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Nikki Crawford

Perfect Venue For My Wedding - 1 views

I am about to get married and yes, I still do not have the venue for my wedding reception. I have a lot of wedding venue choices on my list but I cannot decide as to which amongst the many venues f...

Wedding Venues Adelaide Hills

started by Nikki Crawford on 30 Oct 11 no follow-up yet
Wallis Tavern

A truly Impressive Wedding Venue - 1 views

As a wedding planner, I always make it sure that I impress my clients with everything that I do for them especially their wedding venue. That is why I always offer them Wallis Auchendarroch House a...

started by Wallis Tavern on 04 Oct 12 no follow-up yet
Wallis Tavern

Amazing Wedding Venue - 1 views

started by Wallis Tavern on 06 Dec 12 no follow-up yet
Karl Wabst

Parallelism, privacy stand out at TechEd - SD Times On The Web - 0 views

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    TechEd has been a venue for Microsoft to make big product and platform announcements, but it is ultimately a place where developers come to learn. Two sessions-on data privacy and multicore programming-were especially popular with attendees.
Karl Wabst

How do we keep secret data secret? - FierceGovernmentIT - 0 views

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    There's a great deal of classified information in federal government databases that never should become public. Some of this information, involving the military or the intelligence world, must be made available to contractors by necessity, and that data should be closely guarded and kept confidential. But an alarming new article that we report on this week illustrates this is not always the case, and that information can inadvertently seep out from a classified venue and make it into the public's hands. It turns out that secret information about a U.S. missile defense system was found on the hard drive of a computer discarded by a major contractor, and sold on eBay. The discarded computer, reported the Guardian newspaper in Great Britain, contained documents from defense contractor Lockheed Martin that included detailed test launch procedures, photos and personal data of employees. The hard drive was turned over to the FBI, but one has to wonder how this could have happened and why sufficient controls were not put in place. Apparently, this is not an isolated incident.
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