Jul
5th

Video: 60-Second Pitch: Collaboration software

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Video: 60-Second Pitch: Collaboration software

CIOs spend countless hours listening to suppliers pitch their technology, so silicon.com decided to make the process a lot more entertaining by putting the vendors on the spot. Welcome to the 60-Second Pitch.

Suppliers have just one minute to pitch their product or service to a panel of current and former heads of IT, who then have the opportunity to quiz the vendor before giving the technology a green or red light – just for fun, of course.


Jul
5th

Video: 60-Second Pitch: Collaboration software

Files under Headlines, News | | Leave a Comment

Video: 60-Second Pitch: Collaboration software

CIOs spend countless hours listening to suppliers pitch their technology, so silicon.com decided to make the process a lot more entertaining by putting the vendors on the spot. Welcome to the 60-Second Pitch.

Suppliers have just one minute to pitch their product or service to a panel of current and former heads of IT, who then have the opportunity to quiz the vendor before giving the technology a green or red light – just for fun, of course.

Jul
5th

The Weekly Round-Up: 03.07.09

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The Weekly Round-Up: 03.07.09

Glastonbury – home to ley lines, juggling hippies, gurning students covered head-to-toe in mud and publicity-hungry minor celebrities showing off in their wellies.

And, this year, they were joined by 407 BBC staff. Yep, 407.

Jul
5th

The Weekly Round-Up: 03.07.09

Files under Headlines, News | | Leave a Comment

The Weekly Round-Up: 03.07.09

Glastonbury – home to ley lines, juggling hippies, gurning students covered head-to-toe in mud and publicity-hungry minor celebrities showing off in their wellies.

And, this year, they were joined by 407 BBC staff. Yep, 407.


Jul
5th

Has in-flight entertainment got wings in the iPod era?

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Airlines should scrap in-flight entertainment systems because they cannot compete with the thousands of songs and scores of movies that can be stored on modern media players, according to an aviation expert.

The pace at which airlines can update the selection of film, music, games and technology offered to passengers is being outstripped by constant advances in storage and functionality on media players, according to professor John Hansman, director of the International Technology Center for Air Transport at MIT.