PCM reported disappointing numbers for the first quarter of 2015, but CEO Frank Khulusi sees growth coming down the pike after closing its acquisition of system integrator En Pointe earlier this month.
A series of violent incidents involving police has left some public officials clamoring for body cameras on officers, but IT experts caution that implementation will be expensive and difficult.
Microsoft adds new big data analytics services to Azure and beefs up the capabilities of its cloud SQL database, putting more heat on cloud market leader Amazon Web Services.
At the opening of its Build conference for developers, Microsoft debuts tools that let Android and iOS developers use their existing code to build Windows 10 apps.
Market research firm IDC released its outlook on the first-quarter 2015 global smartphone shipments. Here are the top five leading smartphone vendors this quarter.
Cisco used the 2015 Cisco Partner Summit to launch a new OpenStack-based managed services bundle and financing options to jump-start partners' ability to make money selling private and hybrid cloud solutions.
Kidd's pending retirement is the second high-profile departure for NetApp this year after the head of the company's FlashRay all-flash storage solution moved to competitor Pure Storage.
Aymar de Lencquesaing, a PC industry veteran who now oversees Lenovo's North American business, is where the buck stops in leading the company's enterprise charge.
Hyper-converged infrastructure technology combines compute, storage, and/or networking into a single, integrated appliance. CRN brings the latest offerings from 13 vendors together here for the first time.
While Infinidat wasn't quite in stealth mode, it had been quietly selling its InfiniBox unified storage solution with up to 2 petabytes of capacity per standard rack, but a new funding round helped shine a light on the company's technology.
John Chambers hit the stage at the 2015 Cisco Partner Summit to tell partners that the time is now to transform themselves and their customers into "digital" companies.
Hewlett-Packard plans to leverage Synnex for feedback on its separation process and offer partners working with both sides of the business a single point of contact.
Barracuda's Michael Hughes discusses why the company revamped its partner program, and what the opportunities are around recurring revenue for the channel.