Latest from Asha Barbaschow
-
3 main inhibitors to IoT adoption in the enterprise
VMware's Internet of Things CTO discusses the three main concerns an enterprise should consider before heading down an IoT path.
-
Voice in the enterprise: 3 current use cases
Weeding through the hype, Gartner offers three use cases for voice technology that the enterprise can actually use right now, covering Salesforce Einstein and Amazon Alexa.
-
Advocating for women entrepreneurs: Dell proposes 3 areas for change
The company believes these three key learnings, if supported by local governments, can add up to big changes for women-owned businesses globally.
-
How Victoria Police handled the Bourke Street incident on social media
Victoria Police's head of reactive online communications details how his team delivered real-time emergency services through social listening.
-
How to implement Enterprise DevOps: 5 steps
Enterprise DevOps is the perfect mix between traditional IT and DevOps, standardizing the way teams operate within an organization.
-
Eight reasons more CEOs will be fired over cybersecurity breaches
Security is everyone's problem, but CEOs should make sure their organisation doesn't block its success. Gartner offers eight situations for CEOs to avoid if a breach occurs within their organisation.
-
Bridging the gap between IT and business the Swinburne University way
The university has updated its HR platform with Workday and will soon go live with a learning management system from Canvas, as it updates its tech and redefines where the IT shop sits.
-
Why Australia is quickly developing a technology-based human rights problem
Human rights advocates have called on the Australian government to protect the rights of all in an era of change, saying tech should serve humanity, not exclude the most vulnerable members of society.
-
Service NSW ditches Microsoft for Google
Service NSW switched to Chrome OS to run its customer-service kiosks in 2015, and now it's replacing head office Microsoft kit with Chromebooks and Google's G Suite.
-
How NAB is taking Australia's skills shortage into its own hands
The National Australia Bank is seeking 2,000 tech-focused staff and sending more than 2,000 of its existing staff through training provided by AWS to combat the looming skills shortage.