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By Robert McGarvey |
February 27, 2012
Mobility Matters is a new, online-only column from veteran tech reporter Robert McGarvey. This week's topics: Fast adoption, tablet apps, malware threats, credit swipes.
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By Natasha Chilingerian |
November 20, 2011
Adoption of commercial remote-deposit capture, which refers to business customer-specific RDC solutions, grew by just 10% in 2011 while mobile RDC has become a priority for U.S. financial institutions and vendors, said a new Celent report, “State of Remote Deposit Capture 2011: Signs of a Maturing Market.”
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By Natasha Chilingerian |
November 11, 2011
Commercial remote deposit capture (RDC) adoption has slowed, growing only by 10% in 2011, according to a new Celent report, “State of Remote Deposit Capture 2011: Signs of a Maturing Market.”
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By Robert McGarvey |
September 7, 2011
Think firm cites "vast potential" for mobile financial management and transaction tools.
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By Jim Rubenstein |
July 24, 2011
The plight and protection of small U.S. credit unions came in for new scrutiny last week following a controversial think tank study by Celent, the Boston research firm, finding that CUs under $50 million are fast disappearing under the weight of tech products, competition, compliance and their own “inefficiencies.”
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By Jim Rubenstein |
July 20, 2011
Study saw demise of small CUs approaching.
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By Natasha Chilingerian |
July 17, 2011
Around 10% of credit unions looked to upgrade their core banking systems last year, marking a significant increase from the historical percentage average of 4% to 5%, according to two new reports from Boston-based financial research and consulting firm Celent.
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By Myriam DiGiovanni |
July 3, 2011
For credit unions and banks vying to be the primary financial institution, understanding and delivering products and services based on consumers’ needs has always been a priority.
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By Natasha Chilingerian |
July 1, 2011
Think firm says 10% of credit unions began looking at core processing system upgrades last year.
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By Natasha Chilingerian |
May 4, 2011
Kinect for Xbox 360, a controller-free, $150 gaming device that allows users to operate their Xbox consoles solely through bodily gestures and voice commands, has made a splash among video game and electronics enthusiasts. But is there a practical application for Kinect outside the gaming world–say, in credit union branches?...