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Separating Real IT News From Background Noise
If you're a typical IT professional, you could easily spend your entire day keeping up with the onslaught of industry information from Web sites, blogs and news sites. Mike Masnick, of Techdirt Inc., knows your pain. "There's so much information out there that a lot of you are spending too much time keeping up with things and not doing important things -- like your job," he says. In response, his company has introduced InfoAdvisor, which provides customized Web feeds and commentary to readers.Rambus, Infineon Settle Long-Running Patent Dispute
Ending a long-running patent dispute over computer memory, Rambus and Infineon Technologies AG settled all legal claims Monday and granted each other licenses to their respective technologies. Infineon will pay Rambus a quarterly license fee of $5.85 million. Rambus, meanwhile, was granted a perpetual license for Infineon's memory interfaces. The settlement comes three weeks after a federal judge dismissed Rambus' patent claims because the company destroyed documents in anticipation of litigation.View more book results for the query "*"
E-Filing of Abuse, Neglect Petitions Reaches Family Court
Newly implemented electronic filing of abuse and neglect petitions in New York City Family Court has cut by more than half the time it takes to get the papers before a judge, according to a preliminary evaluation, a "huge step forward" to speed the resolution of child-protective proceedings.Suffolk Law School to Test Google Glass and Launches a Technology Institute
Suffolk University Law School launches a new technology institute, and Google chooses professor Andrew Perlman to test drive Google Glass— the futuristic specs outfitted with a small computer screen, a camera, and an internet connection.Google to Launch New Calendar Service
Google is unveiling a calendar service that allows users to store appointments online, receive reminders about them and share plans with others. Gmail, Google's mail service, has been modified to automatically recognize when messages mention an event so recipients can seamlessly add it to their calendar. Google Calendar will help Google compete with Yahoo, which has offered a calendar service since 1998, and will also offer event planning, which will compete with Evite.com and Yahoo's Upcoming.org.IBM Aims to Make Big Computing Greener
IBM is spending $1 billion to spread technologies and services that could make corporate computing centers more energy efficient. The company will reoutfit the data centers it operates and help its customers redo their own with multiple power-saving approaches.Trending Stories
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