How to implement a successful security plan in 5 steps
Are you starting a security plan from scratch? Check here the essential steps to make it a successful one.
Are you starting a security plan from scratch? Check here the essential steps to make it a successful one.
Simon Burson of Paymark explains how a technology deployment can shift the perception of the business to the security function.
With the convergence of devices, bots, things and people, organisations will need to master two dimensions of mobility, reports Gartner.
As cloud technology evolved, it is the apps which are now disrupting the activities of centralised IT.
Why enterprises have much to gain from the widespread adoption of smartphones and tablets.
Lists four best practices to overcome this looming challenge
"New Zealand is traditionally ahead of the curve and in my opinion, digital models that are gaining traction revolve around the cloud."
The Wanganui District Council is mobilising its workforce and creating a level of frontline service after partnering with Spark Digital.
Nearly 40 per cent of large companies, including many in the Fortune 500, aren’t taking the right precautions to secure the mobile apps they build for customers.
Businesses should brace themselves to deal with a wave of wearables in the workplace, with people almost certain to use the Apple Watch for work tasks according to Telsyte analyst Rodney Gedda.
Unlike most technology trends, the Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) phenomenon is tied closely to culture and norms. As a result, BYOD adoption varies widely country by country, as a recent Dell study on global workforce trends shows.
IT manager Simon Gutschlag takes the perspectives of a biologist, an environmentalist and a technology evangelist at New Zealand King Salmon.
Bring your own device (BYOD) has become an accepted practice in business. Gartner predicts that by 2017, half of all employers will require workers to supply their own devices for work. Yet there are mixed reports about whether BYOD actually saves businesses money.
At a New York banking firm, a couple of executives lost their jobs because they didn't report lost phones within 24 hours, in violation of a draconian BYOD policy. At a California law firm, the CIO knew every time one of its lawyers slipped away to play golf, exposed by watchful BYOD management software.
The mobile revolution has transformed the ways in which individuals interact within and beyond their organisation, getting more done faster for competitive & operational advantage.