• 55% off Travel Cord Organizer - Electronics Accessories Case & Cable Organizer - Deal Alert

    55% off Travel Cord Organizer - Electronics Accessories Case & Cable Organizer - Deal Alert
    Designed to protect and safeguard your electronic gadgets and save time on the go by easily storing and finding everything you need. This travel organizer offers a secure storage space for cord management, laptop and computer accessories putting everything you need in one place. This organizer also gives you special space inside for credit cards, passports, also for boarding passes, smartphone, tickets and has many pockets where you can put coins, keys, USB, SIM card, earphones, and other small
  • Google’s Apigee buy validates API economy

    Google’s Apigee buy validates API economy
    Alphabet’s Google today announced plans to acquire Apigee Systems for $625 million, paying a 6.5 percent premium in a deal that reflects how Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) have become critical threads connecting disparate software systems. Apigee, which went public in 2015 and in May reported revenue of $67 million for the third quarter, makes software that enables developers to use APIs to securely share their data across applications and devices from third-parties, a critical
  • Intel's siloed business units unify around IoT and connectivity

    Intel's siloed business units unify around IoT and connectivity
    Intel has many disparate business units doing their own thing. The challenging task of tethering them is a top priority for Intel's second-in-command, Venkata Renduchintala.Renduchintala, known as Murthy, was appointed last November to run Intel's PC, client, and internet of things businesses. He's made his presence felt: Within six months of his appointment, Intel cut struggling products like mobile CPUs and sharpened its focus on growth areas of IoT, servers, and connectivity.One common thread
  • BrandPost: Manufacturing Cloud ERP Enables One View – Including Mobile Users

    BrandPost: Manufacturing Cloud ERP Enables One View – Including Mobile Users
    Many manufacturers still grapple with the disconnected nature of the systems that run their business. To quickly respond to customer demands and make information-based decisions, everyone in the manufacturing enterprise needs access to ERP and production data—including those on mobile devices.When Quatro Composites realized its legacy ERP couldn’t meet its needs, the company began searching for a solution that would provide everyone in the company with access to critical information.
  • Advertisement

  • The first crop of iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus cases you can buy

    iPhone 7 cases are here!Sure, the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus don’t ship until September 16, but you can get a protective case for your soon-to-be new phone right now. And you’ll need a new case—the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus have the same dimensions as the 6s and 6s Plus, but the new cameras on the iPhone 7 won’t fit the camera opening on most 6s cases. Here’s a first look at what’s already on the market.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please clic
  • IDG Contributor Network: HPE deal makes SUSE an enterprise heavyweight

    IDG Contributor Network: HPE deal makes SUSE an enterprise heavyweight
    Micro Focus, the owner of SUSE, is merging with the software business of HPE in a deal that’s valued at approximately $8.8 billion. The new company will continue to operate as Micro Focus, under the leadership of Micro Focus. Micro Focus will be making a $2.5 billion cash payment to HPE and HPE shareholders will acquire 50.1% ownership of the merged company.
    The merger was announced the same day Dell-EMC closed their merger.
    “We believe that the software assets that will be a part o
  • This USB stick will fry your unsecured computer

    This USB stick will fry your unsecured computer
    A Hong Kong-based technology manufacturer, USBKill.com, has taken data security to the "Mission Impossible" extreme by creating a USB stick that uses an electrical discharge to fry an unauthorized computer into which it's plugged.
    "When the USB Kill stick is plugged in, it rapidly charges its capacitors from the USB power supply, and then discharges -- all in the matter of seconds," the company said in a news release. USBKill.comThe USB Kill 2.0 stick.To read this article in full or to leave a
  • Box's developer platform revamped with new content types, UI tools

    Box's developer platform revamped with new content types, UI tools
    While Box is probably best known for its user-facing storage and content services, the company is also operating a separate platform for developers, and it received a handful of updates Thursday.The platform, which lets developers integrate Box's tools for managing content into the apps they're building, now supports new content types, annotations, and watermarking. In addition, the company launched a new set of tools for building web user interfaces and a revamped developer console.Continu
  • Advertisement

