JamomesNeund XqMM56Mm 22h 5m
Ryet Eurozone unemployment in October fell to its lowest in three years.
Companies settle patent-infringement lawsuit IBMhas reached a settlement agreement with software developer Compuware, which sued IBM in 2002 for an alleged litany of violations including copyright infringement, antitrust law abuses and unfair competitive acts. Under the dealrsquo terms, IBM will spend $400 million over the n <a href=www.stanley-cups.es>stanley cup</a> ext four years on Compuware software and services, the two compan <a href=www.cup-stanley.pl>stanley termos</a> ies announced Tuesday. Compuwarersquo initial complaint in March 2002 charged IBM with using Compuware source code in IBMrsquo File Manager and Fault Analyzer tools; illegally tying customer purchases of mainframe software tools to purchases of other key IBM software products; steering its services customers to its own products without fair competition; and denying rival vendors necessary technical information on IBM hardware and software. The trial on the case began in February in the District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, near Compuwarersquo Detroit headquarters.Compuwarersquo allegations set off a web of litigation between the two companies. IBM countersued Compuware in the Michigan court alleging violations of six IBM patents, and followed up in January 2004 with another patent-infringement la <a href=www.cup-stanley-cup.de>stanley thermobecher</a> wsuit against Compuware, this time in New Yorkrsquo Southern District Court. Those lawsuits will cease as a result of Tuesdayrsquo deal, which settles all outstanding litigation between the companies. IBM said in a written statement that it does not expect the dea Tgnp Winter storms fail to dampen enthusiasm for EasyJet
Tuesday 22 September 2015 2:02 pmAs the skills gap continues to widen whorsquo going to help narrow it By: Matt Ginge <a href=www.stanley-cup.com.es>stanley taza</a> llShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailAccording to the Office for National Statistics, the unemployment rate is 5.5 per cent and for the period June to August 2015 there were 740,000 job vacancies. The amount of job vacancies out there is almost at the highest on record. You donrsquo;t have to be a rocket scientist to see from these figures that therersquo a skills gap with jobs and people not matching.The skills gap problem has been around for a while. Recruiters have been struggling to match candidates with jobs across industry, though professions <a href=www.stanleycup.it>stanley termos</a> in the STEM area: science, technology, engineering and mathematics have beenespecially affected. The construction industry has had a particularly bad knock.The cost of unfilled vacancies amounts to a staggering pound;10bn of lost GDP this year.So, what can be done to the plug the gap Alistair Cox, chief executive of Hays, in his article, Itrsquo Crunch time for the UKrsquo skills shortag <a href=www.stanleycup.com.es>termos stanley</a> e: Our politicians must wake up, sets out some clear steps that need to be taken. There does need to be a better correlation between what teaching and training is offered in schools and universities and what skills the job market demands. Although the governmentrsquo promisingthree million more apprenticeships, again, thought needs to go