Long dominant in the enterprise data industry, EMC now has its sights set at the other end of the storage spectrum and is going after the storage market for small and medium sized organisations.
A new generation of enterprise portals offers a way to collabrate and interact, but getting workers to give up e-mail may be their biggest challenge.
Australian vendors may be touting it as a period of transformation but will events like September 11, the collapse of Ansett and a climate of economic concern really see corporate travel substituted with digital technologies or will it prove to be a temporary turn on?
Seventy percent of organisations in the Asia Pacific region are forecast to take up some sort of collaborative digital team space by 2004.
Some companies are putting the brakes on noncore information technology projects. That simple reality has resulted in a steady stream of profit warnings from just about every corner of the tech sector. But one area that seems to be bucking the trend is the field of business-to-employee applications.
Norm Fjeldheim, CIO of Qualcomm speaks with ZDNet.com editor-in-chief Dan Farber about his "do or die" approach to supporting new technologies within his organisation.
Two document management specialists talk about their business strategies.
EMC's planned acquisition of Documentum represents an infrastructure-level strategy that could be the beginning of a much larger trend, with potential impact on how enterprises seek to address content, archiving, and storage as a completely synergistic, single-vendor solution.
A new generation of enterprise portals offers a way to collabrate and interact, but getting workers to give up e-mail may be their biggest challenge.
Australian vendors may be touting it as a period of transformation but will events like September 11, the collapse of Ansett and a climate of economic concern really see corporate travel substituted with digital technologies or will it prove to be a temporary turn on?
We take a tour of the amazing Digibarn computer museum and meet Altair, Cray, Xerox Alto, Commodore PET and the iPod's great grandpa.
Norm Fjeldheim, CIO of Qualcomm speaks with ZDNet.com editor-in-chief Dan Farber about his "do or die" approach to supporting new technologies within his organisation.
Microsoft's Steve Riley and Peter Watson discuss the shift in security in the world of Web 2.0, with particular reference to Facebook and users freely giving away information that they would not have done previously.
The new RealPlayer 11 lets you save streaming Web video to your hard drive.
SpywareBlaster doesn't scan for and clean spyware; it prevents it from being installed in the first place.
Google Chrome OS demonstration
Vice President of Product Marketing Sundar Pichai gives a virtual tour of Google's new operating system, Chrom… Watch it now
Malcolm Turnbull's ghost twitterer
At the Sydney Media140 conference several weeks ago, Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull admitted he doesn't pe… Watch it now
Surf the Net like it's 1991 with Gopher
The old Gopher protocol is not dead. In fact, it even has Twitter! Here's how to access it.… Watch it now
Sun shining on Ajnaware
Holiday IT to-do lists
Chapman's rough end of the pineapple
Come to our reader Christmas party!
Drinks with the ZDNet AU team, Wednesday 9th December, from 6pm.
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