Stay updated with breaking news from ஏரின் அம்கல்ராய். Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
SHARE As businesses take stock after the panic of overnight transformation, they are seeing a post-COVID business world that looks very different from its pre-pandemic incarnation. Remote operations and the need to rapidly respond to the changing economic climate have made cloud computing essential for modern business survival. Adapting means adopting hybrid cloud. But stepping smoothly from a legacy or pure cloud environment into one where applications and data are dispersed across multiple clouds, on-premises, and even in devices out there at the edge, is a hard task. This is the backdrop of IBM’s Think 2021 event. Scheduled to be held virtually in a series of sessions, workshops, learning opportunities and networking sessions, the conference is taking place May 11 in the Americas and May 12 for Africa, the Asia-Pacific region, Europe and the Middle East. With a focus on success in the digital economy, the conference will spotlight real-life use cases for hybrid cl ....
SHARE The business world is changing. Has changed. The COVID-19 pandemic drove companies to transform three times faster in 2020 than in previous years, with 66% shifting to more cloud-based business activities. As enterprise clients undergo rapid change in a turbulent business environment, they need guidance. They may find it at the upcoming IBM Think 2021 virtual event, which promises to teach attendees how to “navigate change through transformation, automation and modernization.” Business resiliency is the number one attribute required to thrive in the post-pandemic economy, according to market intelligence gathered by International Data Corp. Cloud provides the flexibility to scale operations up and down, allowing businesses to adapt fast to market changes. Add artificial intelligence and machine learning to the cloud model, and the ability to analyze incoming data provides a business with the insights it needs to make course corrections and stay competitiv ....
Ellis Act evictions targeted in California Legislature: New bill would sharply limit them sfchronicle.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sfchronicle.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
‘New wave of shopping’ INDEPENDENT PHOTO BY KEN FARVER | Scott LeRette (seated), Locatile’s chief operations officer, conducts a training session for the owners and an employee of Woodstock’s Apple Creek Flowers, while Locatile’s chief executive officer Dan Hartke looks on. Others pictured are (clockwise from left) Locatile’s chief marketing officer, Erin McElroy; Apple Creek employee Kim Hermann’, and Apple Creek co-owners Wendy Legare and Lynn Nattress. Local + Mercantile = Locatile: online selling method for local stores Subscribe or Login to continue reading this quality article by The Woodstock Independant Start a free trial, then pay only $1 per week after ....
Virgil s Sea Room permanently closes, the latest loss among S.F. s endangered queer bars FacebookTwitterEmail Lila Thirkield, owner of Virgil’s Sea Room, outside her previous bar, the Lexington Club.Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle 2015 The San Francisco queer bar Virgil’s Sea Room has permanently closed after eight years in business, the latest in a string of queer-bar closures in the city. The reason for the closure was simple, said owner Lila Thirkield. At the beginning of the pandemic, she promised herself she’d call it quits if her personal financial losses related to the bar’s expenses crossed a certain threshold. “I kept hoping things would get better before we hit that number,” she said. “But I hit the number.” ....