  • Need to build a customer community? This new Salesforce tool can help

    Need to build a customer community? This new Salesforce tool can help
    Engaging customers is an ongoing challenge for companies large and small, but Salesforce has been working to make it easier. On Thursday, the CRM giant took its efforts a big step further with the launch of Lightning Bolt, a new product designed to jump-start the process of building customer communities, portals, and websites.Last year, Salesforce introduced Lightning Templates for Community Cloud, enabling companies to create customized communities for their customers, partners, and employees.
  • FBI arrests hackers who allegedly dumped details on government agents

    FBI arrests hackers who allegedly dumped details on government agents
    U.S. authorities have arrested two suspects allegedly involved in dumping details on 29,000 officials with the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.Andrew Otto Boggs and Justin Gray Liverman have been charged with hacking into the internet accounts of senior U.S. government officials and breaking into government computer systems.Both suspects were arrested on Thursday, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.Boggs, age 22, and Liverman, 24, are from North Carolina and are alleged
  • Odds that Apple brings back the iPhone's headphone jack? History says pretty slim

    Odds that Apple brings back the iPhone's headphone jack? History says pretty slim
    If you’re deciding whether to upgrade to the iPhone 7, the possibility of Apple bringing back the headphone jack in future phones probably shouldn’t factor in.
    History shows that once Apple makes up its mind on a product’s direction, the company rarely reverses course, even if there’s an outcry from customers. At best, Apple may extend the life of a popular feature through a portion of its product line, but these concessions tend to be temporary. Given Apple’s stat
  • Google puts screws to HTTP with new warnings in Chrome

    Google puts screws to HTTP with new warnings in Chrome
    Google today continued its campaign to tighten the screws on unencrypted web traffic as it outlined the next steps it will take with Chrome to warn users of insecure connections.
    Starting with Chrome 56, which is currently scheduled to ship in stable format on Jan. 31, 2017, the browser will mark sites that transmit either passwords or credit card information over HTTP connections as "non-secure."
    The move will be "Part of a long-term plan to mark all HTTP sites as non-secure," Emily Schechter,
  • 20% off Kuna Smart Home Security Outdoor Light & Camera - Deal Alert

    20% off Kuna Smart Home Security Outdoor Light & Camera - Deal Alert
    Kuna is a smart home security camera in a stylish outdoor light that detects and allows you to interact with people outside your door. The security device includes HD live and recorded video, two-way intercom, alarm, smart motion detection alerts to your phone, and more. Easy 15 minute installation with no batteries to replace so you have continuous protection around the clock. Be protected at all times - Access HD live video with its 720P wide angle camera, communicate via its t
  • Mercedes-Benz to make drone-equipped electric delivery vans for online orders

    Mercedes-Benz to make drone-equipped electric delivery vans for online orders
    Mercedes-Benz plans to make electric vans with automated flying drones as part of a $562 million, five-year investment aimed at speeding delivery times for online product orders.
    Mercedes-Benz, a division of Daimler AG, said its "Vision Van" is a cloud-connected vehicle, enabling its cargo to be tracked by both the delivery driver and the customer. Once near a delivery location, the driver can deliver one package, while up to two drones can take off from the van roof to automatically deliver ot
  • The Galaxy Note 7 implicated in dramatic Jeep and house fires, reports say

    The Galaxy Note 7 implicated in dramatic Jeep and house fires, reports say
    Those who have yet to return their faulty Galaxy Note 7 are literally playing with fire.
    Two incidents this week illustrate just how seriously Note 7 owners ought to take the threat of the phone’s faulty battery. One example comes from a St. Petersburg, Florida man who left his new Note 7 charging inside of his Jeep while unloading furniture. He returned to find the car consumed in flames. The aftermath is pretty devastating. Fox 13
    The aftermath of a Jeep that was completely engulfed in
  • A Surface all-in-one PC may lead a Microsoft hardware refresh in October

    A Surface all-in-one PC may lead a Microsoft hardware refresh in October
    Talk of a Microsoft Surface all-in-one has... resurfaced, with claims the device, code-named “Cardinal,” could launch at the end of October.
    ZDNet’s Mary Jo Foley reported that October 26 might be the date Microsoft has scheduled for a fall refresh of some of its more popular devices, including newer faster, processors. That suggests Microsoft may upgrade a device like the Surface Pro 4 with a Kaby Lake chip, though Foley also reports that a more formal launch of a Surfac
  • Google Chrome to start marking HTTP connections as insecure

