12 programming tricks to cut your cloud bill
Nothing lifts a development team’s spirits like watching an application go viral. It’s a wonderful feeling–at least, until the monthly cloud bill comes in. Some
Nothing lifts a development team’s spirits like watching an application go viral. It’s a wonderful feeling–at least, until the monthly cloud bill comes in. Some
As AI technology advances and more organizations are implementing machine learning operations (MLOps), companies are looking for ways to speed up processes. This is especially
Hazelcast is best known as a developer of in-memory data grid (IMDB) technology, a RAM-loving layer for speeding up operational applications. But with the Hazelcast
The world of data is moving and shaking again. Ever since Hadoop came around, people were offloading workloads from their data warehouses to the new
Enterprises are being deluged with real-time data from a variety of sources, including web and mobile apps, IoT, market data and transactions. In theory, this
It’s not hard to estimate what it would cost to purchase a certain amount of cloud-based compute and storage capacity — after all, vendors publicly
Second generation blockchains were presented as being faster, cheaper, and more scalable than Bitcoin. Third generation chains (basically anything that came after Ethereum) promised even
Data science has been the golden nugget last years. Swiftly produce results in a matter of days, is what speaks to the mind of people
In-memory computing (IMC) is becoming a fixture in the data center, and Gartner predicts that by 2020, IMC will be incorporated into most mainstream products.
Intel has made several acquisitions and revamped its roadmap for deep learning. The new portfolio extends from Knights Mill and Lake Crest (Nervana) for training
A few weeks back one of my favourite analysts, Merv Adrian tweeted the following: ““Just move it to memory and it will speed up.” Not so
Cloud is the “new normal” and the use of business intelligence is increasing in organizations of all sizes. But does that mean you’ll be using