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When Are Mobile Broadband Prices Going To Drop?


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 10:05 AM ET | May 9, 2008

I pay $60 per month for my wireless broadband card with Verizon Wireless. Sprint and AT&T charge similar rates. Are the carriers keeping prices high to deter people from signing up, or is $60 for 5GB of wireless data the fair market price?

Continue reading "When Are Mobile Broadband Prices Going To Drop?..."


Topics:   Mobile


Data Moveage: How To Move Data And Live To Tell About It


Posted by George Crump @ 09:15 AM ET | May 9, 2008

In a previous entry I wrote about the importance of moving data from primary storage to another platform. The roadblock is how to move that data from expensive storage to secondary storage. The traditional approach of deploying an agent on every server that monitors all the files and then moves files that haven't been accessed to a lower class of storage hasn't worked well in the enterprise. There are a variety of reasons, but most of the issues are the deployment and management of that many agents, plus the challenge of leaving stub files (files that point to where the actual file was moved) and managing those files.

Continue reading "Data Moveage: How To Move Data And Live To Tell About It..."


Topics:   Storage


3 Mistakes Customers Make With Their Content


Posted by George Dearing @ 08:50 AM ET | May 9, 2008

Recently I've been pretty hard on content management vendors by pointing out some of the mistakes that can drive them out of business. While vendor elitism with customers can be a big problem, I can't let content management clients completely off the hook. There are a few mistakes that I've seen over and over in every vertical.

Continue reading "3 Mistakes Customers Make With Their Content ..."


Topics:   Content Management


Startup Camp: The Social Network Slapshot


Posted by Fritz Nelson @ 03:31 AM ET | May 9, 2008

I am not a fan of hockey. I make no apologies for that, but I do love seeing hockey live. No other sport beats it. So when I sat down with Josh Schachter, the founder of startup HockeyBarn.com I expected to have to make myself concentrate really hard to appear interested as he rattled off things like shots on goal and the mystical notion of icing. Instead, I this passionate young entrepreneur wowed me with a very cool social media idea.

Continue reading "Startup Camp: The Social Network Slapshot..."


Topics:   Fritz Nelson's Instigator


BlackBerry 9000 Video Review Surfaces


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 08:25 PM ET | May 8, 2008

The web site CrackBerry, which bought the BlackBerry 9000 for over $800 on eBay, has filmed its own video review of the next-generation hardware from RIM. In this video, CrackBerry performs a walk through of the revamped user interface. Looks fantastic.

Continue reading "BlackBerry 9000 Video Review Surfaces..."


Topics:   Mobile


Firefox Provides Increased Security Over Internet Explorer? Not So Much.


Posted by George Hulme @ 08:09 PM ET | May 8, 2008

It's been reported that the Firefox Web browser has been distributing a Trojan horse application with the Vietnamese language pack. No one is sure how many users may have unwittingly downloaded the malware.

Continue reading "Firefox Provides Increased Security Over Internet Explorer? Not So Much...."


Topics:   Security


How To Kill Array Vendor Lock-In? An iSCSI Replication RFC


Posted by Howard Marks @ 04:23 PM ET | May 8, 2008

A few years ago it was easy to divide IT organizations into haves and have nots. The haves used Fibre Channel SANs and array replication to dedicated disaster recovery sites over high bandwidth dedicated links or dark fiber. The have-nots used SCSI DAS (Direct Attached Storage) on their servers and, if they did real time replication at all, used server-based replication solutions like Double-Take or CA's WANsync.

Continue reading "How To Kill Array Vendor Lock-In? An iSCSI Replication RFC..."


Topics:   Backup and Business Continuity : Storage


Google Offers Mobile Enterprise Protection Tools


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 03:53 PM ET | May 8, 2008

In case you hadn't heard, mobile employees are a threat to your business. A lost smartphone, or a laptop that connects to a rogue network rather than a legitimate one, can open your company to all sorts of risks. To help match some of the threats and one-up VPNs, Google used its Postini acquisition to create Web Security for Enterprise.

Continue reading "Google Offers Mobile Enterprise Protection Tools..."


Topics:   Google


Is Google Facing A Brain Drain?


Posted by Thomas Claburn @ 03:42 PM ET | May 8, 2008

Google may be denying that there's a brain drain going on, as the BBC reports, but that doesn't mean it's not happening.

