Breaking News

  • Huge hard drive growth with portable devices

    A recent report has revealed that hard drives are set to be used more commonly inside homes as makers of consumer electronics, such as personal video recorders and music players have been buying drives for their products.

  • EMC embraces new super fast Xeon

    Intel had launched a new improved Xeon for embedded storage systems that can handle 64-bit computing to allow OEMs, such as EMC and HP to provide faster storage services.

  • SAN simplified for smaller businesses

    HP has released new SANs and NAS solutions as part of Microsoft's Simple SAN program, which aims to make it easier for fast growing small and medium size businesses to adopt bigger storage networking systems.

  • HP simplifies storage by playing name game

    HP has moved to ease customer identification of the right HP NAS offering for them by renaming their NAS appliances so that they carry the same name as the HP servers on which they are based.

  • CSIRO ICT Centre ready to innovate

    The Australian Government's chief scientist, Dr Robin Batterham used the platform of yesterday's official public launch of CSIRO's ICT Centre in Sydney to issue a rallying call to the Australian ICT industry to embrace change in order to h...

  • Seagate redefining storage on the hoof

    Hard disk drive vendor Seagate Technology, which has suffered disappointing results of late, will be hoping the introduction of its new 5GB pocket hard drive and 100GB portable external hard drive will help drive revenues on an upward trajectory.

  • Sun expands edge on storage

    Sun Microsystems has released the Sun StorEdge 6130 array as a new member of the Sun StorEdge 6000 family to provide advanced data protection with application-oriented management for lower end users.

  • Most PCs have fallen victim to spyware

    A study carried out by America Online and the National Cyber Security Alliance has discovered that 80 percent of 329 inspected computers have been infected with spyware without the user knowing.

  • Dicom buys Neurascript to strengthen Ascent

    Dicom has bought U.K. based Neurascript, which specialises in software that automates the recognition, extraction and indexing of information from business documents and forms, to help boost its information capture technologies.