Posts Tagged ‘Hardware’

01 Synergy Shines in Dubai

October 17th, 2011

Shaikh Maktoum Bin Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Dubai Deputy Ruler, opened the 30th edition of the Gulf Information Technology Exhibition (Gitex) in Dubai on Sunday.

GITEX TECHNOLOGY WEEK 2011, one of the world’s top ICT events ended today and we at 01Synergy are happy to announce that we made a right decision to exhibit at Gitex.

01 Synergy is pleased with the platform GITEX has provided in sourcing new  partners to help them service the MENA region.

Middle East & North Africa is one of the most exciting and lucrative ICT markets and GITEX  was the right place for 01 Synergy to showcase its services, our stand traffic has been consistently high, enabling us to showcase our latest innovations and demonstrate how our services can help transform businesses in Middle East.

01 Synergy was appreciated for its stand design and showcasing:

  • Mobile Software development services (Apps for iPhone, iPad, Blackberry, Android etc.)
  • Social Media development & marketing (Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin)
  • Rich Internet Application development services (Flash / Silver light)
  • E-Commerce  & CMS Solutions (Joomla, Magento, Mambo, Drupal, WordPress, Typo3, Oxid)
  • Custom Software Development services (.Net, PHP, Java)
  • IT Consultancy
  • Legacy Application re-engineering
  • QA & Testing services
  • Offshore IT Staffing

GITEX 2011 featured more than 3500 companies from 57 countries and several global leaders were drawn to Dubai for the event.

GITEX exemplifies how the region has grown in terms of attracting many of the world’s biggest players in the technology sector. Business leaders recognise the benefits of face to face interaction with clients, and this is one of the many reasons GITEX continues to offer participants unsurpassed value including 01Synergy.

GITEX was a successful event for 01Synergy, as it provided the right platform to facilitate joint ventures, strategic alliances and expand our customer base in the MENA region. We look forward to be back at GITEX 2012.

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IT outsourcing driving concentration of data centre hardware spending

October 14th, 2011

The amount companies are due to spend on data centre hardware will reach $99 billion (£63 billion) by the end of the year, which could see additional capacity for handling IT outsourcing.

New research published by Gartner has predicted that the market will expand by 12.7 per cent from 2010’s spending levels and reach $126.2 billion by 2015.

Its figures include the cost of servers, storage facilities and enterprise data centre networking equipment.

The biggest growth will be concentrated in the largest data centres and these will see their share of spending rise by six percentage points in the five years to 2015, with cloud computing and IT outsourcing being implicated as key factors in this trend.

Jon Hardcastle, research director at Gartner, stated that this year will see worldwide data centre hardware spending levels surpass 2008’s levels.

“Storage is the main driver for growth. Although only a quarter of data centre hardware spending is on storage, almost half of the growth in spending will be from the storage market,” he explained.

Mr Hardcastle suggested that in-house enterprise data centres are unlikely to benefit from these trends as companies maximise their usage of virtualisation technologies and boost their infrastructure effectiveness.

Deployment densities are also growing and this is inhibiting demand for floorspace, with a greater concentration in the largest facilities, he stated.

Cloud computing is playing a key role in driving the benefits that the largest data centre class is experiencing, he added.

At 2015, Gartner predicts that two per cent of data centres will contain 60 per cent of data centre floorspace and will amount to 71 per cent of data centre hardware spending.

Recent figures published by the International Data Corporation have shown that Western European IT spending is forecast to hit $460 billion by 2015, with the rebound experienced in 2010 continuing through the next four years.

Source:http://www.ihotdesk.com/article/800757704/IT-outsourcing-driving-concentration-of-data-centre-hardware-spending

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IT vendors should integrate software, hardware to grow revenue

September 28th, 2011

With the commoditization of hardware, IT vendors are increasingly turning to software and services to generate revenues, say market observers, who also dish out advice on how to sustain the hardware business.

Hewlett-Packard last month announced plans to offload its PC business, despite being the leading global PC vendor, to focus on its enterprise software and services business. Even consumer electronics giant Samsung was reported to be looking to boost its software capabilities through acquisitions.

In an e-mail interview with ZDNet Asia, Tom Kucharvy, CEO of California-based Beyond IT, noted that the shift in focus from hardware to software and service had already been “well in place” with IBM leading the way in this transition when it sold its PC business in 2004. Similarly, Dell began focusing on its enterprise business, he added.

In an e-mail to ZDNet Asia, Ludmila Berkesova who is program manager at Technavio, noted that while HP only recently talked about exiting the hardware business, the “seeds were planted in 2008″ when it acquired EDS to gain a bigger share of the IT services market.

