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Connecting College Campuses Through Cloud Computing – EdTech Magazine: Focus on Higher Education

Rutgers already uses cloud solutions such as Box and Google Classroom for file sharing and collaboration, and students from one university campus can participate in a class taught at another using Cisco Webex Meetings. In this case, however, theyre on the same path as Juilliard: looking to Oracle to drive their back-end functions around finance, HR and student support.

From an end-user perspective, Law says, people arent going to notice where the systems are hosted, since weve always allowed them to access our systems no matter where they are.

But from her IT teams point of view?

Moving to the cloud makes a lot of sense, she says, both in terms of the management requirements and because now well always be up to date. With on-premises solutions, Law explains, usually were multiple versions behind. But once were in the cloud, well get those patches automatically, so well always have the newest features ready for us to utilize.

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The cloud, according to the Rutgers Office of Information Technology, is a major technology paradigm shift and a model of computing that has the potential to provide significant benefits to both users and organizations.

On their own, Oracles ERP, HCM and Student Cloud wont build the One Rutgers culture the university aims to create in the coming years. But, along with the other cloud solutions the university adopts, they will provide the flexibility, scalability, security and cost savings that an institution of Rutgers size requires to succeed.

Law says shes fully confident that Rutgers is heading in the right direction in its push to the cloud. The university and others like it will always have on-premises systems supported by a robust IT infrastructure. But the future, she predicts, will involve a lot of change. And the cloud, she says, will certainly be part of that transition.

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Connecting College Campuses Through Cloud Computing - EdTech Magazine: Focus on Higher Education

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No Winner Likely In JEDI Court Battle; Just Pull The Plug?: Greenwalt – Breaking Defense

The Pentagons plan to consolidate many but not all of its 500-plus cloud contracts into a single Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI).

WASHINGTON: What looks like progress for the Pentagon in its five-month legal battle with Amazon Web Services is just a new variety of stalemate, a leading acquisition expert said.

Bill Greenwalt

The machinations of the legal system will continue to provide pyrrhic victories to DoD or some contractors, former Hill and Pentagon staffer Bill Greenwalt told me, but in the end, no matter what happens, DoD after almost three years struggling to make JEDI work will end up trailing the commercial IT market, as it has done now for decades.

The Department of Defense was already behind the curve when it comes to adopting cloud computing, Greenwalt said. Even government intelligence agencies have moved faster, let alone the private sector.

Look at the timelines, he told me. The cloud first appears at the CIA in 2013 and in the commercial marketplace in the 2000s. DOD was way behind the curve in 2017 when it started this acquisition.

Today, Greenwalt argued, because the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) program is suffering so many delays while technology forges ahead, it is being litigated into irrelevance. By effectively dragging out the trial, the latest legal developments only make that worse.

If we are victorious in one more battle with the Romans, we shall be utterly ruined. King Pyrrhus of Epirus

What Went Wrong

On Friday, over Amazons bitter opposition, the chief judge of the Court of Federal Claims approved a Pentagon motion in the lawsuit over the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure. JEDI is a cloud computing contract worth up to $10 billion that the Defense Department awarded to rival Microsoft unfairly and in large part due to President Trumps meddling, Amazon says.

The judge had already ordered Microsoft and the Defense Department to stop work on the project because Amazon had a reasonable chance to prove at least part of its case. While the Pentagon denies undue White House influence, it has admitted that it might have mishandled certain technical aspects of the competition, so it filed a motion to pause the cause and remand it back to DoD officials to try again.

Amazon argued the conditions of the Pentagons proposed do-over were so hopelessly narrow it wouldnt make a difference. The Pentagon and Microsoft countered that Amazon wanted terms so broad theyd effectively give it a second chance to bid with the unfair advantage that Amazon now knows exactly what price to put on its proposal to underbid Microsoft. Fridays ruling, while still under seal, effectively sided with the Pentagon.

We are pleased with the courts decision to grant our motion, said Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Robert Carver. We will immediately execute the procedures outlined in the motion [and] we remain focused on delivering this critical capability to warfighters as quickly and efficiently as possible.

If your head is spinning from this simplified summary of a mind-bending legal matter and trust us, the technology is just as complex then Greenwalt has some good news for you. Ultimately, none of it matters.

