News from 04/11/2004
2004; Gale Group;
Autores
Giles Smith, Andrew Robson, Christina Hardyment, James Christopher and Wendy Ide, Jon Ashworth, Carol Lewis, John Goodbody and Jenny MacArthur, DJM, Peter Hayes, Patricia Davies, Christine Penney, Gary Duncan, Jennifer Lane, Simon Barnes, Michael Evans and Angela Jameson, Peter Lansley, Mark Souster, Alice Bevington, Matt Wolf, Philip Howard, Carol Midgley, Christine Seib, Rachel Campbell-Johnston, Nic Hopkins, Ian Dickson, Clive Davis, Brin Hodge, Elizabeth Judge, Richard Irving, Sam Marlowe, Michael Tilliotson, Wendy Ide, James Hider, Patricia M. Evens, Tim Reid and Chris Ayres, Fiona Hogan, Irwin Stelzer, Joe Joseph, Andrew Norfolk, Grainne Gilmore and Christine Seib, Ben Webster Transport Correspondent, David Barrett, David McVay, Ian Landau, Michael Tiliotson, Anthony Browne, Mary McCartney Donald, Dominic Walsh, Debra Craine, Rory Watson, Jill Dupleix, Tim Reid, Angela Jameson Industrial Correspondent, Adrian Sutton, Dan Sabbagh, Jonathan Gornall, Richard Farbon, Paul McKenzie, Richard Ford Home Correspondent, Paul Gilbert, Alan Hamilton, Michael Tillotson, Anatole Kaletsky, A. C. Murray, Alan Lawrance, Roland Watson, Charles Bremner, Sarah Billings, Matt Dickinson Chief Football Correspondent, Hugo Rifkind, Alan Goff, Philip Ivory, Robert Gaskin, Daniel McGrory, Gary Duncan Economics Editor, Oliver Kay, Gerard Baker, Rick Broadbent, Mark Henderson Science Correspondent, Sam Coates, Ann Treneman, Rob Wright, Peter Boalch, Elaine Monaghan, Neil Harman Tennis Correspondent, Raymond Keene, Mary Kenny, Daniel Allen, Adrian Starkey, Matthew Pryor, Jack Aspinall, Sean MacAulay, Andrew Fyall, Mike Sterland, Jon Crookston, Chris Partridge, Jeremy Page, Caroline Merrell, Robin Cook, former Foreign Secretary, Bronwen Maddox, Helen Rumbelow Political Correspondent, Patrick Hosking, Helen Nugent, Gabriel Rozenberg Economics Reporter, Nick Hasell, John Adams, Barry Snellgrove, Dalya Alberge, Owen Slot Chief Sports Reporter, David Hands Rugby Correspondent, Paul Simons, Adam Fresco, John Allison, Joe Harrod, Dawn Knight, John Ashmore, John Goodbody, Robert Price, Mary Ann Sieghart, Wayland Kennet, Philip Webster Political Editor, Robin Kempster, Sian Morgan, Alexander Monro, Tim Hames, Ian Johns, Catherine Philp South Asia Correspondent, Sophie Kirkham, Joel Silbert, David Wolfson, George Caulkin, Russell Jenkins, Alan Lee, Peter Riddell, Tony Dawe, Brian Glanville, Carly Chynoweth, Kevin Flack, David Sinclair, Simon Jenkins, Martin Waller, Carl Mortished International Business Editor, Nigel Hawkes Health Editor, Sarah Butler, Benedict Nightingale, Iyad Allawl, Iraqi Prime Minister, Dr Thomas Stuttaford, Stephen Dalton, Tom Roundell, Leo Lewis, Bill Edgar, David Bellamy, Tony Halpin, Alice Miles, Philip Mitchell, Stephen Covey, Adam Sherwin, Abigail Rayner, James Christopher, Alan Lee Racing Correspondent, Jenny Davey, Hubert Védrine, France's former Foreign Minister, Colin McQuillan, Milly Ayliffe, Patience Wheatcroft, Christopher Irvine,
ResumoThe Times Two arrested over fraud allegations Sky-high rent Soldier cleared Oxbridge on a list Last she-bear shot English success Index Free Airmiles T2 Four more years Simon Jenkins reports on the voters' decisive rightward shift Faith Screen Bush pledges to heal the wounds of a divided and bitter nation President congratulates his 'admirable and worthy opponent' and appeals to Kerry supporters, Roland Watson reports In the Times Today The Times Four more years in White House Tiffany & Co. How the contenders addressed the nation President Bush Senator Kerry Gant America's Verdict Blair takes first chance to press case for Middle East Two held in fraud inquiry over £20bn defence order Weather Eye Sector Skills Councils Det Supt Maxine De Brunner New health centres will be stationed to suit workers In Surgery Should all surgeons be made to publish success rates? … Hospital funds under scrutiny Sizzla shows cut Incest apology Newborn feeders Clapton, CBE Surgeons are ordered to reveal heart operation failure rate Why good food really costs you nothing at Sainsbury's Debate Surf-Broad By a Correspondent: Shock over eBay guns Kidnap videotape shows Hassan collapsing in terror Black Watch dodge Iraqi rockets Marksmen go back to work Asylum plea North East ballot Regiments' fate Murder charge Snake abused TA soldier cleared of gun death in Basra Polio child to get damages Jarvis fined Plea accepted Verdict challenge Deterrence effect Body on beach Britain wins eight places in world list of 50 best universities Oxbridge comes second only to the big US institutions, reports Tony Halpin Other