reputation in comment and analysis

Peter Cochrane's Blog: Quality by design

Comment Interestingly, the price difference between the best of the best to the worst of the cheapest tends to be between 10 and 20 per cent - well below the additional lifetime cost and the value of the damaged reputation inflicted by a bad choice. [09 Jul 2008]

Editor's Blog: Signs of terminal decline at T5?

Comment Much more of that kind of behaviour and T5 will get a completely different reputation. It's a small claim to fame, I know, but I was one of the passengers who flew from the newly opened Heathrow Terminal 5 last week - and my luggage even came with me. [16 Apr 2008]

FBI cyber crime chief on botnets, web terror and the social network threat

Comment There's the loss of dollars where an account has money stolen from it and then there's cost to a business where it has to fix damage to a network and damage to reputation in some circumstances. The cyber division is one of the faster growing... [15 Apr 2008]

People are mugs over identity theft

Comment Large businesses use services to monitor corporate reputation. A need may now exist for a similar model for individuals, to measure personal reputation and exposure on the internet and also link into credit ratings. [08 Apr 2008]

The Brampton Factor: Open source 'brotherhood' closed to co-operation

Comment Another strong motivator is the desire to gain reputation and honour from peers, a consideration that is combined with the belief that open source is a meritocratic community. The open source brotherhood prides itself on its collaboration and... [03 Apr 2008]

The rise of the 'Brics'

Comment The companies springing forth from this region need to be aware that they will eventually live or die based on their quality of service and reputation, just like any other IT service company. It actually stands for Brazil, Russia, India, and China... [18 Dec 2007]

HMRC's missing discs: Just a warning shot

Comment Yes, there will always be a place for the carrot approach to compliance - comply with data protection laws and you will maintain trust, reputation and brand. But the HMRC's wayward discs were a mere dry run, argues Stewart Room. [27 Nov 2007]

On-demand software can help banks avoid fines

Comment Nevertheless, the fear of large fines for failure to comply with regulations, along with the risk of a damaged reputation, can encourage a global bank to spend more than $2m on an AML system. The crackdown on financial crime has opened up... [01 Nov 2007]

Q&A: Bruce Schneier, CTO of BT Counterpane

Comment And suddenly we had this huge amount of credibility because of BT - and no one has ever heard of BT in the US - but in the rest of the world they seem to have a good reputation. Schneier: Crime - it's been around since Egyptian times so that's... [23 Oct 2007]

Jonathan Ive

AS Profile Although Ive has a reputation for keeping out of the public eye, he was awarded a CBE in the 2006 New Year Honours list. Jonathan Ive is the British designer who has set Apple's products apart from those of its rivals. [12 Oct 2007]

Escape the data management minefield

Comment But that doesn't mean that with a greater focus, individual organisations can't batten down the hatches and adhere closely to standards and regulations outlined in the DPA to prevent massive data security breaches and the resulting large fines and... [13 Sep 2007]

The Weekly Round-Up: 10.08.07

Round-Up Not only has he been using his adopted persona to poke fun at the real Steve Jobs' reputation for (allegedly) being a highly demanding manager, he's actually making a satirical point about the dullness of corporate blogs. [10 Aug 2007]

Why do public sector projects fail?

Comment These public sector technology catastrophes also attract a good deal of negative publicity - this can do serious amounts of damage to the organisation's reputation and dent stakeholder and taxpayer confidence in the ability of the organisation to... [24 Jul 2007]

How do you get your head around 'risk'?

Comment Does it involve the loss of intellectual property and therefore competitive edge, or the loss of customer data and therefore serious damages in terms of future business, reputation and possibly even punitive measures? [06 Jul 2007]

Leader: Is it safer to hide cash under your mattress?

Leader This won't hold water when a new entrant, probably from some country with a reputation for openness and a professional demeanour, like Norway or Finland, comes to the market. High street banks are having a bit of a tough time of it of late. [21 Jun 2007]

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Business/Systems Analysts (3 posts)

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EUCLID Support (2 posts)

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Systems Support Officers

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Systems Administrator Surrey- London - UNIX/Linux- 40,000

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ELECTRONICS HARDWARE DESIGN ENGINEER - Manchester

A growing company with a reputation for supplying quality product that is now successfully marketed worldwide, growth in the business and demands ...


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