IBM’s paranoid defense of its mainframe monopoly is going to be tested again but this time if it blows the start-up out of the water, or denies it clearance to compete, it’ll be messing with an open source operation, and a European open source start-up to boot.

The European Commission, an admitted open source advocate, is already entertaining at least one known complaint about IBM’s allegedly anti-competitive behavior in the mainframe market.

The new would-be mainframe player is a Franco-American start-up called TurboHercules SAS.

It wants to commercialize the Hercules open source mainframe emulator that’s been in development by a community of IBM mainframers for the last 10 years, and sell it to mainframe shops so they can use x86- or Itanium-based PCs ostensibly for the test and development of mainframe applications.

Hercules is a software implementation of IBM’s System/370, ESA/390 and z/Architecture instruction set, but not IBM’s companion operating systems, and although Hercules has never been commercialized before, it is, for all intents and purposes, the only existing alternative to IBM.

But right away TurboHercules has got a problem because it needs an IBM operating system and IBM ties its mainframe operating systems to its hardware, a fact that should make it the subject of an antitrust investigation but hasn’t lately.

See, IBM is specifically forbidden to tie under the lingering terms of its now-dissolved 1956 consent decree with the United States government.

But IBM has so far evaded capture. Last year it bought Platform Solutions, one of the last companies to sue it for antitrust for tying the OS to the mainframe, to hush the complaint and get PSI’s cheaper, z/OS-capable Itanium boxes off the market.

TurboHercules president Bill Miller, an American who used to work for Softway Systems, the Interix Unix-to-NT interoperability shop that Microsoft bought way back when, says that, being incorporated in France, TurboHercules wrote to the head of IBM France in July asking that IBM loosen up its license enough to let the start-up function.

It wants IBM to let its mainframe customers use their 64-bit z/OS, z/VM and z/VSE – or even older 31-bit and 24-bit – operating systems on a TurboHercules configuration as IBM used to permit before its change of policy in 2000. They would pay IBM a reasonable licensing fee for the privilege.

TurboHercules hasn’t heard back yet.

Miller says there are mainframe shops and schools that would kill for such a device. Universities that can’t afford a mainframe could start teaching mainframe programming again. Mainframe sites could use it for ancillary workloads, training, demonstrations, pre- and post-processing, data preparation and archiving.

Anyway, in the absence of an answer from IBM TurboHercules turned up at Intel’s Developer Forum this week claiming to have found a niche it can occupy in mainframe disaster recovery/business continuity without violating IBM’s myriad proscriptions.

It says there’s a provision in the IBM license that allows IBM operating system software to run temporarily on an alternate machine in the event the customer’s mainframe is inoperable.

TurboHercules doesn’t need to touch the IBM OS to back up a system, merely to restore it.

TurboHercules probably can’t make a living at such a thing, which would likely be popular only with mainframes that had gone off maintenance, or sites that can’t afford a new mainframe, and none of its people have given up their day jobs yet but it’s hoping IBM will either voluntarily relent or be finally pushed to it by the regulators.

The start-up says it a press release that it “hopes to benefit from IBM’s long-standing support of open source software.” In other words it’s trying to stick IBM none too subtly between a rock and a hard place.

It wouldn’t take much to banter about the conclusion – voiced by T3 Technologies (T3T), once the second-largest mainframe systems integrator in the world, in a still-pending antitrust suit lodged against IBM at the end of 2007 – that Big Blue is nothing but a big fraud and hypocrite and “postures itself as a champion of open systems and standards,” demanding that competitors like Microsoft provide reasonable and non-discriminatory access to interoperability information, but won’t do it itself.

IBM is said to be sensitive about its image.

Anyway, TurboHercules co-founder Tom Lehmann observes that “In these tough economic times smaller mainframe shops, as well as state and local governments, are looking for ways to reduce costs and still meet their obligations in the event of a disaster.”

An unidentified mainframe site has got a prototype TurboHercules backup system installed (see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q8km-xOD2vc).

Due to IBM’s licensing restrictions, the demo TurboHercules ran at IDF was reportedly limited to IBM’s older MVS 3.8j mainframe operating system and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server for System z. There’s no problem running z/Linux on the thing. The demo was hosted on Windows Server 2008 on Nehalem and Itanium processors.

