IT Outsourcing - Percento

Archive for September, 2008

Global IT Outsourcing Spending To Reach $1.48 Trillion In 2010, IDC Says

Thursday, September 4th, 2008
Companies are expected to increase spending on IT Outsourcing services at a compound annual growth rate of 5.8% to reach $587 billion at the end of the decade.

Global IT Outsourcing spending is projected to increase at a compound annual growth rate of 6.3% to reach $1.48 trillion in 2010, a market research firm says.

Broken down by segment, worldwide software spending is expected to reach $327 billion in three years, reflecting a compound annual growth rate of 7.7%, International Data Corp. said Wednesday. The hardware market is projected to reach $562 billion by 2010, driven mainly by “robust” spending from the home business and consumer, communications, and government sectors. Specifically, IDC sees more money spent on volume servers, peripherals, storage, and networking equipment worldwide.

Companies also are expected to increase spending on IT Outsourcing services at a compound annual growth rate of 5.8% to reach $587 billion at the end of the decade, IDC said. Sectors expected to have the highest demand are government, banking, and discrete manufacturing.

The spending projections are contained in an IDC study called Worldwide IT Spending, 2006-2010 Forecast Update by Vertical Market: North America, West Europe, Asia Pacific, and Rest of the World.

Source: Information Week

Google’s Chrome-plated strategy

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

By Michal Lev-Ram

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. – If Google’s new Chrome web browser succeeds, going online will be an all-Google experience.

“The web has evolved pretty dramatically, but the underlying browser architecture is still very similar to the original Netscape browser,” Sundar Pichai, Google’s vice president of product management, said at a press conference Tuesday at the company’s Silicon Valley headquarters.

Google says Chrome was designed to be “streamlined and simple.” The browser is available for free download in 100 countries starting Tuesday. Initially it will only work on Windows computers, though versions for Mac and Linux operating systems are being developed.

According to Pichai, Google’s intent is to “drive the whole web platform forward” and thus drive more people to the search giant.

At first glance, Chrome doesn’t look all that different from Mozilla’s Firefox, a competing web browser. But unlike Firefox, Chrome combined the address and search boxes to let people search for information and websites by entering keywords into the same bar.

“What we did is we smashed the two boxes together,” said Ben Goodger, a software engineer at Google and former Mozilla employee. “We call it the ‘Omni Box.’ “

The Omni Box lets users search for information and go to websites directly by typing into the same bar. Other Chrome features include movable “tabs” and an “incognito” window that lets people browse without saving their search history – a feature found on other browsers and which bloggers have nicknamed the “porn mode.”

Google also said its new web browser will be faster and more reliable than existing browsers. On Chrome, each tab operates separately, so if one crashes it won’t affect the main browser window.

Chrome is being released as an open source project, meaning developers will have access to build new features for the browser. Google said its engineers worked on the new browser for about two years.

“It is a huge investment for us,” said Pichai, who added that many Googlers are already using Chrome – including the company’s co-founder Larry Page, who made an appearance at the press conference.

But Chrome is entering a competitive market which Microsoft has dominated for years. The company’s Internet Explorer, which comes pre-installed on computers, accounts for 72% of the browser market. Runner-up Firefox has a 20% share.

“The browser landscape is highly competitive,” Microsoft spokeswoman Catherine Brooker told Fortune. “But people will choose Internet Explorer 8 for the way it puts the services they want right at their fingertips, respects their personal choices about how they want to browse and, more than any other browsing technology, puts them in control of their personal data online.”

So is there room for another browser?

Yes, says Citi Investment Research analyst Mark Mahaney.

“There is market demand for a browser that is speedier, simpler, safer, and stabler than IE,” Mahaney wrote in a report Tuesday morning. “What is unknown is whether Chrome is that browser.”

Source: CNN

Microsoft To Acquire Ciao Shopping Portals For $486 Million

Monday, September 1st, 2008
Ciao operates in seven European languages and countries, and recently launched a beta site aimed at the U.S. market.
Microsoft said Friday that it has reached a deal to acquire Greenfield Online, operator of the Ciao shopping and price comparison sites, for $486 million.Ciao’s Web sites let users search for and buy a wide range of tech products while comparing prices from numerous online retailers. It operates sites in seven major European countries and languages. Ciao also recently launched Ciao.com, a beta site aimed at the U.S. market.

Ciao users can rate products, provide feedback and create lists of their favorite gadgets and appliances. Microsoft officials said the sites would be integrated into its Live Search portal in Europe, where Ciao is most popular.

“Integrating Ciao’s capabilities into Live Search will provide a strong launch pad for our commercial search offer in Europe and enhance our e-commerce offering on MSN,” said John Mangelaars, VP for consumer and online products at Microsoft’s European operations, in a statement.

Overseeing Ciao’s operations at Microsoft will be Rajat Taneja, the company’s general manager for worldwide commercial search. Microsoft also plans to open a European search technology center this year.

Microsoft is looking to increase its share of the paid search market, where it trails Google and Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO). Its attempt earlier this year to acquire Yahoo having been rebuffed, the company is now eyeing smaller, tactical targets.

In July, Microsoft bought out Powerset for a reported $100 million. Powerset specializes in an esoteric form of Web querying called semantic search. The technique uses a variety of linguistic tools to interpret the meaning of search phrases to produce the most accurate results. The method has been in development for more than 10 years.

Earlier this year, Microsoft bid $1.2 billion for Fast Search & Transfer, which lets business users sift through corporate databases for structured and unstructured information.