 | Kopa Windows 7 Family Pack available for pre-order early online Which pieces of iPhone security advice should CIOs take to heart Here are seven practices to insist on and three to ignore, according to Forrester Research. Think iPhone security stinks A new Forrester Rese <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.es>stanley cup</a> arch report finds that the iPhone and iPad are secure enough for most enterprises, including highly regulated ones.Only a couple of years ago, iPhones werenrsquo;t considered secure enough for the enterprise, especially compared to the more secure RIM BlackBerry. Much of that changed with the encryption capabilities of the iPhone 3GS and, later, iOS 4. Today, 29 percent of North American and European enterprises support the iPhone, according to Forrester.That figure will continue to grow because Applersquo improved security only lays the groundwork for iPhones and iPads to push even deeper into the enterprise. By 2013, curating and managing the delivery of mobile applications, not securing the devices, will be the next frontier, writes Forrester analyst Andrew Jaquith in the report. <> <a href=https://www.polene-bags.us>polene cyme</a> Goodbye BlackBerry: the future belongs to the iPhone, writes CIOrsquo Tom Kaneshige. ]So where does this leave the venerable enterprise BlackBerry The iPhone has been battering at BlackBerryrsquo enterprise stronghold, making particular advances among small and mid-sized businesses, sa <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.de>stanley cup</a> y analysts. Now RIM faces another onslaught in the enterprise, this time at the doors of its popular BlackBerry Enterprise Server BES .Industry watchers have been calling for RIM to Agdj Scalpel. Check. Robot. Check. NASA bots, one day, may operate in space FBI confirms goof in naming contractor s employer The engineer accused of trying to destroy data on 4,000 servers operated by Fannie Mae has pleaded innocent, court documents show. <a href=https://www.polenes.us>polene handbag</a> Rajendrasinh B. Makwana, 35, entered his plea duri <a href=https://www.stanley-uk.uk>stanley uk</a> ng an arraignment hearing on Friday before a federal magistrate judge in Maryland.Makwana, who worked under contract at the Federal National Mortgage Association, better known as Fannie Mae, was terminated Oct. 24, 2008, after he was accused of creating a settings-changing script without his supervisorrsquo permission. Within 90 minutes of being fired, Makwana allegedly added another malicious script to a Fannie Mae server. The second script, hidden within a legitimate script that ran each morning on Fannie Maersquo network, was designed to disable monitoring alerts and all log-ins, delete the root passwords to the 4,000 Fannie Mae servers, erase all data and backup data, power off all the servers and then disable the ability to remotely switch on the machines. The malicious script, which was set to trigger on Saturday, Jan. 31, was f <a href=https://www.stanley-canada.ca>stanley cup</a> ound by another Fannie Mae engineer within days of Makwanarsquo firing. The script would have caused millions of dollars in damage and reduced if not shutdown <sic> operations at <Fannie>Mae] for at least one week, the governmentrsquo complaint read.Makwanarsquo employment record was a matter of some confusion last week. Although an affidavit submitted by the FBI in early January said M |