Unisys unofficial winner in Health outsourcing
Unisys is the preferred vendor for the Ministry of Health to outsource equipment currently held in its three datacentres.
Unisys is the preferred vendor for the Ministry of Health to outsource equipment currently held in its three datacentres.
Unisys New Zealand has posted an after-tax profit of $6.08 million for its 2007 financial year, up from $2.12 million the previous year.
New Zealanders are more relaxed about security issues than most of the rest of the world, the latest results of the Unisys Security Index show.
Unisys is aiming to reduce power consumption by 25% at its Kapiti datacentre, near Wellington.
Australian information technology services firm Oakton has capped off a strong half year of growth by hiring the ANZ managing director of rival Unisys.
Unisys has announced new servers and a suite of infrastructure management software aimed at giving it a bigger role in customers' datacentres, where it will compete more directly with Hewlett-Packard and Sun Microsystems.
Unisys has signed a major transtasman contract to provide ICT services to Vodafone Australia and New Zealand.
The Department of Building and Housing has been criticised by Parliament’s finance and expenditure select committee for cancelling a project to register licensed builders online when $653,000 had already been spent on it.
Far from bunkering down after the loss of a major contract with the Accident Compensation Corporation, Unisys is signalling it has a significant client win in the pipeline and increased investment in infrastructure.
Unisys has been named preferred supplier for the Winston Peters-sponsored Supergold Card for senior citizens.
There’s about to be a changing of the guard at the Accident Compensation Corporation.
The Public Access to Legislation (PAL) project, already about four years late, is inching forward, but is being afflicted by further delays.
Concern about claimant data going offshore has led the Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) to seek an assurance from IT outsourcer Unisys.
Unisys has won a $1.5 million-plus contract to build a software system for the Department of Building and Housing’s Licensed Building Practitioner Scheme.
Unisys has announced an expansion of its relationship with Oracle to move mainframe and Unix deployments to Linux and SOA (service-oriented architecture).