Windows 10 is making too many PCs obsolete
Windows 10 will be supported until Oct. 14, 2025 — unless your computer has a Clover Trail CPU. Then you’re out of luck.
Windows 10 will be supported until Oct. 14, 2025 — unless your computer has a Clover Trail CPU. Then you’re out of luck.
The nagware announcements are gone, but Microsoft, along with AMD and Intel, has made darn sure you’ll be running Windows 10 and not Windows 7 on the next PC you buy.
Strike a balance: Hear more on how visionary leaders in the exciting and fast-moving world of technology balance steady approaches to address realistic challenges with how and where to push the envelope, explore what’s possible, and leverage innovative new technology to drive change.
Digital transformation is now a must, not an option. Businesses that don’t embark on the journey, and fast, will be left behind. One of the key differentiators between those who succeed at digital transformation, and those who simply come along for the ride, is the person who initiates and leads the change.
Columnist Rob Enderle writes that if executives would learn from mistakes rather than focus on blame when things go south, acquisitions might not always crash and burn.
It is a simple business query that should elicit a clear answer but in reality, many business owners simply don’t take the time to really understand their own finances. Yet it can mean the difference between success or failure.
Business owners are constantly warned “disrupt or be disrtrupted.” But what if it wasn’t about simply disruption, and more so the market we find ourselves in is the natural evolution of business in a data-driven world. After all, the business goals remain the same: profitability; delighted customers; and effective cost management.
2015 saw demand for ICT skills skyrocket, while the talent pool supply shrivelled in comparison. Australian companies are facing the increasingly complex task of finding high-quality tech talent in a very competitive market, and this competition is only expected to become fiercer over the next five years.
Entrepreneurs might know their product backwards and have business degrees from the best universities (or not). But few have a clue about getting their message out to the media. We asked Lauren Clancy from Max Australia to talk about her industry and give pointers on what PR can do for you.
Though hyper-converged solutions are currently very popular, columnist Rob Enderle writes that despite how flexible and powerful they can be, there are issues.
IBM may have a great product in Verse, but columnist Rob Enderle writes that if Big Blue can’t figure out how to market this powerful email offering, it will never rise to its potential.
With the IoT, we desperately need a common vision of a tomorrow and a critical mass of folks to believe enough to make happen, writes columnist Rob Enderle.
The IoT market is being hyped for a second time. But perseverance is a virtue. The pieces of the puzzle are very slowly falling in place.
In a consulting project, the customer is always in charge, right? Not so fast.
Columnist Rob Enderle describes 2015 as yet another year when stupid decisions were the norm. He would like to see folks finally learning from their mistakes, but he won’t be holding his breath.
Today, if you want to be hired as a C-level executive in a major global enterprise, you are going to have to be capable of delivering high-growth and high-margin revenue streams. In short, you are going to have to be entrepreneurial.
There is a better way to do acquisitions than the often-used Dr. Frankenstein method, writes columnist Rob Enderle. Here’s a look at how Dell does it differently and successfully.
From containers to NoSQL to Spark, here are the IT trends you can expect to persist next year.
As mobile and consumer technology alters our lives, new coinages bubble up in the social networks to capture and express how people live. Here are 10 new words you need to know in order to describe the culture of Silicon Valley as well as the culture changes the valley is bringing into existence.
iPad fans and iPad haters have one thing in common: They aren't buying a whole lot of iPads at the moment.