| InfoWorld Daily PM | | | When we can no longer trust proprietary hardware or software, open source becomes the only option. | | | Issue highlights 1. Apple Dev Center hacker: I meant well 2. Adobe's PhoneGap 3.0 smooths the way for plug-ins 3. Are we in an enterprise startup bubble? 4. How Big Data Can Help Retailers Optimize Mobile | | Resource compliments of: Data+ Conference Data+ is the world's most authoritative conference on analyzing, predicting and monetizing big data. Learn how to build a data strategy for secure, accessible information for data visualization and reporting; integrate Hadoop, Cassandra, MapReduce, Hive, Hbase and other technologies into the enterprise; and more! Register now. | | The self-proclaimed white hat admits to breaching Apple Dev Center and taking user info, but only after warning company of vulnerabilities. READ MORE | | PhoneGap, Adobe's open source mobile application development framework, has been upgraded with a streamli READ MORE | | Around the time the Facebook IPO disappointed Wall Street and shares in Zynga shed more than half their value, the VC herd lost its infatuation with social and decided enterprise was the place to be. READ MORE | | Delivering a dynamic and engaging mobile experience is becoming essential to retailers, and big data marketing applications company BloomReach believes that its new big data application is the key. READ MORE | | White Paper: Symantec With the continuing proliferation of software and devices in the modern enterprise, manual patch management simply can't keep up. Managing Microsoft's monthly Patch Tuesday updates represents just the tip of the iceberg. Read Now! | | | | |
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