It is just another example of how flawed this acquisition process has been from the start, he told me, and how the bid protest process has continued to torture DoD and blind it from pursuing alternative paths.

Its not just the trial thats a dead end for both sides. I think they have been wasting their time since the first Request For Proposals, Greenwalt said.

In fact, he suggested, the Department of Defense should have known this was going to be a mess from the start, based on recent history. The REAN protest in which an Amazon partner beat Oracle for an earlier Pentagon cloud contract in 2018, only for the GAO to overturn it should have given DoD an early indication that this was going to be a nasty process, with everyone eventually tainted by a brutal fight to the death over a winner-take-all procurement, Greenwalt told me.

The REAN award used an increasingly popular contracting mechanism called Other Transaction Authority (OTA), a law which Greenwalt helped draft. JEDI, likewise, tried to bypass the usual acquisition bureaucracy to get new technology in at the speed of Silicon Valley. But trying to run government procurement more like a business runs afoul of a fundamental problem. No private company lets losing bidders force it to do business with them; the government sometimes does.

Cloud computing servers

Time To Reboot

So what should the Defense Department have done differently from the start? What can it do differently now?

There were other options then and now DOD has even more options, Greenwalt said. It may be time to just pull the plug and start over, but there may be too much pride invested to do otherwise.

From the start, instead of focusing on one cloud to rule them all, DoD should have put all of the cloud providers on a IDIQ [Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity] contract and then issue task orders to those companies that met their security and operational standards for individual tasks, he said. In other words, rather than try to award the whole program to a single company, break it up into chunks and dole them out over time to different companies, based on whoever offered the best price and performance for that particular piece.

Now, the Pentagon insists it wont split the JEDI contract because it already has too many clouds. The different armed services, defense agencies, and their subunits are all signing different contracts on different terms over 500 of them. But, if you set clear standards and make your vendors stick to them, it is possible to have a single cloud computing system that works as a seamless whole, even if different companies provide different parts of it. In fact, that kind of multi-cloud approach is increasingly common in the commercial world.

If the Pentagon had gone multi-cloud from the start, it would have then been, for a change, ahead of the commercial market, Greenwalt said. It could have been experimenting with cloud providers and other solutions that manage multiple clouds for the last two years.

Even now, its not too late to try a different approach, he said. There are other clouds already being used at the services and defense agencies, Greenwalt told me. DoDs focus now should be to look at these experiments and where the commercial market is going. They may decide that, except for JEDIs cool name, it may already be obsolete, and a new strategy for secure cloud applications is needed.

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No Winner Likely In JEDI Court Battle; Just Pull The Plug?: Greenwalt - Breaking Defense

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Cloud Computing Market to 2023 research: growing steady at 18.0% CAGR and projected to reach US$ 623.3 billion – WhaTech Technology and Markets News

The Global Cloud Computing Market size is expected to grow from USD 272.0 Billion in 2018 to USD 623.3 Billion by 2023, at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 18.0% during the forecast period. This report spread across 174 pages, profiling 10 companies and supported with 66 tables and 35 figures are now available in this research. An exclusive data offered in this report is collected by research and industry experts team.

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Top Companies Profiled in the Cloud Computing Market:

The key features of IaaS include automated administrative tasks, dynamic scaling, platform virtualization, and network connectivity. IaaS enables enterprises to leverage their IT infrastructure without paying for the construction of the physical infrastructure. Moreover, it provides flexibility, mobility, easy, and scalable access to applications, and enhanced collaboration to help enterprises focus on their core businesses.

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The retail and consumer goods vertical is one of the fastest-growing verticals with respect to the adoption of emerging and innovative technologies, such as cloud computing, big data analytics, DevOps, digital stores, and social networks. Various factors driving this adoption are the rising purchasing power of customers and the need to satisfy customer expectations leading to the existing customer retention and new customer acquisition.

North America to hold the largest market size and Asia Pacific (APAC) to grow at the highest rate during the forecast period

North America is the most mature market in terms of cloud computing services adoption, due to several factors, such as the presence of many enterprises with advanced IT infrastructure, and availability of technical expertise. APAC is expected to offer significant growth opportunities for cloud computing vendors during the forecast period. Rapid advancements in emerging technologies, IT infrastructure services, and the Internet of Things (IoT) have led many organizations to adopt cloud computing services.

