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Desktop virtualization
By 2011, there could be more than 660 million virtualized desktops. John Whaley, CTO and Founder of MokaFive, talks about the issues surrounding current ...
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Mobile virtualization
Mike Seashols, Chairman of VirtualLogix, talks about implementing virtualization technologies onto mobile platforms. He says there are many issues that mobile providers have to ...
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Nurturing sales leads
Phil Fernandez, President and CEO of Marketo, says that many companies today are not managing sales leads effectively. He suggests ways to utilize the ...
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Managing Internet growth
The Internet is growing by 1 zettabyte a year, fueled by images, videos, gaming, and peer to peer file sharing. Pieter Poll, CTO of ...
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Online ad strategies
There are more than 300 ad networks that focus on monetizing Web sites, so having a strategy is key. Ren Chin, marketing vice president ...
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What is semantic search?
Semantic search uses the science of meaning in languageinstead of just searching keywords, it checks the context of the words to return more relevant ...
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Next generation of business intelligence
Data warehouses collect gigabytes of data everyday but the information is not always meaningful. Why? Angela Shen-Hsieh, President and CEO of Visual I/O, says ...
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SIP trunking 101
Voice, instant messaging, and video no longer have to be islands of collaboration. Kenneth Kuenzel, founder and CTO of Covergence, shows how SIP trunking ...
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Wireless inside the enterprise
With the rise of PDAs, Blackberries and mobile phones, the demand for wireless service inside large buildings is increasing every day. Leila Nouri, director ...
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Intel® vPro™ technology and cost savings
Randy Nystrom, an IT systems engineer at Intel, shows how vPro saves time and money by diagnosing PC problems remotely. The content for this ...
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Intel® vPro™ technology and manageability
Limited technical support hours and powered down PCs can make it difficult to manage large numbers of PCs. Randy Nystrom, an IT systems engineer ...
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Application streaming
Updating applications can be time-consuming for both users and administrators. Christian Black, an IT systems engineer at Intel, explains why application streaming is a ...
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OS streaming
Christian Black, an IT systems engineer for Intel, spells out the many benefits of hard-drive virtualization, or operating system streaming, including faster boot times ...
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Enterprise 2.0
Vince Casarez, vice president of product management at Oracle, explains how Web 2.0 technologies, such as tags, wikis, and mash-ups, can be applied within ...
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Secure file transfers
John Thielens, vice president of technology at Tumbleweed, talks about the need for managed file transfers that are not only secure, but auditable and ...
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What is LEED?
"Going green" is becoming commonplace in the corporate world. Paul Holland, general partner at Foundation Capital, explains LEED, the metrics used to certify the ...
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Unified communications
With desktops, laptops, PDAs and mobile phones, our communication systems have become fragmented. David Leach, senior public consultant for Siemens Enterprise Networks, explains how ...
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Virtual business
Brent Arslaner, VP of marketing at Unisfair, explains how virtual environments can increase productivity in marketing, sales and human resources departments within a company.
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Automating virtualization
Richard Whitehead, the director of product marketing at Novell, explains how automation can bridge the gap between physical and virtual machines.
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Greening the data center
John O'Brien, CTO of Dataupia, explains how carbon footprints are calculated in the data center and discusses ways to tame these power-hungry machines.
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What is SOA?
Service oriented architecture may be over-hyped, but it does offer lower-cost and easier integration.
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What is a mashup?
Developers are getting creative, taking APIs from multiple Websites and merging them to form new, innovative applications. Frozenbear.com merges Google maps and Singles to let you know where the single people are in your neighborhood. Parkingcarma.com helps you track down parking spaces in the Bay Area. ZDNet Executive Editor David Berlind says mashups are the fastest growing ecosystem on the Web and that by 2007, there will be 10 new mashups per day.
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Desktop virtualization
By 2011, there could be more than 660 million virtualized desktops. John Whaley, CTO and Founder of MokaFive, talks about the issues surrounding current infrastructures and says that organizations deploying new systems need to think about four things--management, offline use, cost, and the user experience.