Continue reading "Is Google Facing A Brain Drain?..."


Topics:   Google


Asus Eee Fans Down Under Get One-Upped By Microsoft


Posted by Serdar Yegulalp @ 03:20 PM ET | May 8, 2008

Good news: Asus is about to unveil its next generation of Eee PC mininotebooks in both Windows XP and Linux editions, and they look downright snazzy.  Bad news for folks down under: The Linux version of the new Eee is more expensive in AustraliaWhat!?

Continue reading "Asus Eee Fans Down Under Get One-Upped By Microsoft..."


Topics:   Open Source


Students Sound Off About Java


Posted by Michael Singer @ 03:13 PM ET | May 8, 2008

What do future generations think about the state of Java and its relevance to their research? The answer may surprise you, and Sun.

Continue reading "Students Sound Off About Java..."


Topics:   Open Source : Tech Careers : Virtualization


Where Is Europe’s Google?


Posted by Andrew Conry-Murray @ 01:48 PM ET | May 8, 2008

Or Microsoft or Cisco or VMware or...? A Swiss technologist's book says a culture that values risk-taking is Europe's missing ingredient.

Continue reading "Where Is Europe’s Google?..."


Topics:   Startup City


iPhone Sells Out At O2, 3G iPhone Spy Shots Emerge


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 01:03 PM ET | May 8, 2008

U.K. network operator O2 has sold out of its supply of 8GB and 16GB iPhones. It has no plans to restock either model, suggesting that the 3G iPhone will soon be available. Also, purported spy shots of the 3G iPhone have emerged from Taiwan, where it is being manufactured. There are some subtle changes compared to the current model.

Continue reading "iPhone Sells Out At O2, 3G iPhone Spy Shots Emerge..."


Topics:   Mobile


A Sign Of The Times: E-Signatures


Posted by John Foley @ 01:00 PM ET | May 8, 2008

Three years after signing its first electronic "John Hancock," DocuSign has now inked more than 9 million digital signatures. As companies look for ways to introduce eco-friendly business processes, more are signing, virtually, on the dotted line.

Continue reading "A Sign Of The Times: E-Signatures..."


Topics:   Startup City


Workday Laughs Its SaaS Off In Viral Videos


Posted by Alexander Wolfe @ 11:32 AM ET | May 8, 2008

Viral marketing is moving into areas you'd never have thought. Take software-as-a-service, where upstart Workday, a company formed in 2005 by PeopleSoft founder and ex-CEO Dave Duffield, is posting up on YouTube a series of short videos -- OK, they're commercials -- which poke virtual fingers in the eyes of industry powerhouse SAP.

Continue reading "Workday Laughs Its SaaS Off In Viral Videos..."


Topics:   Wolfe's Den


NFS Saved By VMware?


Posted by George Crump @ 08:26 AM ET | May 8, 2008

Will NFS become the predominant storage deployment method for VMware implementations?

NFS didn't need to be saved, but because of VMware its use has been broadened beyond the traditional Unix implementations. Instead of creating a LUN for each VMware Virtual Disk (VMDK), with NFS you manage multiple VMDK files on a single NFS Volume. This makes sense because VMDK's are files, not actual disks.

Continue reading "NFS Saved By VMware?..."


Topics:   Storage


xVM 1.6 - Lean, Free, Runs On Everything


Posted by Joe Hernick @ 11:45 PM ET | May 7, 2008

Want to try out desktop virtualization? Take a look at Sun's latest open source VirtualBox -- I bet it has a binary with your name on it.

Continue reading "xVM 1.6 - Lean, Free, Runs On Everything..."


Topics:   Virtualization


Microsoft Desperate To Curb Zune Demand


Posted by Dave Methvin @ 10:15 PM ET | May 7, 2008

Microsoft must be having a problem manufacturing Zunes, and needs to slow down sales. That's the only conclusion I can draw from the news that Microsoft has pledged to work with NBC to build a copyright cop into the Zune in return for selling NBC's popular TV shows through the Zune store.

Continue reading "Microsoft Desperate To Curb Zune Demand..."


