Archive for October, 2010

Getting Your IT Job Search Back on Track

October 31st, 2010

Columnist Tammy Browning offers some tips on transitioning your skills, elevating your marketability and getting back into the workforce.
Courtesy: CIO.in

Microsoft taps virtualization to move apps to cloud

October 30th, 2010

Microsoft is looking to make it easier to move existing Windows Server applications to the company’s Windows Azure cloud platform via virtual machine technology. The company unveiled this week Windows Azure Virtual Machine Role, intended to ease migration of these applications by eliminating the need to make costly application changes. Customers would get the benefit application management costs by moving software to the cloud, said Jamin Spitzer, Microsoft director of platform strategy.
Courtesy: Infoworld News

Did you Wear a Halloween Costume to Work?

October 30th, 2010

Holiday celebrations in the office can be a lot of fun — they provide everyone with a break from the routine and a chance to let loose — but for some reason it also seems like they never fail to create awkward situations. Just think about how weird things got at your last company holiday party, or that time Bob from accounting professed his love to Jane the marketing director over the loudspeaker on Valentine’s day. Talk about uncomfortable. 

Halloween is no different — it presents plenty of fun-yet-potentially-awkward situations. While it’s always great to get dressed up, it’s pretty easy to take in-office costumes too far: a co-worker gets creepy confused with downright creepy; a colleague finds out the hard way that cubicles and sexy-Harry Potter costumes just don’t mix.

If you’re dressed up at the office and currently reading this post, you’re probably thinking to yourself “Please don’t let TheWorkBuzz make an example out of the exact costume I am wearing!” Relax. Most people err on the side of caution when it comes to dressing up at work, so chances are, you’re completely appropriate if you are in costume.

But, just in case you need a little more clarification as to what differentiates an appropriate costume from a potentially uncomfortable one, here’s a look at a few real-life examples from workers who have witnessed both sides. 

[Side note: We'd show you pictures of our own completely appropriate costumes, but in lieu of dressing up, we at TheWorkBuzz chose to celebrate Halloween by consuming excessive amounts of candy corn instead. Fortunately, some of our CareerBuilder colleagues are far more fun than we are. We got to play "Rock of Love"  at the office today courtesy of Cara Gannon, pictured above. She's one of CareerBuilder's senior account executives, and our very own Bret Michaels for the day.]

The appropriate

“Our entire customer service department are dressed up today as a tossed salad, including a plate, tablecloth and silverware.” — Shari McPeek, marketing manager, Rev-A-Shelf, LLC

“I work for OrangeSoda (not a drink company, we do online marketing for local businesses). The SEO team has decorated our area like levels of Super Mario including the underworld. Everyone is dressing up as characters from the different Mario games. As the only woman on the team I’ll be Princess Peach. There are stars, mushrooms, coins and flowers hanging from the ceiling. The center of the office is decked out with cobwebs and goblins. The kids will come and trick or treat at our desks (and play Mario) later today. I always dress up. One of my favorites was being the ghost of technologies past. I had a cassette tape, cords, a walkman, etc. like chains around my neck.” — Janet, OrangeSoda Online Marketing

“We all dressed up this year! We have two pink ladies, a monk, a witch, an angel, Where’s Waldo, the cast of ‘The Office,’ a rock star, a Viking, a Michigan State superfan, and lots more!” — Brittany Fowler, social media specialist, It Works Global

The potentially uncomfortable                

“We’re in the midst of our costume Halloween party at work, and the costume competition is being judged via a video feed between our office [in San Diego] and the offices of sister company in New York. More than half the 100+ employees here got dressed up. There was one controversial one: A pregnant woman had a baby zombie bursting out of her stomach. Couple people found that a little shocking.  Most everybody else thought it was really cool.” — Tom, Digitaria, a digital marketing agency

“The costume that crossed the line was when a former boss dressed up as Captain Canada. He dyed his underwear red and wore it over white tights with a Canada flag as a cape. Let’s just say your eyes were drawn to the red. Someone reported him to HR. It was funny but awkward to find yourself staring at your boss …” — Janet, OrangeSoda Online Marketing

What’s going on in your office today? Any fun costumes? Any that crossed the line? Tell us how your office celebrates Halloween in the comments section, below.

