Indian outsourcing giants see sluggish growthDespite record-breaking spending on outsourcing so far in 2008, Infosys, TCS and Wipro have reported slow first-quarter growthJuly 21, 2008 by Nick Heath in Tech Industry
BT launches major drive to cut CO2 emissionsBy 2016, the telecoms giant hopes to reduce its 1996 global CO2 emission levels by 80 percentJune 3, 2008 by Nick Heath in Tech Industry
Councils, IBM face legal action over outsourcing dealA trade union is taking IBM and two councils to the employment tribunal, claiming an outsourcing joint venture broke rules on the transfer of public-sector staffAugust 7, 2008 by Nick Heath in Tech Industry
UK tech students farm out coursework to IndiaAcademics at Birmingham City University have warned that IT students are hiring coders in India to complete their coursework for as little as £5June 26, 2008 by Nick Heath in Tech Industry
TCS creates 350 UK jobsThe Indian outsourcer is to boost its 5,000-strong UK workforce with 350 jobs at two development centres in England and ScotlandJune 30, 2008 by Nick Heath in Tech Industry
Gov't appoints tech tsar to cut IT costsThe former CEO of Logica, Martin Read, is to help the government deliver large IT projects successfully and cut the £13bn annual costs involvedJune 24, 2008 by Nick Heath in Tech Industry
Foreign Office overspend sees IT projects trimmedOverspending on two Foreign and Commonwealth Office IT projects has led to spending on other tech schemes being curtailedJuly 8, 2008 by Nick Heath in Tech Industry
Symantec sees pay-per-use future for softwareVirtualisation may spell the end of expensive long-term software licensing deals, according to the security companyOctober 9, 2008 by Nick Heath in Tech Industry
BA: IT-testing failures caused Heathrow T5 chaosBritish Airways has admitted insufficient training and testing in IT systems caused the baggage shambles that marred the opening of Terminal 5November 4, 2008 by Nick Heath in Tech Industry
MPs hit by Office 2003, Word 2007 incompatibilityMicrosoft is working with Westminster IT chiefs to resolve politicians' complaints that they are unable to read some correspondenceNovember 27, 2008 by Nick Heath in Tech Industry