Telcos stories
Vietnam is emerging as a key player in South East Asia's data centre market, reaching near parity with Thailand and Indonesia due to strategic investments.
Vertiv's Tony Gaunt discusses the future for Singapore and Asia where he believes IoT, AI, 5G, data centres and cybersecurity will be paramount.
Forget the hype, the road to full 5G coverage is going to be a little longer than vendors and service providers have promised.
Now in its fourth year DataCentres North is shaping up to be a must-attend for anyone involved in data centres with interests outside of London.
Vocus subsidiaries Dodo, iPrimus, and Commander to refund customers for undelivered NBN speeds, following ACCC agreement, affecting over 5,800 consumers.
The deal is set to commence in mid-2018 on a three-year term, with a global rollout upon a successful implementation.
The new landscape could be a problem for service providers. However, it could be a boon if telcos can situate themselves at the centre of services.
Smartphone shipments fell in 2017 for the first time since their inception with some regions worse than others, but IDC remains optimistic.
As part of the partnership, Tech Mahindra has onboarded VMware vCloud NFV into Tech Mahindra's Virtual Network Function (VNF) Xchange programme.
The low power WAN market is about to get competitive thanks to the rise of IoT, according to a new IDC NZ report.
NBN's 'Enterprise Ethernet' product is designed to deliver wholesale high-bandwidth that can achieve speeds of up to 1Gbps.
Datacloud UK, an event focused on the data center market in the UK, opened in London with discussions on edge computing.
GAS expands Indo IT with Kaseya tie-up, eyeing automation & managed service lessons from ANZ. #TechDayExclusive.
It marks the fourth location that the telecommunications reseller has opened up, in addition to Perth, Sydney, and Singapore.
Nexion managing director Paul Glass talks about how they've leveraged their partnerships to gain global traction.
The Commerce Commission confirms NZ's four major telcos, Spark, Vodafone, Chorus, and 2degrees Mobile, will pay over 90% of the USD $50m levy for 2016/17.
Big telcos buy small ones, and in recent years this has happened at a rapid rate in New Zealand, which means there are now fewer left to buy.
FirstWave says their public cloud security service platform will provide Ingram Micro's channel with new cloud security revenue opportunities.
Vodafone and Spark customers in New Zealand express dissatisfaction with wait times and unhelpful service, according to a Consumer NZ survey.
But why are we seeing an increase in market share by the smaller telcos at a time where fewer and fewer exist?.