OVER two years ago, HSBC fueled Microsoft's FUD by spreading the "intellectual property" nonsense in relation to Linux. What was particularly odd at the time ought to be the fact that Microsoft paid for this press release [2] and hijacked HSBC's voice. Here is how a typical such deal actually works and how it is marketed [3].
I was shocked to hear that HSBC now officially only supports IE, and no other browsers are supported for Verified by Visa. I asked them what I’m supposed to do if I have a Mac and don’t have IE, and they responded that I’m supposed to use IE or nothing at all.
A high street bank today apologised to NetSurf users for locking them out of their web bank accounts, and re-enabled their access. HSBC said it now recognises NetSurf and RISC OS, adding: "We welcome all standards compliant browsers and platforms." The move was welcomed by punters, who were amazed that a global corporation had responded positively to the needs of a niche OS platform.
Global bank selects SUSE Linux Enterprise as its standard Linux distribution, citing interoperability with Windows Active Directory and integrated Windows and Linux platform support.
In March, the banking giant HSBC -- which has more than 9,500 branches employing 284,000 staff in 76 countries -- made moves to consolidate its IT systems, by standardising its Linux deployments on Novell's Suse distribution and tapping into Novell's tie-up with Microsoft.
Comments
aeshna23
2009-07-30 02:24:43
Yuhong Bao
2009-07-31 22:35:33