IT outsourcing in Australia is set to crack AU$11 billion in 2008, according to Gartner, but Australia's dwindling IT baby boomer generation will cause problems
Forget China and India, Vietnam is tipped to become the hottest offshoring destination within the next five years.
Apple has released the results of its investigation into whether workers at its iPod manufacturing plant in China have been subject to labour abuses.
Research group Gartner has forseen a wave of Chinese hardware and Indian IT services companies about to hit the Australian market in 2005, with some of the largest manufacturers in the world on the list.
China and India will become the powerhouse of Asia between now and 2007, reports news agency AFP.
Wipro's Sudip Banerjee explains why many Indian companies fear being left behind by an emerging -- and less expensive -- China.
A leading Asia-Pacific tech analyst claims the outsourcing of information technology and business processes offshore is "not something to get overly excited about," despite increasing international controversy over the migration of jobs to lower-cost countries.
"No army can withstand the strength of an idea whose time has come," said Howard Charney, Cisco's senior vice president, borrowing from Victor Hugo to summarise the power of the Internet.
In 2007 leading industry watchers speculated on the trends affecting the market, and while some proved right, others proved otherwise. Discovers how expert predictions fared on Vista, low-cost laptops and outsourcing.
Indian tech giant Wipro's chairman and managing director, Azim Premji, on the future of the company and where the Indian outsourcing market will go next.
Taiwanese contract manufacturer Quanta made more notebooks than any other PC maker worldwide last year, as the trend for technology companies to outsource work continued.
The semiconductor market will grow at 18 percent in 2004, according to International Data Corp. The growth will be driven by stronger than expected mobile phone and PC shipments.
Twelve companies are combining silicon know-how in a bid to boost the country's chip competitiveness in a cutthroat global market.
If Philips Semiconductor CEO Scott McGregor is gets his way wireless functionality will be inserted into clothes, cars, books, plane tickets, TVs, keyboards and homes.
Buzz Report: Burning, burning iPods
This week, Molly has some advice for the Japanese government, and imagines a world in which the Mormons run Fa… Watch it now
Storage infrastructure on the tender track
Apple has killed the video store; will ISPs be next?
Conroy's filtering plan: security worries
iPhone Launch Centre
The ZDNet.com.au iPhone resource guide contains everything you need to know about Apple's highly anticipated mobile device.
Click here for more.
Superguide: Printers -- all you need to know
Looking to buy a printer? Our superguide rates the latest printers and shines a light into the industry.
Click here for more.
Power Centre: Transforming IT Management
Driving business growth through enterprise IT management.
Dig deeper by clicking here.