IT leaders share top line predictions for 2020
With 2020 just around the corner, a handful of IT leaders dished out some pivotal tech predictions they say will have an impact on the IT and business landscape next year.
With 2020 just around the corner, a handful of IT leaders dished out some pivotal tech predictions they say will have an impact on the IT and business landscape next year.
Leading-edge technologies, including intent-based storage management, promise to change the way IT organisations store, manage and use data.
Financial services firm, William Buck, was on a mission to get the firm’s IT house in order - and put a stop to the ‘revolving door’ that was cycling between outsourcing and insourcing management of its IT environment.
Microsoft has announced changes to its OneDrive storage service that will let consumers protect some or even all of their cloud-stored documents.
The Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC) has found a large number of unprotected network, database and storage services hosted on Australian Internet Protocol (IP) address ranges.
“The Australian Web Archive [AWA] is one of the biggest in the world. And when we say big, we mean enormous,” says director general of the National Library of Australia, Dr Marie-Louise Ayres.
Tech chiefs gathered at Sydney's O Bar and Dining to discuss their storage challenges and the move towards the cloud. The luncheon was sponsored by IBM and Meridian IT.
IBM's Distributed Deep Learning spreads model training across any number of hardware nodes—as long as they’re IBM nodes.
HPE has struck a settlement with the ATO over the “unprecedented” failure of its storage hardware in late 2016.
If Amazon's competitors think they can win customers with better pricing, they should think again.
The ATO has revealed it is working with its technology partner, HPE, to find a "way forward" following the failure of storage hardware last year.
Townsville City Council and James Cook University will this week be briefing potential operators on their planned North Queensland Regional Data Centre (NQRDC).
Australia's Commissioner of Taxation has suggested that HPE has “failed” to reliably provide the ATO with its contracted services.
Animal Logic, the Australian-based digital studio behind movies such as Babe, The Great Gatsby and Happy Feet, knows a thing or two about data management.
HPE has launched an internal investigation into the cause of the hardware failure behind the unprecedented system outage which hit the ATO on 12 December.