Industry news

  • 25 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    More than £200m will be invested by the Government in a network of elite Technology and Innovation Centres to drive growth in the UK’s most high-tech industries, it was announced today.

    The centres, which were announced by Prime Minister David Cameron in a speech to the CBI today, will bridge the gap between universities and businesses, helping to commercialise the outputs of Britain’s world-class research base.

    Business secretary Vince Cable said:

    “We need to do more to ensure the UK benefits from its world-class research.

    “These centres will help take ideas from the drawing board to the market place. They will play a key role in helping firms develop new products and processes so they can grow and prosper.

    “Companies will be able to access technology and skills that would otherwise be out of reach.

    “High-tech industries are the future of the British economy. Growing sectors that exploit these new and emerging technologies will help re-balance the economy and provide the highly skilled, well-paid jobs we need.

    “Thanks to this major investment, British companies will be at the forefront of innovation.”

    The centres, which will receive the money over the next four years, will be based on the model proposed by Hermann Hauser and James Dyson. The network will support businesses in developing and commercialising new technology.

    They will allow businesses to access equipment and expertise that would otherwise be out of reach as well as conducting their own in-house R&D. They will also help businesses access new funding streams and point them towards the potential of emerging technologies.

    Each centre will focus on a specific technology where there is a potentially large global market and a significant UK capability. Areas identified as possibilities by Hermann Hauser included plastic electronics, regenerative medicine and high value manufacturing.

  • 25 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    On Friday, Hewlett-Packard announced with the Bulgarian president, Boyko Borisov, that it will be expanding its outsourcing services to Bulgaria.

    There are currently 3,200 people working for HP in Bulgaria and it is hoped that the expansion will result in an additional 2,000 new job positions for engineers and qualified personnel.

    Over 30 countries were competing for the investment which is a HP initiative and was not set up with the aid of any EU funding. Sasha Bezouhanova, HP public administration director for central and eastern Europe, would not announce the figures of the investment as exact expenses could not be planned. The recruitment for the centre will start immediately and the centre should start working at full capacity next year.

    Borisov said: "More than 300 highly qualified Bulgarians living abroad have returned to work for the HP centre here because the salaries are better than what they have received in the countries they have been working in. After the new job positions are open, even more people will return.”

    HP has announced that the development of the centre would be a good investment in education as well. At present, the company is cooperating with three Bulgarian universities for general education programs.

  • 22 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Nick Clegg has dismissed reports from a leading think tank that the spending cuts will hit the poorest the hardest.

    The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said on Thursday that the cuts would actually hit the bottom half of the earners hardest and not the top tax players – as the coalition government had claimed.

    Clegg responded today and stated that the report from the IFS was “complete nonsense” and that the Treasury had tried to provide more than a snapshot of tax and benefits.

    The IFS said that the biggest losers from the cuts would be families with children due to the reduction in welfare. However Clegg suggested that they did not take into account such factors as public spending inputs that include children and social care.

    Clegg said: “We just fundamentally disagree with the IFS. It is complete nonsense to apply that measure. The richest are paying the most.”

    Clegg also acknowledged the fact that it was a hard decision to raise tuition fees as the Liberal Democrats had actively opposed such a move throughout the election.

    Clegg added: “It quite understandably raises questions about promises politicians make. I signed a pledge that I have not been able to honour.”

  • 22 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    IT services supplier Wipro is the latest Indian outsourcing company to post record financial results.

    The company announced profits of $288m (£183m) for its fiscal quarter to September, a 10% year-on-year growth.

    During this period, Wipro also increased its number of employees by 2,975 to 115,900.

    Azim Premji, chairman of the company, said demand was fuelled by customers catching up with under-investments in IT over the previous year.

    "While the macro-economic environment continues to remain uncertain, there is higher degree of confidence at the micro level," he said.

    The announcement follows recent results from Tata Consultancy Services, which showed sales of $2bn in the three months to 30 September, an increase of 30% year-on-year. HCL also posted revenue growth of $804m, up 27% compared to the same period a year ago.

    Source: http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2010/10/22/243490/Wipro-latest-Indian-IT-supplier-to-post-record-growth.htm

  • 22 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    A Cabinet Office official has said that the Directgov website needs to be simplified to increase its usage.

    Graham Walker, director of digital delivery for the department, said that this is the conclusion from a review of the site launched by the government's digital champion Martha Lane Fox in August.

    An official at the Cabinet Office has said that long-term IT contracts will not be cancelled early in favour of the G Cloud, while a freeze on IT projects has already made cost savings

    Read more

    Speaking at the Beyond 2010 conference in Birmingham, he said: "We've been doing a review of Directgov and most of government on the web. We can see that there is a need to massively simplify it, with a lot more rationalisation and to improve the user experience."

