Search Results for "computerweekly freeform dynamicsstart=30start=10start=10start=20start=10start=30start=20start=20"
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Business Analytics: how AI is augmenting analysis, and bolstering data literacy shortfalls
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comArtificial Intelligence and human analysis have been coming together in recent years. Whether using packaged BI and data preparation tools, or languages like Python and R, business analysts and data scientists and engineers alike have been exploring the use of machine learning algorithms to augment their data analyses. Read more in this e-guide.
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Computer Weekly – 9 May 2017: Casting the IT skills net wider
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this week's Computer Weekly, as research reveals that three-quarters of non-tech workers would be interested in a job in IT, we examine what's stopping them. We analyse the key storage elements of building a private cloud. And Bloomberg's head of data science talks about the benefits of machine learning. Read the issue now.
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Computer Weekly – 20 September 2022: A gold medal performance for networking
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this week's Computer Weekly, we find out how the IT team behind the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham delivered a winning performance, how the centuries-old London insurance market is going digital, thanks to Lloyd's of London, and how low-cost high street stores succumbed to the inevitable and are going online. Read the issue now.
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Top 10 datacentre stories of 2021
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comThe 2021 datacentre news cycle has been dominated by stories about how demand for hyperscale datacentre capacity is continuing to boom, while market watchers grow increasingly concerned about how all this growth is affecting the environment. With this in mind, here's a look back over Computer Weekly's top 10 datacentre stories of 2021.
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Computer Weekly – 23 July 2019: How Apollo 11 influenced modern computing
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this week's Computer Weekly, on the 50th anniversary of the Moon landings we look at the influence Apollo 11 had on modern hardware and software. Our latest buyer's guide examines data protection. And we find out how retailers with physical stores are using technology to respond to the rise of online shopping. Read the issue now.
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Biometrics in the enterprise: An opportunity or an ethical minefield?
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIs biometric technology ready for use in the enterprise to help improve IT security? IT leaders need to be aware of the concerns. In this e-guide we take a look at some of the potential – as well as the risks.
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CW Benelux ezine August 2018
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIt's hardly surprising that the Netherlands is pioneering smart cities. The tech-savvy nation is already planning to have a digital port in Rotterdam with automated ships. Now, according to one Dutch academic, "almost every Dutch municipality is doing something with smart technology".
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Computer Weekly – 26 September 2023: Preparing for post-quantum cryptography
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this week's Computer Weekly, our latest buyer's guide assesses the challenges for cryptography in the emerging era of quantum computing. Google Cloud experts explain how the internet giant is preparing its datacentres for a world of AI. And we examine the privacy, compliance and backup issues from generative AI. Read the issue now.
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Trend Watch: Generative AI in APAC
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comOrganisations are starting to incorporate generative AI into their everyday processes. In this handbook, focused on GenAI in the Asia-Pacific region, Computer Weekly looks at how it's being deployed in healthcare, Australia's GenAI journey, the technology's relationship with the cloud and Red Hat's issues with source code.
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CW EMEA: Keeping across the rules
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comSaudi Arabia made a statement of intent back in 2017 that it would build an entirely new city that would be smart from the start. We go deeper to find out how the project is shaping up.