Gig workers allow companies to be more flexible in terms of scaling up or down fast − an essential survival tactic as competition and demand for digital skills intensify.
Networking obstacles can often keep farms from adopting automation, or relegate them to a low level of automation without the ability to scale their operations.
Step-by-step levels of automation serve as a roadmap to the applications, functionality and agricultural benefits of introducing precision farming techniques.
With data having become the ‘new oil’, it may be time to use a different term for data governance when having discussions with business.
As DevOps teams become more comfortable with the ability to use monitoring tools to react to problems and issues, they can expand what they do with these tools.
Once the biggest perceived disadvantages are considered and negated, there is no denying that cloud computing is the way of the future.
The ultimate vision for precision farming is a solution that uses connected technology to simultaneously address all of a farmer’s pain points.
Both acquisitions and de-mergers present companies with an opportunity to revisit their cyber security landscape.
As companies and government entities speed up digital transformation initiatives in the wake of COVID-19, many are looking to adopt new ownership models for their IT.
As change in the emerging “new normal” world is unpredictable, organisations are on a quest for more agile networks, rejecting the outdated tech associated with legacy networks.
Digitisation steps in to fast-track supply chain transformation, as automating the process from procurement to payment can speed up the process dramatically.
The democratisation of payments through the tech innovation of buy now, pay later enables more consumers to choose interest-free financing for their shopping.
A look at what goes into the making of a successful automation journey and the outcomes businesses can expect to achieve, particularly when it comes to the workforce.