Page 2,660«..1020..2,6592,6602,6612,662..2,6702,680..»

Cloud Computing: Executive Q&A with Briana Frank at IBM – Datamation

The cloud computing market is not only changing rapidly, but also growing into new industries and use cases, as a growing number of companies move to the cloud for their digital transformation goals.

Through a pandemic and the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), ethical tech, and other cloud trends, what does an experienced cloud executive have to say about the changes happening in cloud technology?

Briana Frank, the director of product management for IBM Cloud, recently shared her thoughts with Datamation about the innovations happening at IBM and in the greater cloud market.

Frank directs the product management teams within IBM Cloud Developer Services. Frank also leads the Offering Management and Design teams that built the IBM Cloud Kubernetes service in five months and now manages tens of thousands of clusters worldwide. She believes in creating exceptional experiences that enable users to build and innovate using IBM Cloud. She builds high-performance teams in order to make data-driven decisions. Frank is an entrepreneur and a problem solver who translates that energy into building great products.

More on Cloud Computing: Cloud Computing Market 2021

Datamation: How did you first start in or develop an interest in cloud computing?

Frank: My first introduction to working in technology was during a summer job while attending The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. I was a receptionist for an advertising agency during my sophomore year. Clients often called with urgent changes needed for their websites. Those changes often took time, as there was no one in-house who could make the updates. I took a one-day class in HTML and was able to update client websites myself, often the same day or even immediately. Clients were pleased with the timeliness of the updates, but most importantly, the information they needed to convey was up to date and accurate, which better served their users.

Since then, technology has changed dramatically. Ive continued to evolve my career and my skills based on solving client problems. Cloud has emerged as a way to accelerate innovation. My desire to help clients has guided the technologies Ive worked on over the course of my career and led me to work in cloud computing.

Datamation: What are your primary responsibilities in your current role?

Frank: Today, I am the director of product for IBM Cloud Developer Services. I oversee a portfolio of 17 cloud services that enable clients to innovate faster. These services include Kubernetes, Red Hat OpenShift, serverless, observability, developer tools, and IBM Cloud Satellite, our new distributed cloud offering, which allows clients to run cloud services securely in any environment. As a product director, I spend a lot of time talking to clients about the problems they are facing and brainstorming solutions. Prioritizing our road map to meet client needs is one of the most important of many responsibilities in product management.

Datamation: What makes IBM Cloud unique as a cloud computing platform? What sets your solutions or approach apart from the competition?

Frank: IBM Cloud is the industrys most secure and open public cloud for business. IBM Cloud is protected with the highest-level certified hardware security module Hyper Protect services: FIPS 140-2 Level 4. IBMs cloud platform is built on a foundation of Kubernetes, containers, and open source software.

IBM Cloud is a key part of IBMs broader hybrid cloud strategy. Our hybrid cloud offerings are built to bring secure and open cloud services anywhere a client needs to run them whether on premises, in multiple public clouds, or at the edge.

Taken together, this means that clients can run IBM Cloud services securely and in any environment of their choosing.

Datamation: What do you think makes a cloud computing company or platform successful?

Frank: Enterprises today are pushing ahead with digital transformation, deploying existing tools to fuller potential, and leveraging new ones to advance further. And cloud is leading this shift, with 64% of companies surveyed in an IBM Institute for Business Value report saying they have shifted to more cloud-based business activities during the pandemic.

Yet, only 25% of mission-critical workloads have moved to the cloud. Organizations often cite concerns about security and privacy of sensitive data, such as constituent data, medical records, or financial information.

How to help drive innovation in the cloud while ensuring data remains secure and protected? One way is by giving clients the ability to run secure cloud services in any environment whether on premises, in multiple public clouds, or even at the edge. Especially for companies in regulated industries that may be subject to data sovereignty requirements, this opens up the possibility to embrace innovation in the cloud, while ensuring data remains secure and compliant.

Datamation: How can cloud technology impact the success and/or efficiencies of an organization?

Frank: Having the right hybrid cloud architecture in place allows companies to take advantage of the flexibility, efficiency, and cost savings of cloud computing, while ensuring that their critical data stays protected.

IBM is working with clients across all industries to implement these strategies. Were also seeing even greater promise for cloud in highly regulated industries, like financial services, government, telecommunications, and health care, especially with the work we are doing to de-risk third- and fourth-party supply chains.

By reducing risk consistently, you also increase the opportunity of how fast you can innovate.

Datamation: What are some common use cases or scenarios where a hybrid cloud is the best solution for a business?

Frank: Hybrid cloud can be leveraged anywhere across a computing environment. Case in point, earlier this year, we announced that Lumen Technologies is using IBM Cloud Satellite on its Lumen Edge Compute platform to give its customers more flexibility in how they securely tap into the benefits of IBM Cloud at the edge. For example, a customer can deploy an application at a Lumen Edge location where cameras and sensors can function in near real-time to help detect the time since surfaces were cleaned or flag potential worker safety hazards.

Datamation: What is the biggest cloud development mistake that you see enterprises making?

Frank: Many clients today are dealing with cloud sprawl, meaning they are using more than one cloud and are therefore challenged with managing these different cloud environments. I wouldnt call this a mistake in fact, these days, its not uncommon for an organization to use four to five or more cloud vendors but it is a reality of leveraging many different technologies for different yet very valid reasons. This kind of multicloud environment can be challenging and costly to manage and operate, and in this scenario, each of those vendors has a different view on security wrapped around their services.

Datamation: What do you think are some of the top trends in cloud computing/hybrid cloud/multicloud right now?

Frank: Were seeing tremendous opportunity for digital transformation in the highly regulated space in particular. To help organizations successfully and safely embrace cloud, we have built industry-specific offerings for sectors such as financial services and telecommunications. With these solutions, we are able to help organizations think through how theyve created digital platforms from the outset. A key piece of this is ensuring they have the right controls in place to maintain security and compliance. Weve found that unless you build in these controls as a baseline, it stifles innovation. This is why IBM has built a hybrid cloud platform where there is consistency in cybersecurity controls across the board.