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Users-to-tech support ratio
How many employees should one tech support staff person oversee? CNET's Justine Nguyen explains the golden ratio of users to tech support staff, and what factors contribute to it.
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What is virtualization?
Data centers are commonly filled with large numbers of servers that require a tremendous amount of time and money to maintain. Dan Chu of VMware shows how virtualization can optimize fewer servers to run at higher performance levels.
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Energy-efficient transistors
Rob Willoner, a technology analyst at Intel, explains how smaller and more energy-efficient transistors are resulting in faster and more powerful CPUs.
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First steps to SOA
What does it really mean to introduce SOA into an organization? Ross Mason, CTO and co-founder of MuleSource, explains how an enterprise service bus allows different applications to communicate with each other.
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Desktop vs. workstation: Introduction
Sponsored: Dave Buckley, product line manager of workstations at HP, explains the differences between desktops and workstations, and how these differences influence purchasing decisions. The content for this video was sponsored and provided by HP.
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A load of C.R.A.P.
ZDNet Executive Editor David Berlind suggests that CRAP or Content, Restriction, Annulment, and Protection, is a catchier phrase than DRM - Digital Rights Management. Why does he think this technology is crap? Once you've bought music or other content to play on one device, it won't play on any other device because of the proprietary layer of CRAP.
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SEO 101
How do you get your Web pages to rank high on search results? CNET's Laura Lippay offers some guidelines for Search Engine Optimization, including how to structure your site, where to position content on your page, and how to increase traffic.
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Analyzing Your Competitors
Use the strategic group map technique to determine where your competitors are in the market, where you are and where you need to be.
I'm Veronica Combs, Content Manager of BNET.com. What are your competitors doing, do you know? Analyzing them will help you know where they are in the market place, and where you need to be to keep up with them. One easy way of finding out is the strategic group map technique. This sounds academic, lots of theory, but actually five minutes of analysis will give you an hour at least of discussion about where you are in your market place.
So say I'm a restaurantuer. I have a small lunch shop, and I have a chance to expand, and I want to know: Do I stick with my current strategy, or do I need to try something different? The first step in the analysis is to list my top 5 competitors. I am a sandwich shop so lunchtime is my main business time, and I want to know who else is serving lunch that I need to be worried about. I'm out in a strip mall, so I know my big guys to worry about our McDonalds. Panera is out there as well, new little sandwich shop, latte, salads. Subway of Jared fame, lost all his weight eating at Subway. Wendy's is nearby as well, and finally there is Qdobo, which is a Mexican place.
The next step in the analysis is to identify the two most important competitive factors in my market place. For you, this could be brand image, it could be price, it could be delivery method, it could be a range of offerings. For me, it is speed of delivery. How fast can I get them their food? And my second most important factor is health value. So that means there are my two competitive factors.
The third step in the analysis is to look at my competitors and group them together. You want to think about how they are similar, how they are dissimilar, what products they have in common, what products they have that are only theirs. From looking at my list, I've got the burger guys, McDonalds, and Wendy's, so they're a pretty easy group. They are going to be "A". Then we have the two sandwich guys, you know, somewhat similar offerings, not quite identical, but close. Then we have Qdobo, which is pretty much in a class by itself, at least in this list.
Over here I have my two competitive factors, speed and delivery and health value. I'm going to draw circles on the map that represent their size of the market share. So looking at Group "A" which is McDonalds and Wendy's, they are pretty big. Pretty big market share, really fast delivery, not so healthy. So they are down from this quadrant, Group "A." Group "B" is the two sandwich shops. Little bit healthier, little bit slower than the big guys, big burger guys, so they're pretty much here. Then you have Qdobo which is again in a class all of its own. It's kind of slow, but pretty healthy, skip the sour cream.
So, now that I know who my competitors are, I need to figure out my position. But anything on the drawing board that is low in health value, and slow to produce, I know to kill it right away. Looking at the open spaces on the map, this is where I want to be. If I can come up with a product that's fast to produce and healthy, I've got a great combination. So instead of looking over my shoulder and wondering what my competitors are doing, all I have to do is look at my map to know where I am, and where I need to be.






























