InfoWorld Daily AM | | Over the last few years, it seems that IT job titles are evolving to reflect the quirkiness of the industry itself. READ MORE | | Issue highlights 1. Windows 10 won't save the PC 2. INSIDER HTML5 shoot-out: How Chrome, Safari, Firefox, IE, and Opera measure up 3. Open source threatens to eat the database market | White Paper: Kaminario Virtualized Oracle servers create an especially demanding blend of I/O traffic for storage infrastructure. Kaminario's K2 All-Flash Array combines consistent low latency, high throughput and IOPS with a very low price per GB, making it the most cost-efficient primary storage for many virtual and physical environments including Oracle databases. Learn More | Fixing Windows 8's most glaring flaws is nice, but the new Windows doesn't address the fundamental PC dilemma. READ MORE | Chrome and Opera lead in compliance with the latest Web features, but the differences among browsers may be smaller than they appear. READ MORE | The database market has largely been impervious to open source pricing pressure. That may be about to change. READ MORE | White Paper: Imperva Learn the risks presented by "Shadow IT" and why traditional controls don't provide the required visibility into user activity or address security gaps related to cloud app use. Download now. Learn more. | Join the IDG Contributor Network The IDG Contributor Network is a collection of blogs written by leading IT practitioners about the technology, business opportunities and challenges you face everyday. We invite you to participate by applying to be a contributor today. | | | | | |