10 June 2008
By Jon Brodkin, Network World (US)
IBM and Los Alamos National Laboratory have built the world's first petaflop machine, a supercomputer named Roadrunner designed to ensure the safety and reliability of the nation's nuclear weapons stockpile, IBM has announced. Read more...
07 December 2007
By Bryan Betts
Reputedly the world's busiest Internet peering point, the Amsterdam Internet Exchange - or AMS-IX - has had to replace its core routers as its overall used capacity is now peaking at just over 370Gbit/s. Read more...
15 March 2008
By Peter Judge, Techworld
Motorola took its time bringing out an 802.11n AP for its enterprise Wi-Fi, but it may not be too late for the product to make an impact. Read more...
13 March 2008
Ubiquitous fibre is still a long, long way off, so carriers and others are having to find ways of getting more out of their existing copper plant, such as Carrier Ethernet. Read more...
04 April 2007
By Motorola
Is your healthcare facility considering the possibility of using a wireless network? According to a recent survey from the Healthcare and Information Management System Society (HIMSS), 53 percent of respondents indicated they are either implementing a wireless system or one is in the development plan for their organization. Read more...
13 May 2008
By John E. Dunn, Techworld
05 October 2007
By Network World staff
Wireless isn't the only way to connect another building on the same site into your LAN. Read more...
02 August 2007
By Chris Mellor, Techworld
BluArc NAS storage provides the resource needed by Ultraspeed's diskless servers. It speeds response time, lowers admin cost and increases server availability. Read more...