Tag: BT

VMWare announces new BT agreement

BT has signed up for VMware’s Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) as a managed service.

The agreement will mix BT’s networking capabilities and in-depth security expertise with VMware technology to help customers accelerate their digital transformation.

BT says the managed service will provide employees with flexible, secure, and reliable access to cloud-based applications and services, deployed in private clouds, SaaS, or at the enterprise edge. It also aims to support the adoption of technologies such as the IoT and hybrid working.

BT couples with Rackspace

BT has teamed up with Rackspace to sort out BT’s multinational customers’ cloud services.

Under the terms of the agreement, BT hybrid cloud services will be based on Rackspace Technology’s cutting-edge solutions, which the company will deploy in BT data centres along with its Rackspace Fabric management layer.

BT said that its customers will benefit from the integration of Rackspace Technology’s cloud management expertise and automation, analytics, and AI tools with BT’s world-leading network and security capabilities.

Hyperoptic hire’s BT’s Neale as its MD of Infrastructure

Broadband outfit Hyperoptic has appointed Lisa Neale as its MD of Infrastructure. Neale will report into Dana Tobak, CEO and Founder of Hyperoptic, and will be responsible for delivering the company’s network rollout ambitions.

Neale joined BT as an engineer at age 18, she has spent twenty years steadily rising up the ranks in telecoms. She recently held a number of leadership roles at Openreach, including the Director of Fibre Build in UK East, and Director of Fibre and Network Delivery in UK West.

Neale said: “I am really excited to have a key role in enabling Hyperoptic to connect new customers so that they can enjoy a whole new broadband experience. In parallel, I am also looking forward to collaborating with the senior team on new innovative tools and techniques that will help fast track our rollout schedules. I feel that I will be able to add a lot of value from consolidating everything I have learnt through my career.”

BT promises unbreakable wi-fi

Telco BT is marketing a bunch of promises to micro-businesses including creating an unbreakable wi-fi.

BT’s latest promises to micro-businesses are ‘unbreakable’ WiFi across their workplace, with no blackspots, plus its fastest ever full-fibre speeds of up to 900Mbps.

The service enhancements for micro-businesses are offered in conjunction with BT’s new Hybrid Connect device, which delivers uninterrupted business connectivity by switching seamlessly to EE’s 4G mobile network if there’s a problem with the fixed-line.

Prices for BT’s Halo for business bundles start at £45 per month, plus an additional £7 per month for the Complete Wi-Fi option.

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BT announces new partner plus channel programme

BT has announced its new Partner Plus channel programme for its Wholesale division.

The arrangement is set up using a three-tier system Partner, Premium and Elite to make it easier for partners to collaborate and integrate with BT Wholesale’s suite of experts and services. This includes helping business support, marketing resources, and productivity gains.

Each tier offers a greater range of benefits which will be delivered through BT Wholesale’s new Partner Plus Hub, including commercial support and marketing resources, learning tools built by industry experts, and access to exclusive events.

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BT dragged in by the CAT

BT has been dragged into the Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) over claims it overcharged more than 2.3 million residential, landline-only customers for eight years.

The case has been filed by Justin Le Patourel, a representative of CALL (Collective Action on Landlines), and seeks compensation for customers who are claimed to have been overcharged by BT for many years. If successful, the claim could result in compensation of between £200 and £500 for each affected customer, up to a total of an estimated £500 million, according to CALL.

The claim relates to regulator Ofcom’s 2017 finding that BT’s landline-only customers were getting poor value for money compared to customers who bought bundles of broadband, landline or pay-TV services.

The regulator found that the company had raised its prices many times since 2009, despite a constant decline in the cost of providing landline service to customers.

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UK government, BT, fail kids on internet front

As we reported yesterday, a lack of foresight and even hindsight by the UK government has left some children high and dry on the lack of laptops.

But while it’s all very well having a laptop, if an underprivileged kid wants to study online that obviously requires a secure and reliable internet connection.

We have contacted BT as to whether it has been approached to tender for a cheaper interweb connection for kids maybe with a laptop but no way to conduct “online learning”. We have also dropped a line to the government.

As usual, BT’s really crap PR network has failed to respond to our urgent questions. So no change there. BT has failed to communicate anything for the last 40 years.  It is the backbone of the interweb, in the UK.

The BBC is inviting people to contribute laptops &c. But Auntie Beeb seems to have forgotten the lack of web access.

BT adds Zoom

BT is expanding its cloud-based audio and video collaboration managed services by adding  Zoom Meetings to its portfolio.

The move follows the signing of a new carrier agreement between the pair, with BT becoming the first global provider to offer a fully managed Zoom Meetings service to its customers.

The service will play nice with BT’s global voice and will have end-to-end experience monitoring and enhanced security.

BT will also provide Zoom Rooms, Zoom’s extendable software-based conference room offering.

