Integration and Services: Market Reports
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Consolidation to accelerate in Australian IT services market
Mergers and acquisitions among Australia’s privately-owned IT organisations are expected to take off this year, as companies solidify their market position and expand capabilities in the brighter economic environment.
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Bowtells buy back Notebook Depot
WA integrator, ComputerCorp, has sold repairs subsidiary, Notebook Depot, back to its original founders, Steve and Jeff Bowtell. It acquired the business as part of a $1.4 million takeover of education reseller, Fed IT, in August.
- FTAccount Manager - Strategic Enterprise DevelopmentNSW
- FTSenior .Net Developer - Mobility/Portal SolutionsNSW
- FTMobile Portal Architect - .Net TechnologiesNSW
- CCDB2 / DBA Technical Consultant - Finance company - Melbourne CBD - DB2VIC
- FTDigital Account ManagerNSW
- FTDigital Account ManagerNSW
- FTSupport Consultant - Global Vendor - $55-75,000NSW
- CCDigital Business Analyst - Agile/ScrumNSW
iAsset is a channel management ecosystem that automates all major aspects of the entire sales,marketing and service process, including data tracking, integrated learning, knowledge management and product lifecycle management.
What is Wireless 2.0
The challenges and the Practical Approach to a ‘Wi-Fi that works’ Creating “Wi-Fi that works”, even with minimal requirements, is a tall order given the breadth of client and application types that must perform well over the wireless infrastructure, but when adding in the speed and complexity of 802.11n, a variety of demanding applications, high-density environments, and tricky deployment scenarios, controller-based vendors cannot live up to their promises of Ethernet-like determinism. This whitepaper defines what a Wireless 2.0 network is, and the importance of a controller-less architecture for performance, reliability, scalability, security, and flexibility. Download this now
HiveManager Online: Less Dollars, More Sense
Today’s de facto standard controller-based Wi-Fi infrastructure model is just too complicated, too expensive, and too unreliable. It’s common for enterprise and mid-market network operators alike to get caught in a crossroads of compromises involving costs, complexity, features, and reliability.