    Directgov provides the central portal for citizen-facing government services. It was transferred from the Department for Work and Pensions to the Cabinet Office in the weeks after the coalition government came to power.

    Walker said there are still significant barriers to getting people to use more online government services, and there is a need for some "common enablers" to overcome them.

    "We are starting to talk to service owners about getting 95 percent take-up," he said. "If we are going to do that we need to provide digital support for some people some of the time."

    He cited the example of the difficulty in expecting more people to apply for benefits online when many of them do not have the necessary IT skills, and said there is a need to provide the necessary support.

    "If we don't do that, we will be stuck at 60-65 percent," he said. "We hope to make public progress over the next month or two."

    Source: http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/it-strategy/2010/10/22/official-directgov-needs-to-be-simplified-40090618/

  • 22 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    National Outsourcing Awards 2010

    21st October 10

    The 7th annual National Outsourcing Association Awards was a glamorous affair, attracting the biggest names in the outsourcing industry at the Park Plaza Riverbank hotel.

    The guests all mingled before the ceremony, overlooking spectacular views of London’s most striking landmarks - the London Eye, Houses of Parliament and Big Ben.

    Comedian Jack Whitehall hosted the awards and helped to make the evening a night to remember. Timeout’s “Sickeningly young wunderkind” delivered a fantastic routine before introducing Martyn Hart, Chairman of the NOA, to the stage to introduce the awards.

    Martyn said: “Outsourcing is on the up and the awards are a fantastic opportunity for professionals within the industry to come together and celebrate the year’s successes. Professionals have predicted high growth rates for outsourcing as the public sector increasingly looks to move contracts towards the private sector.”

    The National Outsourcing Association Awards have become a landmark in helping cement outsourcing as a key business function and practice. Interest and attendees to the awards has risen year on year and winning an award is seen as a huge accolade and recognition of success.

    The 17 awards all celebrated the top developments, contracts and innovation within the outsourcing space. Hundreds of applications were whittled down to a shortlist of nominees and winners were then selected by a panel of outsourcing experts.

    The winners of the Awards were:

    BPO Contract of the Year sponsored by Nelson Hall

    Mahindra Satyam BPO & GlaxoSmithKline

    IT Outsourcing Project of the Year sponsored by Cognizant

    Capgemini & Welsh European Funding Office

    Financial Services Outsourcing Project of the Year sponsored by Sitel

    Capita & AXA

    Public Sector Outsourcing Project of the Year sponsored by Alexander Mann Solutions

    CSC - Department of Health

    Telecommunications, Utilities and High-Tech Outsourcing Project of the Year sponsored by sourcingfocus.com

    Infosys

    Offshoring Operation of the Year sponsored by Buffalo Communications

    Exigent

    Outsourcing Professional of the Year sponsored by HML

    Serco - Duncan Mackison

    Outsourcing Service Provider of the Year sponsored by ITIDA

    HCL Technologies

    Outsourcing Contact Centre Provider of the Year sponsored by KPMG

    The Listening Company

    Outsourcing Advisory of the Year sponsored by The OUT Group

    Olswang

    Offshoring Destination of the Year sponsored by FST

    Philippine Trade & Investment - Philippines

    Outsourcing End User of the Year sponsored by IBM

    HMRC

    Award for Innovation in Outsourcing sponsored by RR Donnelley

    CSC

    Award for Best Practice in Outsourcing sponsored by Intelenet

    Centrica

    Award for Academic Achievement sponsored by NOA Pathway

    Verity Billson - Capital One

    Award for Corporate Social Responsibility sponsored by Fujitsu

    Firstsource

    Chairman’s award for outstanding contribution to the outsourcing industry

    National Rail Enquiries

    Martyn concluded: “It’s wonderful that these awards can recognise the innovation and developments that have taken place in the past year and look forward to the future. It really has been an incredible evening.”

    Party band Madhen wrapped up the evening by taking to the stage with a high-energy performance, playing a great selection of songs that kept the guests busy all night. Overall, the awards were a fantastic night for the outsourcing industry and one which has made everyone excited about the NOA Awards 2011.

  • 21 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Vittorio Colao, chief executive, indicated that Vodafone may reconsider future investments in India if the country's Supreme Court upholds an earlier decision demanding that Vodafone pay capital gains tax on its $11.1bn purchase of a controlling stake in local operator Hutchinson Essar.

    "The tax issue will be incredibly important for us to determine how friendly India is," Mr Colao said in a interview with India's Economic Times. "This is a concern for our investors and for other international investors."