Breakdown of primary participants profile:

Competitive Landscape of Cloud Computing Market:

1 Microquadrant Overview

1.1 Visionary Leaders

1.2 Innovators

1.3 Dynamic Differentiators

1.4 Emerging Companies

2 Competitive Scenario

2.1 Partnerships, Agreements, and Collaborations

2.2 New Product Launches

2.3 Business Expansions

2.4 Mergers and Acquisitions

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Research Coverage:

The report segments the global cloud computing market by service model which has been further segmented into IaaS, Platform as a Service (PaaS), and Software as a Service (SaaS). The workload segment covers storage, backup, and Disaster Recovery (DR);application development and testing; database management; business analytics; integration and orchestration; Customer Relationship Management (CRM);Enterprise Resource Management (ERM);collaboration and content management; and others (networking, security, Human Capital Management (HCM), and others).

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Cloud Computing Market to 2023 research: growing steady at 18.0% CAGR and projected to reach US$ 623.3 billion - WhaTech Technology and Markets News

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Cloud Computing in Healthcare Market 2020 Break Down by Top Companies, Applications, Challenges, Opportunities and Forecast 2026 Cole Reports – Cole…

Siemens Healthineers AG

Cloud Computing in Healthcare Market: Competitive Landscape

The last chapter of the Cloud Computing in Healthcare market research report focuses exclusively on the competitive landscape. It examines the main market players. In addition to a brief overview of the business, analysts provide information on their assessment and development. The list of important products in preparation is also mentioned. The competitive landscape is analyzed by understanding the companies strategies and the initiatives they have taken in recent years to overcome intense competition.

Cloud Computing in Healthcare Market: Drivers and Restraints

The report explains the drivers of the future of the Cloud Computing in Healthcare market. It assesses the different forces which should have a positive impact on the whole market. Analysts have looked at investments in research and development for products and technologies, which should give players a significant boost. In addition, the researchers undertook an analysis of the evolution of consumer behavior which should have an impact on the cycles of supply and demand in the Cloud Computing in Healthcare market. In this research report, changes in per capita income, improvement in the economic situation and emerging trends were examined.

The research report also explains the potential restrictions on the Cloud Computing in Healthcare market. The aspects assessed are likely to hamper market growth in the near future. In addition to this assessment, it offers a list of opportunities that could prove lucrative for the entire market. Analysts offer solutions to turn threats and restrictions into successful opportunities in the years to come.

Cloud Computing in Healthcare Market: Regional Segmentation

In the following chapters, analysts have examined the regional segments of the Cloud Computing in Healthcare market. This gives readers a deeper insight into the global market and allows for a closer look at the elements that could determine its evolution. Countless regional aspects, such as the effects of culture, environment and government policies, which affect regional markets are highlighted.

Ask for Discount @ https://www.verifiedmarketresearch.com/ask-for-discount/?rid=29047&utm_source=COD&utm_medium=007

What will the report contain?

Market Dynamics: The report contains important information on influencing factors, market drivers, challenges, opportunities and market trends as part of the market dynamics.

Global Market Forecast: Readers receive production and sales forecasts for the Cloud Computing in Healthcare market, production and consumption forecasts for regional markets, production, sales and price forecasts for the Cloud Computing in Healthcare market by type and consumption forecasts for the Cloud Computing in Healthcare market per application.

Regional Market Analysis: It can be divided into two different sections: one for the analysis of regional production and one for the analysis of regional consumption. Here, analysts share gross margin, prices, sales, production, CAGR, and other factors that indicate the growth of all regional markets examined in the report.

Market Competition: In this section, the report provides information on the situation and trends of competition, including mergers and acquisitions and expansion, the market shares of the three or five main players and the concentration of the market. Readers could also get the production, revenue, and average price shares of manufacturers.

Key Players: The report provides company profiles for a decent number of leading players in the Cloud Computing in Healthcare market. It shows your current and future market growth taking into account price, gross margin, income, production, service areas, production locations and other factors.

Complete Report is Available @ https://www.verifiedmarketresearch.com/product/Cloud-Computing-in-Healthcare-Market/?utm_source=COD&utm_medium=007

We also offer customization on reports based on specific client requirement:

1- Free country level analysis for any 5 countries of your choice.

