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  • Avnet Helps SAS Go to Market on HP Hardware

    Distributor Avnet Technology Solutions is helping SAS, one if its ISV Alliance Program partners, bring its business intelligence software to market on Hewlett-Packard hardware through HP VARs. Avnet will supply and support a bundle of SAS’ Enterprise BI Server (a suite of business intelligence software), HP Integrity servers and an assembly of third-party software for…

  • Lead Generation Is Everybody’s Problem

    When it comes to lead generation in the channel, there is so much pseudo-science and passing of the buck going on that it’s a wonder anything gets sold to a new customer. About the only leads solution providers take seriously today are the ones they unearth themselves because they know the lead is real and…

  • Ingram’s Stegner to Step Down

    Distributor Ingram Micro’s vice president of market development worldwide, Bob Stegner, announced Nov. 29 that he will exit the company after the new year. Stegner, 53, said he is leaving the company effective Jan. 5 because he is “tired” of the hectic schedule and travel, according to one source. There was no word yet from…

  • IBM to Buy Wireless Software Company

    IBM announced Nov. 28 that it will buy privately-held software maker Vallent in a bid to expand IBM’s ability to help communications service providers manage their networks. IBM did not disclose financial terms of the deal, which it said it expects to close by the end of the first quarter of 2007. “We are definitely…

  • Data Thieves Are One Big MasterCard Commercial

    Traditional credit card companies are fighting for their lives against a plethora of new alternatives, ranging from debit cards, non-credit-card contactless payment, cell phones, eCheck, PayPal and Bill Me Later, not to mention newfangled hybrids that merge loyalty and CRM, gift cards, incentive coupons and POS cards, such as a pilot at the Subway chain.…

  • Is Your IT Strategy Wanting?

    You’d think that the deep-dyed techies of eWeek Labs would have been pleased by November’s mainstream media coverage of popularly priced desktop supercomputing. Unfortunately, the supercomputer in question was Sony’s PlayStation 3, and that coverage had more to do with stalled waiting lines outside big-box stores than with stalled instruction pipelines in the Sony game…

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