What must be done to sustain UK competitiveness through to 2025? This was the subject of a recent BCS Thought Leadership Debate, which centred on the premise that competitive advantage is increasingly enabled by IT and the use of intellectual assets.
Up to 400,000 people will receive their salary three days late because the Bacs payment processing system - used by every bank in the UK - experienced a failure on Wednesday.
Employers groups are backing a competency framework for IT professionals which aims to make it easier for IT staff and employers to identify and develop management and people-focused skills.
Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust is supporting a major upgrade of its Patient Administration System (PAS) by deploying knowledge transfer software and consultancy from Knowledge Solutions.
@34162 Well, the obvious costs are storage capacity and backup capacity; you keep growing, you keep adding storage. But, searches of existing files can cost quite a bit too. For example, if we look at Internet searches that we do every day, we're basically searching through unstructured data using simple search criteria, such as text strings. I mention this because the mechanisms used to search unstructured data are very similar.
A 2003 study claimed that office workers spent five and a half hours per week searching the Internet for information. That's about 14% of your workweek spent looking for data. You can see how the cost really adds up. Imagine a legal dispute where you need to produce information for discovery. You can spend significant time looking for specific email messages or other data, so search costs can become enormous.
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The Big Question is an initiative between Computer Weekly and recruitment consultancy PSD. Each week we put the Big Question to top IT professionals to get their take on a current talking point.
A survey conducted by the British Computer Society (BCS) shows that too many organisations still believe that IT management experience is more important than qualifications.