June 2009
By Radicati Team • Aug 24th, 2009 • Category: OtherMailspect Adopts Sphinx Index Engine
June 30, 2009
PR-Inside
Worldwide, it is estimated by Radicati Group Inc., that there are 2.5 billon email accounts; 42% of the world’s population relies on email for information and collaboration.
The Economic Revolution – on the Ground and in the Cloud
June 17, 2009
National Computing Centre
According to the research firm Radicati Group, companies with on-premises email solutions averaged from 30 to 60 minutes of unscheduled downtime and an additional 36 to 90 minutes of planned downtime per month.
Opera lets browser be used as a server
June 15, 2009
SFGate
Sara Radicati, CEO of market research firm Radicati Group, said she wants to hear more about Opera Unite’s ability to combat malware and other security threats. But she said the service overall is a very intriguing feature that will appeal to users.
APAC Hosted Email Market Projected to Grow to 998M Mailboxes by 2013
June 15, 2009
Earth Times
The Radicati Group, Inc.’s latest study, “APAC Hosted Email Market, 2009-2013,” provides an in-depth look at all segments of the Asia/Pacific Hosted Email market, including: ISP/Webmail Email, Hosted Business Email, and Managed Business Email.
Electronic Records Management: File This Under ‘More Work Needed’
June 2, 2009
Workforce Management
E-mail has become an important source of business records, and companies are drowning in it, contributing to an estimated 210 billion messages sent every day worldwide, according to Radicati Group, a Palo Alto, California, technology market researcher. Radicati predicts that this year, workers will spend 41 percent of their day handling e-mail.
Customer service even more vital
June 2, 2009
Coventry Telegraph
While you’re away from the office, customers, partners and suppliers may choose to call your landline, mobile, send you a text, email you, leave a voicemail or send you an instant message. And with daily emails topping 247 billion a day worldwide (Radicati Group), it’s relatively easy to miss important correspondence.