Half of Asia's IT projects miss targetsCommon problems include delays in timeline, budget overrun, and higher-than-expected maintenance costs, a new study reveals.December 11, 2007 by Lynn Tan @ Redhat in CXO
Asia's unified comms to churn US$1.2BThe region's unified communications market will grow at an average growth rate of 16 percent from 2007 to 2011, says IDC.December 10, 2007 by Lynn Tan @ Redhat in Networking
Mobile payments need an open ecosystemWidespread adoption hinges on industry players working together to flash out the different pieces of the mobile puzzle, says Microsoft exec.December 7, 2007 by Lynn Tan @ Redhat in Tech & Work
Avaya invests US$1.5M in S'pore customer centerCompany has invested US$1.5 million to refresh its customer experience center in the island-state to align it to its new business focus.December 6, 2007 by Lynn Tan @ Redhat in Networking
Sophos spots return of 'old-timer' email wormThe three-year-old Traxg worm accounted for nearly a quarter of email-borne malware in NovemberDecember 5, 2007 by Lynn Tan @ Redhat in Security
Three-year-old e-mail worm makes comebackRise of "old-timer" Traxg to No. 2 spot in November threat list indicates users are failing to protect their systems, reveals new Sophos study.December 5, 2007 by Lynn Tan @ Redhat in Security
IPTV adoption hinges on ease of useMass consumer adoption will depend on how easy the technology is to use, says Microsoft executive at IPTV World Forum Asia.December 4, 2007 by Lynn Tan @ Redhat in Microsoft
SMBs fuel HP's PC business in AsiaSmall and midsize business market, coupled with a design strategy just for Asia, helped Hewlett-Packard grow its PC business in Asia.December 4, 2007 by Lynn Tan @ Redhat in SMB
Asian data centers mind energy useCompanies in the Asia-Pacific region consider energy efficiency when adopting eco-friendly data centers, a new study reveals.December 3, 2007 by Lynn Tan @ Redhat in Hardware
AMD opens R&D center in IndiaThe Bangalore-based lab will house engineers who are key in the development of "Shanghai", the chipmaker's first 45-nanometer quad-core chip.November 30, 2007 by Lynn Tan @ Redhat in Hardware