Martin Veitch
Biography
Martin started his IT journalism career at PC Week. He joined Ziff-Davis UK in 1992 and helped launch PC Direct, rising to become Deputy Editor before leaving to set up ZDNet News. He joined IT Week as Executive News Editor in 1998 and was appointed Editor in 1999. He joined CIO in March 2008, and his other published work includes appearances in The Wall Street Journal Europe, BBC News Online, CFO and The Guardian. He also speaks regularly at conferences.
All articles by Martin Veitch
Look, no sticker: AMD's Leslie Sobon on PC branding and Intel Inside
AMD sticker-free option will give branding back to PC makers
If Technology Press Releases Covered Great Moments In English History
How would tech marketers handle 1966 and all that?
Dyson's right: we need a bolder, ingenious Britain
Sir James Dyson's Ingenious Britain calls for help in rebuilding our reputation as great developers
HP-EDS UK boss: Civil servants are terrified by outsider views of IT projects
HP Enterprise Services UK MD Craig Wilson interview Part 2
'Twitter for business': Reed tests Salesforce.com's Chatter
Exhibitions giant pilots micro-blogging for information exchange
AMD wants to put four-socket servers everywhere
AMD's Leslie Sobon is seeking to proliferate the 4P server sector
Google opens Apps Marketplace (and scares the bejeezus out of Microsoft)
Access to thousands of complementary services is another boost for Google's challenge to Microsoft
HP-EDS UK boss: Election will see IT spend hiatus, not drought
HP Enterprise Services MD Craig Wilson predicts IT spending pause but that's all
HP-EDS UK boss on BSkyB, the merger and building an alternative to IBM
HP Enterprise Services boss on the 'new' EDS
IT charge-backs can be a 'think of a number' game
Attempts to quantify IT spend are often artificial
View more Martin Veitch articles »
Email this article to a friend or colleague:
PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.









Question of the day!
Is encryption enough to prevent foreign agencies from intercepting data in the public cloud?