Category: News

Ingram says it will fight Apple cartel fine

Ingram has said that it will ‘vigorously contest’ its €62.9 million fine for teaming up with Apple to fix prices in France.

The French competition watchdog – L’Autorité de la Concurrence – growled and issued its largest ever fine, against Apple, Tech Data and Ingram Micro, amounting to €1.24 billion in total.

Ingram Micro has rejected allegations by an antitrust authority that it fixed Apple product prices in the French market, describing them as “absolutely false”.

The watchdog claims Apple and its distributors acted like a “cartel”, illegally preventing Apple Premium Resellers (APRs) from competing on price against Apple’s own stores and subjecting the French channel to “unfair and unfavourable commercial conditions”.

Coronovirus will change how companies see tech

The coronovirus outbreak and the worldwide reaction to the pandemic will force companies to radically rethink how they operate and embrace technological investment, states global tech market advisory firm, ABI Research.

In its new white paper, Taking Stock of COVID-19: The Short- and Long-Term Ramifications on Technology and End Markets, ABI Research Analysts look at the current and future ramifications of COVID-19 across technologies and verticals. Analysts also offer recommendations to weather the storm and strategies to help companies rebound and prosper after the pandemic has slowed.  

Coronavirus is a black swan says Kicking Pat

VMware CEO Pat “kicking” Gelsinger says the coronavirus pandemic is a“black swan” that changes the way the world works.

Writing in his bog, Gelsinger said: “As we navigate this global pandemic, the future of work is changing. As the work-from-home model becomes the norm and work itself becomes more distributed, we will continue to build infrastructure and technology solutions optimised for the workplace of the future. This is a ‘black swan’ event that I believe will permanently change the way we work, learn, connect, worship and simple how we live in community with each other.”

Softcat has no cough from coronavirus

Softcat has delivered a solid set of numbers and indicated that the business has not seen a snuffle from the coronavirus.

The reseller delivered 20.8 per cent growth in revenues to £524.1 million for its half-year ended 31 January. Operating profit climbed by 19.5 per cent, hitting £40.5 million.

During H1, the firm cut the ribbon an a new office in Birmingham, which already has a staff of 20, and increased the overall headcount by just shy of 13 percent.

Softcat CEO Graeme Watt said there had been a 4.2 percent increase in the firm’s customer base over the six month period.

AECOM and IBM rumoured to want out of “shit show” outsourcing deal

AECOM and IBM want to cancel the $2.3 billion IT outsourcing deal they signed in January 2017.

According to Computing the two parties are struggling to find a mutually agreeable approach to an exit but are finding it hard to come to an agreement.

“All the way up both chains know and acknowledge this is a shit show,” Ting’s Deep Throat added.

The deal between IBM and AECOM has been fraught with challenges according to numerous sources who have approached Computing since it was first announced. Many have cited poor support, lengthy response times, project delays and low morale.

Over half of UK SMBs risk serious financial loss through printer hacks

More than half of UK small and medium sized businesses (SMBs) are exposing themselves to a serious data breach because they are not protecting their office printers, according to research from Sharp. Obviously it has an interest here.

Despite latest analyst reports suggesting that print-related data loss costs larger businesses an average of £313,000 a year, the threat posed to a network by connected printers and MFPs is still being overlooked by businesses across the UK.

The new research provides a snapshot of office printing behaviour across Europe and revealed that UK office workers are oblivious to the potential risks posed by printers and multifunctional printers (MFPs) in their workplace, with 95 per cent not considering these devices as an IT security risk.

Tech Data and Ingram Micro hit by Apple’s fine

France’s competition watchdog has fined Apple, Tech Data and Ingram Micro for running an illegal cartel in France, fixing prices, and “sterilising” the French channel.

Apple and distributors Tech Data and Ingram Micro have been hit by a fine worth more than €1.24 billion by an antitrust authority for allegedly fixing prices in the French market.

In the largest fine the watchdog has ever levied, L’Autorité de la Concurrence claims Apple illegally prevented its Apple Premium Resellers from competing on price, subjecting the French channel to “unfair and unfavourable commercial conditions”.

Sabio buys Google Cloud partner DVELP

Contact centre VAR Sabio has snapped up UK-based Google Cloud partner DVELP.