In addition, major breaches have impacted business and life and grabbed headlines in past months, making enterprises more cautious than ever when migrating workloads to the cloud. And indeed, all cloud architectures are not created equal when it comes to protecting sensitive data. I believe the key missing piece that many cloud providers lack is trust. Gaining this trust calls for new methods of protecting data, to fill in the gaps in some of the traditional methods.

With the traditional methods of securing data, youre trusting your provider not to access or otherwise share it, but the reality is that the data could be accessed such as if the provider were compelled by a court order to hand over the data, or it could more easily be accessed by malicious actors for their own nefarious purposes. But with confidential computing, the cloud provider is incapable of accessing this data. Therefore, you as the customer are ensuring privacy across the entire life cycle of data, including while its in use.

Think of confidential computing as an office in an office building. The office is a private, secure location where you can have a meeting. There are a number of other offices in that building too, but you can lock your door and have a private meeting in your office, and no one has access to your discussions, even though you are in the same building. The owners of the office building and tenants in other offices do not know what is going on in your office. In the case of confidential computing, the cloud is the office building, and the enclave is the office.

Datamation: How have you seen AI/ML impact cloud computing over the past few years, and how do you think these trends will continue to change cloud development and customer expectations?

Frank: We are generating data from more sources than ever before, and users are expecting insights from the data immediately. It isnt a question of whether AI/ML are needed, but how AI/ML can produce insights that can be leveraged instantaneously. The trend we see most commonly is the need to analyze the data where the data is generated to reduce latency, due to not needing the data to flow to another location. In addition, keeping the data in a specific location can assist with regulatory constraints.

Datamation: What do you think well see more of in the cloud computing space in the next 5-10 years? What areas will grow the most over the next decade?

Frank: When it comes to recent breaches, these are stark reminders of the reality business and governments live in today. Businesses must realize that they are only as secure as their weakest link.

Many believe that that weak link can come when outsourcing their digital infrastructure to a third-party cloud provider that this is simply the price you can pay to speed innovation. But this is not true. It is incumbent on cloud providers to lead the way in creating a culture that continues to push us to improve upon the current state of security.

So as technology leaders, we need to not only provide cloud infrastructure solutions, but take care to provide ones that the C-suite can feel comfortable with adopting in light of hackers sophisticated methods. We need to introduce the right strategies and help build the right technological foundation, enabling our clients to embrace innovation in the cloud with trust that their data will remain protected.

By adopting the right open, hybrid cloud architecture one that enables built-in controls and selecting a cloud provider that enables sophisticated encryption capabilities, like confidential computing, youre helping ensure that your data truly remains yours.

Datamation: How has the COVID-19 pandemic affected you/your colleagues/your clients approach to cloud solutions?

Frank: The pandemic has amplified how much of our lives we live online. From ordering food for delivery to completing a banking transaction to visiting a doctor, our personal data is out there. So, the natural question is, who can access it, and is it at risk of being compromised? How can we, as consumers, trust the organizations we communicate with for a frictionless experience, while safeguarding our most critical data?

And how can our cloud providers serve as stewards of their clients sensitive data? By building in cybersecurity controls from the outset, we can help more clients across industries embrace cloud.

Datamation: How do you think that cloud computing can better be leveraged as a technology for global good (i.e., slowing climate change, alleviating poverty, ethical business practices, social justice causes, etc.)?

Frank: Last year, IBM Cloud team and Santa Casa da Misericrdia de Lisboa built and launched a simple and secure telemedicine platform to meet the physical and mental health needs of underserved citizens in Lisbon, particularly the elderly and vulnerable during the accelerating pandemic. The solution is built on the IBM Cloud and incorporates a state-of-the-art cryptographic technology called Keep Your Own Key.This encryption gives the doctor and patient enterprise-level data protection over a secure platform, designed so patients can easily communicate with their medical providers and psychologists to get the assistance they need, quickly and from home. The platform schedules patient care via SMS and email, and sessions are conducted through phone, video, and chat.

SCML has been able to increase their patient support, care, and follow-up, while serving citizens from the comfort of their own homes.At scale, the platform has the potential to open up access to all underserved communities and the elderly in particular, who often have no means of transportation or who are at greater risk of serious complications from COVID-19.

Datamation: How have you seen the cloud computing market change since you first started? How have the technologies, conversations, and people changed over time?

Frank: Technology is more accessible than ever before. The ability to learn about a technology is no longer gated by a class, textbook, or employer. You can learn a great deal about how a technology works just by reading documentation, watching YouTube videos, or even enrolling in free courses. IBM Skills offers free online courses, workshops, and badge credentials created in partnership with governments, NGOs, and schools from all over the world, designed to help students and professionals alike skill up in relevant technology areas. This accessibility has allowed a more diverse group of individuals to enter the industry. In my experience, a diverse set of voices produces richer outcomes, no matter the task at hand.

Datamation: How do you stay knowledgeable about trends in the market? What resources do you like?

Frank: Its important to stay curious, but I think you also have to genuinely care about what problems are being solved and the unique ways they are being solved across the industry. I have traditional ways to learn about trends, including my favorite analyst reports, but Ive often learned about new announcements and breaking news via social media platforms. I also surround myself with interesting and curious people. Not a day goes by that someone doesnt link me an article on Slack. The resulting informal discussions are some of the most valuable to me personally.

Datamation: How do you like to help or otherwise engage less experienced tech professionals?

Frank: I mentor dozens of individuals inside and outside of IBM. IBM has amazing resources that allow me to give back, like product management boot camps, women-in-technology round tables, mentoring, management training, and so much more. I also volunteer for organizations outside of IBM helping entrepreneurs. Most recently, weve helped small businesses struggling to pivot during the pandemic. My approach is to be very transparent about my unique background and non-traditional technology education to inspire others who may not have taken the traditional path to technologist.

