As per the projection made by the federation of Indian chamber of commerce and industries (FICCI), based on data compiled by the KSA Technopak advisors, India's retail industry is likely to cross RS. 100,000 crore by 2010 and the share
Large government funded research work in seismic and weather forecasting are setting benchmarks in HPC and vendors are using these benchmarks to their advantage.
In a high-growth market like India, where scalability is the prime driver of IT, blade servers are beginning to get deployed in sectors other than their traditional bastions like telecom
The growth of open source in the past had been slow due to lack of support, immaturity of products and lack of application support on Linux. Of late, however, significant growth in enterprise-wide application deployment on Linux has been seen,
India is producing a lot of mythological cartoons / animations and these developments are putting pressure on traditional IT systems used by movie makers.
Circa 1995: A typical datacentre with huge tower servers, taking up large surface area and guzzling huge power making it an IT manager's nightmare 2008: A new age datacentre with blades neatly stacked up, creating an agile and clutter free
If you thought that Green IT was only about additional costs and serving the environmental concerns, think again. Green IT strategies are leading to savings in operational expenditure; lower space and power consumption, and higher RoI
International Business Machines Corp. is launching the next generation of its mainframe computer line, which analysts expect to pro-vide a boost to the company's hardware and software sales.
IBM CORE was scheduled to roll out a new mainframe computer on Tuesday boasting a 50 percent performance boost and dramatically lower energy costs than its predecessor.
IBM is set to launch the latest update of its powerful mainframe computer, a more energy-efficient machine that it hopes will compete with high-end computers from rivals such as Hewlett-Packard and Sun Microsystems.
IBM is set to launch the latest update of its powerful mainframe computer on Tuesday, a more energy-efficient machine that it hopes will compete with high-end computers from rivals such as Hewlett-Packard Co and Sun Microsystems Inc.
For long, mainframe computers were just the thing you read about in school and forgot. The onslaught of personal computers and Web servers had given mainframes the image of clunky, old-fashioned computing giants. Well, the wheel has turned a full