• Oracle shrugs off downturn by increasing software revenues
  • Habitat apologises for Twitter abuse
  • Video: Android-based HTC Hero on Orange from July
  • PayPal crashes leaving payments unprocessed
  • Event: Live W-Tech coverage
  • Businesses can give police headstart in busting cybercriminals
  • State IT project too secret to be named
  • Scrap ID cards and Big Brother database, says ex-Microsoft CTO
  • Digital Britain needs a reboot, says ex-Microsoft boffin
  • Cars will talk to each other over the web, expert predicts
  • Intel and Nokia plot next generation of mobile computing
  • CIOs losing strategic role as they battle recession
  • FireControl project won't be ready in time for Olympics
  • One in three send sexually explicit e-mails at work
  • Can AppLocker ease desktop lockdown woes?
  • IT professionals explore disk-based backup, data deduplication to speed backup
  • Cybercrime attacks, IT outsourcing, mobile malware top ISF threat list
  • New South Wales Department of Environment and Climate Change adopts WAN optimisation
  • A beacon for broadband on the Isle of Man
  • Diskeeper boosts virtual hard drives with defrag for Hyper-V
  • Agito offers Wi-Fi call routing for Blackberry users
  • Talend open source data integration goes real-time
  • MySpace to cut another 300 international jobs
  • Habitat uses Iran Twitter tag to sell its products
  • Military tests information and comms systems
  • Beta of free Microsoft security software released in US
  • Business intelligence boosts ambulance operations
  • How to fine-tune Backup Exec
  • Data modeling - and essential practice for business intelligence success
  • Buying botnets: Underground network marks ominous 'milestone'
  • Storage roundup: Oxford chooses DataCore for VM4rent service, StorageCraft opens UK office
  • Disk-based trends top Advanced Backup School agenda
  • Well paid IT contractors don't need protection, says APSCo
  • 1m iPhone 3GS sold in first three days
  • Backdoor admin accounts blow corporate security
  • SMEs hit by increasing spear phishing attacks
  • Apple charges iPod Touch users for critical patches
  • Video: How to do IPv6
  • Internal reports reveal NPfIT flawed at its launch
  • Global telecoms market has peaked, says analyst
  • Security software market bucks the recession
  • Better testing may have prevented Parcelforce data breach
  • Google execs finally head for court over bullying video
  • Government ordered to publish reviews of risky IT projects
  • Enterprise disk buying guide - Western Digital
  • Guardian exposes MPs expenses to crowdsourcing
  • Hackers help get news out of Iran
  • HSBC arm is serious about social media
  • Vodafone maps holiday plans with Twitter
  • BT plots a path to cloud-based IT infrastructure
  • Dozen LTE deployments in 2010
  • Mobile video driving boom in IP traffic
  • Parcelforce customer data revealed
  • UK iPhone users race for OS3 upgrade
  • Video: how to take apart an iPhone without breaking it
  • Video: iPhone 3G stress test
  • Can you trust your backup application's reporting?
  • China watchdog slams Google porn
  • Legal ramifications as judge unmasks blogger
  • How bad is iPhone security?
  • British software supports Iranian protesters
  • Business needs ignored in Digital Britain report
  • Banks will harness social media
  • Airbus crash: focus turns to electronic systems
  • W3C looks for workaround over Apple auto-update patent
  • YouTube losing Google less than predicted
  • Facebook loses case against German network
  • Censored MPs' expenses published online
  • Video: Hackers to release Apple iPhone OS 3.0 software jailbreak
  • Users oblivious as criminals sell access to thousands of PCs
  • EU privacy concerns could hit revenues for Facebook and Twitter
  • Former Microsoft developers to launch Crowdeye search for Twitter
  • Forrester's advice on how to manage governance, risk and compliance projects
  • Geoscience Australia tenders for 50 petabytes of storage
  • When blade servers compromise security
  • Bloggers go soft as EMC, NetApp and HDS let HP get away with dodgy product repositioning
  • IT overhaul results in cheaper, better endpoint security management
  • Basic IT skills need to improve
  • One in five IT staff cheat on security audits
  • Digital Britain report draws mixed response
  • Judge throws out case against Oracle's Larry Ellison
  • The truth about banks, Facebook and Twitter
  • Download iPhone OS 3.0 from iTunes
  • MySpace slashes 420 jobs
  • Carphone Warehouse offers cash for old iPhones
  • Tories warn ID companies not to sign contracts
  • Keep data collection to a minimum, warns ICO
  • Dell bundles software with new SAN
  • Enterprise disk buying guide - Seagate
  • Costly Big Brother plan won't work, warns LSE
  • Breaking news: Digital Britain in a nutshell
  • Digital Britain report: Government confirms commitment to high-speed broadband
  • Barclays hardware failure brings down ATMs and online banking
  • Digital Britain outlines measures to counter online piracy
  • Digital infrastructure as important as transport network
  • Businesses and consumers will pay for broadband for all
  • Citrix unveils new application delivery products
  • How to save 60% on your IT support bill
  • Demand for IT no longer in freefall, says Seagate boss
  • Price is not most important thing to online shoppers
  • More