UK Universities in top 200 World's Top 50 Universities Finding Neverland Register Queen visits Berlin war graves A cemetery which honours British soldiers has a special place in the hearts of Potsdam residents, writes Alan Hamilton Versace MPs impose peace on war protester Sony Sport Attack on gambling deal 'cover-up' Howard accuses minister over civil servant's e-mail revealing 'easy familiarity' with US casinos, Sam Coates writes Tonight 9pm Busy thieves plan a house party on Guy Fawkes night Londinium Makeover Unbeaten century to win Pulsar US Election Secret to Roman lady's light skin A cream found in a 2,000-year-old jar is very like today's product, reports Dalya Alberge M&S Floyd's dark day O2 store Supercalifragilistic! Poppins' record sales Picture Gallery PS Peel's last remark US presidential election result Real winners in reform of gambling Labour's future Stranger than fiction 'Local' provision of cancer services MPs' expenses Efforts to counter global warming Fall back into bed Good and bad news Compact Times The Times Brain Power The world's best universities think globally, in English Vagaries of chance suggest Blair is wrong to gamble with our futures Arts Notebook Second Term Bush has an exceptional opportunity—he must seize it The inevitable triumph of guns, God and a large slice of apple pie Europe has always underrated Bush's domestic appeal Kerry may have lost the war, but he won this argument Blair's big chance to show he's no poodle The question for the Prime Minister is whether he will still suffer politically from his closeness to Mr Bush Kerry should be glad he lost America faces immense military and economic problems which threaten Republican self-destruction Put your faith in the Faith PC World PC World Melting ice breaks polar food chain The National Lottery Legion Gambling addict stole from old lady who trusted her Boy, 5, sent to France in bitter custody battle Homebase Toyota BBC admits offence Aramis Life Business C4 dead serious about ratings Broadcaster begins search for body donor to star in decomposition documentary, writes Adam Sherwin Angry MPs fend off threat of new expense claim cap Pru Health The Cost of Democracy A debate that was guaranteed to get plenty of mileage on election day Parliamentary Sketch Question Time Briefing Keeps Score Rolex The Times London Film Festival Holland Eindhoven Picture Gallery Shock and horror, but what's the point? Firstnight Film a Hole in My Heart Odeon West End Prison ship 'may have to close' US Election emporio Scots seek public smoking ban Health Schools must not fear litigation Education Turmoil over murder sentences Legislation Toshiba Garage watchdog fails its quality test Multiple Display Advertising Items Service Tips Multiple Display Advertising Items 'The Serpent' serial killer caught trying to escape Nepal jail Backpacker appeal Hyundai Smuggled falcons escape one-way flight to Syria Bear Facts In Danger Hunters kill last female bear native to Pyrenees (AFP): Arafat put in intensive care Karzai approved (AP): Hungary pulls out (Reuters): Mosque shooting (AFP): Sex attacker trial (Reuters): Observing ban WHSmith ThyssenKrupp Accessibility Alliance Leicester Deserter's 40-year ordeal is over Sport Dutch anger at Islamist link to brutal van Gogh murder Online Stella Artois (AP): Albanian win in Kosovo poll (AP): Bosnia handover New president (AP): Drugs gun battle (AFP): Factions disarm (AFP): Settlers paid off (Reuters): Bridge too far Hawk or dove-which face will Bush show this time? On Other Pages In, out or Moving on? What Will Happen to These Familiar Faces? Found Democrats left to reflect on the wreckage of gambling all to win Campaign Diary It wasn't simply the God-fearing, gun-toting Bush must act over Iraq, Iran and China Foreign Editor's Briefing FilmFirst 'I'm not sure whether the Bush team have got the skills … Life Search As Putin leads the applause, the Muslim world dreads an encore Cunning strategist who took a sharp right turn for victory Roving at Large Prudential Gay issue reveals extent of Rove's ingenuity The X-Type Spirit Limited Edition Hillary v Jeb: the grudge match for 2008? Senate victories give Bush power to mould Supreme Court in his own image The President has his hands on all the levers of power, reports Elaine Monaghan 'Whoever wins will be our friend. The United States … One. Tel Senate Results Bush's triumph the signal for US troops to move on Fallujah T Mobile And even the omens proved as unreliable The Times How the First Exit Polls Got It Wrong How flawed pollsters got it wrong again Early indications were interpreted in the Democrats' favour-and