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3- Free 40 analyst hours to cover any other data points

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Verified market research partners with the customer and offer an insight into strategic and growth analyzes, Data necessary to achieve corporate goals and objectives. Our core values are trust, integrity and authenticity for our customers.

Analysts with a high level of expertise in data collection and governance use industrial techniques to collect and analyze data in all phases. Our analysts are trained to combine modern data collection techniques, superior research methodology, expertise and years of collective experience to produce informative and accurate research reports.

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Tags: Cloud Computing in Healthcare Market Size, Cloud Computing in Healthcare Market Trends, Cloud Computing in Healthcare Market Forecast, Cloud Computing in Healthcare Market Growth, Cloud Computing in Healthcare Market Analysis

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Cloud Computing in Healthcare Market 2020 Break Down by Top Companies, Applications, Challenges, Opportunities and Forecast 2026 Cole Reports - Cole...

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Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science Market 2020 Break Down by Top Companies, Applications, Challenges, Opportunities and Forecast 2026 Cole Reports…

Oracle Corporation

Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science Market: Competitive Landscape

The last chapter of the Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science market research report focuses exclusively on the competitive landscape. It examines the main market players. In addition to a brief overview of the business, analysts provide information on their assessment and development. The list of important products in preparation is also mentioned. The competitive landscape is analyzed by understanding the companies strategies and the initiatives they have taken in recent years to overcome intense competition.

Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science Market: Drivers and Restraints

The report explains the drivers of the future of the Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science market. It assesses the different forces which should have a positive impact on the whole market. Analysts have looked at investments in research and development for products and technologies, which should give players a significant boost. In addition, the researchers undertook an analysis of the evolution of consumer behavior which should have an impact on the cycles of supply and demand in the Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science market. In this research report, changes in per capita income, improvement in the economic situation and emerging trends were examined.

The research report also explains the potential restrictions on the Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science market. The aspects assessed are likely to hamper market growth in the near future. In addition to this assessment, it offers a list of opportunities that could prove lucrative for the entire market. Analysts offer solutions to turn threats and restrictions into successful opportunities in the years to come.

Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science Market: Regional Segmentation

In the following chapters, analysts have examined the regional segments of the Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science market. This gives readers a deeper insight into the global market and allows for a closer look at the elements that could determine its evolution. Countless regional aspects, such as the effects of culture, environment and government policies, which affect regional markets are highlighted.

Ask for Discount @ https://www.verifiedmarketresearch.com/ask-for-discount/?rid=4625&utm_source=COD&utm_medium=007

What will the report contain?

Market Dynamics: The report contains important information on influencing factors, market drivers, challenges, opportunities and market trends as part of the market dynamics.

Global Market Forecast: Readers receive production and sales forecasts for the Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science market, production and consumption forecasts for regional markets, production, sales and price forecasts for the Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science market by type and consumption forecasts for the Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science market per application.

Regional Market Analysis: It can be divided into two different sections: one for the analysis of regional production and one for the analysis of regional consumption. Here, analysts share gross margin, prices, sales, production, CAGR, and other factors that indicate the growth of all regional markets examined in the report.

Market Competition: In this section, the report provides information on the situation and trends of competition, including mergers and acquisitions and expansion, the market shares of the three or five main players and the concentration of the market. Readers could also get the production, revenue, and average price shares of manufacturers.

Key Players: The report provides company profiles for a decent number of leading players in the Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science market. It shows your current and future market growth taking into account price, gross margin, income, production, service areas, production locations and other factors.

Complete Report is Available @ https://www.verifiedmarketresearch.com/product/global-cloud-computing-iaas-in-life-science-market-size-and-forecast-to-2025/?utm_source=COD&utm_medium=007

We also offer customization on reports based on specific client requirement:

1- Free country level analysis for any 5 countries of your choice.

2- Free Competitive analysis of any market players.

3- Free 40 analyst hours to cover any other data points

About us:

Verified market research partners with the customer and offer an insight into strategic and growth analyzes, Data necessary to achieve corporate goals and objectives. Our core values are trust, integrity and authenticity for our customers.

Analysts with a high level of expertise in data collection and governance use industrial techniques to collect and analyze data in all phases. Our analysts are trained to combine modern data collection techniques, superior research methodology, expertise and years of collective experience to produce informative and accurate research reports.

