Mike Wheatley
Latest from Mike Wheatley
VMware Bets on $700 Million Share Buyback as Virtualization Battle Heats Up
Virtualization software maker and all-round cloud computing giant VMware is betting that its stock could be worth a buyback. Yesterday the company announced its given authorization for as much as $700 million in share buybacks, with the shares available for purchase between now and the end of 2015. Transactions can take place either on the ...
“Hand of Thief” Malware Makes A Grab For Linux
So you thought you were safe from all the internet nasties – worms, Trojans, spyware and so on whilst tapping away on your Linux flavoured computer? Well, you might want to think again. Reports today have surfaced of a new kind of malware that’s specifically targeted at Linux users, which is being hawked on underground ...
China’s Leaders Warm Up to Big Data for Better Governance
China’s repressive internet regime is famous the world over, what with its “Great Firewall of China” put in place to block any sites that censors deem critical of the regime, not to mention the increasingly sophisticated systems it employs to suppress discussion of controversial subjects. China has long seen the internet as something dangerous, something ...
Google Chrome ‘Hacked’: How Your Passwords Can Be Exposed
If you’re one of the millions of people using Google Chrome as your preferred browser, and if you happen to have any important passwords saved within the browser itself, you might just want to reconsider how wise that is. Your data is, of course, at risk any time your computer is stolen, lost or borrowed ...
Crossbar’s Resistive RAM Chips: The Successor to Flash?
Santa Clara-based startup Crossbar has just announced a potentially game-changing new memory chip that it claims has the potential to replace standard flash memory in a number of applications. Crossbar calls its new technology Resistive RAM, and says that it has the ability to store up to a terabyte of data onto a single chip ...
F#@* It! Russia Wants to Ban Swearing on the Web
“Mother Russia” is certainly living up to its nickname of late. About a nine months ago Russian lawmakers first introduced their controversial “blacklist law,” which gives authorities the power to block access to websites that are deemed to promote drug use, suicide and porn (for the kids, of course). Oddly enough, that same law was ...