then the internet took over, Roland Watson reports Times Business Unanimous call to peg rates Stock Markets Currencies Commodities FTSE 100 Dow Jones Shares rise as Bush's win cheers US and UK investors Politics and Wall Street Record total of tourists to visit Five convicted in first Enr… Biotechs seek new growth Still, Waters runs deep Portfolio Building Services Will Dubya fall into the trade gap? Business Editor's Commentary Need to Know FTSE 100 Eurofirst 80 Hang Seng Nikkei Data Day Results in Brief Look Ahead Radio court battle Costs hit ad group Bet of the Day Rumour of the Day Exchange Rates Data Smaller Stock to Watch Deal of the Day Quote of the Day The Times Offersdirect Business Big Shot Biotechs seek share issue change The Carphone Warehouse Group PLC 'Pharma' groups attack price cuts EU rankings plea Drug Setback Marsh & McLennan fires a senior UK employee Still Room for Improvement Online Service sector rebound fuels hopes of recovery Developer of Ground Zero seeks record rent Tower is first step in $12bn project New York Post embroiled in circulation inquiry Renault Laguna Films to Books Warner counts cost of AOL row Sherry Lansing's hot spell C4 lobbies for public funding Allied Irish Bank (GB) Hollywood's 'First Lady' quits Britain should try to be grateful that Bush is the victor Lloyds TSB Business How the Election Result in the US Affects UK Companies Economy helps Dubya settle family's fears Kerry's loss is hailed as a gain for business by the markets Deficit and dollar are priorities as second term starts First Group expects route wins Oracle Rivals cut into sales volumes for Stella Around Bend to More Cash My Travel ultimatum for bond investors No pledge by FSA on mis-selling of low-cost products UK Buyout Idea Yukos set to ask for creditor protection First Milk Limited CVC makes a play for embattled Toys 'R' Us 'Crippling' cost of boosting the minimum wage Elizabeth Judge talks to business groups about how 'rubber-stamp' wage rises could cause job cuts The Times Case Study Wimpole Hair Restoration Clinic Sacking and suing City Diary The Gherk Inn City Diary Money men are the new force in the boardroom The Power 100 Drilling for fat City Diary Join the fast set with the 3G generation Connect your Company to Tomorrow Chris Partridge introduces the first in a series of reports on how business can get the best out of information technology Bosses must get smart to keep mobile workforces motivated Cable & Wireless Hilton doubles disaster protection Case Study We never close whatever the crisis-the business show must go on Missing data link is opening up a whole new world of possibilities Voice, video, multimedia, e-mail and data could all be carried on one set of wires One phone to ring them all at lowest rates High-tech helping hand for disabled Case Study HSBC gets the benefit as broker's concerns hurt Lloyds Larger Capitalisation Shares Stock Markets Wall Street Major Indices Commodities London Financial Futures Money Rates % European Money Deposits % Gold/precious Metals Baird & Co Sterling Spot and Forward Rates Dollar Rates Other Sterling Recent Issues FTSE Volumes Eurotop 100 Pilks reaps the dividend of not bottling on its payout Tempus The Day's Biggest Movers Carphone Warehouse Gilts Investors reassured by Chrysalis health FirstGroup Business Equity Prices biE Interim Executive The Times Unit Trust Information Service WWF AirlineNetwork.co.uk Where to go wild about our national heritage Discover the charm of an escape down on the farm Three-night break on a farm in Powys for £74, or Venice from £279 for three nights. Tony Dawe lists the latest offers Multiple Display Advertising Items ROL Times Register Field Marshal Sir Roland Gibbs Fighting soldier of vast campaigning experience who became a reluctant Whitehall warrior as Chief of the General Staff Field Marshal Sir Roland Gibbs, GCB, CBE, DSO, MC, Chief of the General Staff, 1976-79, was born on June 22, 1921. He died on October 31, 2004, aged 83 Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al-NAHYAN Leader who ensured that the oil wealth of the United Arab Emirates benefited the federation's people Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahyan, President of the United Arab Emirates, was born in 1918. He died on November 2, 2004, aged 86 Lives Remembered Omar Cassem South African Muslim scholar who persuaded the boxer Muhammad Ali to lend his weight to the campaign against apartheid Omar Cassem, anti-apartheid campaigner and scholar, was born on March 1, 1915. He died on October 4, 2004, aged 89 John Bowers Educationist in the developing world who led tribesmen