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Countering Objections to Cloud Computing Armed with the right information, solution providers can counter common objections to cloud computing sales.  |
CFO November 1, 2010 Marie Leone |
Technical Difficulties As the pace of accounting-rule changes intensifies, can IT systems keep up?  |
CFO November 1, 2010 David McCann |
Sensors, Sensors Everywhere Embedding sensors and communications capabilities into any and every object imaginable can facilitate previously unattainable levels of data analysis and, in some cases, response.  |
CFO November 1, 2010 David McCann |
Tablets Get Down to Business Apple's iPad and a host of upcoming competitors are finding an eager audience in the corporate world.  |
CFO November 1, 2010 David McCann |
Attack of the Apps Primed by their experiences as consumers, workers yearn for a greater diversity of mobile business apps -- and they're getting them.  |
CIO November 1, 2010 Maryfran Johnson |
CIO Magazine Founder Joins Hall of Fame CIO magazine's Hall of Fame started with Joe Levy and his idea to honor the leaders of the information age.  |
CIO November 1, 2010 |
2010 CIO Hall of Fame Judges This Year's CIO Hall of Fame honorees were judged by 22 former inductees.  |
CIO November 1, 2010 Kim S. Nash |
2010 CIO Hall of Fame Inductees Tout Business Breakthroughs The five new members of the CIO Hall of Fame - who head IT for P&G, Accenture, Amgen, AmerisourceBergen and Idaho National Laboratory - are world-class leaders in strategy and execution.  |
CIO November 1, 2010 Maryfran Johnson |
CIO Hall of Fame: Inductees Took Risks, Reaped Rewards Tom Flanagan of Amgen, Filippo Passerini of Procter & Gamble, Brent Stacey of Idaho National Laboratory, Frank Modruson of Accenture, and Tom Murphy of AmerisourceBergen are this year's class of CIO Hall of Fame Inductees.  |
HBS Working Knowledge November 1, 2010 Carmen Nobel |
How IT Shapes Top-Down and Bottom-Up Decision Making What determines whether decisions happen on the bottom, middle, or top rung of the corporate ladder? New research from professor Raffaella Sadun finds that the answer often lies in the technology that a company deploys.  |
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