| InfoWorld Daily PM | | | Independent IT consultants and developers in particular are screaming bloody murder over Microsoft's decision to the TechNet subscription program out to pasture. And they've begun fighting back. | | | Issue highlights 1. GitHub finally takes open source licenses seriously 2. Nine traits of the veteran network admin 3. Introducing InfoWorld's New Tech Forum 4. Microsoft Makes Data Mining Self-Service With BI for Office 365 | | White Paper: Network Instruments Can the move to UC be just another simple technology transition? End users expect these technologies to look, act and behave just as their non-IP predecessors. But for IT teams it brings very real, new requirements. Learn VoIP and video success strategies from Jim Frey, an Enterprise Management Associates analyst. Learn more. | | Today, GitHub debuted the new microsite choosealicense.com that offers a greatly simplified view of open source licenses and helps explain their effects. Even better, GitHub encouraged users to license their copyright as open source. READ MORE | | Born or made, network admins share certain defining characteristics. Here are but nine. READ MORE | | Where can you find out how new enterprise technology really works without the hype? InfoWorld offers an exciting new resource for technologists with our New Tech Forum. READ MORE | | Microsoft is attempting to break down the barriers to business intelligence with Power BI for Office 365, which is designed to let companies gain new insights by tapping both structured and unstructured and internal and external data. READ MORE | | White Paper: Riverbed Technology A new kind of storage architecture allows IT to consolidate remote servers and data in the data center by decoupling storage from its server over any distance--even thousands of miles--and still get the same performance as if the storage remained local to the branch. Read more >> | | | | |
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