The North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) Consultation, Command and Control Agency (NC3A) is revamping its global communications network using BT Ethernet Services to provide connectivity to more than 70 locations spread across member nations and the Balkans.
BT has signed an agreement with Tsinghua University in China to increase its cooperation on research and development, as well as in training.
Climate change is happening. The pace of change is slow because the concerned citizens are not fully in power to get things done. Instead climate change is dependent upon a handful of "old" people whose intentions can be called into question. Kevin Taylor believes that climate change can and will happen. Its future will depend on how fast digital natives can take up the cause and run with it.
Without proper security, valuable and private records could be accessed, networks could be compromised. Even with no malicious intent at all, people introducing equipment from home (like a low cost access point) could introduce a gaping hole in the network’s security defenses. Thus, proper security should be designed in from the start. This article set out to explore some of the concerns, anxieties and misconceptions around security in the healthcare sector.
The School of Economics and Management of Tsinghua University and IT provider BT recently signed an agreement to cooperate on long-term collaborative research initiatives with a focus on the development of new technologies in emerging markets, industrialization mechanism in China, and innovation ecosystem evolution.
BT and the School of Economics and Management of Tsinghua University (Tsinghua SEM) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to begin strategic cooperation on a broad range of subjects in the areas of collaborative research and student development.
BT invests half a million pounds to help improve access and quality of education in remote and rural areas in China.
BT has successfully completed the first phase of a pilot project to improve exchange of information between hospitals, outpatient clinics and general practitioners in the three least developed regions of Hungary, bringing direct benefits to 15,000 medical practitioners and over 1.5 million people they serve.









