From the data centre to enterprise software, worldwide IT outlay to hit $4T in 2021
Gartner forecasts the biggest growth in IT spending this year will be on laptops, mobile phones and enterprise software.
Gartner forecasts the biggest growth in IT spending this year will be on laptops, mobile phones and enterprise software.
Citizen digital identities and composable government enterprises are two major technology trends within governments that are expected to pave a way forward through the coronavirus pandemic in Australia.
Gartner has confirmed that companies have been rushing to spend money on tools needed to keep employees connected and productive.
Australian organisations are expected to spend over $4.9 billion on enterprise information security and risk management products and services by the end of 2021.
Gartner projects worldwide IT spending will total $3.9 trillion in 2021, representing an increase of 6.2 per cent compared to 2020.
Annual growth in the global PC market has hit a 10-year high, driven by consumer demand stemming from the coronavirus pandemic.
Work from home users to get more sophisticated network hardware and software as enterprises consider options such as SD-WAN and SASE.
This year may have been a doozy for the IT and business services market in Australia and New Zealand, but 2021 could bring with it renewed vigour.
Apple has grown its share of the Australian smartphone market amid an overall year-on-year decline of 15.4 per cent in the third calendar quarter of 2020.
Australian spending on public cloud services is set to rise by 10.4 per cent year-on-year in 2020 to reach $8.8 billion.
Enterprise finance leaders have ranked analytics technology and robotic process automation (RPA) as their top digital priorities for 2021.
According to Gartner, formative AI will help drive innovation over the next decade. But what exactly is it, and how can businesses benefit?
Enterprise IT spending in the education and healthcare provider sectors is expected to accelerate by 2021 following a bounce back across all Australian industry sectors.
Budgets for digital innovation projects appear to have enjoyed an increase this year, despite spending cuts elsewhere, according to new research.
A remote IT workforce, distributed cloud services, and core modernisation efforts are driving changes in enterprise infrastructure and operations teams.