Lisa Nadile | RSS

Lisa Nadile is approaching her third decade as a high-tech business editor and reporter. She covered search engines back when they were called text management tools, wrote about Adobe as an up-and-comer, and reported on the appearance and growth of a new technology dubbed the World Wide Web back when HTML was just a baby shaking its rattle at its daddy, SGML. She has written for Computer Shopper, PC Week, InformationWeek, Software Development Times, NetworkWorld, Wired.com, CIO.com, and many others. Most recently, she edited and wrote for the National Fire Protection Association's firefighting and fire engineering magazine, NFPA Journal.

Jul 28, 2010

Vendors are being asked to produce features for civic responsibility like never before, and companies—especially large ones—are willing to collaborate to get them.

If it is not the first question that’s asked of e-procurement vendors after cloud deployment and features, it’s certainly the next one. How green are you going to help us become? READ MORE

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Jul 28, 2010

The Procurement department usually gets a phone call only after a company has laid off all the staff possible, stopped hiring, done everything including counting paper clips — and still money is walking out the door. Long considered the low mask on the totem pole, in this economy procurement departments are seeing a rise in their prestige, with the CPO taking a seat at the big table, and a new perception as the department uniquely equipped to cut a company’s costs. Enterprise decision-makers are looking to procurement processes as a way to help a company do business more efficiently.

“In the ‘90s, procurement used to be very tactical. Placing orders, chasing down orders, and then expediting them,” says Gregg Brandyberry, CEO of Wildfire Commerce and former vice president of Procurement, Global Systems and Operations of GlaxoSmithKine. “Then people started to transform procurement from tactical to strategic.”

With this strategic view, e-procurement made its debut — going well beyond “the purchasing department.” The Internet could bring the marketplace to the company on its terms. A new competitiveness between sellers would develop, online collaboration between a company and sellers could open up new commerce doors, and the process of buying goods and services could actually have a high ROI.

That all happened. What also happened was the cloud. Long before the “e-business” notion touched other business functions, e-procurement transactions were made outside of the firewall and in subscription-based, browser-fronted, vendor-populated marketplaces. READ MORE

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Jul 23, 2010

In just seven questions you can narrow down the candidates for that network administrator job to those with true talent and passion.

Interviewing candidates for network administrators is a bit like opening up the door to a herd of Chihuahuas. Sit them down and start talking and all you hear is Yip! Novell? Yip! VPN services? Yip! MCSE? Yip! CCNA? Yip! Yip!

IT managers need to bring on the best talent to run their networks; the company’s infrastructure relies on productive, capable staff. How do you cut through all the Yipping? What questions do you ask to find that stately Shepherd amidst the dog pack?

Whether you are a technical hands-on manager or a business-centric CIO doing that final “check for a fit with the company” job interview, the questions you ask a network admin candidate should check on seven aspects of what makes a good employee: Knowledge, Tinkering, Honesty, Ethics, Community, Discretion, and the all important Sanity Check. We asked network specialists to share their favorite questions (and best answers) to help you eliminate those annoying Yippies.
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Jul 22, 2010

Here’s how to fight back in your worst-case scenario: a fire in your data center.

Fire happens all the time. An electrical discharge, a dumb employee, a malfunctioning piece of equipment can waylay all your careful planning. But if you are prepared for a fire in your data center, you’ll be ready for action in the first 24 hours. The NFPA 75, Standard for the Protection of Information Technology Equipment provides a bare bones list of suggestions in one of its Annexes. READ MORE

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Jul 22, 2010

A little water can do your electronics a world of good.

In a basement of the Pentagon, a 10-minute walk from the outside world, a massive Air Force statistical mainframe caught fire. The day was July 2, 1959, the alarm was at 10:49 a.m., and just five hours later, 4,000 square feet of the world’s largest office building and all the computer equipment in that area were destroyed. Price tag: $7 million, according to the Arlington (VA) Fire Journal.

“Take everything that belongs to us and send it to the government dump,” IBM officials were reported as saying by the Washington Star. READ MORE

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Jul 20, 2010

Whether you have a 200,000 square foot data center or a server rack with a few blades, your data island is a mission critical business component. Lose that data to a fire and you’ve lost the world with regard to your enterprise. What if there was a document—say, about 17 pages long—that showed you how the Department of Defense, the National Security Agency, the Central Intelligence Agency, IBM, Sun Microsystems and other data center monoliths make fire damage extremely unlikely. What if?

There is such as document. It has existed and been updated since 1960, it is available to anyone to read for free and to own for $37 — and you don’t know about it. READ MORE

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Jan 19, 2010

Teamwork-around-PCXSmallLisa Nadile interviewed Wayne Jaworski, networked computer specialist for Wisconsin Rapids Public Schools about his views on user training and Windows 7 training in particular. READ MORE

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Jan 19, 2010

TeamworkXSmallIT training budgets are miniscule. Here’s how to get the most out of them without wasting the money you have. READ MORE

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