Sdvy Carillion and the Balfour Beatty bid ndash; the story in numbers
Conference panelists make comparisons of the two technologies LAS VEGAS mdash; After describing Java as a stable technology wit <a href=www.cup-stanley.es>stanley cup</a> h no great surprises likely to come, Java experts during a conference panel session fielded questions about the competitive power of Microsoftrsquo rival .Net platform.Speaking during a session Saturday at T <a href=www.stanleys-cups.us>stanley us</a> heServerSide Java Symposium here, panelists acknowledged the vitality of Microsoft .Net development technology but defended their prized Java platform. The session was entitled, Future of Enterprise Java Keynote Panel and featured executives from companies such as Sun Microsystems and BEA Systems.An audience member identifying himself as a Motorola employee expressed concerns about Javarsquo future. He asked why developers should be <a href=www.stanley-cup.it>stanley italia</a> confident that J2EE would survive the Microsoft onslaught. I can see some of the new <projects> that are in the works. Theyrsquo;re all .Net. All the younger developers that Irsquo;m associated with are all in .Net, he said.Panelist Mark Hapner, Web services strategist at Sun, cautioned against relying too much on Microsoft technologies. While .Net is a strong competitor. it is tightly controlled by Microsoft, he stressed.Basically, Microsoft sucks the air out of .Net for everything that they classify as being of strong interest to themselves and there really is no place for other contributions, he said. If you just do <development> for .Net, yoursquo;re proppi Kcig Oxford Instruments warns over weak Russia and Japan trading
Monday 27 October 2014 9:15 pm|Updated:Friday 07 June 2019 2:28 pmProfits up after Citizens Bankrsquo market flotationBy: Tim WallaceShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailCITIZENS bank reported healthy profit growth yesterday in its first set of quarterly results since RBS sold off a 25 per cent stake in the US retail lender.Net income came in at $189m pound;117m for the three-month period, up 31 per cent on the $144m in the same quarter of 2013.Revenues were up one per <a href=www.cups-stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley cup</a> cent on the year to $1.61bn, while non-interest expenses climbed three per cent to $810m.Provisions for credit losses dived 47 per cent on the y <a href=www.cup-stanley-cup.us>stanley usa</a> ear to $77m.The commercial banking arm performed well with profits rising nine per cent on the year to $139m.The consumer banking unit saw net income grow by four per cent to $54m.The improvement also pushed up return on average tangible common equity to 5.81 per cent, compared with 4.34 per cent a year earlier.We continue to make solid progress in key growth areas like auto and student lending, and in capital markets where we moved to a top five ranking in middle market loan syndications, 8200 aid chairman and chief executive ndash; and former RBS chief finance officer ndash; Bruce Van Saun.The ini <a href=www.cups-stanley.pl>stanley termos</a> tial public offering was a significant milestone for us as we work towards our aspiration of becoming a top-performing regional bank.The grouprsquo shares s
Conference panelists make comparisons of the two technologies LAS VEGAS mdash; After describing Java as a stable technology wit <a href=www.cup-stanley.es>stanley cup</a> h no great surprises likely to come, Java experts during a conference panel session fielded questions about the competitive power of Microsoftrsquo rival .Net platform.Speaking during a session Saturday at T <a href=www.stanleys-cups.us>stanley us</a> heServerSide Java Symposium here, panelists acknowledged the vitality of Microsoft .Net development technology but defended their prized Java platform. The session was entitled, Future of Enterprise Java Keynote Panel and featured executives from companies such as Sun Microsystems and BEA Systems.An audience member identifying himself as a Motorola employee expressed concerns about Javarsquo future. He asked why developers should be <a href=www.stanley-cup.it>stanley italia</a> confident that J2EE would survive the Microsoft onslaught. I can see some of the new <projects> that are in the works. Theyrsquo;re all .Net. All the younger developers that Irsquo;m associated with are all in .Net, he said.Panelist Mark Hapner, Web services strategist at Sun, cautioned against relying too much on Microsoft technologies. While .Net is a strong competitor. it is tightly controlled by Microsoft, he stressed.Basically, Microsoft sucks the air out of .Net for everything that they classify as being of strong interest to themselves and there really is no place for other contributions, he said. If you just do <development> for .Net, yoursquo;re proppi Kcig Oxford Instruments warns over weak Russia and Japan trading
Monday 27 October 2014 9:15 pm|Updated:Friday 07 June 2019 2:28 pmProfits up after Citizens Bankrsquo market flotationBy: Tim WallaceShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailCITIZENS bank reported healthy profit growth yesterday in its first set of quarterly results since RBS sold off a 25 per cent stake in the US retail lender.Net income came in at $189m pound;117m for the three-month period, up 31 per cent on the $144m in the same quarter of 2013.Revenues were up one per <a href=www.cups-stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley cup</a> cent on the year to $1.61bn, while non-interest expenses climbed three per cent to $810m.Provisions for credit losses dived 47 per cent on the y <a href=www.cup-stanley-cup.us>stanley usa</a> ear to $77m.The commercial banking arm performed well with profits rising nine per cent on the year to $139m.The consumer banking unit saw net income grow by four per cent to $54m.The improvement also pushed up return on average tangible common equity to 5.81 per cent, compared with 4.34 per cent a year earlier.We continue to make solid progress in key growth areas like auto and student lending, and in capital markets where we moved to a top five ranking in middle market loan syndications, 8200 aid chairman and chief executive ndash; and former RBS chief finance officer ndash; Bruce Van Saun.The ini <a href=www.cups-stanley.pl>stanley termos</a> tial public offering was a significant milestone for us as we work towards our aspiration of becoming a top-performing regional bank.The grouprsquo shares s