underground in comment and analysis

Peter Cochrane's Blog: The turntable spins on

Comment In the future it will be far easier for music and movie services to go underground and become invisible. Compiled at my home on a sunny autumn day over a morning coffee and dispatched to silicon.com via wi-fi. [24 Sep 2009]

Give workers a say in corporate IT

Comment Experience has shown that if you try to suppress consumerisation, it will just go underground, which makes any challenges even more difficult to deal with. Just learn to manage it appropriately. There can be little doubt... [09 Sep 2009]

'Airwave does do data - unlike what some of the media say'

Comment It's also working on a second phase of its London Underground network rollout - to boost capacity at some major Tube stations and to fill in coverage blackspots in tunnels on overground parts of the... [11 Jun 2009]

The Weekly Round-Up: 05.06.09

Round-Up For example, it's the sound you hear when a lift door opens and you find you've been deposited in the gloomy underground car-park and not the penthouse as you'd hoped. Bada Bing! Some more on Microsoft's latest attempt... [05 Jun 2009]

Inbox: Underground safe from mobile chatter

Comment A plan to put mobile connectivity on the London Underground has stalled. A silicon.com exclusive got readers talking this week, with (most) responses extremely thankful that trials of mobile connectivity on the London... [23 Mar 2009]

The Weekly Round-Up: 20.03.09

Round-Up Everyone who gets a train to work has to put up with the ceaseless aural pollution from commuters' mobiles already, so why should travellers on the underground miss out on the fun? Dear God, please let allowing access to... [20 Mar 2009]

The Weekly Round-Up: 30.01.09

Round-Up This deluge of electronic dross now means the Round-Up is most efficient when working in places without any internet connection at all (as long as it has its handy reminders) So that's underground, or anywhere outside of... [30 Jan 2009]

The Weekly Round-Up: 12.12.08

Round-Up It's derived from the message flashed up by the ticket barriers on London Underground if your Oyster has run out of credit. Technology has had a profound effect on how we live, shop, interact socially or do business. [12 Dec 2008]

Editor's Blog: Techie slang escapes the server room

Comment Possibly the strangest piece of new slang that is apparently out in circulation is 'code 35' which is the message flashed up by the ticket barriers on London Underground if your Oyster has run out of credit. [11 Dec 2008]

Phil Pavitt, CIO, Transport for London

Comment One of Pavitt's key targets is to streamline and modernise TfL's vast IT infrastructure across the various business units - London Underground, Buses, taxi franchises and rail franchises. TfL is also still planning to do... [29 Jul 2008]

Editor's Blog: Back to the future

Comment We've abseiled down buildings, walked the tracks of the London underground at 2am and this week headed into London's Victorian sewers, all to make sure you are getting exclusives that no one else can bring you. [24 Jul 2008]

Are we losing the security war?

Comment Today, I look at my slide deck from Milan and see that we have entire internet relay chat networks controlled by the criminal underground economy, that cyber crime could be almost as big as the value of the global... [29 Apr 2008]

Malware: From bedroom to boardroom

Comment In 2003, anti-spam legislation was starting to be enacted, which had the effect of driving spam lords underground. Once the preserve of bedroom-bound teenagers, malware is now big business and aimed at financial gain... [19 Nov 2007]

Leader: No hang ups about subterranean mobiles

Leader Tech-savvy Hong Kong has gone in advance of the UK and already has coverage on its underground network - platforms, tunnels, the lot. Equally, those who love the silence of an early morning commuter train have little to... [16 Apr 2007]

Leader: Online gambling on a losing streak

Leader Some poker fans in the US are already talking about a new era of prohibition similar to the 1930s, with the Poker Players Alliance claiming the law will "push poker underground, essentially creating online speakeasies". [02 Oct 2006]

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