Hercules is reportedly spiffier in some respects than its mighty clone.

The widgetry, which can run under Linux, Windows (98, NT, 2000 and XP), Solaris, FreeBSD and Mac OS X (10.3 and later), is supposed to be able to run mainframe apps with the performance of a multi-hundred MIPS mainframe on a single Intel-based server.

Otherwise, TurboHercules means to provide corporate users with commercial services, and provides free downloads and documentation for Hercules installed on Windows and Linux host systems. Its voyage to a recent Share user group meeting suggested that there may be more use of TurboHercules in the corporate world than anybody suspects.

On its web site the start-up says that in the next few months it will be releasing “fully tested commercial distributions to match several real-world scenarios. Our preliminary assessment is that there are several important – albeit not necessarily mission-critical – ways in which Hercules can be deployed in mainframe shops.” It will be offering SLAs.

Hercules is available under the Q Public License to avoid what its community called the “political baggage” of the GPL.

Roger Bowler, the creator of Hercules, is a TurboHercules co-founder.

By the way, IBM filed two motions for summary judgment against T3T on August 30. T3T has until October 14 to respond. That’s likely the last obstacle IBM can throw at it. If it survives, its antitrust case could get to trial sometime in Q1. T3T is also waiting to hear whether the European Commission will open a formal investigation of IBM on its complaint.

Linux creator Linus Torvalds said at LinuxCon this week that Linux is “getting bloated” and that “it’s a problem.”

“I’d love to say we have a plan,” he lamented. “I mean, sometimes it’s a bit sad and we’re definitely not the streamlined hyper-efficient kernel that I had envisioned 15 years ago….The kernel is huge and bloated, and our icache footprint is scary. I mean there’s no question about that.”

Linux Foundation chief Jim Zemlin thinks “bloated for a good reason” would be a “more accurate quote” since Linux is now asked to do so many multi-purpose high-caloric things, but that’s not what Linus said or apparently meant because he also said that every time a feature is added to the kernel the problem gets worse, robbing Linux’ followers of one of the brickbats they throw at Microsoft.

According to an Intel study Linux performance has dropped about 2% with every release. That makes 12% over the last 10 releases.

Something like 10,923 lines of code are added to the Linux kernel every day, adding up to 2.7 million in the last year, whereas 5,547 are deleted every day.

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Adobe Unveils Flash Platform Services

Red Hat Navigates the Summer Doldrums Well

Penguin-On-Demand Goes with Panasas Storage

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Google’s Out Shopping

Intel Futures

Microsoft’s Cloud Builder Floats to Cisco

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IBM Buys RedPill’s Business

Jahia Launches in the Cloud

Cloudy Weather Report

Ex-SAP CEO on Wipro Board

EDS Morphs into HP Enterprise Services

Microsoft Goes with Stockholder ‘Say on Pay’

SCO Told To Rebut Novell’s Appeal-of-a-Appeal

Well, I never.

Microsoft has started a 501.c6 non-profit open source foundation, a bipolar strategy greeted by suspicion, hoots, catcalls, defamation and virtual mooning by the open source set.

It’s called the CodePlex Foundation, which is not to be confused with Codeplex.com, Microsoft’s version of Sourceforge hosting a reported 10,000 projects. Microsoft is kicking in a million dollars to meet the organization’s first-year expenses. After that other folk, who haven’t been recruited yet, are supposed to contribute to its maintenance.

Imagine a kinda halfway house where proprietary software companies and the open source left can exchange source code, but not patent portfolios, hammer out interoperability and in general try to work out their differences in development methodologies and intellectual property.

It’s supposed to increase commercial participation in open source projects either through IP contributions to the foundation under a standard open source license – which one, it says, depends on the project – or through time volunteered to open source projects.

It’s assumed the projects selected will ultimately be good for Microsoft somehow but rights are supposed to extend in perpetuity to downstream developers and users. Copyrights will be assigned to the Foundation.

The idea is to be broader based than the foundations that represent particular projects, platforms or applications, such as Firefox and the Mozilla Foundation, or Gnome and the Gnome Foundation.

The plans, including a charter that articulates the kinds of projects the Foundation works with, and what relationship the Foundation will have with those projects, are currently supposed to be rough-hewn or non-existent so that other people can refine them in accordance with your typical open source process.

