The National Institute of Electrification of Guatemala tenders the professional services of technical support of the system of operation and dispatch of the institution.
Guatemala Government Purchase 9319743:
"Negotiations will be made to acquire through specialized technical support for the Operation and Dispatch System with a 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year, which may be executed in person and/or by chat, e-mail or telephone, as required by the case, by a work team made up of at least one Service Administrator and three specialists in information systems."
Costa Rica's state telecom company plans to reach viability as a company competing with the private sector in logistics services, data centers, and in the area of Digital Government.
This will be a new attempt to recover the positive numbers of Radiographic Costarricense, whose new portfolio of products aims to compete with private companies that have over twenty years of experience in the market.
The Guatemalan Telecommunications Enterprise has awarded the company Columbus Network de Guatemala a contract for the lease of computer equipment and implementation of communications connectivity.
Under the contract awarded on July 30, the provider must provide the service "LEASE OF HARDWARE AND COMMUNICATIONS MANAGEMENT, INSTALLATION, AND IMPLEMENTATION WITH CONNECTIVITY IN THE NATIONAL TERRITORY."
It is vital for the nation's economy that an agenda on Information and Communication Technologies be developed, accompanied by the relevant legislation.
Peter Argumedo, senior researcher at Fusades called for swift approval in the Legislative Assembly of the draft laws related to computer security, in order to promote an investment climate. "An economy must be competitive so that it can be linked to global production chains.
In order to keep attracting foreign investment Costa Rica needs to produce more professionals in the fields of technology, who speak three languages and have the ability to make decisions.
To attract more investment in the area of new technologies, Costa Rica requires more engineers with computer skills, three languages and the ability to solve real problems.
The Panamanian Social Security Department has put out to tender a hospital information system.
The CSS requires a single corporate system, to be used by all components of the Network Services of the Health Department, composed of 70 health care units and 15,000 professionals.
The conditions of the tender identifies the following objectives of the computer system:
The National Secretariat for Science and Technology (SENACYT) is to create an academy to provide training in unified computing, telecommunications and data centers.
SENACYT needs to fill Panama's knowledge gap relative to other countries in the region in the design, configuration and maintenance of computer networks.
The successful bidder will provide the infrastructure necessary to enable SENACYT to offer up to 540 CISCO certificates in unified computing, switching and routing, and dynamic data centers.