It's going to take a cap-and-trade bite out of the corporate wallet to get companies to cut data center power consumption.
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Frank Hayes
#amazonfail
Amazon.com's inept attempts to quell the outrage over the suppression of books' sales rankings holds lessons for IT everywhere.
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Don Tennant
Vacuous Steps
The Obama administration's announcement that it was authorizing U.S. telecom providers to forge service agreements with their counterparts in Cuba was vacuous at best.
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Mike Elgan
6 things that could ruin Twitter (and 5 that won't)
If you're a Twitter user, enjoy its many great qualities while they last, because they may not, writes columnist Mike Elgan. He finds several threats to Twitter, but also some that could be opportunities.
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Michael Gartenberg
Beyond 'Just say no': A framework for business mobile device adoption
Users want to use their mobile devices for business. IT has to meet them halfway.
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Frank Hayes
Energy efficiency: Just pennies a day?
Payoffs that amount to a few minutes of an employee's daily pay aren't going to convince businesses to go green, says columnist Frank Hayes.
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Don Tennant
Changing Behavior
It's going to take a cap-and-trade bite out of the corporate wallet to get companies to cut data center power consumption.
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Bart Perkins
No Easy Road to Industry Architecture
The hotel industry was the first to create an industrywide architecture, and it will benefit from improved data sharing, streamlined hotel processes, reduced costs and improved customer service. But agreeing on an industry architecture isn't easy.
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Mike Elgan
How to kill e-mail (before it kills you)
E-mail is a disease, writes columnist Mike Elgan, and by taking strong action to cure yourself, you'll radically reduce the quantity of messaging in your life, while improving its quality.
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