Microsoft said, “We don’t have it all figured out yet. We know that commercial software developers are under-represented on open source projects. We know that commercial software companies face very specific challenges in determining how to engage with open source communities. We know that there are misunderstandings on both sides. Our aim is to advance the IT industry for both commercial software companies and open source communities by helping to meet these challenges.”

It caught hell for not having broader participation, proving that it was in a no-win situation. If it did, it would have caught hell for that too.

To address the many eyebrows raised by such a thing, Microsoft explained that it has “an evolving engagement with open source” – (well, that’s one way of putting it) – “as demonstrated by its sponsorship of the Apache Software Foundation, contributions to the PHP Community, participation in Apache projects including the Hadoop project and the Qpid project, and participation in various community events such as OSCON, EclipseCon, PyCon and the Moodle Conference.” It skipped over the other faucets of its relationship with open source.

It also claimed to see a “convergence of maturing technology and evolving business models,” an inflection point “where more commercial companies are willing to participate in open source projects” and “a great opportunity to drive change.”

The CodePlex Foundation will be run on an interim basis by Sam Ramji, Microsoft’s departing open source interlocutor, who’s bolting Microsoft for some kind of cloud bivouac on September 25. Microsoft has yet to name a replacement, but Ramji will stay with the Foundation for next few months.

He and the Microsoft-dominated CodePlex board are supposed to replace themselves in the next 100 days with representatives from commercial software companies and open source communities.

Current board members include Bill Staples, general manager of Microsoft’s web platform and tools team; Stephanie Boesch, a Microsoft .NET Framework program manager; Miguel de Icaza, Novell VP, developer platform; Britt Johnston, a Microsoft product unit manager for data and modeling; and Shaun Walker, DotNetNuke co-founder.

Microsoft says “there are a number of ways for individuals and companies to participate in the Foundation – via sponsorship, or by becoming a member of the board of directors or board of advisors.” So it’s not taking members per se.

According to the CodePlex charter, the board sets the Foundation’s “vision and policy.”

Its advisory board, described as the “conscience of the Foundation,” includes VA founder and SugerCRM interim CEO Larry Augustin; MySQL co-inventor Monty Widenius; MindTouch CEO Aaron Fulkerson; Microsoft CodePlex.com chief Sara Ford; HP FOSSology lead architect Robert Gobbeille; Microsoft SubText chief Phil Haack; Microsoft Developer Division principal program manager Scott Hanselman; Microsoft IronRuby creator John Lam; Microsoft NUnit and XUnit.NET co-author Jim Newkirk; Microsoft director of technology, licensing and customer advocacy Monty O’Kelley and Interix Unix-on-NT founder and Microsoft acquisition Stephen Walli, now a consultant.

All the Microsoft people have open source or Unix credentials.

The Foundation will be run by a small staff beginning with deputy director Mark Stone, formerly with O’Reilly and VA Linux.

See Codeplex.org.

For its next trick, the unquenchable, super-ambitious Google is gonna try taking over the US government.

On Tuesday, after the first federal CIO Vivek Kundra unveiled Apps.gov, a thinly populated, GSA-managed, almost completely salesforce.com- and Google-dominated web store where federal agencies are supposed to go to get GSA-sanctioned cloud applications and “coming soon” infrastructure services as well as free software like YouTube, Facebook and MySpace, Google said that by next year it would have a government-specific version of Google Apps that meet security requirements and complies with the Federal Information security Management Act (FISMA) and such.

It’s also working on a government cloud, set for debut in 2010, that promises to keep the data inside the United States of America operated by people with security clearances.

Then there’s Google for the Public Sector, the company’s own shop for tools and advice on exploiting Google Earth, Google Maps and YouTube.

The company is currently working on FISMA certification for Google Apps and is reportedly close; its government data centers will be next. The validation could really rev its engines.

According to a blog by Amazon CTO Werner Vogels, GSA CIO Casey Coleman figures 45% of federal computing could go to the cloud, which means that Amazon and Microsoft and IBM, at least, which didn’t seem to make the Apps.gov cut, are gonna want a piece of this action.

You can count on it there are going to be cloud wars over Washington.

Google’s widgetry will be targeted at all levels of government: federal, state and local so they’ll have to try to standardize on stuff like background checks.

