There are two kinds of people in this world. Those who don’t backup their PCs, and those who don’t backup their PCs.
By 2019, mobile apps will earn their creators £67 billion every year, new research has shown.
New research shows that young people, in this particular case Americans, would rather communicate via text than via voice. Now, who'dathunkit?
Researchers at the University of Bristol have come up with a way to touch and feel holograms.
According to a study by Nectar, the company most known for its points reward card, 16-30 year-olds in the UK favour entrepreneurship over working up the career ladder.
A lot of Brits use their smartphones to access corporate email and corporate data in general, and they’re aware that such information is valuable, not only to themselves and their company, but to hackers, as well.
Research by property-finding website Rightmove has found that people looking to buy a property may decide against it if broadband speeds are slow in the area.
Research by Imation finds 44% of organisations believe a member of their senior management has lost a mobile device in the last year, and 39% think someone in senior management had a device stolen.
£31m to be invested in joint venture with the University of Oxford to build new data-driven molecular based medicine for NHS cancer patients.
Around 70% of CIOs will update their technology and sourcing relationships in the next two to three years, according to a recent Gartner report.
Cloud computing is one of the most disruptive forces in business in 20 years, according to a study by professional services firm KPMG.
Cloud computing has achieved full acceptance as an IT deployment option in the UK - with 78% of businesses adopting at least one service in the area, claims new research.
The cloud revolution could be as big as that created by the impact of data processing on business itself, industry experts have claimed.
There are certain “hints” pointing at a certain direction, according to well-known security reseacher Brian Krebs.
When asked to name examples of successful wearables, 69% were unable to, with 22% being able to name one (either Apple or Samsung’s smartwatches). A mere nine per cent were able to give two or more examples.
Market analyst GfK says in its new global poll that for a quarter of online consumers, the stuff's 'as good as being there'.
You can now donate £2 for cancer research through four shopping windows in the UK, without actually touching them.
UK local government is warming to the idea that technology has the capability to deliver the “transformation” it has failed to in the past.
"There is no reason for any individual to have a computer in his home," Ken Olsen said in 1977. How wrong he was, but analysts still carry on making mistakes in their predictions.
A study of more than 5,000 office professionals across the US, UK, Germany, France and Australia exposes how antiquated business processes and outdated ways of working with documents are having a dramatic impact on productivity, efficiency and worker satisfaction.
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