Monday, June 9, 2014

Why you should try DuckDuckGo on your iPhone

Andy Patrizio: Intel finally gives enthusiast some horsepower
Your Morning Countdown
Share this email
June 09, 2014 Read about why you should try the DuckDuckGo search engine on your iPhone
10. Andy Patrizio: Intel finally gives enthusiast some horsepower

9. Peter Smith: No, unplugging Kinect won't make your Xbox One 10% faster

8. Verizon threatens to sue Netflix in war of words over video quality

7. Phil Johnson: Apple's HealthKit could take the fun out of dessert [CARTOON]

6. Keith Shaw: 30 Years of Tetris
WEBCAST: IBM

Reinventing Storage Efficiency!
Live event: Tuesday, June 17, 2014 1 PM ET / 12 PM CT / 10 AM PT What if you could reduce your storage costs by half? Attend this webcast to hear how you can maximize the economics of your data center by modifying your storage footprint and power usage using Flash Storage, and to learn how IBM is accelerating storage efficiency.
Register Now

5. Melanie Pinola: Beautify your desktop with Bing homepage backgrounds

4. Snowden leaks after one year: Wrangling over the meaning of 'bulk'

3. Andy Patrizio: The DDR4 floodgate opens at Computex

2. US Army warns of database breaches in South Korea

1. Kevin Purdy: Here's why DuckDuckGo works great in iPhone's Safari
: Logicalis

Logicalis eBook: SAP HANA: The Need for Speed
Without timely business insights, organizations today can suffer logistical, manufacturing, and even financial disaster in a matter of minutes. Considering the vast amounts of data being collected by these organizations, the need for real-time business analytics for big data is essential.
View Now

Most Popular
US researcher banned for mining bitcoin using university supercomputers

The Key to Happiness: Throw out Your Data Warehouse

Computex offers a glimpse of future technologies and gear

Networking Trends in 2014

Graph databases find answers for the sick and their healers

WHITE PAPER: Imperva

IPS and NGFWs Leave Dangerous Gaps in Enterprise Security
Firewalls and intrusion prevention systems don't provide sufficient protections for most public-facing websites or internal business-critical and custom Web applications. Here, we explain how Web application firewalls help security leaders better protect Web applications in their organizations.
Learn more!


You are currently subscribed to itworld_morning_countdown as garn14.tech@blogger.com.
Unsubscribe from this newsletter | Manage your subscriptions | Subscribe | Privacy Policy

If you are interested in advertising in this newsletter, please contact: sean_weglage@itworld.com
To contact ITworld, please send an e-mail to online@itworld.com.

Copyright (C) 2014 ITworld, 492 Old Connecticut Path, Framingham, MA 01701.

** Please do not reply to this message. If you want to contact someone directly, send an e-mail to online@itworld.com.

Follow ITworld
Google +
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Share this email

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.