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IDC Home: The premier global market intelligence firm. HTML Examples. TechCrunch. Is This the Tablet of the Future? Yes, the tablets of today are cool, handy devices, but if Samsung makes good on the promises from its latest video, showing a conceptual tablet with a flexible AMOLED screen, then the tablets of the future will make the current ones look ancient in comparison. In the video, a see-through device made entirely of a flexible, AMOLED touch screen is used to take photos, watch videos, read news, play 3D games and translate speech from one language to another - and it all looks amazing.

Of course, a device such as this one is years — decades, perhaps — from mass production. One issue that immediately springs to mind is the problem of equipping such a device with a battery and the needed circuitry (all of which would also need to be flexible), and that's just the tip of the iceberg. SEE ALSO: This Is What the Desk of the Future Looks Like [VIDEO] Six Steps to a Faster Broadband Connection - Page 3. If you're serious about the Internet, chances are you spend anywhere from $30 to $99 per month for a broadband Internet connection.

But regardless of how much you pay, are you getting all the speed that your ISP promised you? And does your connection persist reliably without dropping out frequently or requiring modem reboots? With our quick guide, you can squeeze every last kilobit-per-second (kbps) of throughput out of your broadband modem and keep your connection running smoothly. 1. Test Your Connection Speed Before you start tweaking, get a baseline reading of your downstream and upstream connection speeds at Speedtest.net. 2. If your cable or DSL modem is more than a couple of years old, ask your Internet service provider for a new one. Even with a brand-new modem, make sure that you have the latest firmware installed. To update your DSL modem, you'll have to connect to its Web interface, which means that you'll need to know the IP address of the modem on your local network. The Tech Terms Computer Dictionary.

Five Microsoft apps that will change IT. Microsoft has some potential game-changers on the horizon that could dramatically affect the company's role in the enterprise. Let me preface this article by saying that I don't believe that these are the only five upcoming Microsoft releases that will have a major impact on IT in the coming years. I specifically chose these products because I have some strong opinions on how they will help shape Microsoft's enterprise future. 1: System Center Configuration Manager 2012 In a former life, SCCM was known as Systems Management Server (SMS). With the upcoming release of SCCM 2012, Microsoft is introducing major changes to the product designed to enhance the end-user experience and streamline IT operations.

For example, in SCCM 2012, Microsoft is making the user the focus rather than computers. To this end, Microsoft is also adding a better software portal to SCCM 2012. 2: System Center Operations Manager 2012 3: Windows 8 client 4: Lync I like Lync. 5: Hyper-V 3.0 What do you think? Email Reputation, Email Reputation Reports - SenderScore.org. Can Windows Play Well on the iPad? CIO. CIO — All those iPads racing into the enterprise must maneuver around a tricky corner: getting Windows desktop apps to run on iPads without wrecking the user experience. Sure, Citrix virtual desktop infrastructure, or VDI, can render entire Windows desktops and their apps on the iPad—but not always well.

The problem, of course, is that Windows desktop apps were never meant to run on a 10-inch touchscreen tablet with no mouse and physical keyboard (even less so with a 3.5-inch touchscreen iPhone). Yet workers need these apps to do their jobs. A mouse-driven Windows desktop app... ... gets separated with touch features on the iPhone. We're not talking about simple iPad apps such as Quickoffice and Documents To Go that replicate Microsoft Office, either. Companies, even entire industries, might rely on a single legacy Windows app. But CIOs argue that Windows apps running in a virtualized environment on an iPad deliver a terrible user experience.

Slideshow: 15 Ways iPad Goes to Work.