    Google Chrome to start marking HTTP connections as insecure
    To push more websites to implement encryption and to better protect users, Google will start flagging plain HTTP connections as insecure in its popular Chrome browser.The plan will go into effect in January with the release of Chrome 56 and will roll out in stages. Chrome 56 will display a "not secure" indicator before HTTP URLs in the browser's address bar, but only for those web pages that contain password or credit card form fields.Transmitting such sensitive information over HTTP is dangerou
  • 50 years of Star Trek: Boldly inspiring generations of scientists

    50 years of <i>Star Trek</i>: Boldly inspiring generations of scientists
    For Robert Hurt, some of his earliest memories are of sitting with his dad in their den watching the original Star Trek and dreaming of space travel and astronomy.
    Now 50 years later, Hurt is a physicist working at the California Institute of Technology on NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, peering deep into areas of space that have always been hidden from us.
    Like Captain James T. Kirk and the crew of the starship USS Enterprise, Hurt is a space explorer.
    After Star Trek first aired - 50 years ag
  • Intel may make chips specially for mixed reality headsets

    Intel may make chips specially for mixed reality headsets
    Intel believes untethered headsets could be a new class of PCs in the future, and the company may develop chips dedicated to those devices.The chipmaker previewed its virtual and augmented reality plans last month with Project Alloy, a Microsoft HoloLens-type headset that can mix images from real and virtual worlds. Project Alloy will be available for PC makers to replicate, but Intel may also see a market for mixed reality headset chips.Project Alloy is a prototype headset running on Micro
  • This Bluetooth Star Trek ComBridge turns fantasy to reality

    This Bluetooth Star Trek ComBridge turns fantasy to reality
    Thursday marks the 50th anniversary of the original Star Trek series, but if you swing more Picard than Kirk, your dreams just came true.
    ThinkGeek announced that it’s taking preorders for a working Bluetooth ComBadge—a screen-accurate replica of the badge from Star Trek: The Next Generation.
    The ComBadge, which is made of ABS plastic and zinc functions as a Bluetooth speaker and mic. A neodymium magnet keeps it affixed  to your uniform or favorite nerd t-shirt. It charges via
  • IDG Contributor Network: The value of identifying the 'failure stream'

    IDG Contributor Network: The value of identifying the 'failure stream'
    This is Part 1 of a two-part series related to how enhancing your value stream mapping activities can benefit your IT service management (ITSM) improvement effort.Many things have been written about value stream mapping and the benefit it brings in analyzing the current and future states of products and services. I really won’t go into that here. You can probably go onto the internet yourself and read line upon line about how this is something that you should do to understand your activiti
  • IDG Contributor Network: Why hasn't artificial intelligence made the Internet smarter?

    IDG Contributor Network: Why hasn't artificial intelligence made the Internet smarter?
    The commercial Internet has now been around for twenty some years and the overall experience hasn’t changed much from the days of “You’ve Got Mail.”The Internet started out as a research tool between government, universities and corporations. With the advent of hyperlinks, the Internet has been transformed into a commercial vehicle for the sale of good and services.The Internet of today as a research tool is pathetic and has taken on a bias of consumerism. Take this examp
  • Government ill-equipped to thwart cyberwarfare

    Government ill-equipped to thwart cyberwarfare
    In January, V. Miller Newton, CEO and president of PKWARE, made his annual list of predictions for most likely cyberattacks of the year.Number 3 on the list: The U.S. electrical grid will be attacked. He's been making predictions since 2011, and claims 95 percent accuracy so far (he also predicts that healthcare systems were at risk and that smart watches would be hacked).[ Related: Battling cyberattacks with bombs? ]"This country's infrastructure runs on antiquated technology and systems," he s
  • Google gets API management tools in Apigee deal

    Google gets API management tools in Apigee deal
    Google plans to acquire API management vendor Apigee in a US$625 million deal that will give the search giant secure and multilanguage API tools used by companies bringing more and more of their services online.The deal, announced Thursday, gives Google access to tools that allow company back-end systems to communicate with mobile and web apps, Diane Greene, senior vice president of Google's cloud business, said in a blog post.APIs are "vital for how business gets done today in the fast-growing
  • These mundane jobs bots can take in the enterprise

