A report this week suggested the Australian operations of financial services specialist Aviva would not renew a key outsourcing contract with Hewlett-Packard when it expires this November.
Financial services giant Aviva has started to sign key ICT services contracts as it breaks up a larger outsourcing deal formerly held by Hewlett-Packard.
Major open-source vendors on Monday called for financial companies to contribute more code to the open-source community.
Hewlett-Packard announced that it had received a US$500 million contract to provide global IT services for European commercial bank and financial services firm WestLB in the U.S. overnight.
Hewlett-Packard stepped up its commitment to the emerging area of service-oriented architecture Monday, announcing consulting and software that draw heavily on its acquisition of Mercury Interactive.
Hewlett-Packard plans to acquire Trustgenix, a company that allows users to authenticate their identity to access accounts on multiple sites.
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 announced on Friday that it is expanding on-demand data management centers in North America, Europe and Asia and is offering a new set of utility services.
In line with what has been dubbed the re-invention of Hewlett-Packard, the company announced Wednesday that its IT sales and marketing operation in Australia and New Zealand will be reorganised into just two groups -- business and consumers.
Nokia has signed an agreement with IBM under which Big Blue will run the handset maker's helpdesk operations and support its desktop PCs.
With logical domains, Sun's Niagara systems will catch up this year to rival Unix and x86 servers.
Disaster recovery companies have ben enjoying a boost in demand, dispite no spikes from the Iraq conflict or SARS outbreak.
Harvard president's comments reignite debate over women in computer science, with reformers trying to reverse guy-centric patterns.
It's getting hard to keep a place on the list of the world's fastest supercomputers.
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.
In the flat enterprise software market, the message is clear: It's time to hunt or be hunted.
Do Australian companies really need a business continuity plan? ZDNet Australia finds out what all the talk is about in disaster recovery and continuity planning.
Nothing succeeds like other people's success if you can learn from their experiences, that is.
It's getting hard to keep a place on the list of the world's fastest supercomputers.
Telstra mobile code reader
It may look like a 3-D image but it's in fact a barcode designed to direct your phone's web browser to a relev… Watch it now
In the second part of his interview, Defence CIO Greg Farr talks about outsourcing, the skills crisis and reveals his most urgent IT priority.
I'm a celebrity, don't back me up
Lies, damned lies and telco stupidity
Dear carriers: More walking, less talking
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