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InternetNews August 3, 2010 |
Tech Firms Split on Paying for Security Flaws Some major IT firms have made it a standard practice to pay security researchers for bringing vulnerabilities to their attention, while others have a strict prohibition against it. What accounts for the divide? |
T.H.E. Journal August 2004 |
FYI ... Reading Succes Lab This Website offers a free reading assessment tool that screens students for reading diffulities, including dyslexia. |
CIO May 14, 2012 Mitch Betts |
Study Links IT Spending to Profits New research finds a link between IT spending and corporate profitability, but only for IT projects that are focused on revenue growth. |
InternetNews July 26, 2010 |
Microsoft Updates Bug Reporting Process Extending an olive branch to security researchers, Microsoft says it will provide new mechanisms to make it easier to report vulnerabilities. |
Fast Company April 1, 2011 Rachel Arndt |
MIT's 150th Birthday The students, alumni, and professors at MIT are a brainy -- and busy -- bunch. To mark the university's 150th year, we tracked a handful of smarty-pants with ties to the school. |
AskMen.com March 3, 2002 Joshua Levine |
Dealing With Dyslexia The following will dispel dyslexia myths, give a few pointers and maybe even expose the dyslexic that may be lurking in you... |
HBS Working Knowledge September 13, 2012 Maggie Starvish |
Why Public Companies Underinvest in the Future Private companies are much more focused on the long term when making deals than their publicly owned counterparts. Which side has the right idea? |
Information Today November 2000 |
Mellon Foundation Grant for Digital Repository Economic Model Awarded to MIT Libraries The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has announced that the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation has donated $215,000 to MIT to develop an economic model to maintain digital documents within an academic research library... |
Information Today April 23, 2001 Richard W. Wiggins |
MIT Launches OpenCourseWare Initiative on the Web MIT administrators expect that other universities will use MIT course materials to enhance their own curricula, particularly those in developing countries... |