Content calendar
Thursday 19 July 2001
SAP posts impressive profits
They're on a winning streak...
Top five most embarrassing digital blunders... ever!
Red-faced email (and voicemail) moments re-lived...
Taste no obstacle as 'Beckingham Palace' goes online
Posh Spice's new website will provide virtual tour of Beckingham Palace - thrones and all...
Notes on the move a non-starter for Lotus?
Lotus stakes its reputation on mobile devices...
Ariba takes back ex-CEO
Troubled vendor's on the rebound so Krach isn't getting comfortable...
Outsourcing IT set to rocket
It's expected to be this year's chic...
BT loses out to C&W in CGNU merger
This insurance house just wasn't big enough for the both of them...
Amazon sells paperless books
Forget the paperback, it's virtual books that make the bigger bucks...
Claire Swire: Everyone remembers but few have changed their ways
Careful, you could be next...
Unwanted broadband licences go up for sale, again
Somebody? Anybody?
Virus top ten: Magistr rules the roost
When will people ever learn?
Fly me to the moon (and let us email round the stars)
Ever wondered what your domain name will be on Jupiter or Mars?
Hotmail upgrade hindered by technical troubles
Could this be a crack in the .Net edifice?
'Stingy' telcos stifling mobile content provision
Vodafone voted best of a bad lot...
E-Trade posts scraped profits
It was a close one...
Worm alert: Arise SirCam
Errant intruder that teaches you not to save personal documents on your work PC...
IBM hits targets
IBM does the job and spells out future...
Nokia profits fall with sales
Second quarter results show slide for Finnish giant...
Uncovered: Fraudster profits from data protection fears
Ignorance of the law has allowed an unscrupulous middleman to take a hefty cut...
i2 lost on rudderless ship
"We have no idea where the market is going."
Handspring sells just enough PDAs
But 40 staff still get the chop...
Now you can sign on the dot-com line
Email signatures given European go-ahead...
Accenture on startline for trading
Will it outdo KPMG's IPO?
Microsoft gets egg all over its site
Online bank counting on Microsoft deal...
'Sack 'em!' - users take hard line on web abuse
You're harsh but fair, so you are...
AT&T rejects $53bn Comcast offer
Sounds like a lot of money, but AT&T wants more...
Cartel snitches get offer of impunity
Grass up a competitor and get freedom from prosecution. Sounds good...
Greenspan issues bleak warning
But further interest cut may provide short-term boost...
UK cable companies get mauled on Nasdaq
NTL and Telewest shares suffer savaging...
Siebel hits targets
But not happy about the future...
Ellison lives in "fantasy" world
Well he can afford to can't he?
Stockwatch Daily: Europe rises on results successes
...but the markets aren't getting carried away...
Razorfish spams clients to distraction
Perhaps they should send out a bottle of wine with their apologies?
Microsoft trial: 'The DoJ got it wrong'
Microsoft turns from accused to accuser...
Marconi acts to prevent Mayo outburst at AGM
A few nice words, and £1.3m, keeps ousted deputy from making a scene...
Popular stories
- 1 Android phones, Firefox history, Google Wave and datacentres galore
- 2 Anti-ageism legislation isn't working, say IT pros
- 3 Leaked report reveals billions in budget cuts for public sector IT
- 4 ID cards: Seven years of missed deadlines and U-turns
- 5 Mini laptops, codebreaking, Wikipedia and why there's no 'British Google'
Featured white papers
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IBM XIV® Storage System: Ease of Management Reinvented
Managing a storage system has become a costly and complicated task. The direct labour cost associated with its management is increasing. In addition, organizations incur hidden indirect costs due to slow responsiveness, ineffective utilization, and inflexibility. This paper discusses how the IBM XIV Storage System's revolutionary built-in virtualization architecture provides a way to drastically reduce the costs of managing storage systems.
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Contact Centres: Optimum service at optimum cost
Getting the balance right between meeting the inbound call expectations of busy customers and optimising telecoms costs is the goal for many ICT managers. Technology now enables far more powerful and flexible contact centre platforms to be created without the capital outlay required for conventional systems.
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Orange- customer case study
The ability to leverage location intelligence was critical to the successful rollout of our 3G network as it enabled us to identify potential customers and where they would likely use our enhanced third generation services. As our decision making process was much more informed by location-based data, we could build our network in areas that will serve our customers most effectively.
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Inside a Microsoft datacentre
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Peter Cochrane's latest video blog
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