10 hidden features of Google office apps

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CIO Enterprise Applications

Oct 10, 2016
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Can Facebook really do enterprise collaboration right?

Facebook is about to enter the business collaboration market, and though the space is crowded, the opportunity for Facebook at Work is clear — but the company must earn trust in the enterprise. Read More

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10 hidden features of Google office apps
The Windows weakness no one mentions: speech recognition
How Apple plans to make iCloud, Siri, and iTunes better
Security for your collaborative software
Salesforce will buy Krux to expand behavioral tracking capabilities
Virtual assistant faceoff: Alexa, Cortana, Google Assistant and Siri
Salesforce takes another swing at Microsoft with chatbot building tools

White Paper: Red Hat

Bridging the Gap between Cloud-Native and Conventional Enterprise Applications

Adopt new technologies and maintain existing systems. Many of our customers are struggling with decisions about when to adopt cloud-native architectures and whether or not to continue to invest in modernizing conventional systems. In this paper, IDC analysts respond to Red Hat's questions about these challenges. Read More

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10 hidden features of Google office apps

Google’s cloud-based office apps, officially called Google Apps for Work, are frequently updated with necessary improvements to their feature set and UI. Here are 10 useful elements that have been added recently which may have been overlooked by end users. Read More

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INSIDER

The Windows weakness no one mentions: speech recognition

Microsoft has buried dictation capabilities within Windows for a decade. Isn't it time that Microsoft put speech recognition front and center as a productivity assistant for Microsoft Office? Read More

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How Apple plans to make iCloud, Siri, and iTunes better

Apple wants to move its cloud services teams under one roof as a bet on the future of the company. Read More

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INSIDER

Security for your collaborative software

There’s a gaping hole in your security infrastructure right now. The front door is open, the side window is ajar, and there’s an open safe with a neon sign saying “steal my data” in flashing lights. Read More

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Salesforce will buy Krux to expand behavioral tracking capabilities

Salesforce.com has agreed to buy user data management platform Krux, potentially allowing businesses to process even more data in their CRM systems. Read More

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Virtual assistant faceoff: Alexa, Cortana, Google Assistant and Siri

A lot can change in a year. Just ask Amazon's Alexa, Apple's Siri, Google Assistant and Microsoft's Cortana virtual assistants. We posed the same questions to all four in the summer of 2015 and again in fall 2016, with notable results. Read More

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Salesforce takes another swing at Microsoft with chatbot building tools

Companies have another set of tools at their disposal to build chatbots. Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff announced a new LiveMessage service that's aimed at connecting his company's Service Cloud with messaging services like Facebook Messenger and SMS. e Read More

White Paper: IBM Corporation

Gartner Critical Capabilities for Horizontal Portals

Selecting horizontal portal software is increasingly difficult because of the expanding scope and increasing overlap among products and vendors. IT application leaders will have to understand the capabilities that matter most in support of their desired business outcomes. Read More

State of the CIO 2017

What projects are CIOs prioritizing in the year ahead? Where are they spending those precious IT dollars? These are the questions that will be answered (with your help!) in our 16th annual State of the CIO survey. Make your voice heard!

Enter the brave new world of Windows 10 license activation

Historically, hardware upgrades on Windows PCs that involved major changes (new motherboard and/or CPU, for example) required a phone call to Microsoft to reactivate the Windows license. Microsoft has altered its licensing policy to cut down on calls. Here’s what happened when we tested this hypothesis.

ERP heads for the cloud

Cloud-based ERP will eventually rule, and on-premises software is destined for legacy status. How can IT ensure a smooth transition?

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