EGUIDE:
Inside this report, read more about the findings from the 2022 TechTarget/Computer Weekly's IT priorities study, as well as insights on how ASEAN enterprises are directing their IT investments and what are the main observations and trends for ASEAN in 2022.
EZINE:
Dutch banks have decided to work together in the fight against money laundering. Globally, only about 3% of money laundering activity is detected and stopped.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we discuss the challenges of running global IT in the world of copper mining. We look at how tech vendors are adapting their products to meet the lockdown demands of working from home. And we examine how zero-trust methods can help secure container technology. Read the issue now.
EZINE:
Thanks to an app developed in Sweden, drones can get life-saving equipment to heart-attack victims before emergency services can arrive on the scene, potentially increasing patient survival rates. Also in this issue, read about a Swedish bank's time-saving robots.
EZINE:
In this issue, read about how and why one public sector IT professional in the Netherlands, Victor Gevers, took a whole year out to hack ethically and, in the process, unearthed about 1,000 vulnerabilities.
BOOK:
Download this sample chapter from ITF+ CompTIA IT Fundamentals to learn how to approach IT problems using a standard troubleshooting method, how to troubleshoot common computer problems and more.
EZINE:
In this issue of CW Middle East, read how the UAE and the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company have recognised that things will change as oil and gas resources dwindle. Digital technology, such as artificial intelligence, has been identified as a key driver for future industries.
EGUIDE:
In this e-guide, discover how cloud computing continues to change the IT outsourcing industry, how Indian staff are making up a larger proportion of the workforces at large western companies, and find out how IT is disrupting the legal firms that support the outsourcing industry.
EZINE:
According to an academic study in the Netherlands, only one in seven Dutch people report a cyber crime to the police when it happens - feeling it is better to sort the problem out themselves because they don't think the police will do anything.