Topics:   Microsoft


Internet Explorer Zero-Day Treasure Hunt


Posted by Thomas Claburn @ 07:46 PM ET | May 7, 2008

Somewhere on Israeli security researcher Aviv Raff's Web site is proof-of-concept code for a zero-day exploit that affects Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser.

Continue reading "Internet Explorer Zero-Day Treasure Hunt..."


Topics:   Microsoft


The Most Critical Factor To Attaining Organizational Security: You


Posted by George Hulme @ 07:27 PM ET | May 7, 2008

According to a study just released by consulting firm Frost & Sullivan, you -- that's right: you -- may be the most important factor in the security of your organization.

Continue reading "The Most Critical Factor To Attaining Organizational Security: You..."


Topics:   Security


How Recession Helped Get A Sprint-Clearwire Deal Made


Posted by Richard Martin @ 06:16 PM ET | May 7, 2008

It's a truism that smart money finds places to invest during a downturn. Today's Sprint-Clearwire deal is a perfect illustration.

Continue reading "How Recession Helped Get A Sprint-Clearwire Deal Made..."


Topics:   Mobile


Google's Hedge Against Verizon


Posted by Thomas Claburn @ 04:54 PM ET | May 7, 2008

With its $500 million investment in the $12 billion Sprint-Clearwire partnership, Google buys itself a hedge against the possibility that the open access rules it fought to link to the C Block of the 700-MHz spectrum might be flouted.

Continue reading "Google's Hedge Against Verizon..."


Topics:   Google


Video: Can WebEx Banish The Boring Phone Meeting?


Posted by Alexander Wolfe @ 04:08 PM ET | May 7, 2008

Corporate calling. Corporate who? Long, boring, time-wasting, day-deadening, you can't get out of it, corporate online Web and phone meeting, that's who. (This is my Internet Age version of a knock, knock joke, and just about as unfunny.) But if all-hands-on-deck meetings are like death and taxes -- i.e., unavoidable -- at least WebEx is working to energize them so that they'll be more useful. Call it collaboration on Web steroids.

Continue reading "Video: Can WebEx Banish The Boring Phone Meeting?..."


Topics:   Wolfe's Den


Savvy CIOs Market Their Successes


Posted by John Soat @ 03:20 PM ET | May 7, 2008

If you want your IT group to be thought of as a center of innovation for your organization, you've got to get the attention of business management. Internal marketing can help.

Continue reading "Savvy CIOs Market Their Successes..."


Topics:   CIOs Uncensored


Betting Billions On WiMax


Posted by Paul Travis @ 03:02 PM ET | May 7, 2008

An unusual alliance of tech and media companies is betting billions of dollars on the as-yet-unproved technology known as WiMax. Will they finally usher in the wireless Web? Or is this fated to be another one of those cumbersome tech alliances that go down in flames with technology that doesn't work?

Continue reading "Betting Billions On WiMax..."


Topics:   Mobile


3G iPhone All But Confirmed. Launch Imminent?


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 02:40 PM ET | May 7, 2008

The 3G iPhone reports are off the charts. We still have over four weeks until Jobsnote at WWDC, but everyone and their mother believes the 3G iPhone is going to hit store shelves in the very near future. Here's the latest scuttlebutt.

Continue reading "3G iPhone All But Confirmed. Launch Imminent?..."


Topics:   Mobile


Alfresco's Social Computing Slant Shows ECM's Evolution


Posted by George Dearing @ 01:59 PM ET | May 7, 2008

I had an interesting discussion with John Newton, the co-founder of Alfresco, recently. I'm a little star-struck by this guy. It's hard to get much higher on the food chain when you look at Newton's credentials. Not only did he co-found Documentum, he's also less than five years into the launch of Alfresco, arguably one of the biggest disrupters to appear on the enterprise software radar in years.

Continue reading "Alfresco's Social Computing Slant Shows ECM's Evolution..."


Topics:   Content Management : Information Management : Open Source


On MySQL's About-Face: It's About Expectations


Posted by Serdar Yegulalp @ 12:41 PM ET | May 7, 2008

The official word from Kaj Arnö of MySQL / Sun is out: Portions of MySQL that were originally being considered as closed-source components will now be open source as well.  Good news, bad news, or none of the above?  I take the third view.  The real issue is, again, not open vs. closed code, but how you engage the open source community -- how you clue them in to what kind of company you are.

