The worldwide market for SAN and NAS storage is anticipated to grow from US $2 billion in 1999 to over $25 billion by 2004. As business-to-business and business-to-consumer e-commerce matures, even greater demands for management of stored data will arise. With the rapid increase in data storage requirements in the last decade, efficient management of stored data becomes a necessity for the enterprise. A recent UC-Berkeley study predicts that 150,000 terabytes of disk storage will be shipped in 2003. Most financial, insurance, healthcare, and telecommunications institutions are in the...
The worldwide market for SAN and NAS storage is anticipated to grow from US $2 billion in 1999 to over $25 billion by 2004. As business-to-business an...
Java has taken the computing world by storm - now it arms itself to conquer telecommunications
What links today's hottest programming language to telecommunications? The same characteristics that brought about Java's remarkable success on the Internet: its platform independence and mobility.
Recent developments such as JAIN (Java APIs for Integrated Networks), JAIN Parlay and the Java Telephony API equip Java for the next generation of telecommunications systems and networks. The authors, all practitioners at companies such as Sun Microsystems and Telcordia, provide...
Java has taken the computing world by storm - now it arms itself to conquer telecommunications
The role of the telegraph operator in the mid-nineteenth century was like that of today s software programmer/analyst, according to independent scholar Tom Jepsen, who notes that in the cyberspace of long ago, male operators were often surprised to learn that the first-class man on the other end of the wire was a woman. Like the computer, the telegraph caused a technological revolution. The telegraph soon worked synergistically with the era s other mass-scale technology, the railroad, to share facilities as well as provide communications to help trains run on time. The strategic...
The role of the telegraph operator in the mid-nineteenth century was like that of today s software programmer/analyst, according to independent schola...
The role of the telegraph operator in the mid-nineteenth century was like that of today s software programmer/analyst, according to independent scholar Tom Jepsen, who notes that in the cyberspace of long ago, male operators were often surprised to learn that the first-class man on the other end of the wire was a woman. Like the computer, the telegraph caused a technological revolution. The telegraph soon worked synergistically with the era s other mass-scale technology, the railroad, to share facilities as well as provide communications to help trains run on time. The strategic...
The role of the telegraph operator in the mid-nineteenth century was like that of today s software programmer/analyst, according to independent schola...