Datamation: What do you consider the best part of your workday or workweek?

Frank: The best part of my week is when Im solving problems. Whether Im ideating with a client on technology decisions or working with my team to brainstorm new ideas, the process of solving problems is one that I truly enjoy.

Datamation: What are you most proud of in your professional life?

Frank: I am most proud when I push myself to do something out of my comfort zone and achieve something I didnt think possible. My first patent was very special to me for that reason. The first time I stepped on a large keynote stage was very special to me. I get a lot of satisfaction when I can take an idea and make it real. When you do that enough times, you become known for that characteristic, and Im proud of that reputation.

Read Next: Top Trends in Cloud Computing 2021

Read the original:
Cloud Computing: Executive Q&A with Briana Frank at IBM - Datamation

Read More..

These Are The Best Cloud Hosting Services In 2021And Other Small Business Tech News – Forbes

IT Technician with a Laptop Computer and Black Male Engineer Colleague are Talking in Data Center ... [+] while Walking Next to Server Racks. Running Diagnostics or Doing Maintenance Work.

Here are five things in technology that happened this past week and how they affect your business. Did you miss them?

1 These are the best cloud hosting services in 2021, according to Tech Radar.

Editors at technology website Tech Radar recently reviewed and ranked their take on the best cloud hosting services for small businesses. According to the review, Hostinger was ranked as the best cloud web hosting provider, HostGator the best for hosting only websites, Cloudways was ranked best for ease-of-use and power, Bluehost described as an exceptional cloud web hosting provider, and Dreamhost was ranked for its cloud object storage and cloud server hosting. To see the full reviews, visit read more here. (Source: Tech Radar)

Why this is important for your business:

Please dont tell me you still have a server in your office with your core databases and applications.Im pretty sure that no matter how good your IT support team is theyre still not going to be as good or your data as secure than if you were to move everything to a reliable cloud hosting service.Its what my smartest clients are doing.

2 Work management platform Trello introduces no-code automation features.

List-making app Trello recently announced that its Premium users will now have unlimited access to the platforms automation commands and features. Some of the automation features include the ability to prefill the most frequently used automation commands such as sorting lists by date, etc. Shareable automation commandsone of the new featuresalso lets users share automation commands to additional boards. Additionally, Snapshot reports will allow users to schedule and send email reports automatically. (Source: Venture Beat)

Why this is important for your business:

Trello is an excellent productivity tool for teams that want to share tasks and project management responsibilities. The application is joining other popular apps by adding no code features for workflow and automation.If youre a Trello user you should ask for a demo.

3 Most employee monitoring tools are needlessly invasive, study finds.

A recent study by StandoutCVa resume-help site revealed new findings focused on the most well-known employee monitoring tools. The study found that 75% of the tools studied have the capability of recording employee monitors and screens as well as track which websites and apps theyre using. 59% of the tools have the capability to track mouse and keyboard movements. The study also revealed that almost 50% of the tools can be deployed on company-owned devices without workers knowing. (Source: Fast Company)

Why this is important for your business:

Why are you wasting your time monitoring your employees anyway?They cant be trusted? Theyre your employees!You hired them!Im not a fan of these tools unless you really think youve got a problem, and if you do its probably just with one or two people and if thats the case you already know who they are.

4 Pry Financials raises $4.2 million to make startup accounting more approachable.

Pry Financials recently announced that it raised $4.2 million. Pry which launched in March of this year has over 200 customers and shared that it has seen a 35% month-over-month growth. With the additional funding, Pry has plans to develop more sophisticated predictive features and have industry standards integrated into its templates. (Source: Tech Crunch)

Why this is important for your business:

Another entry into the crowded cloud-based accounting apps and were just getting started. Pry is geared toward making finances for startups less intimidating not only for those in charge of accounting, but for entire teams.

5GoDaddy launched a website design service for small businesses.

GoDaddy recently announced that it has launched a new service to help small businesses design websites. With the rollout of Website Design Service (WDS), the company is broadening its offerings to include more digital services geared toward small businesses, their budgets, and level of expertise. Within a few weeks, GoDaddys new service will provide professionally designed, modern WordPress websites for small businesses. (Source: Daily News Egypt)

Why this is important for your business:

If your website is straightforward then this is a no-brainer. The company is offering many templates and easy to use tools for getting your site designed fast and up and running.Of course if you have more complex needs youre still going to need to shell out for an experienced developer.

Link:
These Are The Best Cloud Hosting Services In 2021And Other Small Business Tech News - Forbes

Read More..

Google pulls the plug on DeepMind-developed health app Streams – Business Insider

Google is shutting down Streams, a mobile app designed to help clinicians track patients' conditions, two years after acquiring it from portfolio firm DeepMind.

The decision to take Streams offline marks the tech giant's latest letdown in a streak of high-profile disappointments. Last week, Insider exclusively revealed the company was dismantling its embattled health division after struggling to hammer out a roadmap for the group, and letting major deals fizzle out along the way.

A Google spokesperson confirmed to TechCrunch it would soon be decommissioning the app, which it took control of when it absorbed DeepMind's own health team in 2019. The app has been in use at a number of the UK's best-known National Health Service hospitals for the past five years, but faced criticism from those wary of Big Tech hoovering up patient data.

Three years before Google took control of Streams away from DeepMind, a New Scientist investigation revealed that the app had extensive access to 1.6 million patients' data as part of an arrangement with London's Royal Free Hospital.

The UK data regulator ruled that the deal was unlawful, triggering public outcry over worries that a US tech giant might gain access to confidential patient data for profit.

The decision to shut down Streams comes just months after Google pulled the plug on Loon, the spin out that hoped to make broadband more accessible using solar-powered balloons, and the shutdown of other moonshot projects, including power-generating kite firm Makaniand fuel alternative Project Foghorn.

