4 agency apps highlight the power of mobile tech
Agencies are beginning to tailor public information and services to mobile users in new and exciting ways, and these four applications are just the beginning.
DOD working to enhance brain injury tools, assessments
The Pentagon is upgrading its chief brain injury assessment tool, but some officials are criticizing its reliability.
Microsoft plans major update for 'Mango' Windows Phone
Microsoft on April 13 unveiled a major tools update to come for Windows Phone "Mango," plus other developer news, at its MIX 11 developer conference.
First preview of IE 10 is here
Microsoft has debuted the first platform preview of IE 10, just four weeks after the final version of Internet Explorer 9 was released.
Justice, FBI bust 2 million-computer Coreflood botnet
Agents used a tactic new in the United States to disable malware on the long-running operation; 13 people were charged.
No lie: GSA backs Google on FISMA certification
The General Services Administration says its FISMA certification for Google's Apps for Government "remains intact" during review.
The Commodore 64 returns, seriously
One of the most user-friendly home computers ever made is being relaunched with a retro look and price, but with something extra under the hood.
Asia’s pool of IPv4 addresses is nearly dry
APNIC, the Regional Internet Registry for the Asia Pacific region, reached its last bundle of IPv4 addresses and now begins rationing the remaining supply. Adoption of IPv6 is the only alternative to exhaustion.
Why social media is worth your time
The Smithsonian Institution's CTO shares tips on how federal knowledge workers can adapt and learn from new technologies.
Analytics tool predicts the traffic for Bay Area drivers
The IBM Traffic Prediction Tool analyzes traffic data from sensors in roads, toll booths, bridges and intersections and combines it with GPS data from drivers' cell phones.
NIST Digital Archives include a few mysteries
The library and museum of the National Institute of Standards and Technology has launched the NIST Digital Archives to make the agency's history and research available to the online world, and perhaps identify some of its artifacts.
Surveillance at the genetic level: Is it possible?
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is seeking technologies that could track gene changes in bacteria and viruses.
Privacy battles move to the fore, but who are the good guys?
Sens. John Kerry and John McCain have introduced a bill to put limits on what companies can do with customers' personal information, but it's just one front in the ongoing debate.
Next-generation governance is the key to future IT success
Current governance techniques were devised in a less-connected age. The path forward lies in next-generation governance — not as a mere catch phrase, but as a tactile, sustainable method of operations, write Fred Knops and Mike Isman of Booz Allen Hamilton.
Is Windows 7 tops in the U.S. OS market? Maybe, maybe not.
While one source says that for the first time since its release in October 2009, Windows 7 has surpassed XP in U.S. market share, another wholeheartedly disagrees.
SP1 for Office for Mac due soon, while other users have to wait
Microsoft is readying the delivery of Service Pack 1 for Office 2010 and SharePoint 2010 in mid-summer, while Office for Mac 2011 users will get it later in April.
How standards could get cloud out of the 1970s
NIST is set to release a road map to establishing standards for cloud infrastructures, which Vint Cerf says are about where the Internet was in 1973.
Did Google lie about Apps for Government's FISMA certification?
Microsoft cites a Justice Department brief in claiming Google's government product isn't certified; Google says it's more secure than the version that is certified.
Qualified cyber pros in high demand but scarce supply
Government agencies need qualified cybersecurity specialists with active government clearances but are having difficulty finding them, a new study finds.
New cyber threats put government in the cross hairs
Symantec's Internet Security Threat Report details a shift toward online attacks that draw on social media information and target high-value victims, such as those in government.
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