in the Ethiopian campaign and foiled communist spies at Unesco John Bowers, educationist, was born on November 27, 1912. He died on October 11, 2004, aged 91 Anniversaries Supreme Courage Birthdays Memorial celebrates Victoria and George Cross heroes Military Matters The Templer Medal Lieutenant-General Sir John Kiszely Court Circular Forthcoming Marriages Memorial Service Births Deaths To place death notices, acknowledgements or notices … In Memoriam - Private Rights are wrong The Peel Appeal The late John Peel assembled an extraordinary record collection. Should it be left to the nation? Showing gratitude Upgrade the offence Breath of fresh air Put on a pedestal Net proceeds DIY defence Moral bankruptcy Charitable act What's your view? Go your own way Missing you already Always on air debate@thetimes.co.uk Debate the issues of the day as they happen, and join in the discussion with other Times readers Danger, Keep out Should people be allowed to protect their homes from burglars by any means necessary? Questions Answered Bridge Chess Personal Column Work claims age bar not discriminatory Court of Appeal Defence suggestibility evidence admissible Court of Appeal Times Online Video link cheaper than counsel travelling Court of Appeal Crown can bypass planning authority Court of Appeal Statutory cap on job award Court of Appeal Heatwave reveals secrets in the ice Weather Eye Nature Notes On this Day November 4,1970 The AirMiles Travel Company Winning Move Five-Day Forecast Times Online Times Sport Melbourne stewards ban Dettori for month Racing Cheltenham considering promotional campaign Diary Times Test Haydock Park Wolverhampton The Times Sports Book Nottingham Racing Yesterday's Results Towcester The Sunday Times Second drugs test moves to New York Equestrianism From easy Shergar victory to Cruyff's Total Football Simon Barnes, celebrating 30 years in sports journalism, proffers the third part of his most memorable moments The Countdown so Far Vauxhall Academy can't skip routine problem Sport on Television The Times Pink Time for the sun to shine on the Rainbow Nation Bagger celebrates gaining Tour playing privileges Golf Crossing the Sexual Divide The Results Service Times Online Today's Fixtures By Our Sports Staff: Lehman gets go-ahead to lead US attempt on Ryder Cup On Saturday RFU denies Canada prices are turn-off Australia turn to victorious cricketers for spur White aims to bridge the racial divide for Springboks Collymore gives statement to Irish police Times Online Ben Schott's magnificent trivia Cricketing spin, golfing sin and a triumphalist reminder of an infamous England football defeat feature in the second extract from Schott's Sporting, Gaming & Idling Miscellany. More tomorrow Jackman takes detour on way to semi-finals Squash Indian gloom deepens after torrid opening Cricket New Zealand boosted by inside knowledge Rugby League Confused schedule stripping game of its star attractions Tennis Feaunati in guilty plea Thomson through Bruno comeback England go down Stevens for Kent Sheffield survive Souness confirms truth of Huth talk but not Dyer deal Uefa Cup The Times Leeds continue downward slide Championship Forest fans draw no joy from revival How They Stand Group D Last Night's Results Group E A Decade of Difference The Premiership Today McClaren confident of glamorous times ahead Arsenal's failings put glorious tradition back in the spotlight Brian Glanville says Highbury is crying out for a playmaker such as James or Brady Chuffed Tbitsee Group E The Times Rugby Canada Real comeback a thing of beauty Own goal ensures a happy return to Spain for Benítez Group a Alfa 147 Football Group D The Times Crossword 22,813 Three names on shortlist for FA's leading role Ageing legs fail to carry United down middle route Peter Lansley sees the sands of time catching up with some famous names England will play Holland in a friendly on February … Times Online Index Van Nistelrooy hits overdrive The Times Cricket spin and golf sin explained Index Van the Man Losing our Religion Quotes of the Day Elections—and the cost of being caught on the hop On a Victorian high Hanson's way Image of the Day The Ethicist Spirited away: why the Christianity will be eclipsed by spirituality in 30 years, startling new research predicts. Carol Midgley reports on the collapse of traditional religion and the rise of mysticism The Sunday Times Game for a laugh? Get serious At the World Monopoly Championship in Tokyo Leo Lewis discovers bedlam across the board Death of the bling thing… The Gentlemen's Movement is the new trend—led by Puff Daddy's former valet, says Paul McKenzie