Insider approached Google for comment.

Are you a current or former Googler with more to share? You can contact this reporter securely using the encrypted messaging app Signal (+447801985586) or email (mcoulter@businessinsider.com). Reach out using a nonwork device.

The rest is here:
Google pulls the plug on DeepMind-developed health app Streams - Business Insider

Read More..

Where the mind is without fear – The Times of India Blog

From an early age, we have been taught that education is probably the only path to achieving success and happiness in life. And yet, so many of us, in spite of the education we have been blessed with, get swayed away by the volatility of life, volatility that has heightened significantly in the current times. This might lead us to wonder has education lived up to its promise? Or has it lost its intrinsic purpose and vision in the wake of modern-day societies and countries? It probably has.

Fundamentally, education needs to be reimagined. Had we heeded Tagores words- Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high while designing curricula and imparting education, this might not have been required. The purpose of education is three-fold: sharing information, building skillsets, and instilling wisdom. Wisdom is critical to be able to better understand the art of living and be at peace with ourselves and the world. Truth be told, our education system, as exposed by the rapid pace of change in the 21st century, and more recently by the pandemic, has obsessively focused on the first two aspects only. And consequently, it has failed our students to be future-ready. Our schools and colleges have rarely taught us how to respond gracefully to a colleagues chiding remarks, double down when things get hard, manage our thoughts, emotions or our worst fears or to keep our heads high in the face of uncertainty. In our race for survival and higher economic status, wisdom remained in the timeless teachings of our past seers only.

The tragedy of Indian education lies in our inability to capitalise on our over 5,000 years old Gurukul system of learning, where students lived in the Gurus residence, learning and working together as a community. This system included all essential elements for nurturing educated and responsible beings. Learning was seen as a lifelong process where life was the most important teacher, and the Guru the leading light. The curriculum inspired students to develop a sense of discretion and self-restraint, build their personality and intellectual prowess, imbibe personal virtues and social awareness, and more.

Some parts of this deep educational philosophy have remained embedded in our 21st-century system, but sadly, only some. The gaps in our education have now manifested into real-world problems, and the raging pandemic and the subsequent disappearance of brick-and-mortar learning has only complicated matters. What then is a balanced and nuanced path towards reclaiming the old order of cultivating informed, skilled and conscious individuals? How can modern society move from developing agile workers to agile humans? Is there still a way to tap into our ancient wisdom and our cultural heritage against the current wave of complexities and unhappiness? The answer is yes and three things need to be done.

First, the student-teacher relationship needs to be deepened again, where teachers are fully responsible for students growth and well-being and teach emotional intelligence as an integral component of the school curriculum, much like the Delhi governments newly minted Happiness class. Further, we need to draw talent and compensate teachers in a manner that, at least substantially, competes with the rewards of a mainstream career. Teachers have always been revered in our society and we should revere them even more.

Second, the learning horizon needs to be expanded beyond teachers, parents, authors and managers to include friends, peers, strangers, community, and life events, for we have always learnt from others and limiting who or what we learn from limits our potential to learn.

Finally, our education system needs to transform the mindset of our students from limited learning through our growing years only, to a mindset for lifelong learning where we all become students for life.

There are many more things that need to be done. However, even if these three changes can be incorporated into our current education framework, we can expect to live up to Tagores words again Where the mind is led forward by thee into ever-widening thought and action, Into that heaven of freedom, my Father, let my country awake.

Views expressed above are the author's own.

END OF ARTICLE

Go here to see the original:
Where the mind is without fear - The Times of India Blog

Read More..

ecoprintQ want to help you Understand X-as-a-Service and Print Management in the Cloud – Industry Analysts Inc

A lot of terminology gets thrown around whenever someone refers to cloud computing and hosting. Its the same with print management in the cloud. Unexplained jargon doesnt help to fight against describing the cloud as this mystical floating field of data. ecoprintQ and PaperCut would like to help answer your cloud based questions.

If youre looking into migrating from on-premise printing to cloud-based print management (either public, private, or hybrid, which well get to soon), youve come across this knot of terminology.

So, today were looking at the three different types of X-as-a-Service in the cloud and how they relate to print management.

What are the three types of (Anything-as-a-Service) in the cloud?

In effect, each one of these can be thought of as a different layer of an abstraction.

IaaS is putting the hardware in the cloud; you maintain full control of the operating system (e.g. Windows or Linux), how its configured, and the applications that run on top.

PaaS in the cloud offers more than just hardware, its hosting higher-level components in the cloud such as a hosted database.

SaaS usually builds on top of PaaS to build an end-to-end solution ready to use, like Office365 or GSuite.

Heres a quick cheat sheet of each XaaS:

IaaS = infrastructure in the cloud

PaaS = infrastructure for development in the cloud

SaaS = software in the cloud

How does XaaS relate to print management in the cloud?

IaaS Infrastructure as a Service

IaaS was really one of the first areas of cloud computing adopted by many companies. Today a good example is moving existing servers into Azure, Amazon Web Services, or Google Cloud Platform.

The advantages mean you can run the same applications and options without worrying about the underlying infrastructure, such as the hardware, the power supply, the raid controller, and so forth.

Over the last decade, more and more of our PaperCut MF customers have been moving their instances into IaaS environments.

IaaS will continue to be a logical and popular first step for many organizations on the path to print management in the cloud.

To read more about the various services in the cloud go to https://www.ecoprintq.com/blog/index.php/2021/07/02/understanding-x-as-a-service-and-print-management-in-the-cloud/

If youd like to find out more about PaperCut and its role in cloud based solutions, give us a call at 1-800-236-8499 or email us at sales@ecoprintq.com. ecoprintQ is committed to delivering excellent service to every customer, providing support at each phase of an opportunity, and promoting solutions at every level. As a result, ecoprintQ is one of the worlds top Authorized Solution Centers.

