Three personal firewalls repel the invaders
Broadband is a two-edged sword for network administrators who must keep field offices, industry partners and telecommuters connected to agency headquarters LANs.
Evolving standards expand wireless reach
Wireless technology is changing the way the world works'or, at least, where it works. Digital pagers, cellular and Personal Communications Services (PCS) phones, personal digital assistants and handheld PCs, and wireless notebook PCs have freed many users from their cubicles and offices.
Air Force survey seeks and helps solve network problems
When the Air Force began surveying network infrastructures at its bases around the world, engineers found some misconfigured servers that were causing lots of problems.
Navy knowledge project focuses on methods
A knowledge management pilot at the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command in San Diego recently received an award from the Navy chief information officer's Knowledge-centric Organization Implementation Assistance Team for advancing electronic government.
Farm Service Agency adds services to its Web site
JAN. 17—The Farm Service Agency today unveiled a redesigned Web site that includes agency forms and other features.
INTERVIEW: John C. Mears, voice response expert
John C. Mears became president and chief executive officer of Microlog Corp. in November, having been co-president of the Germantown, Md., company along with Steve Delmar since last February.
Tivoli software assesses Web site's performance
Two software packages from Tivoli Systems Inc. monitor Web site performance.
New security products get up close and very personal
The security emphasis at the recent Comdex trade show was on new types of software and services for managing heterogeneous security structures.
Matlab 6 now includes a browserlike interface
Matlab 6, the latest version of the technical computing application from MathWorks Inc. of Natick, Mass., has a new desktop interface with a workspace browser, searchable Hypertext Markup Language help and a command history window showing past sessions.
INTERNAUT
It's always fun to kick off the year with a polemic or two. This year, several technology issues could start fights in federal, state and local governments.
USDA steadily cultivates e-gov
Implementing an easy-to-use electronic filing and retrieval system was one of the Agriculture Department's major electronic-government achievements last year.
Feds show off bulk-up plans for supercomputing muscle
The government's pursuit of supercomputing, which has provided the world's six fastest computers, is still picking up speed.
Customs inspectors get Web access to trade data
A $7 million International Trade Data System pilot soon will streamline paperwork for about 3,000 trucks per day that cross the U.S. border in Buffalo, N.Y.
Faster wireless technologies are in the air
Feeling disconnected? A wave of wireless connectivity products might soon cut the cord linking users to LAN servers while still giving them Ethernet-speed access.
POWER USER
We can all look forward this year to the arrival of an Intel Corp. microprocessor, the first in memory without a Microsoft Corp. operating system.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Regarding James M. Fitz-Gerald's letter, 'Don't jail hackers' [<a href="http://www.gcn.com/vol19_no33/letters/3271-1.html">GCN, Nov. 20, 2000, Page 20</a>]: Sorry, but I beg to differ with the position that the juvenile delinquent who hacked NASA should be given a 'token of appreciation' as 'a vital member of this society.'
EDITORIAL
In some sense hoisted by their own petard, Republican House leaders have been squabbling with one another over committee chairmanships. In a burst of zeal after gaining a majority in 1995, they vowed to rotate chairmanships every six years.
USPS launches secure messaging service for agencies
JAN. 17—The Postal Service has introduced a secure Internet messaging service that enables agencies to authenticate internal electronic correspondence.
The Net Plumber
The Web has 19 degrees of separation, according to a study by IBM Corp., Compaq Computer Corp. and AltaVista Co.
Lotus unveils knowledge, security products
JAN. 15—New knowledge management and security products for the Notes/Domino enterprise platform starred yesterday at the Lotusphere 2001 conference in Orlando, Fla.
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