Friday 25 November 2016

Meet the iPhone's 30-ton ancestor; diabetics are hacking their health; gift guide for techies

Top tech stories now available. See what’s trending today.
Subscription | Read Online Twitter Facebook Google+

Meet the iPhone's 30-ton ancestor: Inside the project to rebuild one of the first computers

The US Eniac helped shape the design of modern computers. Now a project has rebuilt part of the 70-year-old machine as a programmable machine.

Additional TechRepublic resources

#WeAreNotWaiting: Diabetics are hacking their health, because traditional systems have failed them

Apple kills wireless routers: Here are the alternatives for professionals and SMBs

Microsoft woos open source developers by joining the Linux Foundation

Boston becomes latest city for driverless car tests, in partnership with nuTonomy

Fake news is everywhere. Should the tech world help stop the spread?

Windows 10 snooping: Microsoft gets more time to tackle 'excessive' data collection

Tweets aren't tools for surveillance: Twitter pushes back against law enforcement

Why Red Hat is happy to have others make billions on its open source dime

Five ways to maintain your privacy on your smartphone, no downloads required

10 books to add to your DevOps reading list

The light side of the Dark Web

Google DeepMind AI destroys human expert in lip reading competition

The open office noise problem: How to design around it

Google Wifi wireless router: The smart person's guide

NFL Wi-Fi, cyberwar training, and hacking diabetes care: TechRepublic's cover stories of 2016

Survey: Is your company moving the data center to the cloud?


We'd like to hear why your company has (or hasn't) made the switch to IaaS, what systems your company is moving to the cloud, and how IT staff and data centers are affected by the change. This survey takes less than 10 minutes, and you can enter your email address to receive a free copy of the resulting research report.

Featured Webcast

Live Webcast: 10 Measurements that Make Data Actionable

When measuring something new, the hardest question is often the first one: What is the most informative and helpful way to measure this? In this webinar, we'll revisit the basics of "ways to measure things" and discover a practical methodology for identifying informative and actionable metrics. We'll discuss ways things can go wrong, and how improved communication, collaboration, and open feedback between analysts and end-users help prevent setbacks. We'll also explore the specifics of some of the most helpful analyses. Register now!

Featured multimedia

Photos: 2016 holiday gift guide for techies

Ten desktop PCs that fit in your pocket

Gallery: 10 bad tech gifts to avoid giving during the 2016 holiday season

Today's recommended downloads

Symantec: Using Always-on SSL/TLS to Maximize Web Security and Enhance the End-user Experience

(Symantec)

Live Webcast: 10 Measurements that Make Data Actionable

(Looker)

Cut VMware & Hyper-V Troubleshooting by 59%*

(SolarWinds)

IT and Business Professionals Say Website Attacks are Persistent and Varied

(Symantec)

A quick guide to SSL/TLS certificates

(Symantec)

A special feature from ZDNet and TechRepublic

How to automate the enterprise

One of today's biggest opportunities for IT to make an impact is by automating business processes, manufacturing, repetitive tasks, and more. We delve into examples and best practices.

Connect with TechRepublic

Visit the Subscription Center to get other free newsletters, manage your account settings or to be removed from TechRepublic communications.

Unsubscribe | Send Feedback | FAQ | Advertise | Privacy Policy

© 2016 CBS Interactive, Inc. All rights reserved.

TechRepublic is a registered service mark of CBS Interactive, Inc.

TechRepublic

235 Second Street

San Francisco, CA 94105

U.S.A.

No comments:

Post a Comment