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IT Decision Makers Admit Existing IT Infrastructures Are Insufficient
UK Companies Preparing To Expand IT Infrastructures Without Adequate Consideration Of Available Solutions
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HP Unveils New e-utilica Features Designed For The Capacity-On-Demand Needs Of Corporates
Hewlett-Packard Company today unveiled additional features for e-utilica that offers corporates the flexibility to meet the dynamic needs of business via enhancements to their existing IT infrastructure.
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'Green' Companies Sell Themselves Short In The City
Listed companies that are leading the way with their environmental and social policies are selling themselves and their shareholders short by failing to make the case to the City, according to research published by Business in the Environment (BiE).
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Keen To Be Green But ... - Press Release
Survey of British attitudes towards climate change and environmentally friendly behaviour.
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Keen To Be Green But ... Toplines
Survey of British attitudes to climate change and environmentally friendly behaviour
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Petrol Buyers Would Boycott Esso
A newly published MORI poll for the Stop Esso Campaign shows 53 percent of petrol buyers would boycott Esso because of the company's attempts to block action on global warming. Figures for Esso's existing customers are virtually identical. A telephone survey by Greenpeace of leading supermarkets revealed that ASDA, Tesco and Morrisons do not supply Esso fuels, Safeway's does supply Esso fuels and Sainsbury's refuse to reveal its suppliers.
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Exercise The Mind Over The Body
Employer provided home PC perceived as a better employee perk than health club membership
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UK Business In The Broadband Doldrums
UK businesses are failing to embrace the potential offered by the internet and ecommerce, highlighting a strong scepticism about the internet's marketing and purchasing power.
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Time Spent On Assessment "Ineffective"
Nine out of ten teachers say they are spending a lot of time on assessment procedures that most claim are ineffective. The results of a survey1 carried out by MORI on behalf of Goal plc, the online assessment provider, show that the average teacher works 56 hours a week, three and a half hours of which are spent on formal assessment - writing and preparing, marking, analysing and reporting.
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Teachers Now Working A 56-Hour Week
As the four major teaching unions threaten a 35-hour week, a recent MORI poll reveals that 60 per cent of British teachers are now working at least 56 hours a week.