Telcos warn that losing Huawei could damage the network

Executives from two of the UK’s largest telecoms providers told the House of Commons Science and Technology Select Committee last week that removing Huawei from the country’s infrastructure will be hugely expensive, and if done too quickly could lead to customers experiencing lengthy disruptions in service.

Having initially ruled that Huawei equipment could be present in up to 35 percent part of the country’s 5G network, the government has been backtracking after US pressure and a backbench rebellion and is expected to begin phasing out Chinese tech giant from the UK’s infrastructure as early as this year.

Dell scores BT project

Tin box shifter Dell has been selected to offer is customer-location IT gear to BT.

The deal means BT can offer a broad range of new managed services to help its multinational enterprise customers deploy applications and services.

BT has sold its global London-based headquarters

BT has flogged off its ts global London-based headquarters to a European property fund for nearly £210 million.

The BT Centre building in St Paul’s has now gone to Orion Capital Managers but it will lease back the building for up to 30 months until it finds a new home in London.

The move comes just a month after BT announced it would be closing 90 percent of its UK offices as part of its Better Workplace Programme.

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Juniper named as BT cloud supplier

Juniper Networks has been chosen by British Telecommunications (BT) to deliver its Network Cloud infrastructure initiative. This deployment will pave the way for BT’s Network Cloud roll-out – and also enable a more flexible, virtualised network infrastructure that can deliver the technology requirements of various lines of business for BT from a single platform.

Skills shortages and integration stuff up digital transformation

The Cloud Industry Forum and BT have woken up to the fact that skills shortages and migration and integration issues are causing problems for firms keen on digital transformation.

According to the pair’s study, three quarters either have or are thinking about digital transformation strategy in place or are rolling one out.

When customers talked about hurdles, barriers and problems the main one was around skill shortages with 59 percent thought they lacked the staff with integration and migration skills,

BT partners with Comm365 on 4G project

btlogoBT  has recently partnered with  network services outfit  Comms365 to provide contingency 4G connectivity to BT Exchanges in outlying areas, such as Shetland and the Orkney Islands, so the company can resolve any connection issues remotely.

Previously, if the connection went down at a BT Exchange, the company would have to send specialist engineers out to the islands to fix the fault, which could take up to a week depending on travel logistics and potentially inclement weather. Not only did this result in unnecessary downtime, but also required engineers to be away from the Network Centre for a significant amount of time, resulting in needless expense for the business. To address the problem, BT was looking for a way to deploy 4G access services to interface to its equipment as a disaster recovery solution, in the event that the broadband connection was lost at the site.

The company turned to Comms365 to deploy its 4G solution at the outlying BT Exchanges so that in the case of a connection issue, engineers at the Network Centre in Manchester could connect remotely to the equipment in order to diagnose the fault and quickly make any necessary changes. One of the primary challenges was that the different locations vary in terms of 4G coverage levels, but with the Comms365 fixed IP Multinet service roaming across all UK networks, the solution easily overcame any issues of coverage or network outages.

BT has deployed the Comms365 solution in two remote Exchanges in Scotland, with plans to roll out into two further locations in summer 2018. The company’s long term plan is to roll out the solution to several other Exchanges across the country, such as Cambridge, Cardiff and London, but the outer regions, including Stornoway and Skye, are being considered first due to their locations and the challenge involved in resolving connection issues.

Phyl Jewkes, 20C Core Transmission Manager at BT said: “It’s imperative that all of our customers receive as reliable a connection as possible, so in the event that a connection goes down we do everything we can to ensure that the connection is restored quickly, no matter how distant the location. With the solution from Comms365 in place, we can rapidly identify and fix any issues remotely without having to send an engineer to the site. Not only does this save us valuable time, but is also a cost-saving solution too. It’s been a really successful partnership and we’re looking forward to working with the team to roll it out to further sites in the future.”

Poor results force BT CEO’s exit

Kitten-KongBT CEO Gavin Patterson will clean out his desk by the end of the year after the telco’s financial results turned out rather bleak.

The telecoms giant announced restructuring plans alongside its yearly numbers – which showed a one percent year-on-year revenue decline during the 12 months ending 31 March 2018. This meant 13,000 jobs to go to save £1.5 billion over the next three years.

BT chairman Jan du Plessis thanked Patterson for his 14-year service to the company, but said that new leadership is needed to work through the restructuring.

“The broader reaction to our recent results announcement has though demonstrated to Gavin and me that there is a need for a change of leadership to deliver this strategy.”

Patterson, who was a BT board member for 10 years before becoming CEO in 2013, said that he was “immensely proud” of what he had achieved during his time with the organisation, highlighting the launch of BT Sport and the purchase of mobile network EE as key accomplishments.

BT has struggled with increased market competition and dwindling revenues, along with a record £42 million fine from Ofcom and difficulties in its troubled Global Services division.