Hi everyone, I'm Ian. I live in Telford and work in retail at Currys. I am very passionate about technology - you could call me a computer geek! I enjoy reading about technology and also working with it - always keeping up to date on the latest news and trying to guess the next trend before it happens.
Friday, 30 December 2016
IBM and Credit Mutuel Arkea beat banking legacy with blockchain
Top 10 virtualisation and storage stories of 2016
Top 10 financial services stories of 2016
Thursday, 29 December 2016
Top 10 desktop, tablet, smartphone and mobile device stories of 2016
Top 10 HR technology stories of 2016
Wednesday, 28 December 2016
UKtech50: Laura Meyer, CIO, Harper Collins
UKtech50: Madhu Bhabuta, director of operational IT, shared services, Mitie
UKtech50: Lee Edwards, CIO, British Library
UKtech50: Stuart McSkimming, CIO, Shelter
UKtech50: Gary Steen, CTO, Talk Talk
UKtech50: John Harris, global CTO, Aimia
UKtech50: Giles Pavey, former chief data scientist, Dunnhumby
UKtech50: Christina Scott, CTO, News UK
UKtech50: Andrew Turner, CIO, Crossrail
UKtech50: Graeme Hackland, IT director, Williams F1
Top 10 information management stories of 2016
Top 10 IT outsourcing stories of 2016
Top 10 retail IT stories in 2016
Tuesday, 27 December 2016
Monday, 26 December 2016
Friday, 23 December 2016
CIO interview: MoD’s DII replacement will feed Government as a Platform
Top 10 networking stories of 2016
Top 10 storage stories of 2016
Top 10 IT careers and skills stories of 2016
Thursday, 22 December 2016
Auticon: the IT consultancy that employs only autistic IT professionals
How to get more from your security budget
Infosec budgets. They are small, they largely come from IT, and CISOs/CSOs often complain they are not nearly big enough.
It’s a constant subject of debate and rightly so; a security budget will indirectly influence how well a CISO protects their business and its assets -- and frankly, how well they do their job (which, in turn, will determine how long they stay in it).
This isn’t meant to be all doom and gloom however; clever CISOs/CSOs and CIOs understand they have to resource more carefully in today’s economically challenging times. For CISOs, that involves using money effectively, and making do with solutions they already have, in order to protect the assets they truly care about. It can also involve upskilling staff, and rolling out cost effective security awareness campaigns.
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(Insider Story)Almost 90% of customers say social media availability affects brand loyalty
Extra £440m to get superfast broadband to hardest-to-reach places in UK
Top 10 state surveillance, investigatory powers and activism stories of 2016
Top 10 business applications stories of 2016
Top 10 software development stories of 2016
Wednesday, 21 December 2016
2017 UK IT budgets show increased CRM and business automation focus
How Shazam handles its data reserves
Hyperscale datacentre growth sees demand for OEM hardware soar, research shows
European court delivers blow to Snoopers’ Charter
Doddle Parcels delivers for Christmas with NoSQL database
Top 10 broadband stories of 2016
Top 10 CW Middle East stories of 2016
Tuesday, 20 December 2016
IT Priorities 2017: Many ANZ CIOs don’t expect IT budget increase
IT Priorities 2017: Quarter of Asean CIOs expect big IT budget increase
Midland News Association backs shared services for improved business agility
Digital Realty sets sights on loosening Equinix’s grip on global colocation market
IT error means 420,000 Scottish taxpayers not informed of new rates
Top 10 women and diversity stories of 2016
Monday, 19 December 2016
HMRC slammed over tax probe into Newcastle datacentre campus investors
BMW runs first Innovation Lab for financial services division
Consumers prepare for Christmas broadband misery
Windows cracks under data access demands
What does Tech Nordic Advocates network look like a year on?
Bright Little Labs launches first book to encourage kids into Stem
Review of 2016: Top 10 CW Benelux articles
Top 10 CIO interviews of 2016
Sunday, 18 December 2016
Could blockchain revolutionise the Middle East?
Friday, 16 December 2016
Ofcom says 5% of UK properties still lack sufficient broadband access
Oracle Q2 2016-17 results: cloud growth but overall revenue flat
Case study: German protein supplier Gelita uses MDM to boost global workforce mobility
2017 IT Priorities: Benelux IT leaders least confident of budget increase
Amadeus turns to NoSQL to answer complex travel questions
Telecoms: Opportunities and challenges in 2017
8 big data predictions for 2017
Market research and advisory firm Ovum estimates the big data market will grow from $1.7 billion in 2016 to $9.4 billion by 2020. As the market grows, enterprise challenges are shifting, skills requirements are changing, and the vendor landscape is morphing. The coming year promises to be a busy one for big data pros. Here are some predictions from industry watchers and technology players.
1. Data scientist demand will wane
Demand for data scientists is softening, suggests Ovum in its report on big data trends. The research firm cites data from Indeed.com that shows flat demand for data scientists over the past four years. At the same time, colleges and universities are turning out a greater number of graduates with data science credentials.
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(Insider Story)