Mobile traffic currently makes up 10% of global Internet traffic, as shown in the chart, and next year more people will use mobile phones than PCs to get online, according to Gartner. Purchases made on mobile devices amounted to $6.7 billion in the U.S. last year, or about 8% of total online sales, and are expected to nearly double to $11.6 billion this year. By 2015, U.S. mobile sales are forecast to reach $31 billion.
The cloud computing services market is expected to hit $68.4 billion by 2020 and a corporate "no-cloud" policy will be as rare as a "no-internet" policy is today, according to Gartner Inc. Whether it be public, private, hybrid or a mix of various models, the use of cloud computing has expanded into almost every organization and new applications continue to evolve.
Eager customers were lined up outside Apple stores this weekend to get a hold of the new iPad after it was released on Friday. Was this be another home run product for the company?
Public cloud acceptance by the Enterprise means more not fewer challenges... Today in London Gartner held day one of its two day Data Centre, Infrastrucuture and Operations Management Summit. Here is what we learned this morning: 1) Public cloud acceptance by enterprise means more not fewer challenges 2) Asked if security breaches will slow public cloud adoption the consensus was that the answer was no.
Remote and hybrid work settings are here to stay for the near future, and they pose a challenge to established corporate practices. Organizations can adapt to dispersed workforces and solve related issues by implementing cloud-based solutions.
Machine Learning (ML) systems are complex, and this complexity increases the chances of failure as well. Knowing what may go wrong is critical for developing robust machine learning systems.
For supply chain managers, the COVID-19 situation has served as a wake-up call. Companies have been focusing on minimizing redundancy in sourcing for years in order to lower fixed costs and increase efficiency. Greater efficiency, on the other hand, comes at the sacrifice of flexibility and effectiveness-a trade-off that the pandemic's supply chain interruptions have brutally demonstrated.
Technical debt-related problems cannot all be solved via DevOps. However, it can monitor code quality, decrease bugs, and discover debt early, reducing the buildup of debt and aiding in keeping it below a manageable threshold.