    These mundane jobs bots can take in the enterprise
    An interventionBots are quickly infiltrating our personal lives and are now beginning to make their way into the enterprise. Inherently more complex than Siri reading you the weather or performing a Google search on IMDB, the enterprise can be a tough nut for bot tech to crack. It has taken some time for technologists to identify the best places to start looking to bot assistance or intervention within the enterprise. The good news is that there are several enterprise tasks that are ripe for bot
  • Canada-EU counter-terror data exchange is illegal, says top EU judge

    Canada-EU counter-terror data exchange is illegal, says top EU judge
    An agreement to send Canadian authorities passenger name record (PNR) data for flights from the European Union cannot be entered into in its current form, a top European Union judge has said.That's because parts of the draft agreement are incompatible with EU citizens' fundamental privacy rights, according to Paolo Mengozzi, Advocate General of the Court of Justice of the EU, in a legal opinion issued Thursday.His opinion, on a case brought by the European Parliament, is only advisory, and it st
  • IDG Contributor Network: Super Mario Run might disappoint iPhone and iPad gamers

    IDG Contributor Network: Super Mario Run might disappoint iPhone and iPad gamers
    Nintendo and Apple made history yesterday when the two companies announced that Mario was finally coming to iOS devices. Super Mario Run is the first Mario game ever for Apple’s iOS devices and many people were surprised by the announcement.
    I’ve waited years for Mario to appear on iOS devices, and at first I was extremely happy while watching the keynote address yesterday. Finally Mario on my iPhone and iPad! After all these years I'd be able to play one of the most venerable chara
  • IDG Contributor Network: What can IoT do for healthcare?

    IDG Contributor Network: What can IoT do for healthcare?
    The internet of things, or IoT, is changing the way that people live, work and stay healthy. The cohesion and communication provided by IoT technologies is becoming evident in the healthcare field. Among other things, it's making it easier for providers to keep track of and monitor patients in between visits, which can make treatment more effective and efficient. This new technology also helps predict future healthcare trends that can make diagnosing patients easier and more accurate, and h
  • You can try HoloLens' radical mixed reality experiences at Microsoft Stores this fall

    You’ve read the hype, salivated over the idea of playing mixed reality Minecraft, and now’s your chance to experience the HoloLens augmented reality headset.
    Microsoft recently announced the HoloLens Roadshow, a tour featuring one-on-one demonstrations of HoloLens hardware at select Microsoft Stores in the U.S. and Canada. While we’re not sure if there’ll be a Minecraft demonstration, you will get to experience the magic of HoloLens for yourself.To read this article
  • Security an afterthought in connected home, wearable devices

    Security an afterthought in connected home, wearable devices
    Based on an extensive review of publicly reported internet of things (IoT) device vulnerabilities, the Online Trust Alliance (OTA) today announced that all of the problems could have been easily avoided."In this rush to bring connected devices to market, security and privacy is often being overlooked," Craig Spiezle, executive director and president of the OTA, said in a statement today. "If businesses do not make a systematic change, we risk seeing the weaponization of these devices and an eros
  • Behind the scenes of Apple's iPhone 7 event

    Behind the scenes of Apple's iPhone 7 event
    Apple's Sept. 7, 2016 'special event' in imagesImage by Matt KapkoApple held its annual product showcase at the storied Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco this week. The company revealed the iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, Apple Watch Series 2 and a set ofsoftware enhancements.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here
  • A USB device is all it takes to steal credentials from locked PCs

    Most users lock their computer screens when they temporarily step away from them. While this seems like a good security measure, it isn't good enough, a researcher demonstrated this week.Rob Fuller, principal security engineer at R5 Industries, found out that all it takes to copy an OS account password hash from a locked Windows computer is to plug in a special USB device for a few seconds. The hash can later be cracked or used directly in some network attacks.For his attack, Fuller used a flash
  • Fed clamps down on for-profit schools

    Fed clamps down on for-profit schools
    Hope you weren't looking forward to your first day of classes at an ITT Technical Institute, because as of today, they're shutting down all their campuses nationwide. The ITT Tech closure's expected to affect at least 35,000 students as well as approximately 8,000 employees, according to the Los Angeles Times.
    ITT Tech is the latest for-profit college chain to crumble under increased scrutiny by the U.S. Board of Education, which created a new division in early 2015 to make sure students were ge
  • Ransomware prevalent in cloud-based malware

