Sure, real-time data is now 'democratized,' but it's only a start
Many companies' infrastructures aren't ready for real-time data analytics. And neither are the companies themselves.
Many companies' infrastructures aren't ready for real-time data analytics. And neither are the companies themselves.
Introduced as a pilot project more than a year ago, Singapore Trade Data Exchange is pitched as a centralised platform that streamlines data flows across a fragmented global supply chain.
Business digitalization is accelerating globally and Huawei's Green Intelligent Optix Network is leading the way.
Data collected from health screenings and temperature checks need security protections.
It was hard to top last year’s demonstration of the new Microsoft 365 experienced powered by the Microsoft Graph. The focus this year shifted to how the graph could break down application and device silos to make everyday applications more user-centric.
AWS, Google, Neo4j, Oracle. These were just some of the vendors represented in the W3C workshop on web standardization for graph data, and what transcribed is bound to boost adoption of the hottest segment in data management: Graph.
An open-source database that is resilient, supports automatic geo-scaling on-premise and in the cloud, and SQL. CockroachDB already is all that. Next in the roadmap: Analytics, with Hybrid Transactional Analytical Processing.
With customers increasingly interested in cloud deployments, OpenText is bringing its tools and managed services to Google Cloud.
Results from the latest Tech Pro Research survey reveal why companies are choosing to implement SDN, why they're choosing not to, and what happens after the implementation is done.
Expected to be operational by December 2016, the 208-megawatt wind farm is projected to be able to power more than 61,000 U.S. homes in a year.