So far Google doesn’t have any takers, though it’s supposed to be talking to government folk, and pricing is still up in the air, or at least hasn’t been discussed publicly, and issues like privacy and security haven’t really been completely worked out.

However, the cloud-bewitched Obama administration has mandated that agencies adopt certain cloud services by 2011 in an effort to save money. According to Kundra, “We spend over $77 billion on information technology. We serve over 300 million customers across the country with our 10,000 systems. But what we’ve been doing is building data center after data center and frankly it has driven the costs across the board and has led to a doubling of energy consumption.”

The cloud, as opposed to the current fashion of agencies having their own systems, in some cases many systems, is supposed to make government procurement more efficient and cheaper. It’s unclear what agencies that already have software-as-a-service system are supposed to do.

The White House is supposed to seek funding for pilot cloud projects in next year’s budget that define what existing workloads can be offloaded and what new services can be built on the cloud. The programs are expected to see lightweight applications rolled out to users.

Shades of the Blitz! Cloud Wars Loom over Washington
Microsoft Beta Tests Feature-Incomplete Web Apps
Microsoft Starts Open Source Foundation
Data Liberation Front Promises Escape from Google
EC Wrong, Wrong, Wrong – and Sloppy To Boot: Intel
Adobe To Spend $18b on Omniture, Or Will It?
Oracle Sales Come Up Short
Intel Loses its General Counsel to Apple
CA To Acquire NetQoS for $200m
Citrix XenApp Gets VM-based Delivery
Doyenz ShadowCloud Promises SMBs Business Continuity
eBay Sued by Skype Inventors for Infringement
Citrix Adds to NetScaler MPX Line
Jigsaw Releases its APIs
NetSuite Makes Another Lunge at SAP’s Base
Oracle Enhances Berkeley DB
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Will Oracle Have To Fire Half of Sun?
Has Oracle Put Teradata in Play?
DOJ Takes Deeper Dive into Microsoft-Yahoo Deal
This Bing Thing is Working
Chrome Polish
Linux Foundation Continues Sweep
Q2 PC Sales Down 4.3%
Status Quo
Recession Watch
HP Board Taps Andreessen
The Twitter Bubble

Shades of the Blitz! Cloud Wars Loom over Washington

Microsoft Beta Tests Feature-Incomplete Web Apps

Microsoft Starts Open Source Foundation

Data Liberation Front Promises Escape from Google

EC Wrong, Wrong, Wrong – and Sloppy To Boot: Intel

Adobe To Spend $18b on Omniture, Or Will It?

Oracle Sales Come Up Short

Intel Loses its General Counsel to Apple

CA To Acquire NetQoS for $200m

Citrix XenApp Gets VM-based Delivery

Doyenz ShadowCloud Promises SMBs Business Continuity

eBay Sued by Skype Inventors for Infringement

Citrix Adds to NetScaler MPX Line

Jigsaw Releases its APIs

NetSuite Makes Another Lunge at SAP’s Base

Oracle Enhances Berkeley DB

WaveMaker Integrates with RightScale

Will Oracle Have To Fire Half of Sun?

Has Oracle Put Teradata in Play?

DOJ Takes Deeper Dive into Microsoft-Yahoo Deal

This Bing Thing is Working

Chrome Polish

Linux Foundation Continues Sweep

Q2 PC Sales Down 4.3%

Status Quo

Recession Watch

HP Board Taps Andreessen

The Twitter Bubble

Like any pleased-with-herself three-and-a-half-year-old showing off her lace panties, start-up switch house Blade Network Technologies was flaunting its heady $230 million valuation Wednesday after closing a $10 million B round.

The largely institutional round – and let’s remember traditional VCs are ducking down any convenient rat hole these days – was led by NEC with help from Blade OEM Juniper Networks, existing Blade backer Garnett & Helfrich Capital – ex-Oracle lieutenant Terry Garnett’s venture buyout operation – and a mysterious silent investor, reportedly a big tech company that doesn’t want people to know where its money is going.

How utterly beguiling. A veiled lady in a little black dress.

The valuation was five times what the company was worth at the time of its $30 million A round in early’06.

Blade claims to leads the data center revolution for high-speed, cloud-ready networking, a proposition that, say, oh, Cisco might take exception to, but then Blade would retort that it holds a commanding 48% market share lead over Cisco in blade server networking, which, as you can guess from its name, is its specialty.

