Fast Five: This week in IT 18/11/11
Your five-minute wrap of the top Australian ICT stories this week.
Your five-minute wrap of the top Australian ICT stories this week.
A look at the hot IT jobs around Australia this week
A look at the hot IT jobs around Australia this week
A look at the hot IT jobs around Australia this week
In 1995, Steve Jobs was on the cusp of middle age -- 40 years old -- when he sat down for an <a href="http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9220609/Steve_Jobs_interview_One_on_one_in_1995">http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9220609/Steve_Jobs_interview_One_on_one_in_1995</a> by the Computerworld Information Technology Awards Foundation as part of an oral history project. The Foundation also produced the Computerworld Honors Program, whose executive director, Daniel Morrow, conducted this interview.
As the ‘silly season’ approaches fast, SCAMwatch has advised expectant travellers to check the authenticity of flight booking websites before making any reservations for domestic and international travel.
Your wrap of the top Australian ICT stories this week.
The details of the Carbon Tax have finally been revealed and everyone wants to know how it will affect them. The IT industry is no exception and questions arise as to the likely impact on data centres, Cloud usage and even green IT initiatives in general.
The rollout of the National Broadband Network (NBN) in the Illawarra will provide 500 new jobs in the region at its peak, according to a statement by the Department of Broadband Communications and the Digital Economy.
Computerworld Australia has compiled a roundup of the latest news on Oracle OpenWorld 2011.
Following Apple's announcement of its iPhone 4S, Computerworld Australia has compiled a roundup of the latest news on the newly introduced smartphone.
Apple is expected to <a href="http://blogs.computerworld.com/19007/apple_confirms_october_4_iphone_5_event">announce the iPhone 5</a> tomorrow, and wireless carrier Sprint is expected to soon begin selling a version of the iconic <a href="http://www.computerworld.com/s/topic/75/Smartphones">smartphone</a> for the first time.
Rumoured to be called Kindle Fire, Amazon’s upcoming tablet will be unveiled in less than 24 hours.
In journalism you dream of the story that keeps on giving. Forget providing a free and seamless way for 800 million people to communicate. Or allowing millions of friends to reconnect after decades apart, or shrinking the world so that comrades otherwise lost overseas are now part of your everyday conversation. No Facebook's great contribution to the world is to keep a generation of reporters and bloggers (is there a difference these days?) steeped in outrage. On your behalf of course.
The Australian arm of global automotive finance firm, LeasePlan, has penned a three-year $15 million ICT deal with CSC.