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Ira Goldstein, 80, was a pioneer in computer programming (Orlando Sentinel) Ira Goldstein, one of the architects of the world's first large-scale air-defense network and a pioneer of the computer system that led to the creation of the Internet, died Dec. 23. He was 80.
Where the Tech Jobs Are, Part 1 (LinuxInsider.com) Despite the daily onslaught of grim economic news, the need for skilled information technology staff remains stable, according to the Robert Half Technology IT Hiring Index and Skills Report, released earlier this month. Twelve percent of chief information officers polled in the survey said they planned to expand their IT departments in the first quarter of 2009.
i-rox: Where Zionism, religion, and crisis meet and thrive (Haaretz Daily) Three years after inception this win-win Haredi software house of women is profitable and doesn't need to cut flab. There isn't any Walking into the offices of i-rox Software Products, you might be forgiven for thinking it's a ghost town. Silence reigns at this company, utter silence.
Lenoir Co. author publishes first novel (Kinston Free Press) LA GRANGE - James Preston Hardison has lived with a set of fictional characters in his head for decades, but now, with the publication of his first novel, he can share them with the rest of the world.
Jonathan Handel: SAG: No Good Reason to Strike (HuffingtonPost) There's turmoil planned for the upcoming Jan. 12-13 SAG National Board meeting, reports the LA Times. SAG's National Executive Director Doug Allen and the current...
The iPhone's Golden Touch (Washington Post) Ge Wang never dreamed of becoming a high-tech Silicon Valley entrepreneur. He's an assistant professor at Stanford, a specialist in computer science and music whose biggest passion has been organizing nerdy "laptop orchestras" composed of 20 people each "playing" a notebook computer.
Meet the mayor of Macworld (The San Francisco Examiner) Mayor of Macworld: Big Apple transplant and self-taught programmer Paul Kent has developed one of the world’s premier computer conferences, transforming it into a hip event that attracts the geeky — and not-so-geeky — for the latest in gadgets and technology.
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