Load balancing EHR for Healthier Healthcare IT Applications

Read this article:
ecoprintQ want to help you Understand X-as-a-Service and Print Management in the Cloud - Industry Analysts Inc

Read More..

Global Cognitive Computing in Retail Market, By Component, By Technology, By Deployment, By Application, By Region, Competition Forecast &…

Global Cognitive Computing in Retail Market, By Component (Platform, Services (Managed, Professional)), By Technology (Machine Learning, Natural Language Processing, Deep Learning, Robotics, Computer / Machine Vision), By Deployment (Cloud, On-Premises), By Application (Customer Experience, Price Optimization, Demand Forecasting, Inventory Management, Automation, Others), By Region, Competition Forecast & Opportunities, 2026

New York, Aug. 31, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Global Cognitive Computing in Retail Market, By Component, By Technology, By Deployment, By Application, By Region, Competition Forecast & Opportunities, 2026" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p06131095/?utm_source=GNW

Global cognitive computing in retail market is expected to grow at a significant rate in the forecast period.Cognitive computing analyzes a massive amount of data with accuracy.

It can understand the natural language, images, recognize patterns, amongst others to provide an enhanced shopping experience to consumers and help the organization to make smart decisions.Change in the consumer preference to buy through online channels has impacted the operation of the retail industry.

Development of interactive platforms along with the lucrative discounts offered by the market players to attract customers is accelerating the online sales channel market growth.Ongoing research and development activities for technological advancements of cloud computing technology to increase the efficiency of the system are expected to fuel the market growth in the next five years.

The rise in the expenditure capacity of the consumer is increasing the sales of smart devices. Organizations are actively utilizing cognitive computing solutions to reduce the other operational expenses is expected to pave the way for market growth. The growing adoption of internet of things technology for real-time monitoring to analyze consumer behavior and the roll-out of 5G technology is influencing the demand for cognitive computing in the retail market.Global cognitive computing in retail market is segmented into component, technology, deployment, application, regional distribution, and company.Based on the regional analysis, North America is expected to dominate the market for the forecast period, 2022-2026.

Supportive government policies and high adoption of advanced technologies by the organizations are driving the growth of the market in the region. The presence of major market players coupled with the start-ups adopting cognitive computing solutions is expected to influence the market growth.The major players operating in the global cognitive computing in retail market are SparkCognition, Inc., Expert System USA, IBM Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, Google LLC, Teradata Corporation, Cisco Systems, Inc., Hewlett Packard Enterprises Co., CognitiveScale, Inc., Deepmind Technologies, Amazon Web Services, Inc., Enterra Solutions LLC, SAS Institute, Inc., Virtusa Corporation, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., among others. Major companies are developing advanced technologies and launching new services to stay competitive in the market. Other competitive strategies include mergers & acquisitions and new service developments.

Years considered for this report:

Historical Years: 2016-2019Base Year: 2020Estimated Year: 2021Forecast Period: 20222026

Objective of the Study:

To analyze the historical growth of the market size of global cognitive computing in retail market from 2016 to 2019. To estimate and forecast the market size of global cognitive computing in retail market from 2020 to 2026 and growth rate until 2026. To classify and forecast global cognitive computing in retail market based on component, technology, deployment, application, regional distribution, and company. To identify dominant region or segment in the global cognitive computing in retail. To identify drivers and challenges for global cognitive computing in retail market. To examine competitive developments such as expansions, new product launches, mergers & acquisitions, etc., in global cognitive computing in retail market. To identify and analyze the profile of leading players operating in global cognitive computing in retail market. To identify key sustainable strategies adopted by market players in global cognitive computing in retail market.The analyst performed both primary as well as exhaustive secondary research for this study.Initially, the analyst sourced a list of service providers across the globe.

Subsequently, the analyst conducted primary research surveys with the identified companies.While interviewing, the respondents were also enquired about their competitors.

Through this technique, the analyst could include the service providers who could not be identified due to the limitations of secondary research. The analyst examined the service providers, distribution channels and presence of all major players across the globe.The analyst calculated the market size of global cognitive computing in retail market using a bottom-up approach, wherein data for various end-user segments was recorded and forecast for the future years. The analyst sourced these values from the industry experts and company representatives and externally validated through analyzing historical data of these product types and applications for getting an appropriate, overall market size.

Various secondary sources such as company websites, news articles, press releases, company annual reports, investor presentations and financial reports were also studied by the analyst.

Key Target Audience:

Cognitive Computing in Retail service provider companies Market research and consulting firms Government bodies such as regulating authorities and policy makers Organizations, forums, and alliances related to cognitive computing in retail marketThe study is useful in providing answers to several critical questions that are important for the industry stakeholders such as service providers, suppliers and partners, end users, etc., besides allowing them in strategizing investments and capitalizing on market opportunities.

Report Scope:

In this report, global cognitive computing in retail market has been segmented into following categories, in addition to the industry trends which have also been detailed below: Global Cognitive Computing in Retail Market, By Component:o Platformo ServicesManagedProfessional Global Cognitive Computing in Retail Market, By Technology:o Machine Learningo Natural Language Processingo Deep Learningo Roboticso Computer / Machine Vision Global Cognitive Computing in Retail Market, By Deployment:o Cloudo On-Premises Global Cognitive Computing in Retail Market, By Application:o Customer Experienceo Price Optimizationo Demand Forecastingo Inventory Managemento Automationo Others Global Cognitive Computing in Retail Market, By Region:o Asia-PacificChinaIndiaAustraliaJapanSouth Koreao EuropeFranceGermanyUnited KingdomItalySpaino North AmericaUnited StatesCanadaMexicoo South AmericaBrazilArgentinaColombiao Middle East & AfricaSouth AfricaSaudi ArabiaUAE

Competitive Landscape

Company Profiles: Detailed analysis of the major companies present in global cognitive computing in retail market.