    Ransomware prevalent in cloud-based malware
    Cloud-based filesharing, collaboration and social networking applications are common vectors for malware infections, a large portion of of which are ransomware delivery vehicles, according to a report released today.
    Javascript exploits and droppers, Microsoft Office macros, and PDF exploits make up 43.7 percent of the total detected cloud malware, said Jamie Barnett, CMO at Netskope, the company that released the report.
    "These are typical ransomware delivery vehicles," she said.
    Cloud-based a
  • Lights out! Why IT shops are disabling wireless AP LEDs

    Lights out! Why IT shops are disabling wireless AP LEDs
    Having seen all sorts of makeshift fixes – from post-it notes to bandages to condom wrappers – used to block wireless access point LEDs from beaming and sometimes blinking, some IT shops have begun turning off the lights altogether even though it can make their jobs a little tougher. 
    Lively discussion broke out online this week among a forum of university IT pros after one member inquired about this “first-world problem,” as he contemplates whether to disable LEDs
  • IBM's new Power8 server packs in Nvidia's speedy NVLink interconnect

    IBM's new Power8 server packs in Nvidia's speedy NVLink interconnect
    IBM is making headlines with its quantum computing research and brain-like chip called TrueNorth, but it also is bringing interesting technologies to its current Power server lineup.Inside IBM's new S822LC server for high-performance computing is a new interconnect that gives a five-fold speed boost to communication between a CPU and graphics processor.The interconnect is based on Nvidia's homegrown NVLink technology, which has been in the works for years. IBM's two-socket server, which is based
  • Top EU court hedges on question of hyperlinking legality in Playboy case

    Top EU court hedges on question of hyperlinking legality in Playboy case
    To the old legal presumption of innocence until proven guilty, the European Union's highest court has added another: innocence until proven profitable.It's OK for websites to hyperlink to an image published elsewhere without the rights holder's permission -- as long as they don't know that, and don't make a profit from it, the Court of Justice of the EU ruled on Thursday.The ruling concerned Dutch website GeenStijl, accused by Playboy of linking to an Australian website that published, without t
  • Microsoft’s tin ear for privacy

    Microsoft’s tin ear for privacy
    Microsoft keeps making news of the privacy front, and not in a good way.
    Much has been made of the way Cortana in Windows 10 may invade your privacy by collecting data such as the words you speak and the keys you strike. Though that is disturbing to many people, Microsoft has responded by noting that Cortana needs to know that information in order to fulfill users’ requests. That’s true, but beside the point. The real issue, as my fellow columnist Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols points ou
  • 5G could require cell towers on every street corner

    5G could require cell towers on every street corner
    Would you want a cell phone tower or network base station in your neighborhood? For many people the answer is "no way." But when 5G — the ultra-fast, next generation of mobile connectivity — arrives it's likely that millions of new cell towers will spring up to handle the traffic, said FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler on Monday.The new 5G wireless is not the only technology that will require more and more cell towers. Google's much-hyped gigabit fiber deployments have stalled, and it appears
  • Hack the vote: Experts say the risk is real

    Hack the vote: Experts say the risk is real
    You should be worried about the November election. Not so much that the candidates you support won’t win, but about the risk that the “winners” may not really be the winners, due to hackers tampering with the results.
    Or, that even if the winners really are the winners, there will be enough doubt about it to create political chaos.
    This is not tinfoil-hat conspiracy theory. The warnings are coming from some of the most credible security experts in the industry.
    Richard Clarke,
  • How identity management helps protect what ails patients

    How identity management helps protect what ails patients
    Empowering the patientImage by ThinkstockThere is serious personal risk associated with a healthcare data breach, especially with multiple connected devices and health record systems generating and storing a patient’s sensitive health data. Every person interacting with an online system needs a digital identity, and it should be authenticated in real time, so that unusual behavior can be detected at any time, whether at login or midway through a session.To read this article in full or to l
  • 3 reasons why Apple Watch Series 2 is great for fitness fanatics

    3 reasons why Apple Watch Series 2 is great for fitness fanatics
    Apple Watch still won't track your sleep, but with the new Series 2 version ($369 and up) and watchOS 3, Apple made its wearable an even more compelling activity tracker. Here are three good reasons why fitness and wellness junkies — especially swimmers, hikers and runners — may want to buy the new Apple Watch.1. Apple Watch Series 2 is swimproof
    Unlike the first-generation Apple Watch, Series 2 is waterproof up to 50 meters, so you can wear it in a pool. The new Watch's Ac
  • What’s your IT department’s strategy for website downtime?

