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Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Phablet deathmatch: Apple iPhone 6 Plus vs. Samsung Note 4

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From: "Network World After Dark" <nww_newsletters@newsletters.networkworld.com>
Date: Dec 3, 2014 9:01 PM
Subject: Phablet deathmatch: Apple iPhone 6 Plus vs. Samsung Note 4
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  IT resume makeover: Top 11 tips from 2014 | The Linux holiday shopping guide

 
  Network World After Dark  

Phablet deathmatch: Apple iPhone 6 Plus vs. Samsung Note 4
Four years ago, Samsung created quite a stir with its original Galaxy Note, a supersized smartphone that many people found too big, but many others loved as a combo smartphone and tablet, giving rise to the "phablet" moniker. This fall, Apple jumped into the phablet fray with the iPhone 6 Plus as Samsung came out with its fourth iteration of the Note. Both are strong contenders, though they differ in where they shine. On the surface, they look pretty much the same, with nearly identical case sizes. The iPhone 6 Plus is a bit thinner (0.28 inch versus 0.33 inch) and a tad lighter (6.1 ounces versus 6.2 ounces), but the Note 4 has a larger screen (5.7 inches versus 5.5). But the differences become clear in their details and operations.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 


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SMART: Best Practices for Migrating the Corporate Directory
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Securing Keys and Certificates to Critical Assets
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INSIDER
IT resume makeover: Top 11 tips from 2014
1. Clear Out the ClutterTo read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here(Insider Story) Read More

 

The Linux holiday shopping guide
Some gift recommendations for those shopping for Linux nerds...or maybe even themselves. Read More
 

The latest mobile trend? Flip phones
Advocates cite ease of use, but the celebrity nude hack may have also played a part. Read More
 

IDG Contributor Network: How mirrored roofs will augment data center air cooling
Data center managers looking to reduce costs might want to take a look at a new roofing material that's being developed by some Stanford University egg-heads.The scientists reckon that their super-reflective, mirror-like substance could be a cheaper and more ecologically sound add-on to air conditioning. It works by disseminating heat out of the area it's trying to cool.Essentially, the cold universe acts as a heat sink.What is it?A thin-film coating on a roof-installed product reflects light from the sun. Direct sunlight is one cause of building heat-up.The tech should also channel heat away from within the structure, according to Chris Cesare, writing about the technology in Stanford News.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 

FTC: Online billing service deceptively collected medical records
An online service allowing consumers to pay their medical bills failed to adequately inform them that it would also try to collect highly detailed medical information from their pharmacies, medical labs and insurance companies, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission said.The FTC has reached a proposed settlement with PaymentsMD, an Atlanta health billing company, and former CEO Michael Hughes requiring the company to destroy any medical information it collected related to its separate online medical records service, Patient Health Report, the agency said Wednesday.PaymentsMD "deceptively" used the sign-up process for its billing service to seek customers' consent to obtain detailed medical information, the FTC said in a press release.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 

Seven things to know about the dual-screen YotaPhone 2
Yota Devices is more than any other smartphone vendor daring to be different with the dual-screen YotaPhone 2, which stands out with its electronic paper display that can be used to read and access apps.The second-generation smartphone was presented Wednesday at an event in London. Here's a rundown of some of the key points we learned about the device:What can the two screens be used for?The YotaPhone 2 has two Gorilla Glass-protected screens; a regular 5-inch full HD screen on one side and a touch-enabled 4.7-inch electronic paper display with a 960 by 540 pixel resolution on the other. That's a big improvement on both counts compared to the original YotaPhone. The 5-inch screen works like any other smartphone screen. The always-on paper display can, of course, be used to read books, but it's also possible to mirror applications from the regular screen. Users can also configure panels to access, for example, apps or contacts directly from the paper display.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 

Capriza drags and drops enterprise apps to a mobile-first world
Capriza has long offered a drag-and-drop tool for porting Web apps from desktops to smartphones, and now is extending it to work with tablets.The growing popularity of smartphones and tablets has put pressure on CIOs to let users access existing apps from those devices. While Web technologies offer the promise of apps that work across different platforms, the user interface doesn't always translate well between big laptop displays and small smartphone and tablet screens.To transform an app to fit the smaller screens, Capriza offers a design tool that lets users drag and drop functions from an existing desktop app, which is shown in one window, to a smartphone, a simulation of which is displayed in a second screen.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 

