World will spend $5 Trillion on tech this year

A new report by Gartner says that global IT spending will soar by 6.8 per cent to a whopping $5 trillion this year!

In the UK, tech experts predict a massive 6.8 per cent growth in 2024 and a stunning 9.2 per cent CAGR.

The hottest markets will be cloud services, software, and infrastructure as businesses and consumers snap up the latest gadgets and gizmos.

IT services will be the biggest slice of the pie, with a huge 8.7 per cent growth in 2024, reaching $1.5 trillion. That means more consultants, more outsourcing, and more cloud computing.

Gartner’s top analyst, John-David Lovelock, says that the consumer market is already saturated with phones, laptops, tablets, and printers, but businesses are still hungry for more IT.

Scality promotes Retureau

London-based Data outfit Scality has promoted Marie-Laure Retureau as its new vice president of sales for Asia, the Middle East and Central Asia.

Retureau will lead a team of experts who will help customers and partners get the best out of Scality’s storage solutions.

Scality’s boss, Peter Brennan, said: ” Retureau is the perfect person to boost our business in Asia. She has amazing skills and is expanding our network of partners in this area with one goal: to help customers update and protect their data. She is committed to making our customers and partners happy and has strong connections in the region that will create many opportunities for us.”

Retureau has been working for Scality for two years and has a lot of experience in the data storage market. She has worked with customers and partners in many countries and knows how to solve their storage problems.

Rackspace helps BMG rock with Google cloud

BMG, the music giant behind stars like Kylie Minogue, Iron Maiden, and Dua Lipa, has partnered with Rackspace Technology to revolutionise the music industry with Google Cloud.

The world’s fourth-biggest music company has moved 95 per cent of its apps and services to Google Cloud, using  Rackspace Technology’s Elastic Engineering team.

This means BMG can pay its artists and songwriters ten times faster and track their music 50 per cent faster than before, using Google Cloud’s cutting-edge AI and big data tools.

BMG has ditched its old distribution partners and struck direct deals with streaming giants like Spotify and Apple, giving its clients more control and access to their data.

Cybersecurity gold rush for small resellers as SMBs splash the cash

According to a new CONTEXT report, small resellers are raking in the dough from cybersecurity sales to SMBs.

The market watcher says small resellers (SMRs) mainly deal with small, medium and home office customers.

CONTEXT claims that in France, and to a lesser extent, the UK and Italy, SMRs have cashed in on booming demand from an SMB market boosted by more investment and the need for custom-made solutions.

It says the year-on-year revenue sales performance of France shows how hot the market is, with figures for Week 52 of 2023 revealing the country is the top dog in cybersecurity sales through distribution.

Across Europe, cloud security revenue sales as of Week 52 shot up by four per cent year-on-year.

Fujitsu’s says sorry for ruining lives of innocent postmasters

Fujitsu has admitted it has a moral duty to pay up for the hundreds of postmasters it helped to convict on false charges because of its dodgy software.

The postmasters were the victims of the biggest miscarriage of justice in UK history. It saw some 700 local post office bosses branded as crooks and sent to prison or left penniless.

Some even killed themselves or died before they could clear their names after being accused of theft and fraud based on faulty data from Fujitsu’s Horizon system between 1999 and 2005.

“Fujitsu would like to apologise for our part in this horrific scandal,” Patterson, who joined the firm in 2019, told MPs investigating the outrage, which has sparked fury across the nation.

The Japanese IT giant’s boss, Paul Patterson, said sorry to the victims and said Fujitsu had a duty to pay out.

“We were involved from the very start. We did have bugs and errors in the system and we did help the post office in their witch-hunt of the subpostmasters. For that we are truly sorry.”

Microsoft to store more cloudy data in EU

Software King of the World,  Microsoft has revealed plans to store and process all personal data from its European users in the EU.

Julie Brill, corporate VP & chief privacy officer at Microsoft, confirmed the decision, saying that the firm is changing the ‘EU Data Boundary for the Microsoft Cloud.’

The plan, which started in 2023, first covered some of Microsoft’s cloud services, including Microsoft 365, Azure, Power Platform and Dynamics 365.

This week the firm expanded the promise to include all personal data, even automated system logs, in the Microsoft EU Data Boundary.

EU officials and American tech giants have been in long talks over how to handle European data. There have been worries about how EU citizens’ data would be dealt with in the US, which has weaker privacy laws than the EU.

SoftwareONE snubs Bain Capital’s bid in bold move

SoftwareOne has turned down a takeover bid from private equity firm Bain Capital, choosing to stay independent after a big review.

The global software and cloud solutions provider’s board of directors looked at ways to make more money, including selling the company in the big review that started in July 2023.

After a thorough check, PE firm Bain Capital made a non-binding offer to buy SoftwareOne, but the board decided that Bain’s offer was not good enough or fair enough.

With help from an independent valuation and expert advice, the board all agreed that saying no to Bain’s offer was the best thing for the company and its people.

SAP fined in bribery case

The maker of expensive business software, which no one is sure what it does, SAP, has been slapped with a  £159 million fine after admitting to paying bribes to officials in seven countries.

The US authorities accused SAP of breaking the law by using middlemen to grease the palms of government officials in South Africa, Malawi, Kenya, Tanzania, Ghana, Indonesia and Azerbaijan.

