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Search Engine Watch Kevin Ryan |
Q&A with Nicholas Carr, author, The Big Switch Carr shares his thoughts on why we're entering a new and even more disruptive era of computerization. |
InternetNews March 18, 2008 Kenneth Corbin |
SES: The Cloud And The New Utility Companies Nicholas Carr delivered an inspiring, unsettling vision for computing power as a utility and predicted where the IT economy is headed. |
PC Magazine March 28, 2008 Erik Rhey |
Q&A: Nicholas Carr - The World Wide Computer Explained The author of The Big Switch tells us why a sea change is coming to computing. |
Wired December 20, 2007 Spencer Reiss |
Q&A: Author Nicholas Carr on the Terrifying Future of Computing The author of The Big Switch explains why he finds the future of computing so scary. |
InternetNews March 6, 2009 Andy Patrizio |
Why Cloud Computing Is the New Electrical Grid Author Nicholas Carr sees parallels between the power grid and cloud computing that presage big changes for IT. |
Search Engine Watch December 11, 2007 Greg Jarboe |
Top News Stories from SES Chicago Thoughts on Don Schultz's keynote at the Search Engine Strategies (SES) Chicago last week... Net neutrality: what can we do?... Soaring through universal search... Orion panel at SES Chicago... The unfiltered reality of SES Chicago... etc. |
The Motley Fool July 2, 2010 |
IT Expert Nicholas Carr on Google, Apple, Facebook Nicholas Carr talks about his new book, The Shallows. The book focuses on the effect Google and persistent information have on our lives. He offers stock purchase advice too. |
CFO June 16, 2003 Scott Leibs |
An Exercise in Utility We may be wired for the promise of IT as a utility, but we're a long way from simply flipping a switch. |
Bio-IT World June 17, 2004 John Russell |
The Satanic Verses of IT From the vehemence of IT industry responses, you'd think Nicholas Carr had written the Satanic Verses of IT with his new book, "Does IT Matter?." Is Carr wrong? If he's not, is that so bad? Maybe the real question is, does Carr's book matter? |
InternetNews January 5, 2006 Clint Boulton |
EMC Goes Grid For $30M EMC purchased grid software from Acxiom Corporation for $30 million as part of a technology and distribution partnership. |
Bank Technology News October 2003 Karen Krebsbach |
Getting on the grid Have financial services firms captured the Holy Grail of technology? That's what some observers say as firms implement grid computing -- an architecture that helps harness all the computer power across an enterprise. For Schwab's David Dibble, it's been a long time coming. Too long. |
BusinessWeek May 24, 2004 Robert Hof |
Is Info Tech All Washed Up? Nicholas G. Carr's book, "Does IT Matter? Information Technology and the Corrosion of Competitive Advantage," is a worthwhile guide to where information technology is headed for the long term. |
InternetNews February 14, 2006 David Needle |
Open Source Will Help Advance of Utility Computing Open source software will play an important role in the inevitable move to a utility model of computing. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2008 Paul McFedries |
The Cloud Is The Computer The Internet has become an extension of our computers. |
Search Engine Watch March 31, 2008 Kevin Newcomb |
Highlights from the SEW Blog: March 24-28, 2008 Good Google bombs... Google webmaster tools... Google no longer a portal?... Search within a search... Yahoo and the future of search... Google video ads... Non-text contextual ads... Social media: one size does not fit all... etc. |
New Architect April 2002 Jay Lyman |
Girding for the Grid When a computing project demands greater processing resources than are available locally, the grid lets remote machines lend their CPU and storage to the task, across a network... |
Fast Company December 2003 James Champy |
Technology Doesn't Matter -- but Only at Harvard Does IT matter anymore? When it comes to innovation, it's more relevant than ever. |
InternetNews November 17, 2004 Michael Singer |
Sun Lights Up $1 Grid Sun Microsystems continued its disruptive pricing strategy this week with a new grid computing offer that costs $1 per -CPU, per-hour to use. |