Continue reading "On MySQL's About-Face: It's About Expectations..."


Topics:   Open Source


Does Your Top Management 'Get' IT?


Posted by John Soat @ 12:37 PM ET | May 7, 2008

It seems like an old -- and answered, mostly in the affirmative -- question. But according to an upcoming InformationWeek survey, fewer top execs get IT these days, not more.

Continue reading "Does Your Top Management 'Get' IT?..."


Topics:   CIOs Uncensored


Making The Most Of Limited Space, Time, And Money


Posted by Marianne Kolbasuk McGee @ 12:31 PM ET | May 7, 2008

Ken Abendshien is CIO of Midwest Health Systems Data Center, a tech support organization that provides outsourced data center services to 27 small county hospitals and long-term care facilities in Kansas, and two in Nebraska. Some of those sites are really tiny -- treating one or two patients a day. And with those hospitals having even tinier IT budgets, Abendshien needs to stretch his resources very carefully.

Continue reading "Making The Most Of Limited Space, Time, And Money..."


Topics:   CIOs Uncensored : Green Computing : Hardware : Outsourcing : Virtualization


Google's Deep Thoughts On Clearwire


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 11:00 AM ET | May 7, 2008

Since it tossed $500 million into Clearwire, a new mobile WiMax company, Google decided it was due a few words. In a post on the Official Google Blog, you'll see such words as: "choice", "freedom", "open", "excited", "embrace", and -- my favorite -- "competitively-neutral network management". Uh. Say what?

Continue reading "Google's Deep Thoughts On Clearwire..."


Topics:   Google


Reporter's Notebook: Sapphire Sets Stage For A Different Kind Of SAP


Posted by Mary Hayes Weier @ 09:21 AM ET | May 7, 2008

When Harley-Davidson CIO Jim Haney drove a Harley onstage during Leo Apotheker's keynote address at Sapphire on Tuesday, there were more than a few gasps from the audience. This is the type of stunt typical of a California tech company, not the stoic German we know as SAP. But I saw it as just one example of SAP trying to reinvent itself, including the upcoming change in CEO leadership.

Continue reading "Reporter's Notebook: Sapphire Sets Stage For A Different Kind Of SAP..."


Topics:   Information Management


'Clearwire' Rises From The Ashes Of Previous Failed WiMax JV


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 09:09 AM ET | May 7, 2008

It's almost poetic. Like a phoenix reincarnated from the ashes of its former self, Sprint and Clearwire have formed a new joint venture to roll out mobile WiMax to the masses. And this time its more than just words. The companies are teaming up with a handful of cable operators, as well as Intel and Google (man, Google is just everywhere these days), to forge a $14.22 billion entity known as Clearwire.

Continue reading "'Clearwire' Rises From The Ashes Of Previous Failed WiMax JV..."


Topics:   Mobile


Data Keepage


Posted by George Crump @ 08:15 AM ET | May 7, 2008

Your servers are probably bloated with data that is years old and yet despite your retention policy, if you have one, you keep it all. The relatively inexpensive price of disk capacity has made it easier to keep everything on primary disk storage. When you think of primary storage, you think of active data, databases, current documents, e-mail, etc. -- but because of the affordability of storage, it basically also has become the archive. Data is kept on disk, "just in case." It seems easier to simply add more disk space to primary storage than to force users to manage it; as a result, "Data Keepage" begins.

Continue reading "Data Keepage..."


Topics:   Storage


Security Researchers Find Trove of Stolen Data


Posted by George Hulme @ 08:24 PM ET | May 6, 2008

A server used as a "drop site" for stolen and highly sensitive information has been uncovered by security researchers.

Continue reading "Security Researchers Find Trove of Stolen Data..."


Topics:   Security


Damage Prevention Via Smartphone


Posted by John Foley @ 05:44 PM ET | May 6, 2008

Vettro has come out with an application for mobile devices that helps utility crews and excavators avoid trouble in the risky business of working around buried cables and pipelines. GPS devices can save money and lives in this sometimes dangerous occupation.

Continue reading "Damage Prevention Via Smartphone..."