Available Customizations:

With the given market data, we offers customizations according to a companys specific needs. The following customization options are available for the report:

Company Information

Detailed analysis and profiling of additional market players (up to five).Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p06131095/?utm_source=GNW

About ReportlinkerReportLinker is an award-winning market research solution. Reportlinker finds and organizes the latest industry data so you get all the market research you need - instantly, in one place.

__________________________

Story continues

Read more from the original source:
Global Cognitive Computing in Retail Market, By Component, By Technology, By Deployment, By Application, By Region, Competition Forecast &...

Read More..

Whitehat Virtual Announces Partnership with BOXX Technologies | Texas News | inforney.com – inForney.com

AUSTIN, Texas, Aug. 31, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Whitehat Virtual, the expert in "work from anywhere" IT, today announced a partnership with BOXX Technologies, the leading innovator of high-performance computer workstations. Together, Whitehat Virtual and BOXX will provide customers working with some of the most graphically demanding resource-intensive applications globally with an "easy button" for protecting IP, working from home, and collaboration by offering expert VDI managed services and support, guaranteeing a quality VDI end-user experience for customers of the industry's most complete line of powerful workstation computers.

As a result of this agreement, Whitehat Virtual is the preferred virtual desktop services partner for BOXX. An expert in solving even the most challenging Citrix and VMware VDI issues, Whitehat Virtual has cataloged over 1,500 optimizations for virtual environments, making them perform better and deliver an optimal user experience. Whitehat Virtual is also a proven service partner for NVIDIA vGPU environments ensuring vGPU enables the best possible performance.

"The arrival of new virtual GPU (vGPU) technologies places heightened demands on virtual desktop technology," said Val King, President and CEO, Whitehat Virtual. "For users of high-performance graphic applications that want the ability to work from anywhere there is an Internet connection, virtual desktops (VDI) must be paired with vGPU technology and optimized to deliver the performance and user experience digital workers need. At Whitehat Virtual, we've seen and solved it all when it comes to high-performance computing on VDI. We are pleased to bring our expertise to the BOXX community of power-computing users and we look forward to bringing BOXX innovations and high-performance hardware to Whitehat Virtual customers."

As a result of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, work from anywhere means new demands on environments, including rich multi-media content delivery for remote training and facilitating team member communication. Overall, VDI environments struggle to deliver this level of content since most were not designed to support robust visual content.

NVIDIA vGPU software enables powerful GPU performance for workloads ranging from graphics-rich virtual workstations to data science and AI. This enables IT to leverage the management and security benefits of virtualization, as well as the performance of NVIDIA GPUs required for modern workloads.

"All VDI systems host multiple users on a single server," said Tim Lawrence, Founder and VP of Engineering, BOXX Technologies. "Only BOXX has the experience and product portfolio to provide engineers, architects, and 3D artists with bare-metal performance in a virtual environment. With Whitehat Virtual managed services and support, we are extending our expertise in high-performance computing with a VDI services partner we trust."

Whitehat Virtual's partnership with BOXX Technologies was recently finalized and services options from Whitehat Virtual are available now through BOXX.

About Whitehat Virtual

Whitehat Virtual is a nationally ranked top 100 technology services provider specializing in security, compliance, desktop virtualization, cloud, hosting, and managed IT services with NVIDIA, Citrix, VMware, Microsoft, AWS, among other partnerships. Whitehat Virtual's mission is to maximize the value of IT for clients at what Whitehat Virtual calls the "Point of Execution," or the last 18 inches between the screen and the end-user, where IT productivity is gained or lost, and ultimately where data translates into dollars. Clients of Whitehat Virtual know what technology to buy, how to deliver it successfully on time, and how to extract maximum business value, achieving more dollar-for-dollar value from their IT investment than their competitors. Learn more at http://www.whitehatvirtual.com.

About BOXX Technologies

BOXX is the leading innovator of high-performance computer workstations, rendering systems, and servers for engineering, product design, architecture, visual effects, animation, deep learning, and more. For 26 years, BOXX has combined record-setting performance, speed, and reliability with unparalleled industry knowledge to become the trusted choice of creative professionals worldwide. For more information, visitwww.boxx.com.

Press Contacts:

Erin Jones

Avista PR for Whitehat Virtual

P: 704.664.2170

ejones@avistapr.com

John Vondrak

BOXX Technologies

P: 512.852.3326

jvondrak@boxx.com

View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/whitehat-virtual-announces-partnership-with-boxx-technologies-301366115.html

SOURCE Whitehat Virtual

Read the original post:
Whitehat Virtual Announces Partnership with BOXX Technologies | Texas News | inforney.com - inForney.com

Read More..

Cloud Adoption in BFSI with ARP – Finextra

Introduction

Cloud adoption journey of Banking, Financial Services and Insurance (BFSI) enterprises requires to address the existing disposition of 2000 and 5000 business applications. Many of these applications consist of legacy technology landscape. Number of factors must be considered to remediate them before or during the cloud adoption journey.Application Right Platform (ARP) is a strategic technology standardization process that BFSI enterprises should consider while planning for cloud adoption. This will benefit BFSI organizations in the long run.

What is ARP?

Business applications comprise an ecosystem of technologies that are loosely and/or tightly coupled. ARP is a framework of decomposing the ecosystem of technologies for a given application into multiple technology layers under consideration (source) and matching the same with preferred standard technology stack (target). For example, an enterprise may decide to adopt only two operating systems, two relational databases, and two middleware software. Many other technologies like reporting, ETL, messaging, data integration, scheduler, logging, tracing, monitoring, security, and DevOps tools are to be considered for an application. These considerations will multiply when we consider adoption of public cloud with PaaS solution. The ARP framework begins with an assessment that spans the portfolio discovery with platform definition and onboarding planning.

