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There is no such thing as a secure operating system.
FORBES: Military Malware May Put An End To iOS Jailbreaking
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To minimize future chaos and literally keep the trains running, Kaspersky and his company are expanding their ambitions beyond mere antivirus software to build their own, extra-secure operating system just for large-scale industry.
ENGADGET: Kaspersky Labs preps its own OS to guard vital industry against cyberwarfare
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At the same time, Android has become much more appealing to businesses in the past year or so, as Google and its hardware partners, like Motorola and Samsung, have worked to make the operating system more secure and manageable for IT administrators.
FORBES: Sprint Business Chief: BlackBerry Is Resilient
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Apple's operating system, meanwhile, is proprietary and viewed as more secure.
WSJ: Pentagon Expects to Enlist Apple, Samsung Devices
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Dell's ability to provide end-to-end technology solutions using ARM processor architecture and the WindowsRT operating system means businesses can be assured that they will be able to manage and secure the XPS 10 on their networks.
ENGADGET: Dell announces XPS 10 Windows 8 hybrid, XPS Duo 12 convertible (update: hands-on)
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In August, F-Secure released the first-ever distributed antivirus product, for mobile devices running Symbian's EPOC operating system, and expects to follow with other wireless platforms.
CNN: Virus protection coming for wireless users
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GeOS is a one-of-a-kind "operating system" for commercial use of OpenStreetMap, making use of the crowdsourced data intuitive, affordable and secure for developers to build services with it.
ENGADGET: Skobbler brings maps to Nook Tablet, Color with ForeverMap 2