Reuters and Microsoft are developing an instant messaging service designed for the world's financial institutions.
Instant messaging use is growing in offices and homes around the world, and the big players are being told by a standards board to work together.
Instant messaging was brought into the corporate mainstream from the bottom of the ladder up, so are companies making a mistake if they send their own messages down the ladder?
The ease and convenience of instant messaging has made it popular with users. But is instant messaging a curse or a boon for the office environment?
The Internet's governing technical body gives a stamp of approval to a group intent on creating an open standard for instant messaging.
Abuse of IM can cripple workforce productivity, and even more serious is SPIM -- spam sent through instant messaging -- which is growing like a virus.
Converting free consumer products into paid services tailored to a business clientele can be harder than it looks.
As a number of horror stories reveal, corporate networks aren't the safe and tightly controlled entities they should be. Here we expose just how wrong it can go and ask leading industry figures to light the way towards effective network management.
Instant messaging was brought into the corporate mainstream from the bottom of the ladder up, so are companies making a mistake if they send their own messages down the ladder?
The ease and convenience of instant messaging has made it popular with users. But is instant messaging a curse or a boon for the office environment?
Instant messaging use is growing in offices and homes around the world, and the big players are being told by a standards board to work together.
The ease and convenience of instant messaging has made it popular with users. But is instant messaging a curse or a boon for the office environment?
The Internet's governing technical body gives a stamp of approval to a group intent on creating an open standard for instant messaging.
It seemed to be an obvious recipe: take two popular emerging technologies and stir vigorously. But the end result isn't to everyone's taste.
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
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