It all depends on how thin you slice the pie and if that particular slice is the only one that’s hot.

Blade is supposed to use the money to develop stuff like a 64-port 10G top-of-rack switch and software as well as for global sales and marketing for its continuing assault on Cisco.

Not that it seems to need much help. A pre-collapse Nortel Networks spin-out, Blade says that despite the economic maelstrom that took the wind out of Cisco’s sails it had a record quarter ending July 31 with revenues up over 30% when shipped its six-millionth Ethernet switch port. It claims 300 of the Fortune 500 as customers.

It claims it’s profitable and will do $100 million the next 12 months.

Of course it helps that it sells through HP and IBM – which between them own the blade market – as well NEC and Verari Systems, some of the folks Cisco alienated with its Unified Computing server thrust. Any of these boys could, of course, be Blade’s mystery investor.

Blade’s got what it calls Cloud-Ready Network Architecture solutions aimed at next-generation data centers where virtual machine awareness, ultra-high performance, extremely low latency, simplified management, lower cost and energy efficiency are key.

Its gigE switches for blade servers support multi-vendor, virtualized data center environments, promising performance coupled with lower TCO.

The trick is in the software in both its embedded and top-of-rack switches. Blade recently broke new ground with the industry’s first 1,000 port Ethernet VMready switch and the first FCoE-ready blade server switch. It’s also championed a concept called “Rackonomics,” a way of scaling data centers by duplicating racks of servers and disk drives with connectivity through its switches, your basic rack-to-go.

A few days ago Blade announced that its 1,000 virtual port VMready switch-resident software is available for HP’s BladeSystems and HP’s 1:10Gb Ethernet BL-c switch. It’s already available on IBM’s 1/10Gb Ethernet Switch Module.

The widgetry is supposed to enable virtualization across the data center infrastructure rather than just the individual servers – a technique that’s supposed to be good for energy efficiency, business continuity, productivity and resource utilization.

Being VM-aware, virtual machines can be added, subtracted and moved around, as VM are wont to do, without losing their ACLs, QoS and VLAN attributes.

According to Blade, which maintains that traditional switches are blind to VM-specific traffic, “In today’s bandwidth-intensive virtualization infrastructures, network policies must move along with virtual machines to maintain application performance, availability and security.”

VMready is supposed to manage and measure VM traffic and assign network parameters per VM, as well as maintain consistent network settings during VM migrations, allowing for workload balancing and HA failover.

Nothing changes on the server since it runs on the switch, leaving more CPU oomph for the virtual machines, and it’s all automatic.

Blade claims other advantages over both its Cisco and Arista rivals.

Unlike, say, Cisco’s Nexus 1000V software switch, its widgetry works with all the hypervisors, VMware ESX 3.x and vSphere, Microsoft, Xen, KVM and OracleVM. It says it doesn’t entail complex changes to the hypervisor, it’s standards-based, not a lock-in, it’s simpler and offers more performance and scalability. And it’s way cheaper, anywhere from $160k-$500k less than Cisco for a rack of blade servers with 128 CPU sockets running vSphere Enterprise.

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VMware Goes Head-to-Head with EC2
The easiest way to build a bridge between private and public clouds is to own both ends of the bridge, which is exactly what VMware is proposing to do with a scheme it calls vCloud Express.
VMware figures it’s got the internal private cloud covered with its vSphere widgetry.
Now it’s started building from the other side and has recruited a bunch of services providers to build external or public clouds that instantly connect with VMware-based widgetry, rapidly provisioning the stuff on-demand and asking users only to pay for what they use by the hour with a credit card à la Amazon, all managed by the same tools like, say, RightScale’s migration skills.
Poof! It’s nominally solved the interoperability and portable issues associated with clouds – though not the proprietary lock-in – and dodged the problem of making it necessary for an application to be written specifically for a particular cloud.
The external cloud widgetry is also supposed to be cheaper than Amazon – like cheaper by half – and support more operating systems though no more hypervisors.
The company has Terremark, the managed hoster where VMware has some money parked, BlueLock and Hosting.com in the US, Logica in EMEA and Melbourne IT in APAC beta testing its vCloud Express public cloud widgetry and their own services. Some will have production-grade SLAs; initially most are thinking prototyping and development.
VMware claims to have amassed a following of a thousand service providers in the last year, which would appear to put it ahead of the eight ball, but most of them don’t have an infrastructure-as-a-service platform, according to Forrester.
vCloud Express depends on a REST-based API for application vendors, service providers and enterprise IT that VMware means to have standardized.