“While we can’t call that move spectacularly successful, it was good enough for HP to think of changing their business model with a higher focus on the services part of the business,” Berkesova added.

He noted that software and services were more lucrative businesses in both the short and long term when compared with hardware.

“If you look at any major corporations’ IT budget, you will find that spend on software and services is actually higher than pure hardware spend. It is also a significantly higher margin business,” he said.

“Low margins, higher labor costs, increasing local and global competition, and availability of low-cost hardware are all making this business difficult to run profitably,” he added.

Phil Hassey, founder of Australia-based CapioIT, noted that hardware also requires services to integrate. He added that it is simply a business that vendors prefer to keep as part of their revenue stream, rather than risk letting a third party benefit from it.

Beau Skonieczny, research analyst of computing practice at Technology Business Research (TBR), explained why software and services are margin accretive businesses. Software is build-once and sell-to-many, and services is able to capitalize on higher-end consulting services as well as lower-cost outsourcing and tech support services to expand margins, he said.

Kucharvy added that software and services were “more sticky” as customers would find it more difficult to switch between software or services vendors.

According to Skonieczny, the evolution of cloud will gradually dissipate the need for large-scale, in-house data storage and servers, and purchasing decisions will be less focused around hardware capabilities. Here, software and services will be key in supporting the added scalability of cloud implementations, he said.

Keeping hardware sustainable
With the commoditization of hardware, Hassey noted that it was increasingly difficult to keep this business segment sustainable. That said, he added that hardware products were still needed in the market.

Hence, IT vendors would need an “absolute razor-sharp focus” on cost as well as a commitment to innovation that delivered increased value for customers, instead of innovating just for the product’s sake, he said.

Technavio’s Berkesova concurred, adding that market players would need to carefully monitor and manage their internal supply chain.

“Sourcing of components to ensure quality while keeping costs down, will be paramount in keeping the business viable. In a volume business such as hardware, it is very easy to see sourcing costs spiral up in short order,” he said.

According to Beyond IT’s Kucharvy, the “easiest” way for vendors to have a sustainable hardware business was through delivering a proprietary hardware platform that provided unique capabilities, and a proprietary architecture that locked in customers through software or locked out competitors through brand loyalty.

While most proprietary systems have disappeared from the market, he pointed to IBM zSeries servers and the Apple Macintosh, iPhone and iPad as example of “most sustainable and profitable” proprietary product lines.

He added that while Cisco Systems had a similar lock, its position was being eroded by more aggressively priced competitors.

A more difficult route vendors, touting industry-standard platforms, can take is to have “such a large volume advantage and economies of scale” that they are always able to sell at lower pricepoints than their competitors, Kucharvy said.

However, selling hardware alone might not be enough.

According to Hassey, vendors will need to bundle products and services, and ensure they develop intellectual property (IP) that can be reapplied across different offerings and that can provide competitive advantage. He pointed to IBM’s achivements in the analytics space and HP’s success in the data center space, as examples.

TBR’s Skonieczny agreed: “Integrated solutions are the main ingredient to keeping hardware afloat. By owning the core IP behind software, services and hardware offerings, vendors are better positioned to establish more efficient and cost-effective ways to integrate the solutions with one another.”

“Developing a cohesive portfolio across software, services and hardware will help strengthen vendors’ offerings and promote pre-packaged solutions,” he added.

While interoperable systems might put pressure on a company’s hardware business as customers would find it easier to integrate products from different vendors, Skonieczny noted that packaged product pricing by large vendors such as HP and Cisco, that have larger scale and “end-to-end” products, could help promote hardware purchases and create a sustainable hardware business.

Enterprise lesson from Apple’s success
For IT vendors, Skonieczny noted that owning the entire software, services and hardware stack is an important piece of the enterprise IT puzzle.

Pointing to Apple’s lead in the consumer space as an example, he said Cupertino’s success was supported by its closely knit products, software and services, which each had clearly defined focus areas and the ability to execute well on that focus in a streamlined manner.

Such a strategy could translate over to the enterprise space with success, but the key differentiator would be organic versus inorganic growth, Skonieczny said. Apple’s innovations were built with minimal help from acquisitions which was one of the reasons why it had been able to maintain more product fluidity and closer integration of hardware, software and service, without needing to mix and match differing technologies, he said.

In comparison, other IT companies grew inorganically through acquisitions of disparate technologies and processes, he noted.

