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The Risks and Rewards of Bring Your Own Device Policies Many companies are allowing BYOD, but a staggering number of them aren't doing anything to ensure that those devices don't easily give up sensitive information that could harm the business or its clients. Learn what can be done to make sure that data is protected—no matter what happens. |
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Don't Want to Help the Government Snoop? You May Not Have a Choice Some of us may never get used to the US government's having access to our personal Internet habits and information, and others are trying to take the fear out of just how capable the U.S. is at accessing this data. What if you could help save the world from a nuclear disaster? It may be possible. |
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Why Firefox OS May Change the Way Software Is Released Two key news items from the mobile world in 2013 were the launch of Blackberry Z10 and the announcement of Firefox OS-powered mobile devices. These devices may be different in form or factor, but they share one unintentional similarity—the locales in which the devices were first launched. |
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The First Connected Child's Car Seat Has Arrived TOMY International has introduced the first smartphone-synched child's car seat with an integrated monitoring system designed to alert parents of unsafe and potentially life-threatening situations—unbuckling while the car is in motion, forgetting the child in the car, and other safety issues. |
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Is the Age of Privacy Really Over? Online social connections are at an all-time high. While there are clear positives from all of these interactions, end users always have concerns about whether too much information is being extracted from them and whether the data is being appropriately shared and used. Is privacy over? |
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The Key to Finding Success in Mobile App Stores App stores can be a make-or-break situation for mobile app developers. It’s not an easy war to win, but understanding the challenges gives developers a better shot at app store success. |
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How to Enrage, not Engage, Your Twitter Followers Maybe one day we'll all know how to use Twitter without infuriating our followers. But when Twitter executives themselves can't seem to figure it out, perhaps we're all doomed to keep making the same mistakes. PR companies across the U.S. were busy putting out social media fires all week long. |
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HTML5: Using WebSocket for Mobile and Web Convergence? HTML has overstayed its welcome as the web language of choice. Nobody foresaw the need to incorporate graphics, sound, alternate devices, or wireless network connectivity. Is it time to relook at HTML5 as a converged development platform for delivering real-time content to a plugged in audience? |