The easiest way to build a bridge between private and public clouds is to own both ends of the bridge, which is exactly what VMware is proposing to do with a scheme it calls vCloud Express.

VMware figures it’s got the internal private cloud covered with its vSphere widgetry.

Now it’s started building from the other side and has recruited a bunch of services providers to build external or public clouds that instantly connect with VMware-based widgetry, rapidly provisioning the stuff on-demand and asking users only to pay for what they use by the hour with a credit card à la Amazon, all managed by the same tools like, say, RightScale’s migration skills.

Poof! It’s nominally solved the interoperability and portable issues associated with clouds – though not the proprietary lock-in – and dodged the problem of making it necessary for an application to be written specifically for a particular cloud.

The external cloud widgetry is also supposed to be cheaper than Amazon – like cheaper by half – and support more operating systems though no more hypervisors.

The company has Terremark, the managed hoster where VMware has some money parked, BlueLock and Hosting.com in the US, Logica in EMEA and Melbourne IT in APAC beta testing its vCloud Express public cloud widgetry and their own services. Some will have production-grade SLAs; initially most are thinking prototyping and development.

VMware claims to have amassed a following of a thousand service providers in the last year, which would appear to put it ahead of the eight ball, but most of them don’t have an infrastructure-as-a-service platform, according to Forrester.

vCloud Express depends on a REST-based API for application vendors, service providers and enterprise IT that VMware means to have standardized.

VMware Goes Head-to-Head with EC2
Word Saved from Ban
VMware vCloud API Spec Sent to DMTF for Standardization
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Altor’s Firewall Moves to the Hypervisor
Pentaho Offer Proprietary BI Users an ‘Escape’
Citrix XenDesktop Goes 3D
Queplix Unveils QueCloud Platform
Astaro Offers VMware Users a Free Firewall
Verizon’s Cloud Spreads to Europe
Kace Spiffs Up its Application Virtualization
EMC Buys Kazeon
Adaptive Computing Delivers Moab for IBM Systems
VMware Claims VM Density Leadership
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Cisco Invests in Korea
VMM R2 RTMs
Lenovo & VMware Expand Deal
Red Hat Releases Network Satellite 5.3
SAS Says ‘No Sale’
Broadcom Settles Backdating Claims for $118m

VMware Goes Head-to-Head with EC2
Word Saved from Ban
VMware vCloud API Spec Sent to DMTF for Standardization
Red Hat Aims To Grind a Magic Key To Unlock All Clouds
CA CEO To Step Down
IBM Unveils Industry’s First Public Desktop Cloud
Server Sales Crater
eBay Sells 65% of Skype
Sun Loses Another $147m
Red Hat Commercializes KVM Virtualization
VMware Betas Free VMware Go
Intel To Resell vSphere 4 to SMB Customers
EMC Buys FastScale
HP Delivers Sub-$1k VMware-based VDI Solution
Wipro Harnesses Oracle for SaaS Platform
Savvis Promises Push-Button Virtual Private Data Centers
Altor’s Firewall Moves to the Hypervisor
Pentaho Offer Proprietary BI Users an ‘Escape’
Citrix XenDesktop Goes 3D
Queplix Unveils QueCloud Platform
Astaro Offers VMware Users a Free Firewall
Verizon’s Cloud Spreads to Europe
Kace Spiffs Up its Application Virtualization
EMC Buys Kazeon
Adaptive Computing Delivers Moab for IBM Systems
VMware Claims VM Density Leadership
Cisco & EMC Talking Joint Venture: WSJ
Sony Pre-Installs Chrome
EMC Co-Founder Commits Suicide
Nokia’s First Netbook Carries Heady Price
Gmail Down Again
Adobe Buys Business Catalyst
Cisco Invests in Korea
VMM R2 RTMs
Lenovo & VMware Expand Deal
Red Hat Releases Network Satellite 5.3
SAS Says ‘No Sale’
Broadcom Settles Backdating Claims for $118m

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