Linux Set For Asian Growth
News In a survey of IT managers in 12 countries in Asia-Pacific (except Japan), Linux is installed on a tiny 6 percent of servers, computers that organisations that use to run databases or hold data. Whether Linux can sustain its spurt depends on a...
[March 5, 2003, 9:59]
EU Plays Catch-up With US At Dot Com Summit
News The 15 leaders of the European Union will meet tomorrow to discuss plans to boost e-commerce in Europe to make it more competitive against the US and the Asia Pacific. Grant said that such issues, together with a lack of training would cause Europe...
[March 22, 2001, 14:04]
Security Tops IT Spending In Asia
News According to IDC's recent survey of 2,850 companies across 12 countries in Asia-Pacific (excluding Japan), 56 percent of enterprises splurged on security solutions in 2002. The flavor of investments in 2002 was clearly defensive," said Puni Rajah...
[January 21, 2003, 11:12]
Workers, Managers At Odds Over Email - Or Are They?
News According to a survey of 3,000 employees from four Asia-Pacific nations, 70 percent of managers believe that email increases workplace productivity. Contrary to what you'd expect, fewer workers than managers are convinced that email increases...
[April 18, 2002, 14:37]
Email Tops IT Support Headache List
News The view is common across Europe, the US and Asia-Pacific regions, where 166 managers were surveyed. It is astonishing that, in a world that is becoming increasingly automated, the simplest of tools, email, is causing the most support issues," said...
[April 6, 2001, 14:43]
Virtualisation Key To Next-gen Data Centres
News In a statement on Thursday, Willie Low, senior market analyst of IDC's Asia-Pacific Software Research Group, said: "IDC has identified virtualisation as one of the key technologies underpinning the successful evolution of existing data centres to...
[September 21, 2007, 9:26]
HP Puts Faith In Software
News Steve McWhirter, vice president of HP Software in the Asia-Pacific region, told ZDNet Asia that the decision stemmed from customer surveys which revealed that while the product names are well-known, "no one really cares about the brand.
[December 27, 2006, 9:44]