Gentlemen, Gangstas and their Habits My next goal: save the planet Pen Hadow tells Jonathan Gornall why he trekked to the North Pole three times and now fears for the Earth's future All wrapped up in an oriental delight home.forum@thetimes.co.uk Chinese Roast Pork with Pancakes I wish I had a flat stomach Getting Personal Mary McCartney Donald Rosebud Salve My heart's desire: a van with shagpile and a didgeridoo Hearth Goddess Watching from the window For chronic bronchitis sufferers, loneliness can be the hardest part, says Dr Thomas Stuttaford The Times Doctor's Orders First Choice Theatre The Bells Greenwich Playhouse Swamped with talent Dance Rambert Theatre Faustus Royal Theatre, Northampton Pop Rooster Ica, Sw1 Entertainments Concert Dresden Staatskapelle/Haitink TV & Radio Radio Choice The Times Index Bridge and Chess have moved to the Register section … Choice Answers from Back Page Main Channels Entertainment Factual Sport Prime Time Film Guide Kids BBC One Viewing Guide No Going Back: Chaos at the Castle Channel 4, 8.30pm Variations Whistleblower BBC One, 9pm Horizon BBC Two, 9pm Touching the Void (2003) Channel 4, 9pm Mad Max 2: The Raod Warrior (1981) Five, 10.05pm Memento (2000) Channel 4, 11.05pm Curtis's arrows fall short of the target Last Night's TV Stirring up trouble True Fiction MPs have backed away from an outright ban on smacking children. T2 hears profound disappointment from the cutlery drawer Index T2 Crossword No 3427 Polygon T2 Quiz Word Watching Picture the loan The Times Juggling is the new way forward The Week in Work Inside Contact us The Times Statwatch Good Week… What Else Happened Making your next move Hotel offers top staff a suite deal Perks of the Week Data File What does your company offer you? The 60-Second Business Book For the Top Jobs, Turn to It's a matter of method How to ... Manage your Boss Manipulating the manager is simply a matter of technique, and what you want to get out of it ... promotion, a quiet life? Carly Chynoweth offers a ten-point guide to creating a super supervisor Test Yourself ... Do You Have an Executive IQ? Find out More modulex Do you agree with this advice? Can I be fired for not taking a drugs test? Worklife Challenge The Headhunter How Do I Become a ... Laing O'rourke TV debate is no basis for choosing a leader Opinion As companies become increasingly rigorous in the way they select people for senior positions, Adrian Starkey suggests it's time we applied similar principles in elections My Best Move ... ... And my Worst Lessons I Have Learnt Data File Web Watch What It's like Working for ... Carol Lewis takes a look at the software giant with a socially responsible attitude and graduates lining up to join its staff ... Greetings NatWest A return to school will kick-start your career The Times Top 100 Graduate Employers What Not to Do ... Career Choices Teach First Just do not say anything daft The last thing you want to do at your interview is open your mouth and put your foot in it, says Carol Lewis. Be prepared Case Study What the NHS Could Learn from the Romans Data File The Gurus Boiled down Course Watch The Office Psychologist Office Affairs Clear the way to a serene existence Trend Watch Information Environmentalism New communications technology has left workers buried beneath a pile of information, not all of it work-related. Daniel Allen clears away the clutter Dress to stay stain-free What to Wear ... On Business Lunch Work Kit Statwatch You Need a New Job when ... Ask the Experts Plumb in a pipe dream Career Clinic Positive induction is a critical factor Test Yourself ... Answers Multiple Display Advertising Items Careers of the Week Research Assistants To Advertise in Career Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Multiple Display Advertising Items Screen The heart of what matters I Huckabees takes on Christianity, 9/11-ism and the nature of existence, says Matt Wolf Winning s and Minds Catch the Final Day of the Festival Camel Let's twist again Interview The young star of tonight's LFF gala tells Ian Johns its convoluted history Off the wall and into my heart James Christopher pays a fond farewell to a London Film Festival that gave the world's oddballs a place in the limelight Best Screenplay Hits and misfits So how was the LFF for you, James Christopher and Wendy Ide? It's a wonderful life, at last The hand-wringing, conscience-stricken existential hero has been missing from the big screen for far too long, says Sean MacAulay, but now he's back again—and this time he's an optimist The Times Focus on Some Reel Thinkers Caught in the act Actors should take risks, says