    He warned that if India continues to demand the disputed tax payment, the country's telecoms sector would be "squashed like lemon" as international investors would reconsider their Indian development plans.

    Mr Colao said Vodafone has invested more than £1bn a year into India since it joined the market three years ago and has paid almost a third of its revenues in taxes to the India exchequer. He added it was "totally unacceptable" that the Indian authorities have not pursued Hutchinson for capital gains tax on the 2007 sale.

    The Supreme Court will on Monday set a date to hear Vodafone's appeal. The case has been closely followed by a string of multinational companies as it could set a precedent for other cross-border takeovers in India.

    George Osborne has lobbied against the tax bill on Vodafone's behalf.

    Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/mediatechnologyandtelecoms/telecoms/8075999/Vodafone-warns-India-over-tax-bill.html

  • 21 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    OpenStack, the open-source cloud management software project formed by hosting provider Rackspace, has met an initial development milestone, backers are expected to announce Thursday.

    An updated OpenStack code release dubbed "Austin" will be available Thursday, some three months after the project was first announced. OpenStack includes the code that powers Rackspace's Cloud Files and Cloud Servers technology, as well as software developed by NASA for its Nebula cloud platform.

    An initial component based on Cloud Files, OpenStack Object Storage, was released in July. The Austin update eases deployment, fixes bugs and adds new features, such as a statistics processor and better access control.

    Cloud computing services ‘should be like consumer products’, says SAPVMware to launch cloud platform for developersMicrosoft dives into cloud with Office 365 launchG-Cloud will save us £1.2 billion a year, says government CIO.

    A second component called OpenStack Compute is a provisioning engine built with code from Cloud Servers and Nebula. It is now suitable for testing and prototypes with the arrival of Austin.

    OpenStack, which is available under the Apache 2.0 license, is seen by some as a potential counterbalance to proprietary cloud platforms and tools such as Amazon's public EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud), as well as the burgeoning range of vendor offerings for building private clouds.

    Rackspace has said it has no interest in being in the software business, preferring to win clients based on the overall quality of its hosting service. Therefore, open-sourcing its technology made sense, because the company will benefit from the community-driven development model, it says.

    A NASA official expressed similar sentiments in an interview earlier this year.

    Rackspace and NASA aren't going it alone. The project has support from Advanced Micro Devices, Intel, Dell, Citrix and dozens of smaller companies that develop cloud management, monitoring and other tools.

    It made sense for large vendors such as AMD and Intel to join the effort, since their chips power the racks of commodity hardware commonly used to build out data centers, but the absence of software platform players from the current list is telling.

    Vendors like SAP are more inclined to partner with other established players, but that could change if the right company decides to push OpenStack for building private clouds, said Redmonk analyst Michael Coté.

    Meanwhile, OpenStack backers are already looking toward the next iteration, code-named "Bexar," which is set for release in January. That will be a topic of discussion during a "Design Summit" event in November.

    Source: http://www.computerworlduk.com/news/cloud-computing/3245083/openstack-cloud-project-is-on-track/

  • 21 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Microsoft has changed its licensing policies in a deal which will put 100,000 city of New York staff on its cloud services platform.

    Under the terms of the deal the city will consolidate the 40 or more different software licenses it currently has with Microsoft into a single agreement and will shift its workforce onto cloud services. The five year deal will save the city millions according to Mayor Bloomberg.

    "To deliver services efficiently and function at the highest level, City employees need the same technological resources that top private sector businesses provide to their employees," he said.

    "Through our partnership with Microsoft, we've found ways to offer our employees Microsoft's newest, state-of-the-art computing tools while reducing costs to taxpayers. By capitalizing on the City's buying power, consolidating dozens of separate City agency license agreements into a single one, and paying for software based on use, we'll save $50 million over the next five years."

    Previously 40 different city organizations had run their own application systems and the move to consolidate is part of New York’s Citywide IT Infrastructure Services program (CITISERV), which will consolidate the City's separate agency datacentres into a centrally-managed facility.

    The contract will be a big boost for Microsoft, which is facing stiff competition from Google in its government business.

    "With Microsoft's latest cloud-based productivity and collaboration tools, New York City employees will benefit from having better access to information, improved collaboration and information sharing among city agencies," said Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer.

    “Additionally, this comprehensive partnership provides the latest in operating system, server and development tools laying a foundation for greater innovation and infrastructure modernization."

    The news came the day after Microsoft announced the planned launch of its Office 365 cloud offering.

    Source: http://www.v3.co.uk/v3/news/2271949/microsoft-scores-massive-cloud

  • 21 Oct 2010 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    George Osborne said today there was no "plan B" if the speed and scale of his deficit reduction programme poses problems in the future as he stood firm by the "hard but fair choices" unveiled in the spending review.