SAP confessed to the dodgy dealings, which took place between 2014 and 2022 and agreed to cough up the cash to settle the charges.

The US Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) and the US Department of Justice (DOJ) said SAP had cheated honest businesses by securing lucrative contracts with public sector customers through bribery.

The DOJ revealed how SAP had paid off officials at state-owned enterprises in South Africa and Indonesia to get their business.

Accenture song snaps up Work & Co in mega-deal

Tech giant Accenture Song has splashed out on Work & Co, a trendy New York design and technology firm, in a secret deal worth millions of pounds.

Work & Co has nearly 400 staff and boasts a dazzling array of skills and clients, including IKEA, Gatorade, Apple, Disney, Airbnb, and Google.

On Tuesday, Accenture Song, which used to be called Accenture Interactive, said that Work & Co will join its digital experience business, which helps clients boost their growth and value with cutting-edge products and services.

The exact price of the acquisition was not revealed, nor was the date when it will be completed.

Accenture Song is not done yet. The company also announced it will buy Navisite, a Massachusetts cloud solution and service provider.

UK Tech Cluster Group wants government cash for every region

A West Midlands delegation stormed the Houses of Parliament to launch a report that tells the next UK Government to provide more cash for regional tech groups.

The Ecosystems of Innovation report, delivered by the UK Tech Cluster Group, presents four big ideas to ensure that every region of the UK gets a boost.

The West Midlands group was led by Yiannis Maos MBE, CEO of TechWM, part of the UK Tech Cluster Group. Bringing together tech groups from every region and nation of the UK, the UK Tech Cluster Group’s Parliamentary bash called on the central Government to commit to four key areas that will unleash tech’s power across the UK regions.

PC sales up after eight quarters of slump

Global shipments of PCs hit 63.3 million units in the fourth quarter of 2023, a rise of 0.3 per cent, marking the first increase after eight quarters of drop, according to Gartner.

The analyst firm’s research shows 2023 to be the worst year ever in PC history, falling 14.8 per cent.

This is the second year with a double-digit fall, with shipments totalling 241.8 million units.

This marks the first time that shipment volume has gone below 250 million since 2006, when 230 million units were shipped.

Big G analyst Mikako Kitagawa said the market has hit rock bottom after big adjustment and normalisation in stock, with the “slight growth” suggesting demand and supply are “finely balanced.”

But she warns this situation will likely change due to the expected component price rise in 2024 and political and economic uncertainties.

HPE spends £11 billion on Juniper

Former maker of expensive printer ink HPE is buying Juniper Networks in a £11 billion deal that sets up a fight for network supremacy in the AI era between HPE Aruba Networking and market leader Cisco Systems.

HPE said the deal to buy California-based Juniper gives it more AI networking power and doubles its networking business, making what it called in a statement a “new networking leader with a huge portfolio that gives customers and partners a tempting new choice to drive business value.”

HPE is paying £31 per share in a cash deal that expects to boost its non-GAAP EPS and free cash flow in the first year after the deal closes.

On a pro forma basis, the new networking segment will go up from about 18 per cent of total HPE revenue as of fiscal year 2023 to about 31 per cent and make more than 56 per cent of HPE’s total operating income.

Which? blasts telecoms firms for price hikes

Which? has told telecom firms to stop any plans to go ahead with ‘unconscionable’ broadband and mobile price hikes in April, even after the industry watchdog found the practice hurts consumers and set out plans to ban it.

Ofcom recently planned to ban the practice of inflation-linked mid-contract price rises, saying that they cause ‘big consumer harm’, but this will not happen before the next wave of expected hikes in April 2024.

Many providers seem ready to shamelessly go on – with next week’s CPI inflation news set to start the announcements of the latest round of shocking hikes for consumers. Many may have already suffered increases of up to 17 per cent last year.

Which? Has written an open letter to big broadband and mobile providers – BT, EE, O2, PlusNet, Shell Energy Broadband, TalkTalk, Tesco Mobile, Three, Virgin Media and Vodafone – telling them to cancel any unfair and unpredictable price hikes planned for April this year. The letter has been published as a full-page national newspaper ad this morning.

HPE to snap up Juniper for £10 billion

Hewlett Packard Enterprise is close to sealing a £10 billion deal to buy Juniper Networks, the US firm behind the world’s smartest network.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the deal could be announced this week unless the talks go pear-shaped.

A spokesHPE indignantly said the company doesn’t comment on gossip or hearsay and Juniper Networks did not say anything either.

Juniper Networks, based in Sunnyvale, California, used to make most of its money from service providers, but has now shifted to selling more to businesses, with its intelligent software and AI gear. It is now the leader in AI-powered networks, with its Juniper Mist platform, which rivals Cisco Meraki and HPE Aruba’s ESP.

EU probes Vole’s AI antics

The EU has launched a probe into Microsoft’s $13 billion deal with OpenAI, the firm behind the world’s most popular chatbot, ChatGPT.

The Brussels bigwigs want to know if the deal is a sneaky way of merging the two tech giants and creating a monopoly in the booming artificial intelligence (AI) industry.

The EU’s competition boss, Margrethe Vestager, who is jetting off to California this week to grill the top dogs of Apple, Google and OpenAI, said she wants to keep the AI market fair and open.

She said she is asking businesses and experts to spill the beans on any dodgy dealings in the AI sector, and keeping a close eye on any cosy partnerships that could harm competition.