Contact us:

Mr. Edwyne FernandesCall: +1 (650) 781 4080Email: [emailprotected]

Get Our Trending Report

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Tags: Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science Market Size, Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science Market Trends, Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science Market Forecast, Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science Market Growth, Cloud computing IaaS in Life Science Market Analysis

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Berkeley Lab’s Dan Martin Takes on New Role with the Exascale Computing Project – HPCwire

April 20, 2020 The U.S. Department of Energys Exascale Computing Project (ECP) has named Dan Martin, a computational scientist and group lead for the Applied Numerical Algorithms Group in Berkeley Labs Computational Research Division, as team lead for their Earth and Space Scienceportfolio within ECP Application Development focus area. Martin replaces Anshu Dubey, a computer scientist at Argonne National Laboratory.

I am confident that Dans technical expertise and deep experience with the codes that are relevant to the ECP portfolio make him a good fit to replace me at ECP. Not only is he highly respected for his work, but his management style will mesh very well with the leadership team, said Dubey of Martins appointment, I have a vested interest as my project remains in Dans portfolio at ECP!

The ECPs Earth and Space Science project portfolio includes ExaSky, a project unraveling the mysteries surrounding the structure of the universe; ExaStar, focused on researching explosive astrophysical phenomena such as stellar explosions and neutron star mergers to gain insight into the cosmic origin of the elements and the behavior of matter; EQSIM, focused on modeling earthquakes and their impact on structures within an earthquake zone; Subsurface, a project probing the cracks in wellbores and reservoirs to reliably inform decisions pertaining to carbon capture, fossil fuel extraction, and waste disposal; and E3SM-MMF, research on resolving clouds at an unprecedented scale with advanced parameterization.

One of the exciting promises of the coming exascale age is the expertise to push our ability to do science into places that were inaccessible until now. Im excited that my role in ECP will support the practical development of this capability to study specific scientific problems, said Martin.

About the Computational Research at Berkeley Lab

The Computational Research Division conducts research and development in mathematical modeling and simulation, algorithm design, data storage, management and analysis, computer system architecture and high-performance software implementation. We collaborate directly with scientists across LBNL, the Department of Energy and industry to solve some of the worlds most challenging computational and data management and analysis problems in a broad range of scientific and engineering fields, including materials science, biology, climate modeling, astrophysics, fusion science, and many others. We also develop advanced capabilities for scientific data understanding through visualization and analytics. We perform research in high-performance computing (HPC) technology for extreme-scale computing systems, including research into performance optimization, performance analysis, benchmarking, and performance engineering of scientific applications, compilers, operating systems, and runtime systems. We also perform research in cloud computing, workflow tools, scheduling, computational frameworks and distributed systems. Our products range from peer-reviewed scientific publications to scientific research codes to end-to-end computational and data analysis capabilities that enable scientists and engineers to address complex and large-scale technical challenges.

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Berkeley Lab's Dan Martin Takes on New Role with the Exascale Computing Project - HPCwire

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This hydrogen storage ‘sponge’ could be the key to safer EV fuel cells – The Next Web

A group of scientists claim to have made a breakthrough that addresses one of the biggest challenges associated with hydrogen cars. It could make hydrogen electric vehicles (HEVs) safer and give a significant bump to the distance they can travel on one tank.

Researchers led by scientists from Northwestern University, Illinois, say they have developed a metallic sponge-like material thats capable of storing greater quantities of hydrogen at much lower and safer pressures when compared to conventional tanks.

[Read: BMW readies for hydrogen-powered X5 tests in 2022]

Its like a bath sponge but with very ordered cavities, Prof Omar Farha, from Northwestern University in Evanston, US, told the BBC. You can wipe up spilled water with a sponge, and reuse the water by squeezing the sponge, they added.

With the new material, the scientists apply the same principle, using pressure to store and release [hydrogen] gas molecules.

Conventional tanks store hydrogen in liquid form at pressures some 300 times greater than car tires, around 10,000 psi (700 bar). As a result, these tanks must be robust and have thick walls, and that makes them costly to produce. Using current technologies, most hydrogen-powered EVs can only really be driven around 500 km (around 300 miles) on one tank.

Immense pressures are needed because hydrogen is incredibly light and not that dense. According to a BBC report, to store 1 kg of hydrogen at ambient pressures, youd need an 11,000 liter tank. So its not all that practical at the moment.

