- AusCERT 2013: Four dissenters to spur next year's security debates
- AusCERT 2013: Kill the password, says Mozilla
- AusCERT 2013: Unmanaged, unknown privileged logins opening the door for APTs: Cyber-Ark
- AusCERT 2013: Companies unaware of IPv6 security risk even if they’re not using it
- In pictures: AusCERT 2013 roundup
In Pictures: Dearly departed - the Windows features that didn't make it
As Windows 8's arrival is imminent, we look back at the once-must-have features in earlier versions of Windows that got killed along the way
From revolutionary to roadkill
With the final version of Windows 8 now out and about, we can confirm that it’s killed off many Windows 7 features. That's nothing new: Over the years, Windows has spawned -- and then annihilated -- hundreds of technologies. Windows 8 may be an extreme case, in terms of numbers, but it’s by no mean the first version of Windows to kill features that were ballyhooed as must-have reasons to upgrade just a few years before. Let’s step down memory lane and see what’s gone by the wayside, paying our respects as we go.
Market Place
CSO
CIO
ARN
CFO World
CMO
- Analytics and personalisation drive leading marketer behaviour: Report
- Innovation and big data take centre stage during CMO panel
- Twitter targets second screen interaction with Amplify advertising partnerships
- Facebook talks hyper-targeting, analytics and cross-platform at AANA event
- Tapping into social experience: Tourism Australia
































