AC3 set to acquire Bulletproof
AC3 is set to acquire 100 per cent of cloud services provider Bulletproof after the company’s $0.152 per share offer received the blessing of Bulletproof’s independent board committee.
AC3 is set to acquire 100 per cent of cloud services provider Bulletproof after the company’s $0.152 per share offer received the blessing of Bulletproof’s independent board committee.
Macquarie Telecom has failed in its effort to have the Takeovers Panel force Bulletproof to commission a new independent expert’s report assessing MacTel’s acquisition offer for the cloud services company.
Bulletproof has confirmed that “a number of parties” have indicated an interest in acquiring the ASX-listed cloud services firm.
Macquarie Telecom today announced it has lodged an application with the Takeovers Panel seeking a “declaration of unacceptable circumstances and related orders” in the wake of a target’s statement (PDF) released in December by Bulletproof.
Macquarie Telecom is seeking to acquire cloud services provider Bulletproof, offering $0.11 per share for the voting shares that it doesn’t already hold.
Realising the many benefits that cloud can bring requires you to maximise your use of cloud services and not simply treat cloud as another source of raw compute and storage that would be available from a traditional Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) offering.
ASX-listed managed cloud services company Bulletproof has acquired the business assets of New Zealand firm Cloud House, it announced today.
DevOps — one of the biggest trends in software development among startups and big business alike — first began in 2007. Its aim is to increase the speed at which companies develop and publish software.
Bulletproof (ASX:BPF) is set to acquire private cloud provider Infoplex from Nextgen Group.
Mazda Australia's online presence has been overhauled, with the company refreshing not just its Web content for the launch of the new model of Mazda3 but also the CMS driving the site and the car manufacturer's hosting partner.
Although I'm happy with my Samsung Galaxy S II Android phone, I've also got a bad case of <a href="http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9220539/With_Siri_Apple_s_iPhone_4S_gets_a_voice">Siri</a> envy. I, too, would like a "personal assistant" that responds to natural language requests such as "Move my meeting from 3 to 4." And I'm sure I'm not alone, as the <a href="https://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C1GGLS_enUS291US304&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=Siri+for+Android">millions of Google search results</a> for "Siri for Android" attest.