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While most of this week's security attention is focused on RSA, our coverage of products seen at HIMSS, health-care IT's biggest annual confab, continues with commanding security products for the vertical.
Our ongoing coverage of HIMSS, health care IT's biggest annual confab, continues with a look at select networking and infrastructure products on display at the show.
Here's a look at a select few of the many systems and peripherals that left an impression on opening day.
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The Channel Wire
April 24, 2008
Yahoo is opening up its services to let developers create new applications for its Website and allow its millions of users to share information across its many features as is becoming increasing popular in social networks.

"We are taking open to another place," Chief Technology Officer Ari Balogh said Thursday in a keynote speech at the Web 2.0 Expo conference in San Francisco Thursday. "We are literally in the process of rewiring Yahoo from the inside out to create a development platform at Yahoo that will literally open up all the assets of Yahoo to developers across the Web in a way we've never dome before."

With the initiative, the world's largest Web network is moving to transform its giant portal into a more open and interactive site, closer to social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace, which have gained millions of users.

"We are going to make the consumer experience at Yahoo open and social throughout and provide hooks for developers to do the same," Balogh said.

Yahoo's initiative is called Yahoo! Open Strategy (Y!OS). In one example, Balogh said Yahoo is opening its SearchMonkey Developer Tool for developers to create data services to build applications.

However, Yahoo's bold move came against a backdrop of a possible takeover of the company by Microsoft, which has set a Saturday deadline for Yahoo to agree to a deal or face a hostile takeover.

Microsoft Chief Financial Officer Chris Liddell said on Thursday the company would withdraw its $31 a share cash and stock offer if Yahoo does not start negotiating, Reuters reported. Liddell said Yahoo has "unrealistic expectations" of its value.

"We have been clear that speed is of the essence to make sense," Liddell told investors on a conference call to discuss quarterly results, Reuters reported.

Microsoft is expected to make further comments on its strategy toward Yahoo next week.

Posted by Jack McCarthy at 8:55 PM
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