News (132)

  • C&W goes 'chapter 11', business as usual in AU

    UK Telco Cable & Wireless has filed for voluntary Chapter 11 petitions under U.S. bankruptcy laws as a part of a dramatic down-scaling of its U.S. based operations.

  • Administrator liquidates New Tel

    New Tel has been placed into liquidation, thanks to the casting vote of administrator Phil Carter of PricewaterhouseCoopers.

  • Dell to march deeper into wireless

    Dell Computer will expand deeper into the wireless market as part of its overall goal of increasing annual revenue to US$60 billion in the next few years, according to company president Kevin Rollins.

  • Making wireless dreams a reality

    Organisations must create thoughtful strategies to manage their mobile bandwidth, applications, devices and security. Then maybe that big promotion of wireless will become more than just a dream.

  • Wireless Visionary: The future of wireless chat

    For Yossi Vardi, the evolution of wireless technologies such as Bluetooth and Wi-Fi points to a future where messaging programs are increasingly powerful and pervasive.

  • Can GPS work for your business?

    The GPS system originated as a military application; its business uses now have CIOs interested. How can it can help your business with tracking applications?

  • Behind the refashioning of Sony

    Sony Electronics President Fujio Nishida on his plan to remake one of the most recognisable consumer-electronics brand names into a broadband networking company.

  • M-commerce security a moving target

    In the rush to embrace mobile commerce, IT managers are finding that wireless technologies present unique and urgent security challenges. ZDNet examines the challenges to building wireless safeguards.

  • Five technology mistakes smart companies make

    The hidden costs for outdated technology are bigger than you think. Here's how to reclaim precious time and money.

  • Pacific Wireless wants iBurst

    Internet service provider Pacific Wireless today expressed an interest in buying the iBurst wireless business from the wreckage of Commander.

  • Nortel cuts 1,300 after terrible quarter

    Nortel Networks has flagged plans to cut 1,300 staff as it reported its biggest quarterly loss in seven years amid a worsening economy.

  • Commander can't sell iBurst

    Five months after besieged ICT services outfit Commander announced its turnaround plan, the company still hasn't found a buyer for its iBurst/Personal Broadband Australia wireless internet service provider, and one analyst believes it won't.

  • Chariot exits wireless race

    Local Internet service provider Chariot is looking to offload its wireless division Omninet, less than 18 months after it first bought the asset.

  • Liberals: Rudd is raiding bush broadband cash

    Bruce Billson, the Liberal communications spokesperson, has taken aim at Labor's plans to draw on money from the previous government's communications fund to build its fibre-to-the-node (FTTN) network.

  • Google millionaires: From Mountain View to the wine bar

    Sometimes, it's not easy to leave the Googleplex. Even for the many millionaires among the search giant's pre-IPO employees, there's great appeal to a workplace that prizes creativity and rewards its employees -- of course, there's also the cachet of working at one of the hottest tech companies in the world, a virtual Shangri-La for the geek set.

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