The Hypothetical Life of a CISO
A CISO (Chief Information Security Officer) is the pinnacle of successes and the aim for many a security engineer in the industry but many will never achieve this level of success.
Craig Ford | 21 May | Read more
A CISO (Chief Information Security Officer) is the pinnacle of successes and the aim for many a security engineer in the industry but many will never achieve this level of success.
Craig Ford | 21 May | Read more
Having reviewed Acronis's True Image backup solution multiple times over the last decade or so, I'd given up hope that it would ever sport anything that even approximated a friendly user interface.
Jon L. Jacobi | 02 Oct | Read more
As students return to school, technology goes with them. That technology--and the data generated by it--is valuable not simply as a means for getting school work done, but also as entertainment for those brief hours between one assignment and the next. It's for this reason that it pays to plan for disaster. With a single massive power burst, storage media that suddenly heads south, or interaction with a light-fingered ne'er-do-well, the technology your student depends on can vanish. Take these five tips to heart, however, and the loss of a device or data need not be catastrophic.
Christopher Breen | 20 Aug | Read more
Once upon a time one of the primary handicaps of iOS devices was the fact that you had to physically connect it to a Windows or Mac PC with a USB sync cable to back it up using iTunes. With iOS 5 Apple introduced iCloud, essentially allowing users to cut the cord. But these iOS backup methods were not created equal, and if you don't choose carefully you could be risking significant data loss. To ensure your iPhone or iPad data is fully protected, here's a look at what each option backs up and when to use it.
Tony Bradley | 15 May | Read more
March 31 is World Backup Day; do you know where your data is?
David Braue | 31 Mar | Read more
I've been answering questions from PCWorld readers since 1997, and I think I've read about every problem that Windows and PC hardware can provide.
Lincoln Spector | 18 Jun | Read more
Even if you don't do New Year's resolutions, flipping the calendar to a fresh year is a great time to take stock of your tech habits and brush them up as needed. Unlike resolutions you have to keep all year, like working out every day, most of these technology pledges are set-it-and-forget-it. We know you're a super-smart person and you're probably doing all this stuff already, but it never hurts to double-check.
Susie Ochs | 03 Jan | Read more
A new year is upon us, and that can mean only one thing: resolutions. For most folks, these tend to be of the "get in shape" or "quit smoking" variety. But if you're a PCWorld reader, consider adding some PC-specific resolutions to the mix.
Rick Broida | 22 Dec | Read more
It's the time of year when we make promises for the new year that are routinely broken before that year is a week old. And for this reason, far too many of us simply resolve to never make another resolution. (Because, after all, that's an easy one to keep.)
Christopher Breen | 30 Dec | Read more
Backup, archival, recovery, and redundant operations for business continuity are key success factors for industrial strength IT. But how do the rules of the game change with multi-tenant SaaS applications?
David Taber | 10 Sep | Read more
John Septimus Roe Anglican Community School (JSRACS) is located on two campuses across the suburbs of Mirrabooka and Beechboro in Western Australia. A number of devices within the school’s existing laptop fleet were at least five years old and no longer met the performance needs required by the curriculum. JSRACS wanted high performing laptops that would be powerful enough to support a range of learning activities and could withstand use by multiple students each day.