Here are the highlights of my Day 1 at HPE Discover 2016.
HPE Discover 2016 – Day 0
Here are the highlights of my Day 1 at HPE Discover 2016.
Since 2015 the general rule of thumb to predict total number of internet-connected devices per user was thought to average 3, but this appears to be changing once again.
Cost-conscious enterprises—in other words, most enterprises—recognize that moving their UNIX-based applications to a Linux platform can save them some serious coin.
The cloud presents a new landscape for building out IT infrastructure; this new landscape can be a real challenge for enterprises. Instead of thinking in strictly in terms of cost, CIOs need to also think in terms of applications, service levels and governance.
Okay, so maybe your worst day isn’t as bad as being chased by bloodthirsty zombies or crazed biker gangs, but working in a post-cloud IT environment can sometimes feel like a post-apocalyptic place where everything is turned upside down.
If cloud technology has a silver lining, then much of that silver is ending up in the pockets of Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and other “big” cloud providers.
For years, moving big, mission-critical workloads into a virtualized environment has been deemed a mission impossible. According to conventional wisdom, virtualized systems simply weren’t big enough or reliable enough to justify the move. But that’s not the case anymore.
Enterprises like to talk about their data as though it’s locked securely in a tight vault. The reality of business data, however, is a lot more nebulous.
Retail businesses stand to benefit immensely from Cloud technology, and not only in terms of what it can do to boost application performance during seasonal spikes.
Earlier this year, the Washington Post wrote an article that likely caught few healthcare chief security officers (CSOs) by surprise, entitled 2015 Is Already the Year of the Health-Care Hack—And It’s Only Going to Get Worse.