by Keith Johnson, Reporter, The Wall Street Journal
And then there were five–defections from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce over its climate-change policy, that is.
Apple today resigned its membership in the Chamber “effective immediately.” That’s a harsher tone than the other departures–three utilities said they’d let their membership lapse at the end of the year, and Nike simply quite the Chamber’s board of directors.
by Amol Sharma and Ben Worthen, Reporters, The Wall Street Journal
Indian technology-outsourcing companies no longer just want to serve their clients’ computing departments–they want to be them.
For years, India’s big tech firms positioned themselves as a cheap alternative to U.S. and European competitors for tasks such as software maintenance and database upgrades. They were content to take whatever work companies like Citigroup Inc. and BT Group PLC parceled out to offshore specialists.
SAP’s new CEO Leo Apotheker says the software giant will focus on its core software business, even as its rivals expand beyond their traditional boundaries.
The latest trend in the tech industry–at least among its biggest companies–is to offer products and services that used to be provided by partners.
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