EZINE:
We search back through the Computer Weekly archives held at The National Museum of Computing to present what was happening in IT over the past five decades.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, the former CEO of bed retailer Dreams explains how digital, data and communication helped turn round a failing company. The UK government has a new digital strategy – but it all seems rather familiar. And we talk to the tech firms trialling a four-day working week. Read the issue now.
EBOOK:
In this software age, is there any role left for hardware? In our three-part guide, our experts' response is a resounding, "yes." Read now to learn why hardware is still an essential networking choice in terms of scale, reliability, and performance.
EGUIDE:
In this e-guide, learn how you can properly architect your flash storage to ramp-up for NVMe, as well as how you can overcome the risk you'd take by consolidating your storage for use with NVMe.
EZINE:
This month's Modern Infrastructure e-zine examines how two abstraction technologies are being used together and how some open source innovators are even latching onto this best-of-both-worlds idea in an effort to better merge containers and VMs.
EGUIDE:
Access this e-guide to get a strategy in place to ease your transition to HCI and reduce your hardware needs, as well as time spent working on storage and hypervisors.
WHITE PAPER:
Access this white paper to learn about a storage system that uses real-time compression and SSD technology to boost storage performance. Read on to learn more about how the benefits of this storage system provide a strong ROI, and how your organization could cut costs.
EGUIDE:
Fixing mistakes in a data center after it's running is challenging, expensive, and operationally dangerous. This exclusive e-guide provides a guide to data center design to help you properly establish requirements from the beginning and details what experts are saying about the evolving data center layout.
EZINE:
BYOD in ANZ: Benefits, challenges and IT headaches Employees are demanding – and businesses are enabling – the use of personal computing devices in the workplace