| InfoWorld Daily AM | | | The Firefox OS shows way too many rough edges once you start using applications, and the very cheap hardware from Chinese manufacturer ZTE doesn't help either. | | | Issue highlights 1. Whose self-driving car will you trust: Google or the automakers? 2. Why Microsoft .Net failed 3. Video: How quantum cryptography works | | Resource compliments of: Gartner, Inc. The World's Most Important Gathering of CIO and Senior IT Executives. Based on direct input from more than 2,000 CIOs, The CIO Program at Gartner Symposium/ITxpo 2013 offers targeted content and session formats of special relevance to the CIO community over the course of three intensive days. To learn more, click here. | | Driverless cars are coming, and Google wants to do more than design its software -- it wants to build the cars too. READ MORE | | Microsoft tried, but it couldn't win the hearts and minds of developers who weren't already indoctrinated -- and it alienated others along the way. READ MORE | | Once quantum computing comes into play, it's game over for conventional cryptography. Thus, quantum computing begats quantum cryptography. But how does quantum cryptography work, exactly? Let this video bring you up to speed. READ MORE | | White Paper: Citrix New ways of working call for new ways of managing risk. Mobility, flexwork, BYOD and increased collaboration across organizations have changed the risk profile and undermine existing IT architectures. This paper describes how desktop virtualization can help regain control and reduce risk without sacrificing business productivity and growth. Learn More | | | | |
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