Australia’s embattled construction sector could benefit from cloud based information systems that can be switched on and off in lockstep with individual projects – with the exception of those organisations based in remote areas like the Kimberleys.
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Brenton Currie
Saturday, 29 October 2011 15:18
I have argued before, most recently on video streaming, that if you want total freedom, piracy is the way to go.
Nick came from the other end, the user experience, and comes to the same conclusion.
From the article:
Nowadays, copyright barely resembles what it was originally designed for i.e. to protect both parties: inventors and content creators on the one side and the public on the other. Corporate America and government compliance have written out public interests in many instances. The case of Mickey Mouse is illustrative.
Nonetheless, there's an air of inevitability about it all. Historically, how often have incumbent, monopolistic industries shrugged their shoulders and written off their entire business model to embark on a journey along a crowded new highway, with rules set by customers, that leads who-knows-where?
Slashdot picked up the article, and a typical /. discussion erupted.
Think again. Most businesses only have PART of a DR plan - and this spells business disaster in the event of an IT disaster.
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