As end of Q2 nears, IBM employees fret 'resource actions'
IBM appears poised to make the bulk of its workforce rebalancing moves in the second quarter. Employees ranging from consultants to data center workers to sales are sweating.
Smaller variations are going to account for over half of overall tablets this year, analysts say.
While Estonia reflects some of the mobile and PC hardware trends we take as read, in others areas - Apple's popularity, for example — the country does things its own way.
Hardware, Mark Hurd, open source databases and cloud computing are among the big question marks that need to be answered for Oracle.
While the telco regulator has decided on a cap to lower roaming charges by 30 percent from next month, it said making it entirely free was "not practical" due to carriage costs operators have to pay for using another's network.
Sunrise has joined rival operators Orange and Swisscom in rolling out an LTE network across the country.
Canonical is hoping to lure mobile operators to back Ubuntu with the promise of having a helping hand in the OS' development.
Microsoft do a superb job of using Twitter to handle technical support. Yet Apple does nothing (and totally should)...
In the wake of community concern over subcontractors' handling of asbestos in Telstra pits, the company has found that contractors were given only basic asbestos awareness and competency training.
Oracle has released critical patch updates containing 40 security fixes across Java SE products.
Love him or hate him? These questions abound. The number of ironies borne by the situation is also bewildering.
The chip maker's CEO says that graphics technology licensing deals will soon be on the table to increase the firm's future profitability.
Kodak is seeking court approval in an offering to give creditors large equity stakes in the company once it emerges from bankruptcy protection.
As more cloud providers set up shop in Australia, local organisations are getting more comfortable with adopting cloud services, according to IBM.
We want our data protected from failures. After a failure we want our data back quickly. And we want to pay as little as possible. How?
Australia Post uses Agile software development methods to keep the technology team constantly ensuring that the company's Android app matches its iOS counterpart.
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