PODCAST:
In this week's episode of the Computer Weekly Downtime Upload podcast, Caroline Donnelly and Brian McKenna are joined by Cliff Saran to discuss the end of support of Windows 7, IR35 in the private sector, Will Carling and AWS in respect of the Guinness Six Nations Rugby Union tournament, and IT at Davos.
TECHNICAL ARTICLE:
This article describes how game developers can use the power of CSS3 to design common game indicators, such as health, magic, ammo, money, etc.
EGUIDE:
In this e-guide, learn how Microsoft is dominating the Software-as-a-Service space thanks to its strength in collaboration software and how the new generation of collaboration software could be stoking communication overload. Also, check out our chart comparing Slack, Microsoft Teams and Spark.
EGUIDE:
Auto Trader is the UK's biggest online marketplace for new and used car sales. Its head of infrastructure sets out how cloud, containers and microservices will help reinforce its market-leading position in the years to come
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we examine the impact of climate change on datacentres as potential victims and contributors to the problem. We look at the rise of voice channels and how IT leaders can use the technology for better customer experience. And we ask what lessons must be learned from Ecuador's citizens' data breach. Read the issue now.
EGUIDE:
Within 20 years technology could automate as many as two thirds of middle-ranking job, meaning employers will find it difficult to find the people with the high-level skills they need. This changing demographic has led to a spurt of technological innovation in Human Resources as companies gear up for the recruitment wars that lie ahead.
EGUIDE:
The question of productivity has become an inevitable consideration since the pandemic made home working commonplace. In this 16-page buyer's guide, Computer Weekly looks at how it's being maintained, the advantages a remote workforce brings to business and the hybrid model being embraced by workers.
EGUIDE:
In this e-guide: HR software had long been a relatively backward zone of enterprise software before the Covid-19 pandemic. It had been catching up, as organisations applied digital approaches drawn from customer experience to employee experience, encompassing the journey from recruitment, through working and learning, to moving up or moving on.