The Android will edge out Research In Motion's BlackBerry and Apple's iOS for all of 2010 to become the second best-selling mobile OS globally behind Nokia's Symbian, according to market research firm Gartner.
Oracle's newly minted co-president, Mark Hurd, is set to deliver a keynote speech at the vendor's OpenWorld conference on Sept. 20, in what could be the former Hewlett-Packard CEO's first high-profile appearance since leaving that company in August.
If the idea of using Linux in your business is one that makes you nervous, chances are you've fallen prey to one or more of the many myths out there that are frequently disseminated by competing vendors such as Microsoft. After all, each Linux user means one less sale for such companies, so they have a powerful motivation to spread such FUD.
MicroStrategy, a business intelligence software maker, has deployed 1,100 Apple iPads to executives and sales personnel to conduct critical job-related tasks. The company said it expects 700 more iPads to be deployed soon.
Adobe on Thursday said it would resurrect a tool that lets developers port Flash applications to the iPhone after Apple did an about-face earlier in the day.
Security experts warned Thursday of a fast-spreading email worm, the first large outbreak of this type in nearly a decade.
The worm appears in email messages with the subject "Here you have," and contains what seems to be a link to an Adobe PDF file. In fact the link takes the victim to a Web page hosted on the members.multimania.co.uk domain that then tries to download a screensaver (.scr) file. If the user agrees to installing that file, he is then infected by the worm, which mails itself to his email contacts.
Google made searching a smidge faster this week, while proving yet again they really are smarter than the rest of us combined. What else happened? Craigslist responded to complaints from 17 state attorneys general, Mark Hurd got a new gig, Apple opened its App Store kimono, and the planet got a brief reprieve from two boulder-size asteroids. Have you got what it takes to ace our quiz before we're all blown to kingdom come? Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. Now strap on your tinfoil helmets and begin.
Nokia has named Stephen Elop, former president of Microsoft's business software group, to become its new CEO effective from later this month.
Elop will replace Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo in the top job on Sept. 21. Kallasvuo loses his board seat with immediate effect and will step down from the CEO position on Sept. 20, Nokiasaid. Elop will leave Microsoft immediately, that company said.
Codesion, which offers hosted source code management, has added the Git distributed version control system to its services, the company said this week.
The company enables users to host code repositories, including Subversion and CVS. Developers can use "best of breed" development tools with Codesion, said company CEO Guy Marion. These repositories are deployed to cloud platforms such as Amazon Elastic Compute Service (EC2).