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April 14, 2020
Whether innovating for survival or planning for a post-pandemic comeback, CIOs may find conditions ripe to challenge the status quo, remove barriers and make change Read more â¶
DDR5 memory promises a significant speed boost
Patch Tuesday here. Get your system locked down.
AWS makes COVID-19 datasets freely available
UPDATE 4-10: How enterprise networking is changing with a work-at-home workforce
How to use anonymous types in C#
5 steps to building an effective disaster preparedness plan
IoT roundup: Tech companies step up to help fight against COVID-19
Taking advantage of building blocks and streamlined models enables developers to build solutions in less time. Read more â¶
Memory was becoming the drag on performance in the many-core era, so DDR5 plans to address that. Read more â¶
DEALPOST
Unlock nearly 80 hours of expert training for under $60. Read more â¶
With all the problems weâre having, the last thing you need is a bum patch throwing your system (or your family's systems) for a loop. Take a couple of minutes right now and make sure you have Windows automatic updating set to pause. Tell your friends, too. Read more â¶
AWS COVID-19 data lake makes regularly updated and curated COVID-19 datasets available to anyone with access to an AWS account Read more â¶
As the coronavirus spreads, public and private companies as well as government entities are requiring employees to work from home, putting unforeseen strain on all manner of networking technologies and causing bandwidth and security concerns. Read more â¶
Take advantage of anonymous types in C# to create and instantiate types that have read-only properties without having to declare the type beforehand Read more â¶
Disasters come in many forms, but they all create disruptions in the workforce, networks and partner ecosystem. Here's how CISOs can prepare security teams for the next one. Read more â¶
This month, we look at some of the ways the IoT sector is helping to combat the spread of the novel coronavirus. Read more â¶
Just as pilots use VR-guided simulators to rehearse their flights, the same technology can reconstruct a patientâs 2D medical imaging into a 3-dimensional, 360-degree model. Read more â¶
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