Topics:   Mobile


Manhole Covers: Gateways To Terrorism


Posted by Thomas Claburn @ 04:05 PM ET | May 6, 2008

Fear mole-men with bombs. That, more or less, is the message from Manhole Barrier Security Systems, which on Monday warned that cities need to do more to protect against assaults on infrastructure launched by underground attackers.

Continue reading "Manhole Covers: Gateways To Terrorism..."


Topics:   Security


Search Gmail More Effectively


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 02:02 PM ET | May 6, 2008

One of my favorite features of Gmail is how easy it is to search through your e-mails to find what you want/need. Sometimes, though, you need to be really specific. Google has some search tips that let you quickly narrow your search down to just a handful of results.

Continue reading "Search Gmail More Effectively..."


Topics:   Google


Stimulus Checks And Storage


Posted by George Crump @ 11:44 AM ET | May 6, 2008

With stimulus checks on the way, the question I'm sure you're asking is how you can use yours to help out the storage industry. You are, aren't you?

Continue reading "Stimulus Checks And Storage..."


Topics:   Storage


T-Mobile Launches 3G Network, But No New 3G Phones


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 11:12 AM ET | May 6, 2008

Finally! T-Mobile officially made it official. Though users reported that the network was up and running late last week, T-Mobile announced the launch of its 3G services in NYC yesterday. Too bad it doesn't have any killer 3G phones to use on it.

Continue reading "T-Mobile Launches 3G Network, But No New 3G Phones..."


Topics:   Mobile


The 'Right' Linux


Posted by Serdar Yegulalp @ 10:37 AM ET | May 6, 2008

Any talk of Linux brings with it talk of what it will take to get Linux on the desktop in big numbers.  Much of the talk in this vein revolves around distribution X versus desktop Y, or something of that nature.  The real issue, though, may not be a particular distribution or package model, but the mind-set of the creators.

Continue reading "The 'Right' Linux..."


Topics:   Open Source


Cursive Recognition Is Cure For Crappy iPhone Keyboard


Posted by Alexander Wolfe @ 09:03 AM ET | May 6, 2008

It hit me yesterday, when I was reading fellow blogger Eric Zeman's complaint about the difficulties he's had typing accurately on the iPhone's soft keyboard. That's a problem I've kvetched about constantly, most recently in "5 Areas Where Apple's iPhone Falls Short." But I think I've figured out the solution, and, surprisingly, it's not a hard keypad a la my beloved BlackBerry.

Continue reading "Cursive Recognition Is Cure For Crappy iPhone Keyboard..."


Topics:   Wolfe's Den


HTC Shows Off Its Latest Jewel, The Diamond


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 08:16 AM ET | May 6, 2008

Today in London, HTC chiseled out its latest Windows Mobile smartphone, the Diamond. This stylish and powerful touch-screen device is super thin, carries HSPA, and a custom YouTube application for the video hungry. It will be available on most carriers later this year.

Continue reading "HTC Shows Off Its Latest Jewel, The Diamond..."


Topics:   Mobile


Startup Camp: Get Your Game On


Posted by Fritz Nelson @ 01:12 AM ET | May 6, 2008

It just so happens that more startups fail than succeed. It just so happens that startups have more ideas before breakfast than most of us have in our lifetime; it's just that sometimes they don't wake up until lunch. It just so happens that startup founders can be a little eccentric (and passionate and blindly brilliant and single-minded and stubborn).

Continue reading "Startup Camp: Get Your Game On..."


Topics:   Fritz Nelson's Instigator


Microsoft's Plan B: The Mobile Web


Posted by Richard Martin @ 06:29 PM ET | May 5, 2008

Now that Steve Ballmer has taken his ball and gone home, three things have become clear about the failed Microsoft bid for Yahoo: 1) This deal is not dead yet; 2) Yahoo's future as an independent company is at any rate limited; and 3) Microsoft is playing in the wrong arena.

Continue reading "Microsoft's Plan B: The Mobile Web..."


Topics:   Mobile


Why Is It So Hard To Be Found?


Posted by George Dearing @ 05:53 PM ET | May 5, 2008

Across various industries, the one thing I always hear customers say is "How can I make sure I'm found?" This applies to both internet searches and searches within the firewall. Everyone wants their content to be found, read, appreciated and remembered.

Continue reading "Why Is It So Hard To Be Found?..."


