| | | INSIDER Alert | | Your guide to the top content posted this week for Insider members | | | | Computerworld My wife is wonderfully low tech, with an old, vanilla mobile phone. Last weekend she surprised me by deciding she now wants a phone with all the bells and whistles. I was worried that she’d been bitten by the new iPhone bug, which hit 9 million other people in one weekend, but her change of mind was more educated. She was learning from our kids. | | CIO In our ongoing series, career coach and strategist Donald Burns shows technology executives how to better transition from IT consulting back to corporate IT as he works with a client who's feet are planted firmly in both worlds. READ MORE | | InfoWorld Generally speaking, you should never expect anything you don't test regularly to work properly. This is true across all kinds of technologies, but the need for regular testing is often overlooked. Would you expect a car you parked in a barn two years ago to start today? If it did, you'd feel lucky. IT systems are no different. You shouldn't count on a successful site failover, to take one important example, if you haven't tested or maintained the systems that make it work. READ MORE | | Network World Whether you're protecting corporate data from internal leakers, hackers looking to steal money from you and your customers, foreign spies, your own government, or employees accidentally leaving their laptops in a taxi, encryption is today's hot go-to tool. READ MORE | | CIO There’s inevitable tension between enforcing global IT standardization and allowing flexibility at the local level. Here’s how to find the right balance. READ MORE | | CIO At Yum Restaurants International, the value of IT is business innovation. READ MORE | | | |
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