Canadian government agencies have pegged content management as a top IT priority this year. Fair enough, bearing in mind that research makes clear that one size definitely doesn't fit all.
Access to information and services remains a powerful driver in the public sector for the adoption of basic enabling technologies like Web content management. But IT shops in government and health agencies are increasingly turning to the more commanding functionality that ties the software to business process applications in the back end.
Access to information and services remains a powerful driver in the public sector for the adoption of basic enabling technologies like Web content management. But IT shops in government and health agencies are increasingly turning to the more commanding functionality that ties the software to business process applications in the back end.
As the market for voice over IP starts to mature, some of the leading hardware and software vendors are trying to find ways of plugging into the challenges of hosted and managed IP communications services.
The Telecommunications Policy Review Panel last month called on Minister of Industry Maxime Bernier to cut back the role the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) plays in setting rates, but Bernier now finds himself at a crossroads after the CRTC laid out stringent conditions for local forbearance, or circumstances where it might consider loosening its grip on regulation.