Many other parameters must be considered in ARP process before embarking on cloud journey as described below.

Key Considerations for Cloud-led ARP

1. Private vs Public cloud vs On-premise data centers

We see a clear trend towards selecting one private cloud and multiple public cloud providers followed by application migration. There is a clear preference for hosting a large number of the applications on-premises due to perceived security questions regarding liability, non functional requirements and integration with legacy systems. Adoption of public cloud in large BFSI enterprises is primarily seen for specific business use cases like reporting applications or high-performance computing requirements such as risk analytics applications or archive data platform, whereas we see significant adoption of public cloud in insurance as well as small and medium sized banks.

2. IaaS vs. PaaS vs. CaaS

We see a clear trend in BFSI where IaaS platforms are selected for migrating some of the existing applications whereas turnkey PaaS platforms (Red Hat OpenShift, Pivotal Cloud Foundry, etc.) or Containers as a Service platforms such as Docker Enterprise Edition, Mesosphere DC/OS or Kubernetes are selected for new application development.

3. Application Centric View & Application Disposition

It is essential to establish the application-to-infrastructure mapping or a Full-Stack view of the application as application is a logical unit of several software and hardware components. Many enterprises would not have this up-to-date mapping. Application centric view can help in establishing the complexity of migration and hence the business case. Many large banking enterprises would have classified their applications in terms of their strategic dispositions, namely Buy, Hold and Sell. The Buy and Hold category applications must be classified further on the basis of their Migration Disposition using 4R model.

4. Technology Standardization

BFSIenterprises are slowly realizing that when dealing with thousands of applications, going with Lift & Shift migrations is not an effective approach in the long term. Hence their efforts on large scale technology standardization apart from OS, DB and, MW. Technology standardization can significantly benefit to reduce administration cost, cost of license, cost of procurement of multiple tools, and cost of application maintenance and development. When we try to map the ecosystems of technologies to target technologies, the ARP exercise brings multiple use cases for remediation.

5. Commercial off the Shelf (COTS) Products

BFSIfirms use a significant number of COTS products. COTS applications must be certified to run on VM and analyzed for compatibility with the target cloud platform. The upgrade may need adjustments to business processes and/or end user training and may have implications for the existing licensing model.

6. Additional considerations

Summary

To ensure successful cloud adoption, the ARP of thousands of existing traditional applications must be addressed pragmatically. ARP can benefit enterprises in reducing propriety OS, DB and MW licenses, adoption of single platform for scheduling, logging, message queue, rationalizing skills needed to maintain the infrastructures, significant reduction in application development and maintenance cost, and makes applications fit for moving to cloud.

Read the original here:
Cloud Adoption in BFSI with ARP - Finextra

Read More..

The key to cloud choice is consistency, not complexity – IT-Online

As the world begins to open up again, were faced with something that we havent had much of over the past year choice.

By Lee Syse, cloud tech lead at VMware SSA

Choice of where to eat, drink, exercise, socialise, shop. Its something were seeing more of in a technology that has been fundamental to our lives over the last year, too the cloud. The range of cloud options available to businesses has expanded rapidly as the use of modern applications which rely on the hybridity and flexibility that multi-cloud environments provide has exploded to cater to and deliver on shifting customer expectations.

In theory this greater array of options should cater for every potential need and put paid to many commonly cited barriers to cloud. But theres a catch. Many organizations are still battling legacies of unrestrained, unmanaged, unsupported choice and this has created cloud diversity and complexity in equal measure.

Andrew Cruise, MD at Routed Hosting recently summed up perfectly why this complexity has become such a problem: The risk right now is that people are losing control of their businesses, he said.

To get back in control, he argues, they must bring much more transparency to the cloud. They also need to develop things that are reversible by design and will enable roaming between clouds. The challenge facing businesses today then, and particularly their IT teams, is how to find that perfect balance between control and choice.

Lead from the app

Modern applications will soon outnumber traditional applications, and as a result, an organisations ability to keep pace with this shift is becoming the most important differentiator when it comes to business success. Businesses and their IT teams need to figure out how to take advantage of this innovation without introducing more risk and uncertainty and do so quickly.

In its purest form, cloud is the answer, because its the de facto way to modernise applications. But in many businesses, the ability to innovate and modernise with cloud is being suffocated by complexity. Its affecting the pace at which they can modernise applications and move them to the cloud and deliver the experiences that end users demand. Not only that, but its also making the lives of the IT team harder by creating silos of management and security and complexities at the edge.

To unravel this complexity manually would take IT teams too long and be far too expensive, leaving organisations with a decision to make. Many businesses are instead choosing to adopt a multi-cloud strategy that allows their IT teams to break down the complexity rather than continue to increase it, by affording greater consistency and enhanced flexibility. But how exactly does multi-cloud achieve this?

The cloud comfort blanket

The hybridity of multi-cloud delivers consistent infrastructure everywhere, that evolves and extends a modern cloud infrastructure to thousands of other cloud partners. It also ensures operational consistency by delivering unified management and security, which enhances flexibility while also avoiding complexity and preventing cloud lock-in.

Why is this important? Each cloud provider has their own software toolkits, provisioning portals, management software and monitoring capabilities, all of which work perfectly well within that cloud environment. If youre using one cloud provider, theyre simple enough for your IT team to manage.

But using one cloud provider for everything isnt feasible anymore. Each cloud has its own unique attributes, and each business will have their own motivations for using them, whether they be technical, economic, geographic or regulatory. Thats why Forrester research predicts that companies will be running on average 8,7 public clouds by 2023.

The existence of these cloud sprawls helps explain why a strategic approach to cloud one which focuses on the role of each environment in delivering business outcomes is so important.

Without it, IT teams would need a different team of people with the skills to manage the specific requirements of each cloud that their company uses a prospect that is unrealistic both in terms of likely cost, and also of enough talent being available with the appropriate skillsets.

