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Business class SaaS
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Mobile virtualization
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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
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SIP trunking 101
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Intel® vPro™ technology and cost savings
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Intel® vPro™ technology and manageability
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Application streaming
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OS streaming
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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?
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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
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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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Bayes Theorem keeps spam out
When applied to spam, this probability theory kicks out real junk mail and is less likely to create false positives.
The first generation of spam filters was pretty crude. It not only missed a lot of spam, but it misidentified real messages as spam. The new generation of spam filters is much more flexible, much more likely to catch true spam and much less likely to indicate a false positive, flagging a message as spam that's a real message.
Most spam filters actually use what's called Bayes filtering, which relies on Bayes Theorem. Dr. Thomas Bayes was a 19th century mathematician. In his theorem, well, it goes something like this. The probability, just kidding, let's not do the math. Think about this. Bayes Theorem basically says if you have an event and you want to know the likelihood of that event happening, you can determine a probability by looking at a subset of randomly selected parts of that group.
Think about an election. Let's say you've got a group of voters here and they're going to vote on a referendum. They have to vote either yes or no and you want to know what is the likelihood that there's going to be a yes vote. If you take a randomly selected subgroup and you learn the distribution of yes to no in this group, let's say in this case 7 yes, 3 no, you can use Bayes Theorem to predict what's the likelihood of a yes vote from the larger group. I think the math works out in that case of 7 to 3 distribution that you have an 89% probability that the vote is going to be yes. So that's how Bayes Theorem works in an election.
Now with spam filtering, it's basically the same kind of problem. You want to know yes or no for spam within this whole universe of your e-mail inbox. So Bayes filters take a subset of that and they test for different conditions. They look at an individual work and say, what is the probability that that word is spam from looking at the subset. So look at combinations of words and a probability to the combination. They look at colors in an HTML e-mail. What's the likelihood that a particular color in an HTML e-mail indicates spam or what kind of URLs, what kind of links are in there and where the placement of individual words is? All kinds of conditions and they can assign a probability using an individual condition or a combination of any one of these. That allows you to build a filter back here that is very flexible, you can set it to be as restrictive or nonrestrictive as you want. This allows you not only to catch a lot more spam, but a lot less false positives, because you're not just looking at say, you know, in the old age, you'd say, any e-mail that has Viagra in it is automatically spam. Now you can say any e-mail that has the word Viagra you can say by itself 90% likely, but if it says Viagra plus pills, 98% likely, Viagra plus 'buy now' 100% likely.
So by using Bayes filtering you're able to reduce the number of false positives and have a much more efficient spam filter.




























