7 Biggest Stories of the Week, Nov. 17-21
Ahead of the Thanksgiving week madness, we've got the seven biggest stories for the week ending Nov. 21.
November 21, 2014
![7 Biggest Stories of the Week, Nov. 17-21 7 Biggest Stories of the Week, Nov. 17-21](https://eu-images.contentstack.com/v3/assets/blt10e444bce2d36aa8/bltea3de7b701587714/6538f05cc7c7121eabfc5d96/TGIF_0_0.png?width=700&auto=webp&quality=80&disable=upscale)
Ahead of the Thanksgiving week madness, we’ve got the seven biggest stories for the week ending Nov. 21. Enjoy!
An outfit called the Demski Group—the company behind the UT One Ubuntu tablet—has launched a Kickstarter campaign to support development of MAGE, a platform for building mobile apps without having to write code.
Read the story here.
Symantec (SYMC) has axed chief operating officer Stephen Gillett and eliminated his former position altogether, in a move suggesting the company already is taking initial steps to split itself into separate security and storage operations.
Read the story here.
Intel (INTC) plans to consolidate its PC chip and mobile processor operations under one roof, according to a Wall Street Journal report based on an internal email from chief executive Brian Krzanich to employees, and subsequently confirmed by the chip maker.
Read the story here.
Expanding on its software-defined networking (SDN) strategy announced earlier this year, Extreme Networks (EXTR) has built an ecosystem of technology vendors and developed two more pieces of its SDN hardware stable.
Read the story here.
SUSE kicked off its third annual SUSECon conference in Orlando this week, with the enterprise Linux distributor highlighting several new product announcements and sales figures for the first half of fiscal year 2015.
Read the story here.
Verizon Enterprise Solutions has announced the launch of Verizon Cloud Marketplace, the company’s online storefront for cloud-based services.
Read the story here.
Enterprise-level IaaS cloud provider Peak has landed $16 million in debt and equity funding in the last year, which the channel-centric company said it will use to back its growth initiatives.
Read the story here.
Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) reportedly has shuffled a number of its top brass into new roles specifically to manage its split into two publicly held companies, one focused on PCs and printers and another on enterprise business, according to an internal HP memo read by Bloomberg.
Read the story here.
Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) reportedly has shuffled a number of its top brass into new roles specifically to manage its split into two publicly held companies, one focused on PCs and printers and another on enterprise business, according to an internal HP memo read by Bloomberg.
Read the story here.
Ahead of the Thanksgiving week madness, we've got the seven biggest stories for the week ending Nov. 21.
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