The London-headquartered cloud consultancy was established in 2015 and counts Marks & Spencer among its customers.

It marks the second purchase by Sabio this year, having acquired Spanish firm Team vision earlier in January.

Mike Andrews, Sabio’s VP of commercial strategy, said DVELP’s acquisition will augment the contact centre (CC) specialist’s existing portfolio and gives it more “breadth” to deliver value to customers.

Universities tap TAP in COVID-19 crisis

A university technology platform is being rolled out as a front line tool in the fight to maintain control of admissions amid the Coronavirus pandemic.

The Access Platform (TAP) provides a virtual environment in which prospective university students can interact with ambassadors who are already studying courses at a given university.

It has proven to be particularly successful for universities which have high overseas student intakes – and in recent weeks has become an invaluable tool as COVID-19 has gripped the world.

TAP Co-founder and Chief Strategy Officer Nik Higgins, is currently in Australia where the platform has quickly established itself as the market leader.

Parcel delivery could be the next big e-commerce thing

The rise in e-commerce is fueling rapid growth in parcel delivery volumes, a market expected to grow to $665 billion by 2030 according to a new analyst report.

Consumers are increasingly expecting parcels to be delivered quickly. This demand is driving companies to explore using automated delivery technologies to cover the last leg of the delivery journey.

Lux Research’s new report, “Automating the Last Mile,” predicts that automated last-mile deliveries will generate up to $48.4 billion in revenue by 2030, even though automated deliveries will only address 20 per cent of all parcel deliveries.

Coronavirus recession will bring about a new business world.

A CEO of one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory organisations has warned that the the recovery from a coronavirus-triggered recession will usher in a new era in which how we live, do business and invest will fundamentally change, 

Nigel Green, the chief executive and founder of deVere Group said: “Any way you look at it, it’s now almost certain that there will be a coronavirus-triggered recession as both global supply and demand are impacted. We can expect this recession to be deep but short. The slowdown will be temporary because it’s not caused by deep-rooted problems and imbalances in the economy, rather by a wholly unexpected shock that’s gripped the world.”

He said: “Every recession produces a new world. This one will too.  

Tech firms are hotbeds of sexism

Half of women have experienced discrimination while working at a tech firm, research from Studio Graphene has revealed.

The London-based digital agency commissioned a survey of 500 full-time workers in the UK tech industry. It found that 49 percent of women have experienced some form of discrimination in the workplace, while 20 percent have resigned from a role in the past because of discrimination or harassment.

Computacenter sees trouble ahead

While Computacenter CEO Mike Norris has just reported a stonkingly good financial year, he is a little worried about what he is seeing in his crystal ball.

The services giant saw overall revenue grow 16 percent year on year to £5.02 billion, with its Technology Sourcing unit contributing over £3.8 billion to that number.

Norris warned that last year has set a “high bar” for its current fiscal year and that it may not see the same level of growth due to the impact of coronavirus.

“It is too early to predict the outcome for the year as a whole and there is still much work to be done, particularly as we have not yet completed our first quarter. Our services pipeline is the strongest we have seen for some time in both professional and managed services. While we still believe customers will continue to invest in product, particularly in the areas of security, networking, and cloud, it may well be difficult to achieve the same growth rates we have seen in recent years.”

E-commerce boosts parcel delivery businesses

The rise in e-commerce is fueling rapid growth in parcel delivery volumes, a market expected to grow to $665 billion by 2030.

Consumers are increasingly expecting parcels to be delivered quickly. This demand is driving companies to explore using automated delivery technologies to cover the last leg of the delivery journey.

Lux Research’s new report, “Automating the Last Mile,” predicts that automated last-mile deliveries will generate up to $48.4 billion in revenue by 2030, even though automated deliveries will only address 20 percent of all parcel deliveries.

Avaya provides free collaboration software to education institutions

Avaya is providing its Avaya Spaces collaboration software for free to education institutions, including colleges and universities, along with qualified non-profit organisations worldwide.

Since January, Avaya has seen a 200 percent increase in video collaboration traffic on this platform.

Avaya CEO Jim Chirico said: “Coronavirus (COVID-19) is impacting the lives of people around the globe and every day we hear new sobering stories about the very real health and safety implications of the spread of this virus.