Delicious/delimiterau
- Earning billions and getting taxed a pittance
- Dell chief defends transfer pricing
- Qantas tech exec shifts to Jetstar
- Zurich Australia leads regional thin client push
- Early investors drop Facebook
- Victoria kills HealthSMART IT project
- Woz not great - mUmBRELLA
- Santos' thin client starts big-data plans
- Nokia Lumia 800 revs up at Bridgestone
- Telstra privacy breach was 'one little oops'
Posts Tagged ‘outsourcing’
Enterprise IT, Featured, News - Wednesday, May 2, 2012 17:15 - 7 Comments
Pacific swaps out VMware for Hyper-V
news Clothing and homewares manufacturer Pacific Brands has revealed it switched out VMware’s market-dominating virtualisation platform over the past several years, installing Microsoft’s rival Hyper-V system instead as it sought to take more advantage of virtualisation in its operations.
According to the company’s technical services lead Brent England, the company’s virtualisation journey started in 2007. Pacific was initially using VMware’s ESX 3 platform to virtualise its central server infrastructure, which it eventually upgraded to version 3.5. The company kept on using the software for the next several years, but by the time 2010 rolled around, the situation had started getting a little uncomfortable. England says by that time, Pacific was experiencing a number of performance issues which were causing some of its staff running its business applications to complain.
- Unhappy dragon: Westpac IBM outsourcing
spreads to St George - NBN Co in-sources contact centre
- An insider’s view of NAB’s IT transformation
- Westpac sends another 125 tech jobs offshore
- HP firms up multimillion deal with Downer EDI
- Westpac appoints McKinnon lieutenant Whincup CIO
- Macquarie follows Westpac in IT offshoring
- McDonald’s swaps out IBM support for Unisys
- The Westpac dialectic:
IT outsourcing and warring narratives








sponsored post ING Direct recently implemented a private cloud solution to virtualise its entire banking platform, allowing it to provision a new copy of itself -- a so-called 'bank in a box' -- within minutes. 