Kevin Bacon in his festival Times Screen Talk. He reveals why to Wendy Ide The man who wouldn't be king To celebrate the Times DVD giveaway of a Private Function, Clive Davis profiles the unlikeliest of celebrities, Michael Palin The Times A Funny Old Life Review Rationing is off in a Feast of British Comic Stars Tomorrow: By George, they had it Ian Johns on the rise and demise of Handmade Films About a boy and Nicole New Releases Wendy Ide is haunted by a tale of love reincarnated, but she finds a reason to believe in Santa Times Online The Times Children's home More New Releases Ian Johns wonders if the kids are all right Saint and siblings Interview From real-life horror the director of Nobody Knows has crafted a film of delicate compassion, Ian Johns met him The Times Ructions in the labour ward Jonathan Glazer's Birth had a tough delivery, but father and baby are fine, says Stephen Dalton New DVDs Geoff Brown celebrates Jean Vigo's small but perfect oeuvre my summer of love Tiny tops Wendy Ide hails the winners of this year's TCM Classic Shorts contest, and some past glories A Home at the End of the World A family that plays together Interview The couple behind Look at Me tell Wendy Ide how they separate work and home life i huckabees projectplace Multiple Display Advertising Items Profile of Computacenter, one of the UK's most experienced outsourcing service providers Are you organised enough to outsource? If you're not organised enough to run your company, you're not organised enough to outsource anything Are you organised enough to outsource? If you're not organised enough to run your company, you're not organised enough to outsource anything types of outsourcing in brief All kinds of functions can be outsourced. Here are some other activities you may need to get experts to run for you Selecting a supplier: how do you select a supplier that can 'walk the talk'? The legal minefield Preparing to outsource; Outsourcing is a litigious business. Fifteen years ago, having handled one outsourcing contract, David Barrett became the outsourcing expert for city lawyers Simmons and Simmons. Now he's got a department of 14 people all specialising in this field, which reflects its growing popularity. It also illustrates … tips for minimising your legal bill Xerox Chestnutts Why play host when you can get someone else to do it? Web hosting: Hosting a web site can be a nighmare. Everything to do with running a web site is in a constant state of flux. The telecoms services they need, the price of the equipment a web system runs on and the security threats to your web services change all the time facts and figures Outsource your business processes Customer relationship management, in its simplest terms, means keeping tabs on your customer and identifying those you can sell more to. It's full time occupation and one that many medium sized companies lack the resources to do properly. So indeed, do many corporations Savvis Media Planet Scottish Widows Document management is a good idea on paper Corporate governance regulations mean you need super efficient document management system. Do you really want to devote your time to becoming a super efficient filling expert? Outsourced document management is a good idea because: facts and figures Co-location Outsourcing a web site isn't to everyone's taste. It depends how comfortable you are with someone else holding your data. There's alwasys the outside chance that the host can go bankrupt (this is the IT industry we're talking about) and have their severs seized by the bailiffs. Leaving you with … Savings Rapid Host achieved through outsourcing Further Info: www.verio.co.uk Micheline Germanos Portrait: Business technology has come a long way since Micheline Germanos first joined Philips in 1987. In those days, the experts predicted that mainframe computers would soon be extinct, modems would be gone in a year once BT dropped the price on its exciting new broadband ISDN service and that … Outsource the IT staff Keep the IT: Many medium sized companies have no idea what their IT staff do, let alone how to manage them effectively. You can have an IT department and get someone to manage them facts Simmons & Simmons Projectplace delivers lower costs Yor know what they say: fail to prepare, prepare to fail. Some people mistake that maxim to mean you can never do too much planning and analysis. On yes you can, especially in IT, where it's never possible to map out the future with 100 per cent certainty. There are always too many varibles that … facts about projectplace Computacenter
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