Very interesting report, @FireMon. Thanks for sharing it. We hope to significantly facilitate security orchestration with #Ansible Security Automation > FireMon’s 2019 Report Reveals Lack of Automation as Underlying Security Challenge in DT Initiatives https://t.co/ByYB2A4WO9
In my career, I met dozens of startups that had to relocate HQ to the US to secure VC funding. Shame. I’ve been a big fan and used it for years > Messaging app Wire confirms $8.2M raise, responds to privacy concerns after moving holding company to the US https://t.co/1t25rwkiTX
One of the biggest mistakes I’ve seen in the early days of cloud computing (when I was in Gartner) was believing that if you’d build a private cloud, LOBs would come. Raise your hand if you have the same problem today, 10y later, with different technologies.
Just 3y ago we said that #AI would become a great equalizer, giving 5ppl startups the opportunity to compete against big vendors. Turns out that it’s not true: the cost of hiring data scientists, acquiring enormous datasets, and using cloud GPU for model finetuning is prohibitive
I’m a huge fan of @Citymapper and over the years I consistently preferred it to @GoogleMaps. However, disappointingly, in the last few months the former has become less reliable in reporting the buses arrival and 1000s diversions in #London. I’m now using the latter more and more
There’s more marketing in industry research that you could ever imagine. In fact, what academic research lacks to have a deeper impact is professional marketing.
The buzzword now is #automation. Everything is “automation for use case X” or “automation for persona A”. The thing is, it always was (I started talking about it in 2004, but it’s older). The difference now is that, collectively, a few IT marketers have decided that time is right