Computer Weekly – 21 July 2015: How the internet of things could save the honeybee

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Computer Weekly – 21 July 2015: How the internet of things could save the honeybee

In this week’s Computer Weekly, with bee populations being decimated, we find out how the internet of things could save the honeybee and secure crop production. Amid fears that artificial intelligence could end human innovation, we hear from the experts on AI about the reality. And we examine the challenges of delivering quality customer service in a multi-channel world. Read the issue now.

Could the internet of things hold the key to saving the honeybee from annihilation?

Gemalto is developing an ambitious machine-to-machine communications project, with agricultural science firm Eltopia and the University of Minnesota, to save the honeybee (and humans) from extinction.

The rise of artificial intelligence – and its threat to humanity

General-purpose artificial intelligence could eventually mark the end of human innovation – what might this mean for enterprise IT?

Managing your customer’s multi-channel service experience

Customers expect the same levels of service however they contact you – by phone, in-store, on the web or from mobile. We examine how to deliver the best multi-channel experience.

Financial applications in the cloud are multiplying

CFOs in Europe are embracing cloud-based financial applications following improvements in security and delivery.

Case study - Bet365: A company betting on its own technology innovations

While many sites make great use of agile development, run in the cloud and are built on Java and JavaScript, Bet365 is doing IT its own way.

CIO interview: Law firm rolls out IT strategy based on single platforms worldwide

International law firm Ashurst’s head of IT Bruna Pellicci talks about the firm’s global plan for its core business areas.

Buyer’s guide to log management - part 3 of 3: Making the most of logs

Most IT systems produce log files to help developers identify how they behave, and network administrators can use the data from these to automate security systems.

Opinion: EU General Data Protection Regulation comes into sharper focus

European authorities have reiterated their resolve to reach an agreement by the end of 2015 on a new data protection law that will reach beyond Europe, says William Long, partner at law firm Sidley Austin.

Vendor:
TechTarget ComputerWeekly.com
Posted:
Feb 8, 2021
Published:
Jul 17, 2015
Format:
PDF
Type:
Ezine
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