Topics:   Content Management


Data Deduplication Will Not Become A Feature


Posted by George Crump @ 04:50 PM ET | May 5, 2008

As data deduplication matured last year, the constant question I was asked by industry analysts was "Isn't this just a feature?" The question implied that anyone that was specifically in the data deduplication space was going to be erased by the larger manufacturers as they added deduplication to their offerings. It seemed logical, but hasn't occurred. The major manufacturers have struggled putting together viable strategies for data reduction and, to some extent, it's really not in their best interests to reduce the amount of storage required.

Continue reading " Data Deduplication Will Not Become A Feature ..."


Topics:   Storage


Google Seeks Open Access Assurances From Verizon Wireless


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 04:07 PM ET | May 5, 2008

Google has doubts that Verizon Wireless will honor the open access provisions that come with the freshly-won spectrum it nabbed in the FCC 700-MHz auction. In fact, it went so far as to file a petition with the FCC forcing Verizon to officially pledge that it will honor the conditions. Google, are you in third grade?

Continue reading "Google Seeks Open Access Assurances From Verizon Wireless ..."


Topics:   Google


Security Continues Its Drive Toward The Cloud


Posted by George Hulme @ 03:16 PM ET | May 5, 2008

Everything from CRM software to word processors and spreadsheets is now delivered as services. It’s about time that more security vendors do the same.

Continue reading "Security Continues Its Drive Toward The Cloud..."


Topics:   Security


I Stink At Typing On The iPhone


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 01:30 PM ET | May 5, 2008

I hate to admit it, but it is true. After 10 months (and untold thousands of messages), I still stink at composing text using the iPhone's software QWERTY keyboard. I make mistakes all the time, and have to edit and re-edit messages before sending them. Time to go back to a physical keyboard?

Continue reading "I Stink At Typing On The iPhone..."


Topics:   Mobile


Opening Up To Solaris


Posted by Serdar Yegulalp @ 12:55 PM ET | May 5, 2008

OpenSolaris, Sun's open-source version of its Solaris operating system, gets its official kickoff today at Sun's CommunityOne conference in San Francisco.  And it's not Sun's attempt to knock Linux out of the box -- it's something a little subtler than that.

Continue reading "Opening Up To Solaris..."


Topics:   Open Source


Ballmer's Yahoo Deal: Mission Accomplished?


Posted by Dave Methvin @ 12:45 PM ET | May 5, 2008

Perhaps it's inevitable that the most visible executive at Microsoft is the target of all kinds of vitriol and insult, regardless of whether it's deserved or not. As Bill Gates is winding down his involvement with the company, Steve Ballmer is taking his place as Chief Lightning Rod for Microsoft. And boy-oh-boy, this failed Yahoo deal has really brought out the Ballmer-busters.

Continue reading "Ballmer's Yahoo Deal: Mission Accomplished?..."


Topics:   Microsoft


8 Trends In IT CIOs Can't Ignore


Posted by John Soat @ 12:12 PM ET | May 5, 2008

Accenture's chief scientist sees several IT trends emerging over the next 36 months that CIOs need to embrace. Hint: One leads to the CIO becoming the Chief Intelligence Officer. If you like the sound of that, read on.

Continue reading "8 Trends In IT CIOs Can't Ignore..."


Topics:   CIOs Uncensored


Deutsche Telekom Mulling Sprint Nextel Buy


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 09:40 AM ET | May 5, 2008

Reports wafting over the Atlantic Ocean suggest that Deutsche Telekom -- parent company of T-Mobile USA -- is considering Sprint Nextel as a take-over target. And why not? Sprint's share price is below $10, and the euro continues to dominate the dollar. Sprint's spectrum alone is worth it. That would make T-Mobile + Sprint the largest wireless operator in the United States. But could it work without falling to pieces?

Continue reading "Deutsche Telekom Mulling Sprint Nextel Buy..."


Topics:   Mobile


Yang's Words To Yahoo Troops


Posted by Eric Zeman @ 08:44 AM ET | May 5, 2008

Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang sent out an e-mail to the staff at Yahoo. In it, he says, "Now is the time for us to shine and show what we're made of." Yahoo has to do that, and a whole lot more.

Continue reading "Yang's Words To Yahoo Troops..."


Topics:   Google



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