How time flies: 50 years of digital imaging

It was 50 years ago this spring that Russell Kirsch of NIST thought to find a way to digitize photographs and put them on a computer.

DHS: Additional SBINet wireless test will teach lessons

DHS will begin a second wireless test of its Border Net project in the Great Lakes region to build on lessons learned in the Arizona pilot test.

B-52 gets a facelift

The Air Force has awarded a contract to Boeing to install Integrated Weapons Interface Units on B-52 bombers, increasing its ability to deliver precision-guided weapons.

A thousand hands make light work

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Microsoft is dead, long live Google

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Back from the future

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Signals of opportunity

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Geospatial One-Stop

The Geospatial One-Stop project ' sponsored by the Office of Management and Budget ' wants your data.

Live free or die

Free software is free not in the sense of price, but in the sense that it comes with no restrictions on the user.

HSIN's unsteady path

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Dual-core, multifaceted

Dual-core laptops have lots of power and features, but no two are alike. The GCN Lab tests eight models and finds they come in a wide array of configurations, from no frills to supercharged.

Write me to the moon

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GIS greens San Francisco

The Urban Forest Mapping Project allows the city's existing and newly planted trees to be tracked, and the city to map future planting locations and calculate costs.

GCN at 25: March of the microprocessors

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R. Fink | As ye sue, so shall ye reap?

Repercussions from the Microsoft/Linux lawsuit are being felt in the bunkers.

Shawn McCarthy | Where to get help on DOD security training

DOD IT managers facing requirements for information assurance training can find help.

Technical difficulties

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Mimi Browning | CTOs ' Bringing back the IT edge

IT Strategy'commentary: A good chief technology officer can restore the IT edge CIOs used to have.

Wyatt Kash | Service on demand

The government's focus on service-oriented architectures could make on-demand software a viable option.

Melanie Wyne | Software of Choice

Melanie Wyne, director of public policy at the Computing Technology Industry Association, disagrees with the good-or-evil argument about free and proprietary software.<br><br>

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