The National Health Service (NHS) plans to ditch its current e-mail system for Microsoft Outlook and Exchange 2007.
Struggling IT services company, Electronic Data Systems (EDS), has been paid US$2.05 billion before working capital adjustments for its product development software unit it said late last week.
Outsourcing heavyweight Electronic Data Systems today confirmed an internal investigation was underway into staff at a Commonwealth Bank Sydney data centre amid allegations of software piracy and misbehaviour.
The first task on new EDS Australia and New Zealand vice president David Caspari's plate should be to come clean on exactly what the local consequences of HP's acquisition of the Texan IT outsourcing giant will be.
The Australian Tax Office is preparing to put the last and largest of its IT outsourcing contracts centralised computing up for grabs, worth around AU$160 million per year. This is EDS's last chance to retain work with the ATO and possibly its first bid since its proposed acquisition by HP.
What do you need to do to get a bunch of Microsoft-obsessed geeks really excited?
The outsourcing specialist said it was "proactively engineering" Linux into its product portfolio, backtracking on previous statements that the open-source software was not suitable for large enterprises.
Siebel Systems will announce today in the US that the first company to complete installation of its latest customer relationship management system is IT services giant Electronic Data Systems.
The Bank of Queensland is in the midst of a $480 million outsourcing partnership with EDS which has seen the bank's profits double in the last three years.
As storage volumes escalate, companies are weighing up the risks and benefits of outsourcing storage. Additional reading: Seven deadly sins of data warehouse development
With storage volumes doubling every year, ZDNet Australia looks at some of the options available to cyber-space strapped companies.
New programs are to be aimed at encouraging software makers to produce applications for the next version of Office.
Despite a rocky beginning, intrusion detection and prevention systems are an important part of any security arsenal. We road-test six hardware and software-based systems.
Microsoft's software licensing program is not proving popular - about two-thirds of its biggest customers are yet to sign up, and some are exploring alternatives.
Microsoft has used its Tech Ed conference for its first Australian public showing of its Xbox Live Internet gaming service, but the launch hasn't been without its glitches.
D-Link's DCS-5300G is no real match for a dedicated wired and monitored solution, but it's also nowhere near as expensive.
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