| By Bob Gourley | Article Rating: |
|
| November 6, 2012 05:00 PM EST | Reads: |
1,311 |
By RyanKamauff
Here are the top tech stories and news of the day.
- Apple squanders its riches - BetaNews’ Joe Wilcox examines the behavior of Apple as a corporate icon, and relates it to the behemoth of the 1990s, Microsoft. He sees negative perceptions, arrogance and a failure to innovate of late. Likening this to Microsoft, he sees a complete lack of consumer and analyst expectation for Microsoft, which is where Apple may be headed. Via BetaNews, more here.
- Why Apple could be getting closer to building its own Mac chips - In 2005, Apple dropped their own internally designed PowerPC silicon for Intel’s x86 architecture, and hasn’t looked back for a while. Apple has begun to design their own ARM chips for iOS devices, and may be looking to replace the chips inside of the MacBook Air (and later their full MacBook lines). ARM chips are being used successfully in servers, and it shouldn’t be long before you see them in multiple PCs. Via GigaOM, more here.
- Judge dismisses Apple lawsuit versus Motorola over standards-based patents – After Apple insisted that they would only pay $1 per product (instead of the 2.5% per product Motorola requested), Judge Crabb has thrown out the lawsuit over fair royalties. Via Engadget, more here.
- GigaOM takes a look at how Tumblr has done it - Tumblr’s CEO believes that the sites ability to easily post, share and re-post all without comments. They chose to ignore comments to keep the ‘jerks’ off of the site. The eco-system has grown, and reached over 20B page views (and growing). Via GigaOM, more here.
- Report: Internet Explorer 10 Is The Fastest Browser On Windows, Chrome 19 Wins On Mac - New Relic, a web application performance management firm, monitors 40B pageviews a month. It has found that IE10 performs the speediest on Windows 8, followed by IE9, Firefox 15, Safari 5 and Chrome 21. However, Chrome 19 is the fastest browser on both Mac and Linux platforms. Via TechCrunch, more here.
- Google Chrome 23 in finished form brings Do Not Track, graphics boosts for Windows users - The latest version of Chrome offers the much needed Do Not Track feature which allows you to increase your privacy and thwart targeted advertisements. They have also included hardware graphical acceleration for Windows PCs. Via Engadget, more here.

Read the original blog entry...
Published November 6, 2012 Reads 1,311
Copyright © 2012 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Bob Gourley
Bob Gourley, former CTO of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), is Founder and CTO of Crucial Point LLC, a technology research and advisory firm providing fact based technology reviews in support of venture capital, private equity and emerging technology firms. He has extensive industry experience in intelligence and security and was awarded an intelligence community meritorious achievement award by AFCEA in 2008, and has also been recognized as an Infoworld Top 25 CTO and as one of the most fascinating communicators in Government IT by GovFresh.
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- Windows Azure IaaS Reaches General Availability
- New Relic Q1 2013 Blazes Past Growth Targets and Reaches 40,000 Active Customer Accounts
- Portable Experimenter’s Platform, Powered by Raspberry Pi
- Basho Announces Open Source Riak CS and General Availability of Riak CS Enterprise v1.3
- MicroStrategy Announces General Availability of MicroStrategy 9.3.1
- CollabNet And UC4 Announce General Availability Of Joint Enterprise DevOps Platform
- AMAX Launches StorMax(TM) CFS, powered by IBM(R) General Parallel File System(TM) (GPFS(TM))
- MicroStrategy Announces General Availability of MicroStrategy 9.3.1
- Project Floodlight Grows to the World’s Largest SDN Ecosystem; Global Users, Contributors and Partners Innovating Using Open Source SDN
- The Software Freedom Conservancy – Fundraising Campaign: Non-Profit Accounting Software
- New Relic Named Best Place to Work in the Bay Area for Second Year in a Row
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- Windows Azure IaaS Reaches General Availability
- New Relic Q1 2013 Blazes Past Growth Targets and Reaches 40,000 Active Customer Accounts
- Portable Experimenter’s Platform, Powered by Raspberry Pi
- SUSE Receives Common Criteria Security Certifications
- Basho Announces Open Source Riak CS and General Availability of Riak CS Enterprise v1.3
- Granular Enforcement of Access to File Systems Featured in Latest Release of FoxT ServerControl
- MicroStrategy Announces General Availability of MicroStrategy 9.3.1
- CollabNet And UC4 Announce General Availability Of Joint Enterprise DevOps Platform
- AMAX Launches StorMax(TM) CFS, powered by IBM(R) General Parallel File System(TM) (GPFS(TM))
- MicroStrategy Announces General Availability of MicroStrategy 9.3.1
- Project Floodlight Grows to the World’s Largest SDN Ecosystem; Global Users, Contributors and Partners Innovating Using Open Source SDN
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- Red Hat Named "Platinum Sponsor" of Virtualization Conference & Expo
- An Introduction to Ant
- Cloud Expo 2011 East To Attract 10,000 Delegates and 200 Exhibitors
- Google Web Toolkit: Finally Java Has Been Put into JavaScript!
- Cloud Expo, Inc. Announces Cloud Expo 2011 New York Venue
- AJAX World RIA Conference News - AJAX & RIA with Server-Side JavaScript
- Early Notes on GoogleApps
- President & CTO of 3tera Speaking Next Week at SYS-CON's Cloud Computing Expo November 19-21 in Silicon Valley
- Rating JRuby, Jython, and Groovy on the Java Platform
- Python Creator Guido van Rossum to Present the Next-Generation Python 3000
- Rackspace Cloud APIs Open Sourced




