But using the metallic sponge, officially called NU-1501, tanks could be made with thinner walls and larger capacities, simultaneously giving a bump to HEVs range and safety.

Many automakers are leaning on battery technology for the electric vehicles. But others, like Toyota and BMW, are also exploring hydrogen technologies.

Earlier this year, BMW announced the next generation of its hydrogen fuel cell drivetrain, and casually mentioned that real world tests would begin in the next couple of years.

For those drivers, hydrogen cars could be the easy answer, as fueling is pretty. In the UK, industry bodies estimate that some 40% of households dont have access to off-street parking to charge EVs.

For those drivers, hydrogen cars could be the easy answer as fueling is pretty much the exact same process as for a gasoline car.

Read the full research paper from Northwestern Univseristy here.

*Disclaimer: Its not actually a sponge like the one in the header image.

Read next: Mathematicians explain how we should exit the coronavirus lockdown

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Who will be the winners in a post-pandemic economy? – World Economic Forum

COVID-19 is putting the global economy into a tailspin. Many countries are heading for very sudden and unprecedented recession. This crisis will catalyze some huge changes. Few industries will avoid being either reformed, restructured or removed. Agility, scalability and automation will be the watchwords for this new era of business, and those that have these capabilities now will be the winners.

Thanks to government stimulus packages, liquidity is coming back to the market. It will keep enough of the economy afloat so that it can climb out of recession rapidly once the various lockdowns are lifted. But the way much of it is structured means that it will likely benefit already better capitalized larger businesses, over the smaller operators who may struggle.

It would be an over-simplification, however, to paint this new era as one of big versus small, or incumbents versus upstarts. The past decades tropes that pitted fintechs and digital natives against big banks and consumer brands will seem dated by the middle of this year.

Indeed, one could see the current times as the first real test of the digital-first business mantras that have been extolled over the first part of this century. COVID-19 will force a rebirth of many industries as we all sit at home in lockdown, re-assessing and re-imagining modes of consumption, supply, interaction and productivity. As president of a global technology firm, what intrigues me is where there will be paradigm shifts, as opposed to just existing trends either accelerating or decelerating.

For instance, the shift from cash to digital payments is clearly accelerating. My WEF Council colleague Huw Van Steenis, who is chair of the sustainable finance committee at UBS, highlighted that 31 countries have lifted contactless payment limits this year to support social distancing measures. In the UK, ATM usage was already falling between 6% and 14% a year, but has now plummeted by more than half. As he argued in his Future of Finance report, this has major implications for: the resilience of payment forms young and old; for banks business models; and society, as we work to ensure no-one is left behind in an increasingly digital economy.

In the workplace were already seeing a super-charging of the nascent bring your own device (BYOD) trend in business technology. As people scramble to work and socialize remotely, previously niche tools such as Zoom, Slack, Microsofts Teams, and even the Houseparty app, are suddenly supporting millions of personal and corporate interactions every minute.

Those businesses that have designed their solutions to use the full potential of cloud computing, will not buckle under the pressure. For instance, the cloud gives businesses easy access to digital payment methods. It has enabled companies to continue working, by rapidly and securely providing access to business applications to their employees working at home. Yet it also provides financial flexibility, allowing those seeing a slow-down to wind down the technology costs of business lines that are facing challenges.

Meanwhile, supply chains are having to reconfigure themselves in real time. As the demand for personal protective equipment (PPE), ventilators and other medication spikes, manufacturers are having to retool and reinvent themselves. For instance, the Royal Mint turned its hand to producing medical visors, while Dyson and many other manufacturers, large and small, are producing ventilators or PPE.

As large grocery retailers struggle to manage queues of disgruntled customers, smart local restaurants have been quick to turn themselves into retailers repurposing their restaurant supply chains towards end consumers.

A new strain of Coronavirus, COVID 19, is spreading around the world, causing deaths and major disruption to the global economy.

Responding to this crisis requires global cooperation among governments, international organizations and the business community, which is at the centre of the World Economic Forums mission as the International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation.

The Forum has created the COVID Action Platform, a global platform to convene the business community for collective action, protect peoples livelihoods and facilitate business continuity, and mobilize support for the COVID-19 response. The platform is created with the support of the World Health Organization and is open to all businesses and industry groups, as well as other stakeholders, aiming to integrate and inform joint action.

