Juniper Research says our global on-going transition from physical to digital only set to raise the figure even higher.
The two will cooperate to strengthen "the understanding, research and development" of the next-generation breed of superfast networks.
The UK is behind the curve when it comes to the adoption of wearable technology - both at home and at work, according to a new survey.
Famous Chinese e-commerce company, Alibaba group, is having tough a time facing government criticism.
Apple has been bolstering its green credentials with the announcement of a partnership with the World Wildlife Fund to launch a major forestland project which will run for years over in China.
The Canadian government has said it will take it a year to build a more secure IT infrastructure after the National Research Council (NRC) was hit by a cyber attack apparently of Chinese state origin.
The $2.3bn deal has moved a step closer to reality, and Lenovo hopes to close it by the end of the year, once the stamp of approval from the US is also obtained.
The Chinese government is further showing its displeasure with Redmond, and now plans to help domestic development of platforms to take over from Windows, and also Google’s Android OS.
China has ramped up its online censorship programme by blocking one of the Internet’s largest content delivery networks (CDNs), cutting off the country from large swathes of the web.
A Chinese state-run newspaper has claimed that an overseas malware attack was responsible for Web snags
China is set to invest $182 billion (£117 billion) to improve the country’s Internet speeds by 2017, as the national government looks to bolster its service industry.
China has expanded its censorship programme to include a number of virtual private networks or VPNs.
AngelList, a sort of a dating site but for start-ups only based in the People's Republic, has an additional £260 million to throw someone’s way in the United States, The Wall Street Journal reports.
Everyone knows that nation-states wage cyber warfare against each other.
China has come down hard on US-based security company Symantec and its Russian counterpart Kaspersky, removing it from the list of approved antivirus providers in Chinese government computer systems.
The Chinese government has decided that it will stick with using Windows XP as the operating system of choice, rather than upgrading to a newer platform. The decision, it says, its to avoid costs.
China’s online censorship programme has taken a decidedly aggressive turn, following the announcement that police officers will now be stationed inside large Internet companies.
The Chinese government has issued restrictions on exporting drones and supercomputers due to concerns over national security.
Just a few days before China hosts a major Internet industry conference, the country has apparently decided to block access to multiple different websites.
China has agreed to discuss limiting the amount of support or state aid that it gives companies in exchange for the EU not imposing sanctions on exports from the country.
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