1. Atlas Shrugged
2. The Lord of the Rings
3. 2001 A Space Odyssey
4. The War of the Worlds
5. Neuromancer
6. Snow Crash
7. The Fountainhead
8. The Soul of a New Machine
9. Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution
10. Brave New World
11. Frankenstein
12. If Chins Could Kill: Confessions of a B-Movie Actor
13. Shadows over Innsmouth
14. The Call of Cthulhu
15. The Ultimate Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy
16. The Illustrated Man
17. Does IT Matter?
18. Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid
19. Microserfs
20. Show-Stopper!
21. The Cuckoo’s Egg
22. The Google Story
23. The Road Ahead
24. Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything
25. iWoz: Computer Geek to Cult Icon
26. 1984
27. 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
28. Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?
29. Foundation
30. Harry Potter
31. His Dark Materials
32. The Day of the Triffids
33. The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe
34. The Time Machine
35. 1632
36. Fahrenheit 451
37. Slaughterhouse-Five
38. Watchmen
39. Wicked: the Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West
40. Contact
41. Dune
42. I, Robot
43. Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
44. Lila
45. Profiles of the Future: An Inquiry into the limits of the Possible
46. Revelation Space
47. Starship Troopers
48. Where the Wild Things Are
49. World War Z:An Oral History of the Zombie War
50. The Geek Atlas
51. Little, Big
52. The City & The City
53. Everything Bad is Good for You
54. Stranger in a Strange Land
55. The Cluetrain Manifesto
56. Anathem
57. Predictably Irrational
58. Amber series
59. Magician: Apprentice
60. Magician: Master
61. The Serpentwar Saga: Book I, Shadow of a Dark Queen
62. The Serpentwar Saga: Book II, Rise of a Merchant Prince
63. The Serpentwar Saga: Book III, Rage of a Demon King
64. The Serpentwar Saga: Book IV, Shards of a Broken Crown
65. Code Complete
66. The Mythical Man-Month: Essays on Software Engineering
67. Ender’s Game
68. American Gods
69. Ringworld
70. The Forever War
71. The Ghost Brigades
72. The Sword of Shannara
73. Hyperion
74. A Brief History of Time
75. The Dilbert Principle

referenced : techrepublic

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1. The consumerization of IT

We have been discussing the consumerization of IT on TechRepublic since 2007 when The Wall Street Journal published tips to help business professionals circumvent their IT departments. Back then, it was primarily an annoyance involving a few power users who were bringing their own Palm Treos into the enterprise and using a some unauthorized Web tools to get their work done.

Since then, consumerization has developed into a full-blown trend that nearly every organization — except for the ones with the tightest security or the most centralized IT departments — have to deal with. Workers are bringing their own laptops and smartphones into the office and connecting them to corporate systems. More people than ever are telecommuting or working from home for a day or two a week. And, the number of Web-based tools has increased dramatically, including many that have become favorites of business users, such as Evernote, Dropbox, and Google Docs.

This puts the onus on IT to craft pragmatic and effective computing policies and to help users understand which tools are safe to use and for which kinds of activities.

2. The borderless network

The old security model was for IT to build a big moat around the corporate network and only let trusted, authorized employees come across the well-guarded drawbridge and into the proverbial castle. However, that model has broken down as companies have had to make more and more exceptions — for example, VPN users working from home, smartphone users on the go, and extranet users via company partnerships.

As a result, today’s IT security model is more about risk management than network protection. Companies have to identify their most important data and then make sure it’s protected no matter who’s accessing it and from wherever and whatever device they’re accessing it from.

3. The cloudy data center

One of the most expensive and cumbersome aspects of the company headquarters — and even some large regional offices — can be the data center. It can make it difficult to reconfigure buildings because you always have to worry about the data center ramifications, which can be extremely costly and limiting.

That’s why some companies are looking to break the cycle and either consolidate and minimize their own internal data centers or outsource the data centers themselves. Some are doing it by going with more cloud computing applications like Salesforce.com. Some of renting server capacity from vendors such as Amazon AWS and Rackspace. Others are going the more traditional route and simply renting data center space from third party data centers that have already solved problems like power, cooling, and telecom redundancy.

Vendors such as EMC and Microsoft see this happening and they want to be part of the mix as well, so they are encouraging companies to virtualize all of their servers and create a “private cloud” that has the flexibility of a cloud solution and the privacy and security of a homegrown server solution.

4. The state of outsourcing

Every time you mention the word “outsourcing” among IT professionals (especially in the U.S.) there’s a predictable knee-jerk reaction. In most cases, they are associating outsourcing with “off-shoring,” the practice of moving entry-level help desk and programming jobs to foreign countries (usually in Southeast Asia) where the labor costs are much cheaper.

However, outsourcing is a much larger trend, and off-shoring is just one part of it. Outsourcing is thriving in many different forms, and it’s reasonable to expect that it will accelerate. Big companies such as IBM, HP, and Verizon Business are offering to take over many of the maintenance functions for IT departments. In many cases, they’ll even keep IT pros on staff and on-premises but those IT pros will now get their paycheck from the vendor. The big benefit here is 24/7 monitoring since these large vendors have engineers in their sophisticated NOCs at all times, plus they have specialists who can solve more difficult problems when the need arises.

When companies move their maintenance portions of the IT department to outsourcers, that leaves business analysts and project managers as the primary job roles left for the internal IT department.

5. The mobilization paradigm

The computer revolution has put a PC on virtually every desk in the business world and in lots of other places where people work, from the sales counter to the warehouse to the patient exam room. While PCs still make sense on the desks of knowledge workers, for all of these other workers who regularly move around as part of their daily job, the stationary PC often changes the natural flow of their routine because they have to stop at a system to enter data or complete a task. That’s about to change.

Mobile computers in the form of smartphones and touchscreen tablets (like the iPad) have taken a big leap forward in the past four years. They are instant-on, easy to learn because of the touchscreen, and they have a whole new ecosystem of applications designed for the touch experience. In the years ahead, we’re going to see more and more development done on these mobile platforms, which will untether workers from their stationary PCs and allow them to interact with people and products in much more natural ways.

Referenced : techrepublic

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The news from Intel that Intel will stop the production of processor Celeron serie in 2011. DigiTimes said that Intel would start the stopping of Celeron from now until 2011. Beside that Celeron will be replaced with the newest product. And these newest product has better ability and capability.

As we know that Intel Celeron is cheap version in the market of processor. So that Intel must change the Image of Celeron. Lot of news say that Intel against the news. Intel said that it was just a rumor. These Super Business of Processor Extremely said that Celeron will not be pulled from the market until next year. Commonly, Celeron 2.4 GHz and 2.6 GHz is priced about USD 43 untill 53. So we’ll see is it just a rumor or intelligence information.

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