Sunday 3 July 2016

Embiggening AWS doubles its UK sales to £254m



Cloud slinging (and to evade taxes) Amazon Web Services has almost doubled its turnover in the UK last year, pulling in £ 254m.

According to analyst services Annual software TechMarketView IT and business processes (ISBT) report disorder business pushed up sales at the local level of 45 percent, a foot that is likely to increase once AWS sets its bit in our barn ribs.

Total revenues for software vendors remained unchanged in Blighty, only 1.8 percent to £ 45 billion.

Cloudification but the market is still far - the market observer believes that the UK market for cloud software worth £ 3.4 billion in 2015, an increase of 23 percent from 2014.

TechMarketView estimated that by the year 2018, income from activities other than the cloud decline. In 2019, it is expected that cloud computing does not include only 15 percent of what will be an almost £ 50 million UK SITS market.

managing partner Anthony Miller said the transition to digital technology is shaking up the market for suppliers, "[It] will radically redraw the landscape of providers.

"In response, we have seen increasing consolidation - as technology giants like Microsoft and Dell look to move their business models through major acquisitions -. With closer collaboration between technology providers, large and small"

business process services giant UK capita remains the market leader in the UK, for the third consecutive year as revenue increased six percent to £ 6.7 billion. Not surprisingly, much of this is due to its strategy of acquiring band.

The public sector in the UK SITS market was worse than expected in 2015, falling to almost flat levels. This was due in part to Whitehall moving out existing contracts; for example, the Agency Driver and Vehicle Licensing IBM has provided an internal contract and HMRC began to move away from its size mega-contract Capgemini.

All paris are open for exactly what will happen next year, following the effects Brexit much talk but little known. TMV said one worst case would entrench organizations over the next two years - cutting budgets and staff reductions