IT Firms Give Money, Tech Support For Haiti Relief

MONETARY CONTRIBUTIONS

Intel: $2.5 million

Cisco: $2.13 million

Microsoft: $1.25 million

id
unit-1659132512259
type
Sponsored post

IBM: $1.1 million

Salesforce.com: $800,000

Dell: $500,000

EMC: $500,000

Hewlett-Packard: $500,000

Xerox: $300,000

CA: $200,000

AMD: $100,000

Informatica:$100,000

Ingram Micro: $100,000

Tech Data: $100,000

F5 Networks: $65,000

Network Hardware Resale: $40,000

Softchoice: $33,000

Adtran: $25,000

FusionStorm: $14,000

Eze Castle Integration: $7,000

D-Link: $3,000

SpectraLogic: $2,500

TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE

Coleman Technologies: Teamed with customers Care.org and Duke University, which used its RAPTOR solution for jumpstarting network capabilities quickly in order to ramp up for the relief efforts

Dell: Provided servers, notebooks, desktops, printers for an emergency relief information hub within hours of the earthquake

FieldWorker: Supplied software, backend support for the mobile emergency relief efforts of relief organization World Vision

IBM: Developed a vehicle tracking system with World Vision

Intermec: Donated 30 of its CN50 rugged mobile computers to World Vision, teamed with the NGO and FieldWorker on mobile emergency relief efforts

Intel: Built a modular data center for the Haiti Aid consortium of relief organizations

Lenovo: Donated 200 ThinkPad laptops to the America Red Cross

MyAssist: The mobile personal assistance service arm of the NoelGroup evacuated eight Haitian children in need of major orthopedic surgeries to Massachusetts, where they received free surgeries

Neomedia: Built the mobile barcode application for "m-giving" to Haitian relief used by attendees at the Mobile World Congress

Verizon Wireless: Delivered a texting platform for its customers to donate to the American Red Cross via their mobile phones, raising $4.84 million for aid to Haiti from Verizon customers