Near 80 per cent of Australian organisations investing in mobility: IFS
Australian business are investing in mobility, with the majority (79 per cent) doing so to increase productivity and lower costs.
Australian business are investing in mobility, with the majority (79 per cent) doing so to increase productivity and lower costs.
Stand by, Cloud bursting is here. And that's just one reason there is so much focus on the hybrid Cloud, according to VMware Cloud infrastructure and management product marketing manager, Aaron Steppat.
Gartner recently announced that worldwide mobile phone sales declined last year by 1.7 per cent, with sales totalling 1.75 billion units.
We look back at the more unusual moves made by IT companies
There is a lot of buzz around the hybrid Cloud, and this can be attributed to customer choice, according to FrontRange Solutions Asia-Pacific VP, John O’Brien, who claims the hybrid approach gives customers the choice of utilising either Cloud or on-premise deployment options.
Cloud provider, Elastichosts, is continuing its global expansion by opening four new datacentres around the world.
The television is probably one of the greatest technological innovations of all time, at least in the consumer space.
The desktop virtualisation business will expand substantially in the corporate market in 2013.
Consumers will continue to pay more for mobile and wireless services as ISPs will push up prices to increase profitability.
Data consumption and creation will continue to be robust in 2013.
The percentage of enterprises supporting BYOD has increased to 76 per cent, according to Good Technology’s 2nd Annual State of BYOD Report.
There are market observers predicting doom and gloom for 2013, but that is not a reflection of what is actually taking place in the market, according to Eaton Industries power quality marketing manager, Michael Mallia.
As more datacentres become virtualised, Australian IT businesses are pushing to maximise the benefits this brings.
Partner engagements with virtualisation customers will progress from basic implementations of traditional hardware to the next level of applying service virtualisation.
In 2012, Lenovo noticed an increasing popularity of the Ultrabook category within the market.