    The Institute for Fiscal Services has warned that the public spending reductions could "reduce the quantity and quality of some public services" to such an extent that the chancellor may want to put some of the money back in and urged him to review his programme after two years.

    Osborne announced sweeping cuts to welfare, higher education, social housing, policing and local government that will axe £81bn from government spending and draw the country back "from the brink of bankruptcy".

    The most striking of the new cuts announced yesterday was a package of £7bn in extra welfare cuts on top of the £11bn already made in the last budget. This will include the withdrawal of £50 a week from the 1 million people who have been claiming incapacity benefit for more than a year.

    Housing charities have also warned of the prospect of rising homelessness among the young as a result of changes to housing benefit rules.

    Osborne admitted that his budget was a "hard road to follow" but promised a brighter future at the end.

    Labour however denounced the government's "slash and burn" strategy while the IFS said his measures were "regressive", hitting the poor harder than the rich.

    Today, the chancellor cited the backing of the International Monetary Fund and big business to underline his conviction in his decisions.

    Pressed on what he would do if his strategy proved to have devastating consequences, Osborne made clear he intended to stay on course.

    Speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today programme, he said: "People in the Labour party keep saying: 'Where's your plan B?' I've got a plan A ... This country didn't have any plan at all in a few months ago. We have got the plan. We have got some fiscal credibility out there in the world. We've created a platform for economic stability, dealt with this huge budget deficit problem with a measured plan that takes place over four years."

    He added: "Yes, some people on the Labour side say that I am going to far but I believe what I am doing commands the support not just of bodies like the IMF but also businesses who are going to create that private sector recovery that we want to encourage."

    He said that he had made a deliberate decision to cut benefits, such as housing benefit for single young people, rather than frontline services.

    "I have made a conscious choice. I have decided to try to sustain spending on the national health service, on our schools, on some of the important infrastructure like our roads and green energy," he said.

    "I have chosen, in part, to pay for that, as part of the deficit reduction plan, by trying to curb the rise in the benefits bill. That has involved some hard choices but I think they are fair choices.

    "If we don't deal with the rapid rise in things like the housing benefit bill, which is now greatly more than we spend on the police, then we will have a real problem."

    He rejected the suggestion that Britain faced rising homelessness as a result of housing benefit cuts as he insisted that the principle that a welfare system that incentivises people to work to earn more money than they could possibly earn on benefits was "perfectly reasonable".

    "I wish I was not doing this against the backdrop of the enormous budget deficit, but these are the cards I have been dealt by my predecessor and I am dealing with it," he said.

    And he defended the decision to maintain universal benefits for the elderly, such as free bus passes, regardless of their income brackets, because he said means testing would have ended up being too costly.

    Carl Emmerson, the acting director of the IFS, said that the public finances "often do not behave as expected" in response to government efforts to pull economic levers, and that a review after two years would be sensible.

    "There are two key downside risks to this deficit reduction plan," Emmerson said. "First, the structural budget deficit could turn out to be larger than the Office for Budget Responsibility's central estimate. Back in June, the OBR gave the government about a six-in-10 chance of meeting its fiscal target without further policy action, so it is quite possible that further tax rises or deeper spending cuts might prove necessary.

    "Second, the deep cuts to spending announced in the spending review will reduce the quantity and quality of some public services.

    "Should this deterioration prove too great for the government's liking then the chancellor might wish to top up his spending plans. A review of these spending plans in two years' time would be a sensible move."

    Emmerson said the chancellor's plans implied the deepest cuts since the 1970s after Britain was bailed out by the International Monetary Fund.

    He warned that the plans would hit the poor hardest: "The benefit cuts ... on average will impact those in the bottom half of the income distribution more than the top half of the income distribution. Therefore, they are regressive.

    "And the public service cuts, it's hard to know who loses from that, but the Treasury's best estimate ... again suggests that the bottom half will lose more than the top half. So the new stuff we heard about overall does look regressive."

    Osborne insisted that people would understand that the alternative to his plans was economic ruin. "Yes, it is a hard road to follow, but it leads to a brighter future and if we don't follow this road, then I think people understand it would lead to economic ruin," he told ITV's Daybreak.

    Alan Johnson, the shadow chancellor, said that Osborne's budget was a return to what people expected from the Tories.

    He told the Today programme: "What most people saw yesterday from a budget that is increasingly being shown to be unfair as well as unwise and even untruthful in respect of some of the statistics, is a return to what they expect from the Conservative party. We believe the way we bring down the deficit needs to be steady, needs to be sure. This slash and burn approach is something we wouldn't do."

    Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/oct/21/george-osborne-spending-review-there-is-no-plan-b

Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software