has found.

The Daily Telegraph – Microsoft is ‘number five’ in the mobile market

Steve Ballmer, Microsoft’s chief executive, has admitted that the technology giant is losing the battle in the smartphone space with its Windows Phone offering, saying its currently ranked fifth in the market.

IT Pro – BT gets go-ahead for watered down broadband unbundling

The European Commission has said it agrees with regulator Ofcom that BT should be able to offer only virtual unbundling for its fibre broadband networks for the time being.

ComputerWorldUK – PC is not dead, device form is changing

Apple CEO Steve Jobs may believe that the personal computer – Mac and Windows PCs – will diminish in importance in the near future, but Microsoft boss Steve Ballmer sees thing differently. Ballmer, during an interview at the Wall Street Journal’s D8 conference, told the Journal’s Walt Mossberg that PCs will continue to evolve but will remain popular, even in a world where more and more people carry smartphones and tablet devices like the iPad.

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March 16th, 2010 by Steve

Daily News 16/03

BBC – Evan Williams says Twitter fundamental to government

Social networks will become a fundamental way we communicate with our governments, businesses and loved ones, Twitter co-founder Evan Williams has told the BBC.

The Guardian – Lib Dems to change their amendment to the digital economy bill

Rights group calls for bill to be abandoned as peers reverse key changes

The Guardian – Would your constituency get superfast broadband under the Tories?

Rural voters likely to lose out under new Tory proposals – find out how your constituency would do

IT PRO – Google: Mobile ads rates could top PC

Google engineering vice president Vic Gundotra did not say when he expected the crossover in the so-called cost per click of its search ads to occur, during a webcast to analysts about the company’s mobile business. But he said that mobile ad rates have increased “dramatically” in recent years.

The Register – Battle lines drawn in Apple-Google warfare

The battle between Apple and Google is heating up, with execs taking potshots at each other and Silicon Valley insiders choosing sides – some by getting new business cards.

Computerworld UK – Apple talks iPad price with UK mobile networks

Apple executives are reportedly on their way to the UK to discuss the April release of the iPad with each of the major mobile networks, according to the Metro newspaper.

Computerworld UK – Wales gets one of the world’s largest data centres

One of the world’s largest data centres has opened for business in the UK, protected by bomb-proof glass and powered by enough electricity to run a small city.

Computerworld UK – 10,000 Microsoft staff buy iPhones

Steve Ballmer doesn’t use one but apparently as many as 10,000 Microsoft employees do. Embarrassingly, the device in question is Apple’s iPhone.

SC Magazine – Facebook users warned of new malicious application that claims to show who looks at your profile

The removal of application notifications on Facebook has led to bogus applications that claim to show which of your friends are viewing your profile

SC Magazine – Who really is responsible for allowing and monitoring social networking use?

Recent claims that staff productivity is the responsibility of line managers and not security has been assessed. Ray Stanton, global head of business continuity, security and governance at BT Global Services, claimed that if companies are blocking access to social networking for productivity rather than security reasons, then the responsibility for managing staff lies with line managers.

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March 9th, 2010 by Steve

Daily News 09/03

BBC – US eases Cuba, Iran, Sudan, sanctions to allow freer web

The US treasury department has eased sanctions on Iran, Cuba and Sudan to help further the use of web services and support opposition groups.

BBC – S Korea child ‘starves as parents raise virtual baby’

A South Korean couple who were addicted to the internet let their three-month-old baby starve to death while raising a virtual daughter online, police said.

BBC – Queen expresses Commonwealth internet concerns

The Queen has warned that businesses in developing nations are missing out on opportunities because the internet is an “unaffordable option” in many areas. In her annual Commonwealth Day message, the monarch praised advances in science and technology for improving lives.

IT PRO – Ballmer: Microsoft ‘all in’ on cloud strategy
Microsoft’s chief executive Steve Ballmer says his company is throwing its weight fully behind the cloud.

Computer Weekly – UK shoppers flood to online stores

The UK is the largest online shopping market in Europe, but there is still room for growth as online sales catch in-store sales. About E40bn will be spent by UK consumers online in 2014 if sales increase by 10 per cent every year from this year.

The Daily Telegraph – Four in five believe internet access is a fundamental right

Four in five people around the world believe that web access is a fundamental human right, according to a new survey. The poll, which collated the answers from more than 27,000 people across 26 countries and was conducted on behalf of the BBC World Service, found that 87 per cent of interne t users felt that web access should be a basic right. More than 70 per cent of non-users felt they should have access to the net.

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