But with one cloud management platform, IT teams have the comfort blanket of a single toolkit that enables them to manage all clouds within their estate. As well as reducing complexity and simplifying management, this also makes cloud environments reversible by design.

Let me explain what I mean by this. We have seen and continue to see many of our customers who move to the cloud quickly be taken by surprise when it grows faster than they expected, which in turn spawns too much usage, and incurs far greater costs than they had budgeted for.

Businesses like these need to be able to reverse decisions and have the flexibility to move workloads both into and out of the cloud, based on their needs.

A consistent cloud approach allows IT teams to wrap security, latency and governance policies around a workload so that those policies then exist wherever that workload goes whether that be into private or public cloud environments, or on-premises and that application or workload performs optimally wherever it is hosted.

One of our customers, Salvatore Cassara, CIO at SGB-SMIT Group, explains how his organisation has benefitted from multi-cloud, and the consistency it provides, when it comes to everyday data access.

We have a multi-cloud solution that is made up of various cloud providers and a private cloud solution, and VMware helps bring these elements together, he said. It allows us to confine the data that is more sensitive within our private cloud, and then distribute the rest through the other cloud providers. That reach makes the data available for those that need it, when they need it.

The benefits of application modernisation for IT

The practical benefits of this consistency for businesses, including both the ability to facilitate seamless use of the cloud, and to enable application modernisation, has been discussed. But there are also key operational benefits for IT teams.

Having the freedom to take existing applications, move them to their preferred cloud and use the native services of that particular cloud, removes the need to maintain older instances of applications, making it easier for businesses to avoid downtime as they move applications to newer platforms.

This portability also allows IT teams to deliver better services to lines of business because they dont have to worry about that element of the application, and can instead focus on providing underlying support of in the form of back-up services, networking, security, governance and so on.

Adopting a multi-cloud strategy makes it technically, commercially and strategically easier for businesses and their IT teams by delivering consistency, not complexity.

This acceleration of cloud capabilities, and the subsequent impact that it will have on application modernisation, is one positive from the last year that we need to hold on to and continue to build upon.

Cloud shouldnt be seen as a take it or leave it trend, but one that needs continual nurturing during its growth and is enhanced, not restricted, by choice.

Related

See original here:
The key to cloud choice is consistency, not complexity - IT-Online

Read More..

TechCentral webinar: Cloud moves from hype to business as usual – TechCentral

Cloud has moved out of hype into full business necessity. It is no longer discussed as a cloud strategy today it is a critical component of almost every organisations IT strategy.

The 2020 rush to cloud, spurred on by the global pandemic, solved the most immediate and pressing business problems, and according to Gartner, saw an almost 30% surge in end-user growth in the 2020-2021 period. This growth, however, is predicted to see a sharp turnaround before the technology plateaus into something closer to a steady and sure utility up until 2025 and beyond.

What Altron Systems Integration has witness as a response to Covid-19, and in close alignment to Gartners prediction, has been the rapid response to the necessity to enable working from home, followed by a period of reflection. The so-called lift and shift from on-premises to public cloud has come with a slew of unexpected challenges, which, says Altron Systems Integration, will see 30% of workloads moved to public hyperscale cloud repatriated.

Together with Cisco, Altron Systems Integration is hosting a webinar examining the lessons learnt from rapid cloud adoption, and how organisations are overcoming performance and availability issues. Well be examining cost implications how often the price tag has been way heftier than organisations were budgeting on. And well be examining workload placement on-prem placement is predicted to move from 2019s 80% to 30% in 2025.

This discussion will offer significant insights for professionals in senior IT management, including chief technology officers and cloud specialists, interested in discovering how to improve security, application delivery, user experience and governance across platforms in this new era of cloud as a necessity.

We are focusing on workload placement, what this impacts, how it impacts it, and how to ensure the right workloads are placed in the right architectures, across traditional IT and cloud.

The discussion will take place between TechCentral host Daniel Robus and Charl Venter, practice lead: infrastructure as a service practice, with Altron Systems Integration, Daniel van Graan, practice lead for cloud at Altron Systems Integration, and Luca Relandini, principal architect, Europe, the Middle Africa, Africa & Russia, data centre and cloud, with Cisco.

Daniel van Graan: Practice lead: cloud Altron Systems IntegrationVan Graan is an experienced leader with a demonstrated history of working in the IT services industry. He is skilled in IT strategy, software project delivery, and has strong business acumen and an ability to grow organisations. Van Graan joined Altron in 2005 as a senior business analyst in the telecommunications part of the business. He since filled various management positions where he was responsible for different aspects of the business. These include architecture, development, quality assurance and business unit management. He is currently the practice lead for the Altron Systems Integration cloud business.

Luca Relandini

Luca Relandini: Principal architect, EMEAR data centre and cloud, CiscoAs a principal architect at Cisco focusing on cloud computing and DevOps, Relandini leverages his previous experience leading mission critical projects. He has an end-to-end understanding of both hardware and software architectures, as well as the linkage between IT and the business strategy. He works with customers to innovate their architecture and processes with state-of-the-art technology and best practices, realising that governance, organisation and change management are more important success factors than the choice of the best technology. He owns certifications as enterprise architect, SOA architect, ITIL, TOGAF and infrastructure as code (AWS and Terraform).

Charl Venter

Charl Venter: Practice lead, IaaS, Altron Systems IntegrationVenter has been with Altron for 11 years. He has come through the ranks as an MCSE mouse-clicking server engineer to a technical data centre solutions architect, and now serves as a practice lead. He also holds several technical certifications from various vendors. Some of these are Cisco data centre CCIE, VMware Double VCP and Azure cloud architect expert. He is a true technologist at heart and loves crafting solutions and seeing how technology can resolve business problems.

Read the original:
TechCentral webinar: Cloud moves from hype to business as usual - TechCentral

Read More..