As an organization, the Forum has a track record of supporting efforts to contain epidemics. In 2017, at our Annual Meeting, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) was launched bringing together experts from government, business, health, academia and civil society to accelerate the development of vaccines. CEPI is currently supporting the race to develop a vaccine against this strand of the coronavirus.

This combination of scalable and agile capabilities is what will define the short and medium-term success of businesses, whether large or small. But in the longer term, change will have to be more fundamental. Resilience, combined with agility, must be the new focus of business leaders as we all emerge from this crisis.

To create long-term resilience we will likely see further robotic automation and artificial intelligence (AI) within our supply chains. These technologies reduce manual intervention and hand-offs, cutting transmission risks, and reducing the reliance on humans to work face-to-face. They can also enable production to scale and shrink in response to sudden demand.

Indeed, government interventions may have unintentionally accelerated this trend. Many countries fiscal stimuli amount to the largest scale experiment in Universal Basic Income (UBI) to date. UBI is considered by many to be a prerequisite for a successful AI-driven economy by enabling businesses to potentially replace humans without impacting their welfare.

Its clear that this crisis will cull a lot of outdated practices, yet many more than we might think will continue. We will always want to travel, to eat out, to be entertained, and to have experiences in person. Just dont expect any of these activities to be unchanged. Or to be delivered by the same brands, and by the same means to which weve become accustomed.

We will emerge from this period stronger, wiser and more connected as a global society. Resilience will be at the forefront of every strategy, yet it is agility that will ensure competitiveness, and an ability to respond to the unexpected. To achieve this, businesses will have to re-evaluate where they must be strong and where they must be flexible.

License and Republishing

World Economic Forum articles may be republished in accordance with our Terms of Use.

Written by

Mohit Joshi, President; Head, Financial Services, Insurance, Healthcare and Life Sciences, Infosys Limited

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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Who will be the winners in a post-pandemic economy? - World Economic Forum

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Why should we embrace a new age of computing power in the Middle East – Gulf Business News

Charles Yang

Monday 20 April 2020

In todays digitally-connected world, humans use computing as an extension of our own capabilities. Computing power is a means to further explore our environment, to expand our abilities, and to create wondrous new inventions across every sector of society. From the convenience of smartphones and wearables to laptops and super-computers, computing is becoming ubiquitous in our lives.

Yet the way we look at computing continues to evolve. Computing and connectivity are advancing by leaps and bounds, and will soon pave the way to a digital world in which all things are connected, and all things are intelligent.

We anticipate that in five years from now, artificial intelligence (AI) applications will account for more than 80 per cent of all computing power used around the world. As the world continues to face challenges, particularly in combating the Covid-19 pandemic, we also see a greater reliance on computingbolstered by 5G connectivityto support applications like virtual collaboration, data collection and analytics, and disaster response command centers.

In the Middle East specifically, computing represents the cornerstone of tomorrows intelligent economy. All across the region, governments have reinforced investments in computing technology as part of their national visions. A new breed of incubators, labs, and academic institutions are being established to propel that technology forward on the local level.

Its perhaps no surprise that IDC recently noted that investments in digital transformation and innovation will account for 30 per cent of all IT spending in the Middle East, Turkey, and Africa by 2024, up from 18 per cent just two years ago .

It is our responsibility now to ensure that everyone has access to this computing power. If we are to truly achieve ubiquitous computing, we need to work together to develop a common understanding of three key concepts: necessity, diversification, and investment.

Regarding necessity, we believe that ubiquitous computing will truly be the cornerstone of tomorrows intelligent society. Just as per capita GDP has traditionally been used to measure a countrys economic productivity, per capita computing power will be used to measure the stages of development in smart countries across the Middle East. This can actually be measured in something called gigaflops per second (GFLOPS).

Currently, per capita computing power in major countries ranges from 100 to 2,500 GFLOPS. Even places with high per capita computing power are just in the early stages of their development journey. In the next stage of growth, those nations will see per capita computing power surpass 10,000 GFLOPS. Its an enormous leap by any measure. In many ways, it is equivalent to how electricity formed the foundation for an industrial society with computing power forming the cornerstone of an intelligent society.

The second concept that needs contemplation is that of diversification. Specifically, we must build a diversified power ecosystem that can support the development of the Middle Easts computing industry. This will be essential to meet the needs of different application scenarios and data types which will be far more than what we currently have today.

