All SMEs News - January 2007

Small firms miss out on full potential of IT

Small business owners are still missing out on the full potential of IT, according to a YouGov survey commissioned by the British Chambers of Commerce and Microsoft.

Hybrid drives hit NAS boxes

DNF will be making hybrid drives available in all of its storage products, but it doesn't recommend them for IP SANs.

Trend improves SME security platforms

Trend Micro has upgraded its Worry-Free Security products for small- to medium-sized firms with improved anti-spam and anti-spyware engines, and easier management.

SAP to offer on-demand software to mid-size firms

SAP is to launch a full range of on-demand hosted software for mid-size companies, building on the tentative steps it made towards CRM on-demand solutions last year.

Check service established for stolen IDs

A US start-up has launched a free service to allow users to find out whether their credit card details and identities have been compromised.

iSCSI grows in the midmarket and enterprise

  • News
  • Date: 25 January 2007
Because transporting "SCSI over IP" leverages ubiquitous Ethernet networks, that translates to lower cost, easier maintenance and simpler management, which makes SAN deployment more attractive for SMEs.

Incipient claims storage virtualisation first

  • News
  • Date: 22 January 2007
Storage technology provider Incipient is proclaiming 2006 as an annus mirabilis, featuring what is says is storage industry history by bringing to market its switch-resident storage virtualisation software for Storage Area Network (San) environments.

Next move: How do I become a general IT manager?

  • News
  • Date: 20 January 2007
The question: How do I become a general IT manager?

Microsoft and Nortel reveal roadmap for unified comms

Microsoft and Nortel have unveiled a roadmap to help enterprises adopt unified communications platforms.

Shortage of graduates threatens future of UK IT sector, warns BCS

The British Computer Society has highlighted an alarming downturn in computer science graduate projections which could imperil long-term success for the nation's expanding IT economy.
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