FIRST LOOK: Firefox 34
The fact that modern browsers update silently and often occasionally takes some of the savor out of a new release. Rapid releases mean new features are deployed in a dribble, rather than in bursts. With Firefox 34, however, Mozilla has bucked the trend, giving us a swath of new features to enjoy all at once. Have a look. Read More
 

OpenDNS reinforces cloud security with ties to Check Point, ZeroFOX, others
OpenDNS has developed a partner API that lets security vendors connect their technologies to the OpenDNS cloud for enforcement, effectively extending protection to any device no matter where it connects to the Internet. OpenDNS CEO David Ulevitch The first two such partners are Check Point and ZeroFOX, and the company will announce another dozen or so partners over the next few months, says OpenDNS CEO David Ulevitch. + Also on Network World: How the cloud is changing the security game +To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 

Qualcomm hopes to cure Wi-Fi rage with enterprise platform
Using Wi-Fi networks in crowded environments can be a soul-destroying experience, but next-generation access points powered by Qualcomm chipsets will use a new antenna technology to ease the pain.Wi-Fi has become a victim of its own success, leaving busy networks simply unable to handle all the laptops, smartphones and tablets we use today.+ ALSO ON NETWORK WORLD What you should know about SDN and Wi-Fi +The problem is that access points or wireless routers use short time slots to communicate with only one user at a time, and as more users get connected networks get overloaded. New antenna technology MU-MIMO (multi user-multiple-input multiple-output) will help change that by letting 802.11ac networks transmit data to many users simultaneously.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 

Amazon Web Services tweaks cloud pricing structure
Amazon Web Services is providing more payment options for its cloud-based virtual machines, allowing users to lock in a price and pay either entirely upfront, or throughout the life of a one- or three-year contract.AWS has a variety of ways customers can pay for using its cloud-based virtual machines. The most common is an on-demand pricing model where customers enter credit card information and pay for virtual machines by the hour.For customers who plan to use the resources for a longer period of time, AWS offers Reserved Instances (RI) that carry a contract of either one or three years. Previously customers had to pay for those RIs up front, but today AWS announced that customers can pay for the RIs throughout the life of the contract.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 

DARPA looks to connect complex system security dots and wipe out malicious cyber attacks
High-end cybercriminals count on the fact that modern-day enterprise computer systems tend to be intricate and complicated. So sophisticated and dense that they let few people or other systems gain any significant visibility into their real machinery and software.They are in fact mysterious black boxes.The researchers at DARPA think its time for a change in the way security is handled in such systems and later this month will detail a program they call Transparent Computing (TC) they says "will develop technologies to record and preserve the provenance of all system elements/components (inputs, software modules, processes, etc.); dynamically track the interactions and causal dependencies among cyber system components; assemble these dependencies into end-to-end system behaviors; and reason over these behaviors, both forensically and in real-time."To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 

Is Sprint's new half-off deal a desperation move?
  Sprint donned its boxing gloves with an extravagant offer to cut monthly wireless rate plans in half for new customers who switch to Sprint from either Verizon Wireless or AT&T.The new "Cut Your Bill in Half" offer, which starts Friday, notably doesn't apply to T-Mobile customers. Sprint is clearly positioning itself to take back the "top value in wireless" crown from T-Mobile, which has dominated headlines for more than a year with its new and unusual pricing and contract plans.MORE ON NETWORK WORLD: 12 most powerful Internet of Things companies Whether Sprint can afford to attract new customers by cutting costs so drastically, and at the risk of imperiling its already shaky revenues and profits, remains to be seen.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here Read More
 

Quick look: NASA Orion's critical test mission
  NASA will this week launch Orion, which is destined to fly humans to the moon, asteroids and Mars. Read More
 

 

SLIDESHOWS

14 go-to tools for Mac sysadmins

Mac pro Gerard Allen shares his must-have sysadmin tools for enterprise Apple deployments.

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MOST-READ STORIES of 2014

1. FIRST LOOK: Firefox 34

2. The Best IT Resume Tips of 2014

3. Why there's no open-source standard-bearer for the network

4. Unreleased Sony movies leak after hack; Sony may suspect North Korea

5. Peeping into 73,000 unsecured security cameras thanks to default passwords

6. Imagine traveling in an airliner without access to any of your personal electronic devices

7. The Linux holiday shopping guide

8. BYOD is saving serious money for IT

9. How UPS uses analytics to drive down costs (and no, it doesn't call it big data)

10. Network slowdowns are the biggest issue for IT, survey shows


 
 

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