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Half-terrabyte of Storage for Under $4,500
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Wednesday, July 10, 2002Half-terrabyte of Storage for Under $4,500Networkable storage for less than $10 per gig looks like pretty decent answer for big image databases.
IBM plans low-cost storage appliance. NAS 100 with close to half a terabyte of storage will support ATA [InfoWorld: Top News]
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Categories: Future of Print, Technology Monday, July 8, 2002Taking the Long View on e-BooksJenny Levine at TSL certainly understands e-Books. I've seen a lot of money and effort get poured down the e-book drain in the hysterical hope that some paperless book revolution was going to make everybody rich. As usual both the naysayers and zealots are wrong. Jenny has her feet planted firmly in the middle, which is where we all belong.
Ebooks Don't Need To Fly Off Shelves. E-Books Not Exactly Flying Off The Shelves "But a couple of months ago, BookExpo America 2002 in New York was virtually devoid of e-book chatter. The two-year-old International eBook Award Foundation folded this year due to lack of funding -- and interest. About the only time you hear the topic mentioned in publishing circles these days is when this question comes up: Where have all the e-books gone? Sunday, July 7, 2002Secure Printing From an IT PerspectiveVery little attention has been paid to the idea of security in print streams. PDF and PostScript files for books and other printed matter are routinely passed over the open Internet. Some WAN providers like WAMnet provide encryption via their proprietary networks, but far more material is transferred openly.While not about graphic arts printing specifically, this post on Slashdot shows the issues of security are beginning to surface in areas outside the print industry, which means yet one more thing printers are going to have to address.
Slashdot | "Ask Slashdot" - Secure Printing? |
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This Page was last updated: Wed, 02 Jul 2008 22:06:57 GMT
License: Unless otherwise expressly stated all original material, of whatever nature, created by Terry W. Frazier and included in this website, its related pages and archives, is licensed under a Creative Commons License, some rights reserved.
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