To do this, we need to innovate within the underlying computing architecture. This will fundamentally require greater collaboration between technology developers, industry regulators, academia, and others to evolve the ecosystem at the speed required. An example of this is the Green Computing Consortium. This is a joint effort between global providers of servers and cloud computing solutions as well as universities and research institutions. This Consortium has brought together a remarkable number of industry resources and experts to help promote the development of a diversified computing power ecosystem.

The third concept we must consider is that of investment. Investment is needed to promote the kind of innovation that boosts economic growth and improves peoples lives. Enhanced computing power is ultimately done by promoting a countrys information and communications technology (ICT) sector, which thereby contributes to innovation in all other sectors. Higher computing power in industries such as education, healthcare, manufacturing, and energy will lead to the improved welfare of nations across the Middle East. For example, it has been estimated that every dollar invested to make manufacturing plants more digital and intelligent can stimulate 10 dollars worth of growth. It therefore makes sense that in the regions many visionary plans for national development, governments have identified investing in ICT infrastructure as essential.

Underpinning all three of these concepts is the theme of cooperation. Cooperation is essential to achieve a world that is enhanced by ubiquitous computing.This knowledge sharing is particularly critical when nurturing a local talent ecosystem in the Middle East, whereby a new generation of aspiring minds can harness the value of this technology pivot.

By strengthening our common understanding of computing necessity, diversification, and investment strategies, we will be better able to contribute to the Middle East governments ambitious visions and national strategies to embrace the bright future of an intelligent society.

Charles Yang is the president of Huawei Middle East

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Why should we embrace a new age of computing power in the Middle East - Gulf Business News

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Most IoT Companies Are Adapting To Edge Computing As A Base – Express Computer

A recent research by Intel on self driving cars or autonomous vehicles has highlighted that a car would be generating around 1GB of data every second data and would also be requiring computing of this data within few seconds. However, cloud network solutions are quite fast enough to receive 1GB of data within a second, by computing possibilities, and also relaying it back.

Also Read:Edge Computing: Everything You Need To Know

If not this then, the time taken to ask for ask for a car to switch on the light, and the time it hits a tree, would leave very little time. Undoubtedly, systems are getting much faster, amid the coming of a new technology thats becoming all pervasive. To second that, Edge Computing is becoming a fast base for almost all IoT devices. This allows users to send in more data to the cloud, and several firms are also trying to put more power in computing devices.

Also, Artificial Intelligence is fast gaining momentum on Edge. Its noted that the concept is not new, given the focus on security and privacy, this becomes especially important as privacy scandals get uncovered. Edge can be calculated on the mobile phone too. Every phone has certain computing capacity and it stores specific data that it doesnt even share with the central server like fingerprints or face scanning.

Previously, there was a fear among people that manufacturing companies would be getting a hold of personal data, and can build further elaborate profiles. Now, the manufacturing companies gave consumers some assurances that the data would always be staying on the phone and would never be making it to Apples or Samsungs database. The decision would be left on the phone as to whether it would decide on encoding and decoding a fingerprint.

Siri and Google are cloud dependent, where any query by the user is being sent to the cloud, where AI determines the question and sends the answer back, which s being relayed to the user.

Amazon had announced a few years ago that it would be creating a custom chip for Echo, as the cloud is not over burdened with ever piece of information, but its calculated and determined within the device.

All of this might seem to be complicated, yet there are companies that are going through an elaborate exercise of understanding that not everything can be transferred to the cloud. In this regard, Edge paves out as the only solution. Here, an autonomous car doesnt need everything to be sent on the cloud. The information of what to hold and what not to can be taken by the computer onboard. For instance, a security cam can decide which information to hold, and what not to.

Also Watch:Key vectors of the future of computing: Hybrid cloud, edge computing and connected devices ~ Vikram K, Sr. Director, Industry Verticals, Hewlett Packard Enterprise

The held information can be transferred to the cloud. This facilitates the fact that computing on Edge can take various forms, but it doesnt talk about having control over data. Also, going forward, computer might give an illusion of choice of downloading updates, whereas Edge Computing doesnt. However, Edge would be needing more solutions, probably a Blockchain.

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Most IoT Companies Are Adapting To Edge Computing As A Base - Express Computer

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