Tech Stocks Week in Review Featuring iPad
From Trefis.com
Apple Stock: iPad Business More Valuable Than Mac Desktops - We estimate that Apple’s iPad business accounts for 4% of the $267 Trefis price estimate for Apple’s stock compared to about 3% for Apple’s Mac desktop business…
Tech Stocks Week in Review Featuring Dell
From Trefis.com
Trefis Analysis: Notebook PCs 17% of Dell’s Stock on February 25, 2010 Dell shipped an additional 1.2 million notebook PCs in 2009 over 2008. We expect growth in the global notebook market to drive Dell’s notebooks sales in the future…
Fatal System Error - Be Afraid, Be Very Afraid
By Richard Stiennon, Chief Research Analyst, IT-Harvest
It is hard to believe upon reading Menn’s account that the night before Barrett had excused himself from the rehearsal dinner to secretly pass off a key fob with a digital audio recorder that he had used to capture a day’s worth of conversation with one of the Prolexic partners to an FBI agent waiting around the corner in a dark sedan…
Tech Stocks Week in Review Featuring Cisco
From Trefis.com
Trefis, named for its focus on trends, forecasts, and insights, is revolutionary in its forward-looking approach to stock analysis, which incorporates an intuitive look at the relationship between a company’s product divisions and its stock price. Services for Routers and Switches Make up 18% of Cisco’s Stock - Cisco makes a significant amount of money by providing troubleshooting and maintenance services to its hardware customers….
Tech Stocks Week in Review Featuring Apple
From Trefis.com
While many will equate the mobile age with just cell phones, the reality is that many new devices with entirely new use cases will enter our lives and create amazing experiences. This mobile age will require companies to have deep expertise in BOTH hardware and software to create breakthrough products, and I am bullish on Apple because I believe they uniquely have both the hardware and software skills to lead this transformation…
Top Cyber Defense Vendors to Watch in 2010
By Richard Stiennon, Chief Research Analyst, IT-Harvest
The security industry is poised for its biggest upheaval ever in 2010. While defense contractors move into the space (redubbed “cyber”), and the big players adjust their product portfolios by making strategic acquisitions and large IT vendors (HP) break into the space, there are many small companies offering innovative products and services. Here is a list of just a few that are on IT-Harvest’s rada…
Technology is Helping Victims and Fraudsters
By Michael Eggebrecht, Community Editor at CIOZone
Last year, 11.1 million U.S. adults were the victim of identity fraud — 4.8 percent of the population. That’s good for a 12 percent increase from 9.9 million the prior year, according to Javelin Strategy & Research, which released its annual identity fraud survey Feb. 9. Along with that increase, the total annual fraud amount in 2009 increased 12.5 percent, from $48 billion to $54 billion. At the same time, the average fraud resolution time fell from 30 hours in 2008 to 21 hours last year…
Insurance Industry Fights Liability Claims
By John Watkins, Attorney with Chorey, Taylor & Feil
In your policy it states quite clearly that no claim that you make will be paid. You unfortunately plucked for our Never-Pay Policy, which if you never claim is very worthwhile - but, uh, you had to claim - and there it is… Monty Python’s Flying Circus, circa 1971
China: Internet Freedom Is Culturally Relative
By Richard Stiennon, Chief Research Analyst, IT-Harvest
We have had a few weeks to absorb the implications of wide spread Chinese supported attacks against Google and thirty or so other organizations. The US Secretary of State made one of the most affirmative statements on Internet freedom yet articulated by a government. Various policy analysts have chimed in as well. Some thoughts on what they have said…
Behavioral Based Email Security Systems
By Simon Heron, CISSP Internet Security Analyst
There needs to be a change to email security if we want to stop seeing high profile security breeches such as the ones that hit Hotmail and Google in 2009, and the America law firm Gipson Hoffman & Pancione more recently. The problem is, most email filtering systems will trust the email address and therefore allow it through.


