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No rest for the vigilant

Achmea, the Netherlands’ largest insurance company with 13,500 employees, added PDAs (personal digital assistants) and smartphones to its portfolio of business communications devices about two years ago, but Bob Jutte, the firm’s CIO, continues to review the potential risks of using them. “Smartphones,” he says, “now have connections to the mobile Internet and have effectively become small notebooks. Originally it was a mobile contact book, now it is a mobile office. So we need to continue looking for a good security solution for PDAs.

For the BBC, social media opportunities outweigh the risks

BBC, the British public service broadcaster, has adopted a liberal view on the use of new technologies. Its journalists and reporters use social media sites, such as Twitter, on a daily basis as one of many sources of information and public opinion, and leverage Facebook in their research of news stories and people. BBC employees also use Facebook for internal networking and communication with colleagues. The IT department is also mulling over the policies that would permit the use of personal laptops.  

The fertile crescent

Despite its diminutive size, Israel ranks fourth among 66 nations in the R&D category of the IT industry competitiveness index. Home to just 7.3m inhabitants, the Middle Eastern country has an impressive track record of innovation, supported by high levels of military and commercial research and a high-quality education system.

An abundance of patents

The generation of patents is an important—although certainly not the only—pointer to the innovative impulse of a country’s IT sector. For this reason, it is a heavily weighted indicator in the R&D category of the Economist Intelligence Unit’s index model. It has also been a difficult indicator to measure, because until recently most countries’ patent applications could not be attributed to any particular sector.

Coping with India's talent crunch

Rising international competition and the demand for more valueadded services means that India’s IT outsourcers need talent in spades. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), India’s biggest IT company, now employs 14 0,000 workers and is striving to ensure that the supply of skilled, low-cost labour does not run dry.

South Korea gets smart

Could smart grids be the next big thing? If so, South Korea looks the place to be. The government has announced that a whopping US$84.5bn—about 2% of the East Asian country’s total GDP—will be invested in green technologies over the next five years in a bid to boost the competitiveness of its economy. A government aim to create a nationwide smart electricity grid by 2030—and be the first country in the world to do so—means that companies in this technology area may be poised to prosper.

From zero to a billion

When Deutsche Telekom unveiled its latest strategy update earlier this year, the company talked aplenty about expanding its broadband and data services operations. But a newer focus was also to increase its role in intelligent networks. Still in their infancy, such networks earn operators almost nothing today. By 2015, however, Deutsche Telekom expects them to be contributing €1bn in sales (see chart).

Embracing Skype

The UK operator 3 agreed a partnership with Skype in November 2006 to provide the latter’s VoIP service over 3’s network, but at that time it was a fairly niche proposition. Mr Middleton admits it was not particularly well integrated into 3’s services initially and that usage did not begin increasing until the last quarter of 2007. This was when 3 launched the Skypephone, which fully integrated Skype with the phone address book and featured a button for easy access to the Skype service.

African innovation in mobile pricing

It is not just in developed data markets that more sophisticated tariffing schemes are being considered. In Africa, operators’ dependence on low-income users has given rise to real innovation in the area of so-called dynamic tariffing.

One mobile operator that has already introduced pricing based around this concept is Vodacom Tanzania. It has used technology to identify under-used parts of the network and then offer heavy discounts to its customers at off-peak times or in particular locations.

BT, fibre and IPTV

Tim Whitley, chief strategy officer of BT, says the investment case for the company’s fibre-optic network plan is based on the need for higher bandwidth in the market, as services like catch-up TV, video-on-demand and multi-room HDTV (high-definition TV) take off. Yet, for many years the company resisted a rollout, prompting criticism from industry observers that the UK would end up lagging its European peers on broadband capability.

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