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The first national CIO won the highly-vaunted job and has the chance to reshape the way government-and perhaps, subsequently, business-uses technology.
The CEO of Twitter may not be at the helm of the most intellectually-inspiring service, but Twitter has gotten more press and enthusiasm (and funding) than any IT service this year.
Larry Page and Sergey Brin The Google juggernaut kept rolling along as the Web's dominant company, and the stock recovered to stratospheric levels.
The demand for more business-focused IT leaders never dies, but the recession started to separate the wheat from the chaff.
The Windows 7 release didn't go nearly as horribly as Vista, so the Microsoft CEO has something to celebrate. The question is, what will CIOs say?
BI blows away all other technologies in recent surveys of CIOs' top tech priorities. Looks like IT leaders learned a thing or two from the economic collapse.
Younger workers may hold the best strategies and ideas for Web 2.0 and mobility to help move their employers ahead.
Driven by concerns over cost and efficiency, virtualization leapt from the data center to the mainstream.
The research scientist's long-awaited Enterprise 2.0, published in December, offered the strongest argument for Web 2.0 in the enterprise to date.
iPhone challengers proliferated almost as rapidly as iPhone apps, and carriers started getting serious about service.