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CIO September 15, 2005 Christopher Koch |
Integration's New Strategy Old concepts and new technologies have recently converged to generate a new strategy to improve IT responsiveness while reducing integration costs. It's the integration layer, and it may put an end to all those complaints about IT's slowness and inflexibility.  |
CIO September 15, 2005 Susannah Patton |
Dial VoIP For Vulnerability Voice over Internet Protocol offers great savings in long-distance calls. But without extensive safeguards, VoIP can expose your phone system to the havoc affecting the rest of the Web.  |
CIO September 15, 2005 Stephanie Overby |
It's Cheaper In China CIOs are beginning to see China as a cheaper alternative to India. Nypro, a global plastics manufacturer, shares some lessons from its experiences over there.  |
CIO September 15, 2005 Fred Hapgood |
The Virtues of Virtualization Using software to model the future of IT may free CIOs from the risks and limitations of all that annoying hardware.  |
CIO September 15, 2005 Patricia Wallington |
Lonely At The Top Congratulations! You're the new CIO. And your former colleagues don't like it. The challenges can be invigorating. Redefine yourself and your relationships successfully, and you will be on the way to making your mark on your company.  |
CIO September 15, 2005 Michael Schrage |
Contract Sadness Too many CIOs cut enterprise software deals that look fabulous to the CEO and CFO but commit the people who do the real work to a nightmare of unrealistic expectations.  |
CIO September 15, 2005 Scott Sullivan |
Panning For Digital Gold As one trucking company CIO has learned, you don't need a new enterprise-wide system to find the gold in customer data.  |
CIO September 15, 2005 Gary Beach |
Socket to Me Software licensing policies can be a nightmare for CIOs.  |
CIO September 15, 2005 Edward Prewitt |
Benchmarking IT Greatness What separates the best IT departments from the rest?  |
CIO September 15, 2005 Malcolm Wheatley |
London's Cameras In the eyes of the British public, CCTV has become the police's first port of call and a high-tech crime-fighting tool. Yet police receive no special training in analyzing CCTV footage, nor any high-tech tools, a technical support officer.  |
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