Magazines
IT - Software & Development Magazine
Linux.com
Linux Advisory Watch
Linux Advisory Watch provides the most comprehensive collection of security advisories released throughout the previous week. With complete coverage and in-depth descriptions of all security bulletins, vulnerabilities and updated packages, this is one newsletter Linux professionals and enthusiasts alike, can't live without.
Linux Security Week
Linux Security Week is the definitive information resource for security administrators and security professionals. This weekly newsletter summarizes the most notable security issues and the latest developments within the Linux and open source communities. It is distributed every Monday morning by the editorial staff at Guardian Digital.
Linux Weekly News
SMALLBUSINESS.ITWORLD.COM
Get the latest technology news and content for small and medium businesses (SMB). This guide advises SMBs where to spend, and how technology can help gain competitive advantage, as well as provides a wealth of how-to articles, product and service evaluations and market analysis.
SECURITY.ITWORLD.COM
Security challenges and strategies for IT professionals. Experts explore the trends and technologies that can protect your enterprise or leave it vulnerable to attack. Rigorous security standards, contingency plans, tips and countermeasures to protect your computer and network information assets are explored.
Linux Journal
Sys Admin Magazine
XTech Conference & Exposition (fomerly XML Europe)
XML Conference & Exposition
News Standards Summit
XML & Frontier Technologies
Extreme Markup Languages is devoted to the theory and practice of markup languages from industrial, academic, and other points of view. It differs from other conferences partly in its unapologetic emphasis on technical subjects and problems on the frontiers of current practice, and partly in the participants it attracts. Extreme typically has an unusually high concentration of markup theorists, computer scientists, linguists, taxonomists, publishers, lexicographers, typographers, software developers, librarians, and other people you want to spend time with -- also anarchists, curmudgeons, and deep thinkers -- and a lower than average concentration of managers in need of a clue.