Saturday, February 9, 2013

Why Surface Pro May Not Change Things | Dell's Next Moves

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  Saturday, February 09, 2013
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7 Moves Dell Must Make Now
InformationWeek Editor
Michael Endler
 
 
By going private, Dell has extricated itself from Wall Street's fickle grasp. No longer beholden to quarterly earnings reports and fluctuation in shareholder loyalties, the company is now free to invest for the long term, even -- as Michael Dell has said in the past -- if it means suffering some temporary losses along the way. This flexibility is all well and good -- but what should Dell do to capitalize on it? READ MORE

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QUOTE OF THE DAY
"A lot of people like snow. I find it to be an unnecessary freezing of water." -- Carl Reiner
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MOST POPULAR THIS WEEK
Surface Pro Demand: Don't Believe The Hype
More workers want a Windows tablet than want an iPad, Forrester Research says. This doesn't mean Surface Pro will realign the industry.

7 Moves Dell Must Make Now
Dell's decision to go private was a bold step, but the company must continue making aggressive decisions to succeed.

BlackBerry Z10: 5 Best Features
After spending more than a week with the BlackBerry Z10 and the BlackBerry 10 OS, I have some opinions on what BlackBerry got right.

6 Reasons Hackers Would Want Energy Department Data
In Department of Energy breach, what was driving attackers to steal employee data? Stuxnet revenge is one theory.

You Can Take Data With You, Ex-Employees Say
Half of former employees admit they took corporate data when they left, and 62% say the practice isn't wrong, Symantec study reports.

Email Overload: Can Social Really Help?
Social collaboration platforms promise less email in corporate in-boxes, but do they deliver? The small business Brilliant Life Design finds out with a trial of Sendgine.

Cloud Implementation Costs, Complexity Surprise Companies
Business and IT leaders find integrating cloud with existing IT infrastructure is harder than they expected, says KPMG global survey.

 
EYE CANDY: IMAGE GALLERIES
Samsung Galaxy S IV: What To Expect
Samsung's Galaxy S phones have become the closest thing to the mythical "iPhone killer" of Android fans' dreams. Here's a look at the next version's likely features.  View Now

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7 Portals Powering Patient Engagement
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