Financial services company Aviva Australia has revealed it is in the midst of an extensive back office technology consolidation project, with Oracle software taking centre stage as a number of other platforms are eliminated.
IBM, one of the loudest advocates of pooling computing resources with grid technology, has secured a half-dozen new customers.
Linux, having just won the fight for mainstream respectability, has moved to a challenge that's less glamorous but just as important: making itself attractive to the information technology industry.
Microsoft, Oracle and 16 other companies have put aside their differences and agreed to work together against cyberattacks.
Microsoft has unleashed eight new enterprise servers, including its brand-new Windows 2000 Datacenter Server operating system, and made clear it was taking dead aim at Sun Microsystems's dominance in the high-end server market.
In the flat enterprise software market, the message is clear: It's time to hunt or be hunted.
David Thomas, ManageSoft's Asia Pacific director and David Lenz, sales and marketing director at Novell Asia-Pacific, go head to head on their respective offerings.
Visa CIO touts new transaction technologies
Michael Dreyer, CIO of Visa, expresses what innovation means to him in different areas, such as their PayWave … Watch it now
Australian Govt funds IT start-ups
Google should come clean on datacentres
US shows what OPEL could have been
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