In today's technology roundup: Nokia shows off first Windows 7 handset, Google faces US anti-trust probe, Winklevosses take on Facebook yet again, and UK census data 'safe'.
The EOH company has achieved the Certificate of Cloud Security Knowledge certification.
The penetration of mobile phones in many African countries is higher than the world average, says Winston Smith, MD of Alvarion SA and Southern Africa and Nigeria.
ITWeb, in partnership with Veeam, is running a survey on data resilience readiness among businesses in Africa.
The survey aims to explore just how prepared these businesses are to recover from a ransomware or cyber attack, as well as the resources they have at their disposal to help them recover.
In this survey, we examine, among other things:
By completing the questionnaire, you stand a chance to win a Takealot or Amazon gift voucher to the value of R5 000.
The detailed results of the survey and the winner of the lucky prize draw will be published on ITWeb.
Thank you for participating!
The local Internet service provider will give its customers 5GB of free storage space in the cloud.
The system offers users a document and records management system that can archive, find and retrieve content.
Researchers at UK hospitals are working to show how e-health can replace paper-based systems.
iSPartners will represent the company as timeXtender Africa.
Many SMEs in SA still have not recognised the impact hacking can have on their businesses, says Symantec.
The service provides users with their lost phone's location and also enables them to wipe personal data.
In today's technology roundup: UK census data hacked?, Fujitsu bounces back after tsunami, jobless start new careers in IT, and Foursquare hits 10m users.
The company helps enterprise customers accelerate their transition to private, public and hybrid cloud models.
The organisation needed to upgrade its Oracle database from version 9.2.0.6 to a 10.2.0.4.
In today's technology roundup: More trouble for RIM, Mozilla to unleash Firefox 5 today, iPhone drives up mobile data, and Google Chrome Frame bypasses admin controls.