verizon news from FierceCIO
News
Report: Four percent of security products pass first round of certification
A new report from ICSA Labs, a division of Verizon Business that offers vendor-neutral testing and certification of security products, found that 78 percent of security products don't pass the first... Read more...
Pay online or pay for being billed
Big companies are trying to get their customers out of the habit of receiving a paper bill. Online billing saves them money, but so far, they haven't been able to break a very old habit. T-Mobile got... Read more...
Patch needed for web security
Dan Kaminsky, a director at IOActive, a computer security firm, believes there are some major flaws on the Internet that need to be fixed, and fixed quickly to stop hackers from diverting users to... Read more...
Verizon bringing FiOS technology to the enterprise
Verizon is quietly working to bring its popular residential FiOS high-speed Internet service to the enterprise. Marketing will start in 2009 and will be directed at federal, corporate and
... Read more...Honey, I shrank the data center
Smaller is almost always better, the sages among us sometimes say. This was the case when a facility near St. Louis run by Schneider Electric and its American Power Conversion subsidiary created a... Read more...
SPOTLIGHT: Verizon to blast past 40G beginning in 2009
Verizon Business plans to start deploying a 100Gbps network over major routes starting from the beginning of 2009, validating its earlier position that 40G is nothing more than a stepping stone. Only... Read more...
Intel sees WiMAX in its future
Sure WiFi is taking off throughout the country, but WiMAX is just around the corner and Intel wants a major piece of the market. Read more...
Migrating to IP telephony with relative ease
Making a successful transition to an IP telephony infrastructure can mean great... Read more...
AT&T Web site hacked
Earlier this week it was Verizon; Now you can also add AT&T to the list of... Read more...
How Verizon aligned IT with its business goals
Imagine pulling in five different acquisitions resulting in 150 different computing applications to run, support and maintain and then whittling that number down to just over two dozen in an... Read more...






