elliott
Epicor Software Case Study: STL Group of Companies
White Paper Elliott said Epicor was a perfect fit because the vendor's own consultants handled the installation, implementation and support of Epicor for Distribution - which is fully integratable with various other systems. [30 May 2009]
Elliott Reduces Annual Job-Costing Expenses by US$1 Million and Improves Inventory Management
White Paper Elliott wanted to replace aging legacy, text-based enterprise resource planning solution with Web-based, fully-integrated solution able to automate job costing and enable efficient workflow processes to improve... [03 Apr 2009]
Photos: Making beautiful music with the earliest computers
Photo The codebreaking computer used in World War II, the Colossus Mark II, and vintage machines ranging from the 1960s' Elliott 803 through to the 1980s' BBC Micro - will sing again as part of the Obsolete project, which is... [10 Mar 2009]
£273m in IT projects axed by UK
News Matthew Elliott, chief executive of the TaxPayers' Alliance, said: "People will be shocked that so much money has just been poured down the drain, particularly at a time when ordinary families are struggling to make ends... [20 Oct 2008]
Apple chasing budget buyers with MacBook newbies
News The big news with Tuesday's MacBook announcement is obviously the new design. Replacing the white or black plastic chassis is an aluminium body built from a single piece of metal. Gone is the mouse button, consumed by a large glass... [15 Oct 2008]
Voice biometrics, war tech and the history of computing
News Next up was the UK's first business computer, the Elliott 803, which emerged in the 1960s, with museum trustee Kevin Murrell showing how the computer worked. In September silicon.com had an exclusive look through the... [08 Oct 2008]
Britain's classic computers: A silicon.com special
News Hardware on display includes one of Britain's first business computers, the Elliott 803, and the PACE TR-48, one of the earliest torpedo simulators, made by Electronic Associates to simulate the firing of torpedoes... [02 Oct 2008]
ID cards, driverless buses and virtual shipwrecks
Photo Here's the Elliott 803 - the most popular British computer for businesses and universities during the 1960s. The MoD showed off the computer games it uses to give army drivers in the Royal Logistics Corps experience of... [02 Oct 2008]
Can £7m dent £105bn cyber crime menace?
News Gareth Elliott, policy advisor with the British Chambers of Commerce, said: "It is a step in the right direction but £7m does not seem like very much compared to the cost of cyber crime. British business has questioned... [01 Oct 2008]
Editor's Blog: Reely good news on video
Comment I've mentioned the video player already of course, and I'm a big fan of all the video we've been publishing from the National Museum of Computing out at Bletchley - the video of the Elliott 803, one of the first British... [16 Sep 2008]
The Weekly Round-Up: 12.09.08
Round-Up The Elliott 803 was developed in the early 1960s and until 1965 it was the most popular British computer for big businesses and universities. Going back further there's also the first ever business PC, none other than... [12 Sep 2008]
Inbox: Antique computing, Segway protest and ID cards
Comment The Elliott 803 was developed in the early 1960s and until 1965 it was the single most popular British computer for big businesses and universities. A story concerning fibre broadband in every UK home caused a storm this... [11 Sep 2008]
Photos: Britain's first business computer
Photo The Elliott 803 was developed in the early 1960s and until 1965 it was the single most popular British computer for big businesses and universities. This is the console for the Elliott 803 on display at... [05 Sep 2008]
Inbox: iPhone ad, red boxes, wi-fi piggybacking, sci-fi thinking
Comment Trevor Elliott, Enniskillen The weekly Inbox column collects the best and most thought provoking reader comments that silicon.com receives each week. Readers were in disagreement over a story on silicon.com concerning... [04 Sep 2008]
Five reasons why Chrome will crash and burn
News Nate Elliott, research director at analysts Jupiter Research, said: "In most cases the products that Google has delivered on its own have failed. Jupiter Research's Elliott believes Google is hedging its... [02 Sep 2008]