Search Results for "open group computer weeklystart=20start=10start=30"
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Computer Weekly – 15 August 2023: How does your salary stack up?
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this week's Computer Weekly, we reveal our annual salary survey, comparing IT professionals' pay and attitudes to their job – how does yours stack up? The new digital chief at DWP discusses AI, data modernisation and shaking up the tech behind the benefits system. Read the issue now.
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Computer Weekly – 6 November 2018: After 10 years, Post Office IT system goes on trial
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this week's Computer Weekly, 10 years after we revealed concerns over the Post Office accounting system, affected subpostmasters finally get their day in court. We look at how businesses are turning to wearable tech to help employees. And we analyse the key players in the market for object storage. Read the issue now.
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Top 10 Australia IT stories of 2018
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this review of the top 10 Computer Weekly articles focused on IT in Australia, we look at what the country is doing to cement its position as a leader in mastering and deploying advanced information and communications technology across a large segment of its economy.
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UKtech50 2018: The 50 most influential people in UK IT
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this e-guide, you will find our definitive list of the movers and shakers in UK IT – the CIOs, industry executives, public servants and business leaders driving the role of technology in the UK economy. This is our top 50 most influential people in UK IT for 2019.
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Computer Weekly - 7 July 2020: The privacy challenges of easing lockdown
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this week's Computer Weekly, as pubs in the UK re-open after lockdown, we examine the privacy issues around collecting customer data for contact tracing. We look at how interconnected devices are revolutionising the manufacturing and engineering sectors. And we assess GDPR progress two years after its introduction. Read the issue now.
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Computer Weekly – 4 June 2019: GDPR one year on – is it working?
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this week's Computer Weekly, a year after the EU's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) came into force, we assess its progress. Fears of technology are holding back digital healthcare – we look at the tech that's bringing back a human touch. And we examine Microsoft's desktop management tools for Windows 10. Read the issue now.
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Top 10 business applications stories of 2019
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comThe steady incursion of artificial intelligence (AI) into enterprise software was a major theme behind Computer Weekly's indepth stories in this area in 2019. Human versus machine is the opposition that looms over much of the coverage here. Here are Computer Weekly's top 10 business applications stories of 2019.
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Trends In Zero Trust Strategies And Practices Remain Fragmented, But Many Are Seeing Success
Sponsored by: Portnox34% of organizations report having paused or abandoned a zero-trust project in the past, according to research by TechTarget’s Enterprise Strategy Group (ESG). To discover the drivers that informed that decision, and to explore other trends in zero trust, dig into this ESG research report.
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Computer Weekly – 13 March 2018: Unlocking digital change in criminal justice
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this week's Computer Weekly, we talk to the IT and digital chief at the Ministry of Justice about digital transformation across the criminal justice system. European cities are trying to attract British IT talent as a result of Brexit – what does it mean for UK IT? And we take an in-depth look at the fintech sector. Read the issue now.
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Converged infrastructure: What enterprises need to know
Sponsored by: TechTarget ComputerWeekly.comIn this e-guide, we round up some of the latest thinking and use cases for converged and hyper-converged infrastructure systems, as enterprises and hyperscale firms seek to reduce the complexity of their datacentres.