While it would be too late for many larger companies such as HP and Dell to build out an enterprise strategy similar to Apple’s in the consumer space, he suggested these market players looked at deploying effective inorganic growth strategies within the software and services realms to differentiate their offerings from the competition.

Pointing to HP’s acquisition of Autonomy, the TBR analyst noted that the purchase would “significantly bolster” the IT vendor’s software expertise in managing unstructured data sets.

“While this is an excellent opportunity for HP from a strategic standpoint, the execution of Autonomy integration is another story,” he said. “HP will need to find ways to integrate the data management capabilities into its existing enterprise portfolio, while building a more streamlined and cost-effective solution set for enterprise clients to utilize.”

Source:http://www.zdnetasia.com/it-vendors-should-integrate-software-hardware-to-grow-revenue-62302250.htm

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Wipro to sell data centres and other computer hardware assets of Infocrossing

September 26th, 2011

India’s third biggest software exporter Wipro is evaluating options to sell data centres and other computer hardware assets of its US subsidiary Infocrossing to unlock value from what the company now calls ‘non-core’ business, people familiar with the discussions said last week.

At least five persons, including officials and bankers, said Wipro has already received initial offers from several medium to large US telcos, and the company is deliberating to carve out five data centres owned by Infocrossing for a potential sale estimated to be worth anywhere between $300 million and $400 million.

“This part of Infocrossing (data centres) is not a game changer we want over next three-five years,” the first person said on conditions of anonymity because these discussions are at an early stage. The person also added that Citigroup is currently holding discussions with potential buyers.

“Interests received so far are unsolicited. As of now there is more than one potential bidder,” he added. When contacted, a Wipro spokesman declined to offer any comments as the company is in a silent period ahead of its earnings announcement next month. In August 2007, Wipro had acquired Infocrossing for $600 million, with then revenues of around $200 million.

At that time, the company had plans to increase Infocrossing revenues five-fold to $1 billion by 2010. “There is a realisation now that customers do not make decisions based on whether a vendor owns data centres or not – a proposition clearly visible when Infocrossing was acquired,” another person intimately familiar with Wipro’s acquisition strategy said.

Among domestic peers, Wipro has been most aggressive in pursuing and making acquisitions having bought some 28 firms across the businesses of technology, lighting and retail. In April this year, Wipro acquired oil and gas IT practice of US-headquartered SAIC for $150 million in an allcash deal. Infocrossing has been the biggest acquisition Wipro has made so far.

Another person directly involved in these discussions ruled out complete sale of Infocrossing, which contributes revenues to Wipro from the lucrative healthcare business. Infocrossing counts Nestle, BP, Capital One and Best Buy among its top customers.

“Nearly a third of Infocrossing revenues are from healthcare clients, a segment which remains big strategic play for Wipro,” the third person, who is also familiar with the internal discussions, said. “The idea is more about unlocking value from non-strategic part than giving up the entire unit,” he added.

Infocrossing is headed by Martha Bejar who is the chairperson and CEO, and has around 1,000 staff in the US. While data centres are being considered non-core by outsourcing vendors, telecom firms such as AT&T and Verizon are increasing investments in such facilities to host and offer applications using the cloud computing model.

According to US-based Datacenter Dynamics, companies in the US will invest nearly $9.5 billion next year in data centers. On its part, Wipro has been attempting to offer outsourcing services bundled with computer data centres with customers such as Citigroup.

Last year, Wipro even acquired a Citigroup data center in Meerbusch, Germany. “The part of Infocrossing, which currently offers these integrated services, is not something that can be sold. Data centres in the US are being considered to be sold,” the fourth person said requesting anonymity because Wipro has not officially mandated any investment banking firm for this sale.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/news-by-industry/telecom/wipro-to-sell-data-centres-and-other-computer-hardware-assets-of-infocrossing/articleshow/10120689.cms

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The Internet Group Confirms Gold Membership of the Service Desk Institute (SDI)

June 24th, 2011

The Internet Group, the London IT management and IT outsourcing specialist, has announced that it is now a Service Desk Institute (SDI) Gold Member.

Having been awarded a coveted three star rating by the SDI for its service desk earlier this year for open and direct communication with clients as well high levels of customer satisfaction, Gold Membership status further confirms The Internet Group’s commitment to best practice service desk support.

Adam Maurice, managing director of The Internet Group said, “We firmly believe in the framework and methodology that the SDI represent, and since we have introduced these into our business, we have seen the client experience get better and better.” Connecting service desk professionals across a network of countries, SDI Gold Membership allows The Internet Group’s own service desk team further access to the very latest industry intelligence, thought leadership seminars, events and research.

