Sometimes I think that our government departments have no clue as to what they are doing, and sometimes I think that maybe they do - both thoughts are equally frightening.
Drop the ball, quaff the cider; the age-old feud between journos and PRs comes to a head.
Many companies today try to keep information on their activities under lock and key, often to the detriment of their corporate image.
The onset of the technology revolution has led to all sorts of advances that the children of today make use of, but it also means there are more opportunities for school bullies to be cruel.
Two recent ICT awards ceremonies displayed a complete lack of the very skills they honoured.
The minister has announced that we should have a 51% partner in the SNO in the next eight weeks. Why, after all the times she's gotten it wrong, should we believe her now?
It appears as though the SNO licence procedure is trundling down the same long and messy road the third cellular licence bid took.
Attending the launch of the Corporate Research Foundation`s top ICT companies for 2003/4, I found myself questioning the validity of the list, as criteria for inclusion are subjective and companies have to pay to be included in the accompanying book.
Online banking security and stability have come into question again lately. As far as I can tell, my e-bank is very secure: no one can steal my money because no one has much chance of accessing it.
Everyone, at some time, has felt the urge (usually justifiably so) to smash their PC with a blunt object, but there are people out there who take this attitude to a whole new plane.
While the SNO licence saga has all the hallmarks of a classic television soap opera, beneath the murky waters of the process there may lurk monsters from a B-grade horror movie.
When you buy a software licence, are you purchasing the right to use intellectual property or are you just making a significant investment in a plastic CD?