-
3
Analysis: Microsoft - Too old and too big to survive?
What browser do you prefer? According to w3schools.com, which tracks browser usage of people interested in Web technologies and hence more likely to try alternative tools, as of April this year, 38.3 per cent of us preferred Google's Chrome, 35.8 per cent went with Mozilla's Firefox, and 18.3 per cent were still using Microsoft's Internet Explorer (Apple's Safari and Opera were trailing way behind). Over the last year IE and Firefox have seen their shares decrease and only Chrome has gained share.
-
1
Google Chrome share suffers with tweak of browser use calculation
A change in the way browser usage is calculated led to a decline in web browser market share for Google Chrome, which experienced its second market share slip this year after growing steadily throughout 2011.
-
The lowdown on Google's Safari tracking cookies
A grad student has caught Google with its hand in the cookies jar.
-
IE 9 anti-malware kingpin in browser face off
Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 9 is hands-down superior at detecting security threats delivered by malicious websites, according to testing company NSS Labs.
-
Amazon Cloud Player now works with iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch
Amazon's Cloud Player music streaming service launched only with Android compatibility, but an update rolled out this weekend quietly introduced basic support for Apple's iOS. If you have an Amazon Cloud Drive account (5GB free, plus a free 20GB upgrade if you purchase an album via Amazon MP3), you can now stream music on iOS devices too.
-
8 killer Safari 5.01 extensions
Apple's new Safari extension gallery looks a lot like the iOS App Store, populated with colorful icons that hold strange and wonderful things. In case browsing the 100 extensions Apple offers for Safari 5.01 is too much effort, here are eight good ones to get you started:
-
5 reasons to upgrade to Apple's Safari 5
Although it wasn't mentioned during Apple CEO Steve Jobs' keynote address Monday at WWDC, Apple launched an updated version of its Safari Web browser for Mac OS X 10.5.8 and 10.6.2 or higher, as well as Windows XP SP2 or higher, Vista, and Windows 7.
-
Safari 5 in depth: Has it sped past Chrome?
The just-released Safari 5 ups the ante in the browser wars, with two major improvements: a performance boost to rival speed king Chrome, the highly useful Safari Reader, which makes it much easier to read multi-page Web articles.
-
Google's Chrome tops Safari: Is Firefox next?
Google Chrome hit a milestone over the weekend when it became the third-most popular browser after Microsoft Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox, according to metrics firm Net Applications. It controls just 4.63 percent of the browser market, but Chrome has made significant inroads against competing browsers, such as the former bronze medalist Apple Safari.
-
1
Browser wars redux: Top 5 duke it out
For browser fans, this is the best of times.
-
iPhone's Safari leads on sexy smarts
Most people would agree that Apple's mobile Safari browser is one of the iPhone's great strengths. While Steve Jobs leaned on the iPhone engineers to get the new device just right, on the other side of the house Apple's browser people also felt under pressure to do their part. Everyone at Apple knew that much of the iPhone's magic would lie in the way it accessed Web content.
Oracle Exadata - Extreme performance, lowest cost.
As organizations contend with escalating demands for greater quantities of information, more sophisticated data analysis, and a burgeoning user population, Oracle Exadata makes database workloads faster, easier to manage, and less expensive. Oracle Exadata is the world’s first database machine to provide extreme performance for both data warehousing and online transaction processing (OLTP) applications. Read this whitepaper.
Gadwin GeForms
GeForms allows you to create your own forms or fill in existing forms electronically. Using GeForms you are provided with sophisticated form design tools which ...
Process-Driven Master Data Management for Dummies
We wrote this book to introduce you to the subject of processdriven MDM. It’s a big topic, one that far outstrips the ability of a brief book to cover. However, our hope is that by reading this book you will gain a fundamental understanding of processdriven MDM, how it works, and what it takes to make it a success in your organisation.
- FTSenior Network Field Engineer - Cisco R&S / Wireless SolutionsNSW
- CCOBIEE ConsultantWA
- CCSystem Engineer - Exchange - CONTRACTSWA
- CCSAP PM ConsultantNSW
- FTIT Account Manager - System Integrator - Career Progression - Start ImmediatelyNSW
- CCSAP FICO ConsultantNT
- FTSAP Basis ConsultantACT
- CCSystem Engineer - Lync and Exchange - CONTRACTSWA
- FTProduct Manager Strategist - Enterprise ApplicationsNSW
- FTTechnical Services Engineer - ShoreTel/MitelVIC
- FTSAP Basis ConsultantNSW
- FTChange Management ProfessionalsNSW
- FTSenior Network Field Engineer - Cisco R&S / Wireless SolutionsNSW
- FTSenior Citrix EngineerNSW
- FTQM Trainer and ConsultantNSW
- CCAvaya Engineer - ERS 8600 4.1NSW
- FTSenior Citrix EngineerNSW
- FTSenior Network Engineer - Cisco / Nexus / UCS / - Routing / Switching / WirelessNSW
- FTiPhone App DeveloperNSW
- FTiPhone Developer DeveloperNSW
- FTIT Service Desk EngineerNSW
- FTIT Service Desk EngineerNSW
- FTiPhone App DeveloperNSW
- CCPC Relocation Technicians - Multiple Roles availableSA
- FTiPhone App DeveloperNSW