    What’s your IT department’s strategy for website downtime?
    Website disruptions are more than a mere annoyance. They can quickly add up, leading to declines in productivity and revenue. These website errors not only affect your end-users, they also pull key players away from other projects to help put out the fire to avoid major profit losses."Latencies and inconsistent website behaviors doesn't only damage the customer experience and deter consumers away from your site; it can also lead to drastic revenue loss. In fact, Amazon calculated that a one-seco
  • To iPhone 7 or not?

    To iPhone 7 or not?
    It's as predictable as falling leaves in autumn: Apple unveils a new iPhone and Executive News Editor Ken Mingis insists this will be the year he finally skips an upgrade.
    Why wait? His current "bros gold" iPhone 6S Plus works just fine, and the really revamped iPhone isn't coming out until next year. Sure, the new iPhone 7 has a fancy new camera, super fast quad-core processor, brighter screen and no audio jack. 
    But getting a new iPhone means having to pre-order at 3 a.m. ET, because if
  • Samsung brings JavaScript to the Internet of Things

    Samsung brings JavaScript to the Internet of Things
    Samsung has begun offering a stable 1.0 release of JerryScript, its lightweight JavaScript engine for the internet of things (IoT).
    Requiring less than 64KB of system RAM, the open source engine is intended for resource-constrained devices like microcontrollers. JerryScript backs on-device compilation and can access peripherals from JavaScript. It uses a C API for embedding in applications, and Ubuntu 14.04 Linux is the only supported development environment.To read this article in full or to l
  • Rugged devops: Build security into software development

    Rugged devops: Build security into software development
    Devops is transforming how developers and operations teams work together to deliver better software faster. At its core, devops is about automation. When several tasks in development, testing, and deployment are automated, developers can make changes to code and deploy to production frequently. Amazon, a leading devops proponent, at one point claimed to have more than 1,000 deployments a day.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here(Insider Story)
  • How it works: Iris scanning improves smartphone security

    How it works: Iris scanning improves smartphone security
    You hold your smartphone in front of your face, the angle and distance guided by on-screen feedback. It flashes near-infrared (NIR) light into your eyes -- a brief dull-red glow. Your smartphone recognizes one or both of your irises, and unlocks itself.
    At least, that's the new smartphone login scenario. Previously seen mostly in military devices and fixed installations, iris scanning is joining other biometric authentication methods (such as fingerprint scanning, facial recognition and voice r
  • 14 tips for working with recruiters

    14 tips for working with recruiters
    How to get the most from tech recruitersImage by Thinkstock If you're trying to land a new job, it's almost a given that you'll be working with a recruiter at some point. Understanding the role a recruiter plays in helping you find a job can help you make the most of this critical professional relationship. Here, recruiting and staffing firm Venus Staffing shares 14 tips they've complied from their experts for leveraging these relationships to the fullest.
    1. Understand that recruiters don't wor
  • Where, when, and how to preorder your iPhone 7 and 7 Plus

    It seems like just yesterday that Apple announced the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus with stereo speakers, overhauled cameras, and splash-proof capabilities. Oh, wait, it was yesterday. And now it’s time to preorder your shiny (or matte) new iPhone. Preorders start on Friday, September 9 at 12:01 a.m Pacific. Yep, that’s right after midnight, so don’t go to bed Thursday night without setting your alarm.
    Apple.com may seem like the most obvious choice to preorder your iPhone 7 and
  • Apple Watch Series 2 hands-on: Ceramic is stunning, but Hermès overpriced

    Apple Watch Series 2 hands-on: Ceramic is stunning, but Hermès overpriced
    It’s really hard to tell the difference between the new Apple Watch Series 2 models and the originals—the aluminum and steel versions anyway—until you place them side by side. Turns out, the Series 2 models are ever so slightly thicker than their predecessors. Just a hair, not enough to even complain about, really, and it’s certainly not a deal-breaker. But from Apple, a company with a track record of sacrificing ports and redesigning keyboards in order to make its produ

Follow @ITExecutiveNews on Twitter!