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Courtesy: The Work Buzz

Intel, Toshiba, Samsung enter agreement to halve chip circuitry size

October 30th, 2010

Three unlikely bedfellows have joined forces to halve the size of the technology used to make NAND flash chips and microprocessors in an effort to vastly increase the density and capacity of solid-state drives (SSDs) and create faster CPUs that use less power.
Courtesy: Infoworld News

Securing Apple iPads in the enterprise

October 30th, 2010

IT organizations have come to a stunning realization: There is no stopping the great iPad enterprise invasion. Risks abound as companies must deal with securing iPad apps without much help from Apple, says Julie Palen, senior VP of mobile device management at Tangoe, a telecom expense management software and services provider.
Courtesy: Infoworld News

The Technology Pro’s Greatest Enemies

October 30th, 2010

How to spot — and take down — the six most nefarious adversaries of IT.
Courtesy: CIO.in

Broadband Stimulus Creates Computer Training Centers

October 30th, 2010

The broadband stimulus program wasn’t created just to deploy broadband in underserved rural areas – it was also designed to create education centers to help train more people in how to use the Web.
Courtesy: CIO.in

Cellphone market slowing, smartphones still boom

October 29th, 2010

Helsinki: Cellphone market growth slowed slightly in the September quarter due to worries over economic growth and component shortages, and the market growth would slow further in the current quarter, researchers said on Friday.
The phones market — the largest volume electronics industry — has surged this year from a slump in 2009 when the recession hit consumer spending on the latest gadgets around the world.
Strategy Analytics (SA) said the overall annual market growth slowed to 13% in the third quarter, from 16% in the first half, and forecast growth to slow further to 10% in the fourth quarter.
“Component shortages and ongoing economic volatility slightly constrained volumes,” said analyst Neil Mawston.
“We expect the escalating smartphone wars to provide positive upside for handset volumes in the fourth quarter, but the volatile supply of certain components will mean some vendors may not be able to deliver their fully desired output of phones.”
Several handset makers, including Nokia and Sony Ericsson, said component shortages dragged their sales in the quarter below expectations.
“The hangover from the economic downturn persisted with constrained component supply impacting performance,” said CCS Insight analyst Geoff Blaber.
“We expect supply to remain a problem in the fourth quarter as an abundance of smartphones and a swathe of tablet devices increases pressure on component supply,” Blaber said.
Smartphone Boom
The smartphone market continued to surge in the quarter, with Apple’s iPhone sales rising 91% from a year ago, making it the No. 4 global handset vendor measured by volume.
Since 2009 it has created the largest profits in the industry. “The entrance of Apple to the top 5 vendor ranking underscores the increased importance of smartphones to the overall market,” IDC analyst Kevin Restivo said in a statement.
IDC said on Friday it expects smartphone market volumes to grow 55% this year from a year ago.
Sony Ericsson and Motorola, both benefited from their shift in focus to smartphones in the quarter, but their total sales volumes continued to shrink sharply from a year ago as they sold less cheaper models.
Among the top three vendors only No. 2 Samsung Electronics continued to win market share, while the share of LG Electronics and that of market leader Nokia shrank in the quarter.
Samsung reported its quarterly earnings on Friday. The company’s smartphones business, a major drag in the first half, is recovering fast and accounts for 11% of its total handset shipments, a jump from 2% a year ago.
“Handset volumes from many leading names have showed surprising softness – Nokia, LG and Sony Ericsson all coming up short of consensus,” said Tero Kuittinen, analyst at MKM Partners.
“Many of these vendors have blamed component shortages for volume lightness, but some questions persist over whether the brand-name phone manufacturers might be losing share to no-name low-end vendors,” he said.
LG and Nokia, both have struggled to keep up with smaller rivals in the fatter-margin business of selling more advanced cellphones, and LG on Thursday unveiled a record quarterly loss in its mobile phone unit.
“This was the ninth consecutive quarter that Nokia has grown volumes below the market average,” said Strategy Analytics’ Mawston.
Nokia has dominated the lower end of the market for years — controlling more than 50 percent of that market, but analysts said the Finnish firm was under increasing pressure from Chinese rivals like ZTE.
“Nokia’s grip on the traditional mobile phone market has been somewhat loosened, as multiple Chinese vendors have gained ground, especially within emerging markets,” said IDC analyst Ramon Llamas.

Courtesy: LiveMint

Microsoft quarter boosted by Windows, Xbox, Office

October 29th, 2010

Healthy sales of Windows 7, Office 2010 and Xbox 360 consoles propelled Microsoft to US$5.41 billion in net income for its first fiscal quarter of 2011, a 51 percent increase from the same period a year before. The company also reported a 25 percent increase in revenue for the quarter, or $16.20 billion for the quarter that ended Sept. 30. This figure exceeds what many analysts had expected the company to generate for the time period: A poll from Yahoo Finance found that analysts, on the average, expected the company to earn around $15.80 billion for the quarter.
Courtesy: Infoworld News

Oracle-SAP case takes dramatic eleventh-hour turn

October 29th, 2010

Oracle’s lawsuit against SAP has taken an unexpected turn four days before trial was due to begin, with SAP saying it won’t contest charges that it contributed to acts of copyright infringement by its TomorrowNow subsidiary. The development effectively removes one of SAP’s defenses in the trial — that its executives didn’t know its TomorrowNow subsidiary had been stealing Oracle software. It could also reduce the likelihood that SAP executives will have to take the stand, according to one legal observer.
Courtesy: Infoworld News