Doctors turn to iPods and open source to cut costs
While Apple is riding high on the sales of the iPod, the iconic music player is morphing into a business tool: radiologists at the University of California, Los Angeles (...
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Banks forced down outsourcing and offshoring route
Outsourcing and offshoring are set to increase in the banking industry despite rising profits in the sector, because of the pressures of market consolidation, fierce comp...
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6,400 Deutsche Bank job cull to hit IT
Deutsche Bank is to slash 6,400 jobs worldwide in 2005 as part of a €1.2bn cost-cutting programme that will see further consolidation and outsourcing of its IT infrastruc...
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Apple racks up quarter of a billion iTunes downloads
Apple has revealed that users of its iTunes online music store are now downloading songs at the rate of over a million a day.
The latest figures from Apple reveal iTun...
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Public sector left behind as banks hoover up contractors
If you're a contractor, you're now more likely to be working in financial services than the public sector, new research has found.
The public sector, historically the ...
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Tech heart to future UK roads policy
There is no "killer idea" that will lessen levels of congestion on UK roads, though IT will be at the heart of improving traffic flow, according to the recently appointed...
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Mac mini hits the shops
They arrived with high hopes of landing the latest iPod, but, in the end, they shuffled home disappointed.
About 60 people lined up outside Apple's retail store in San...
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My first computer: The BBC Micro
This article was first published in January 2002 as part of our 'Technologies That Time Forgot' series. We are running the full series again to mark the recent re-birth o...
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Veritas plans minimal layoffs
Symantec and Veritas have gone to great lengths to allay fears of huge job losses as a result of their merger but unfortunately, there will be casualties.
Approximatel...
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