News (25)

  • Australians miss out on Seagate kilobyte refunds

    Although a discrepancy between the traditional and modern definitions of kilobyte has led to Seagate Technology offering a rebate on their hard drives, a Seagate representative has confirmed that Australians will not be eligible for the refund.

  • Q&A: Debian leader on not being in it for the money

    The Debian GNU/Linux operating system continues to generate interest from developers around the world, keen to sign up and contribute code to the open-source project now in its 15th year.

  • Seagate to pay refund over gigabyte definition

    Seagate Technology, the world's largest hard-drive maker, is offering customers a five percent refund on drives bought during the last six years following a lawsuit over the definition of a "gigabyte". As an alternative, customers can choose to receive free backup software.

  • 2007: How was it for green IT?

    It's official, 2007 was the year in which green IT became important to the IT industry, with corporate giants like Google, Intel, HP, Dell, Microsoft and Sun Microsystems all willing to get their hands dirty.

  • Microsoft accused of withholding Vista APIs

    Security vendors are claiming Microsoft was deliberately withholding access to its Vista spyware product, but the software giant denied the charge.

  • CIOs speak: Which vendors have a good reputation?

    IT directors and chief information officers give their verdicts on 10 of the biggest IT vendors.

  • Carly Fiorina on globalisation

    ITU 2003: Hewlett-Packard's chief executive - who has been shoulder-tapped by the new California governor-elect - spoke in favour of globalisation.

  • PC vendors snub antitrust altered Windows

    The four largest PC vendors have no plans to sell the media player-free version of Windows which Microsoft was ordered to offer by Europe's competition commissioner.

  • FBI supplier readies secure Linux

    Trusted Computer Solutions is branching out from its Solaris roots with a secure version of Linux, due out in spring 2005.

  • JPEG patent suit targets 31 major firms

    A who's who of the hardware business are being sued by Forgent Networks, a software company that claims rights over the compression technology behind the image format.

  • B2B Ventures Reach Saturation Point

  • AMD's Sanders: A call to arms!

    In Hannover, Germany on Monday, AMD's chairman and CEO, Jerry Sanders, discussed his company's future processor strategy, its continuing battles with Intel and his dream of seeing his processors in the corporate environment. ZDNet UK's editor, Richard Barry, was there.

  • Why CIOs must adopt IT governance

    Will CIOs be able to maintain the status quo when they are on the hook to improve results while also cutting staff and overall spending.

  • B2B Ventures Reach Saturation Point

    A battle is under way among business-to-business marketplaces. There have been several casualties already, and analysts expect more bloodshed in the next 24 months.

  • Trade shows: where are they headed?

    Where is the IT industry spending its marketing dollars to grab your attention? In this CeBIT preview, ZDNet Australia asks if trade shows are really worth it.

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