Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella touts ‘tech intensity’ formula to Kiwi firms
In his second visit to New Zealand, Microsoft CEO outlines factors to consider as organisations increasingly tap data and AI to transform their businesses
In his second visit to New Zealand, Microsoft CEO outlines factors to consider as organisations increasingly tap data and AI to transform their businesses
We compare the hybrid cloud solutions from the big three public cloud providers and beyond.
“Some of the examples we’ve seen have created an impact that reaches far beyond one organisation, transforming people’s wellbeing as well as our natural environment,” says Sarah Bowden, Microsoft New Zealand One Commercial Partner Director.
Join forces to help Kiwi firms on their digital transformation programmes
“The outcome is a robust platform designed with 24x7 uptime and the ability to grow and adapt as the needs of the co-operative evolve,” says CEO Wayne McNee
Microsoft Corp said on Monday it was investing $1 billion in San Francisco-based OpenAI and that the two had formed a multi-year partnership to develop artificial intelligence supercomputing technologies on Microsoft's Azure cloud computing service.
Says direct connections bypass the public internet and make cloud performance fast, reliable and private.
Gartner lists key trends in PaaS and platform architecture for application leaders to consider as they decide on technology investments for the year ahead
Web defacements, data exfiltration and ransomware were the biggest concerns
Adopting the cloud can be done safely and effectively, but it is a continual learning experience, writes Lee Atchison of New Relic
IT managed services and custom software development among top earners
“We’re on a mission to revolutionise the way customers interact with us and turn insurance industry norms upside down,” says Tower CEO Richard Harding.
The ICT team at St John talks about the steps leading to the delivery of the electronic Patient Report Form (ePRF), which has now been used over a million times by ambulance services across New Zealand.
Old-world businesses are reinventing themselves, says technology futurist Chris Riddell.
Or, why transforming legacy systems is a challenge but not impossible