Monthly Archives: May 2019
NVIDIA and the Birth of Creator Laptops at Computex
Typically, I’m not a fan of Computex, because there isn’t that much going on at that show. Apparently, that isn’t at all true this...
How Data Itself Will Take IT Business to a New Level
Enterprises understand the importance of having an analytics tool that gives them a complete understanding of their customers, and the ability to communicate those...
Best Cloud Computing Service Providers 2022
It’s no surprise to those even slightly informed in the IT business that hybrid—which combined both public and private cloud elements—is now the standard...
HPE Buys Cray, Seeks Return to HPC Relevance–Again
The success of corporate acquisitions is never guaranteed. Too many things can go wrong. Deals often look better on paper than they do in...
How NVIDIA EGX Accelerates AI at the Edge
This week at Computex 2019 in Taipei, GPU market leader NVIDIA announced its new EGX server, an engineered system that brings high performance, low...
GDPR One-Year Anniversary: Data Privacy Still Needs Help
A year after the introduction of the General Data Protection Regulation in the European Union on May 25, 2018, the protection and privacy controls...
Mersive Technologies: Product Overview and Analysis
Company Name: Mersive Technologies Inc. (enterprise collaboration tools)Company description: Mersive is a provider of wireless media streaming and collaboration solutions that enable multiple users...
SaaS Performance Breaks: How Can Enterprises Protect Themselves?
Software-as-a-service (SaaS)-based applications are now the lifeblood of most organizations, but they’re certainly not foolproof. Breaks in performance (speed, availability, reachability) are occurring more...
Why Microsoft Chromium Edge Browser for Apple is a Major Development
Microsoft this week announced it has ported its new Edge Chromium based browser to the MacOS, and I think this is huge. I’ve been...
Law Firm Releases New Data Privacy App for CCPA
Law firms aren’t particularly known for developing software. They’re much more apt to be protecting—or prosecuting—software developers in intellectual property litigation than writing code...