Keeping service desk technicians abreast of service desk developments from a global perspective, SDI Gold membership is also a hallmark of a service desk committed to achieving a consistently high level of customer satisfaction.

Having maintained a three star SDI accreditation for two consecutive years, The Internet Group’s London-based service desk provides 24-hour incident resolution with an average response time of just 12 minutes. Proving an expert single point of contact, The Internet Group’s service desk facilitates incident management, service request management, change management and problem management for end users.

All of The Internet Group’s IT management services are based on the internationally recognised ITIL v3 and SDI frameworks.

Tel: 0800 094 9001 opt 6 or email rebecca@applejupp.com About The Internet Group: The Internet Group is a multi-award winning specialist provider of managed IT services to UK and International businesses. The company provides a complete range of IT solutions – from remote support and additional resource, through to a fully outsourced solution – to help its customers ensure operational excellence at all times. Through its team of highly skilled engineers, consultants, procurement officers and project managers, The Internet Group provides clients with a solution tailored to their individual business needs, helping to turn IT from an overhead into an asset.

By utilising the best practice frameworks of ITIL and through its work with the SDI and adoption of their standards based accreditation programme, The Internet Group provides a high level of service management. As a result, the company was awarded a 3 star SDI accreditation in November 2009, in recognition of its customer-led approach to IT support. To reinforce this accreditation in June 2010 The Internet Group won SDI’s IT Service Excellence Supplier of the Year award (as nominated by their clients) and IT Service Excellence Professional of the Year award.

The Internet Group has also been recognised by Computer Weekly as the Best Place to Work in IT (2008) and included in the Deloitte Technology Fast 500 (2008), due to its exceptional business growth. The company works with clients across a range of industry sectors, including professional services, recruitment, retail and manufacturing.

Source:http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2011/06/24/5595748.htm

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IBM to focus on banking, infrastructure sectors in India

May 5th, 2011

IBM will focus on providing its services to the banking, infrastructure and public sectors along with its key telecom sector in India, a significant market for the world’s largest technology services firm, the chief of its Indian unit said.

Last month, IBM topped expectations for first-quarter profit and revenue, partially driven by strong performance in the red-hot markets of Brazil, Russia, India and China, where revenue was up a combined 26 percent over a year earlier.

The company already has a strong presence in India’s telecommunications sector with clients including Bharti Airtel and Idea Cellular. “We are also now focusing on several other industries like banking and public sector and in the infrastructure space, particularly in the airports and energy utility area,” IBM India’s Managing Director Shanker Annaswamy told a media briefing on Thursday.

IBM has already won contracts from State Bank of India , the Indian Railways, the Delhi and Hyderabad international airports among others, he added.

The company will also look to build its presence in the smaller cities of India, where it sees growth, he said.

“Another area where we see very big potential and is yet to be tapped is outside of the metro towns,” he said. “The next level of towns are big enough for creating business opportunities.”

IBM provides strong competition to home-grown software services exporters — Tata Consultancy Services , Infosys Technologies Ltd and Wipro , who lead India’s near-$60 billion IT outsourcing sector.

The Indian companies have planned wage hikes of up to 15 percent to keep employees from being poached by firms like IBM and Accenture , even as they battle the technology giants for contracts.

Last year, IBM won a 10-year contract from Bharti to manage the computing technology and services that run the Indian firm’s mobile networks in 16 African countries. Bharti acquired the networks last year from Zain .

IBM also manages Bharti’s IT infrastructure in India in a 10-year deal, which began in 2004 and had an initial value of about $750 million.

IBM’s operations in India include providing hardware, middleware and technology services, back-office services, consulting and research and development.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/software/ibm-to-focus-on-banking-infrastructure-sectors-in-india/articleshow/8168889.cms

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Teardown reveals Kinect hardware worth $56

November 15th, 2010

A teardown of the Kinect recently carried out by UBM TechInsights reveals the true value of what’s inside Microsoft’s newly released motion control device. The total cost of the hardware was estimated at $56, around $17 of which can be attributed to its PrimeSense motion detection system, which includes microphones, cameras and processor.

It has been noted, of course, that this number does not figure in manufacturing or marketing costs (the latter of which could easily have taken up the rest of the list price), but it still leaves one to wonder how much of the total $150 Kinect price that Microsoft keeps in their pocket. What percentage of profit is considered acceptable? Given the marketing, I wouldn’t be surprised if they were breaking even and hoping to make their profits on the games.

Source:-http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/367995/cios_must_revaluate_use_outsourcing_gartner/

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