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Applying unified communications
Thuy Ha, director of product management at Qwest Communications, discusses a practical framework for unified communications. Ha explains how to build a foundation on ...
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Optimizing mobility
Thuy Ha, director of product management at Qwest Communications, explains how the network has evolved from being voice-based and centralized to being an individual ...
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Business class SaaS
The Software as a Service market is expected to double by 2012. Martin Capurro, senior director of product management at Qwest Communications, examines how ...
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Non-intrusive security
Martin Capurro, senior director of product management at Qwest Communications, discusses how to strike the right balance between productivity and security within the enterprise. ...
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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
Sponsored: Randy Nystrom, an IT systems engineer at Intel, shows how vPro saves time and money by diagnosing PC problems remotely. The content for ...
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Intel® vPro™ technology and manageability
Sponsored: Limited technical support hours and powered down PCs can make it difficult to manage large numbers of PCs. Randy Nystrom, an IT systems ...
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Application streaming
Sponsored: Updating applications can be time-consuming for both users and administrators. Christian Black, an IT systems engineer at Intel, explains why application streaming is ...
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OS streaming
Sponsored: Christian Black, an IT systems engineer for Intel, spells out the many benefits of hard-drive virtualization, or operating system streaming, including faster boot ...
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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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Non-intrusive security
Martin Capurro, senior director of product management at Qwest Communications, discusses how to strike the right balance between productivity and security within the enterprise. He explains security must work end-to-end, from the system level to the mobility level, and how each layer works to mitigate risk.
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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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Applying unified communications
Thuy Ha, director of product management at Qwest Communications, discusses a practical framework for unified communications. Ha explains how to build a foundation on a converged network, then add layers such as mobility, conferencing and collaboration.
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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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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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Optimizing mobility
Thuy Ha, director of product management at Qwest Communications, explains how the network has evolved from being voice-based and centralized to being an individual and access-anywhere model. Ha also offers enterprises a solution to meet the expectations of a growing mobile workforce.
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Business class SaaS
The Software as a Service market is expected to double by 2012. Martin Capurro, senior director of product management at Qwest Communications, examines how security, performance, compliance and portability are affecting overall adoption.
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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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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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Effective Professional Blogging
TechRepublic VP Bob Artner explains what it takes to be an effective professional blogger. He advises avoiding the mistakes of many personal blogs, which he says Bloviate and are Loud, Obnoxious and Gabby.
I'm Bob Artner for TechRepublic and today we're going to talk about effective professional blogging, and to be an effective professional blogger, you have to avoid the mistakes of too many personal bloggers. What are those mistakes? Well they bloviate. They're loud. They get into fights. They're obnoxious. They call each other names or they try to be too cute and they gab. So that works in a personal blog, but in a professional blog, you're trying to do something more important. You're trying to put your best face forward and to explain things and topics that you care about and have a certain expertise about.
So how can you be an effective professional blogger? Well, here's an acronym; think of candy, taffy and I think this will help. First of all, have the right tone. A professional blog presumes a certain amount of professionalism, so don't insult your audience and again the audience is the second part there. Who are you writing for? Too many bloggers, both personal and professional bloggers put too many of their posts involved with endless links to other bloggers about topics that are relatively trivial. You want a broad audience who cares about the things that you care about, so remember that you have a broader audience in mind and not just your three or four buddies that also have blogs. That comes to the most important part I think which is focus. You know, you can blog about anything, but the most effective professional blogs are concerned with the area of competence or expertise that the blogger has. If I'm at public relations, I should do a blog about my job in public relations and some of the clients I work with and some of the campaigns I've been involved with. People aren't coming to hear about my vacation or the fact that my daughter was sick although they might be interested about that. They are coming because of my insights into my professional career, so remember your focus.
What else? Frequency. A blog by its very nature implies regular contributions. This doesn't mean you have to post 10 or 12 times a day. Quite frankly, I don't see how people who do that can actually do their jobs, but it does mean you're posting more than once a month. If you're posting once a month you're not writing a blog, you're running a website that's just not updated very frequently.
And what about this last one? Well, be yourself, and I know I said earlier on the personal side that you want to not bloviate or be loud or obnoxious or gabby. It's all true, but you do want to be yourself. You do want some of your personalities to shine through. More importantly, you don't want to appear artificial because that's death to an effective blog.



























