Laden...
May 01, 2020
Learn to use the tools Zoom gives you to secure online conferences. Read more â¶
Supply-chain woes put the brakes on hyperscale data centers
Industrial robots could 'eat metal' to power themselves
Gatsby JS stands on the shoulders of thousands
Wi-Fi 6E explained, and when to adopt Wi-Fi 6
Bayer Crop Science leverages image analytics for precision agriculture
TypeScript 3.9 slashes compile times for packages
Windows 10 update (and retirement) calendar: Mark these dates
Read Gartner's COVID-19 remote workforce impact report. Read more â¶
Major cloud providers are having trouble getting basic components for new data centers so they've put off some construction plans, but they have enough surplus capacity already to ride out the problem. Read more â¶
DEALPOST
Tech entrepreneurs now have a whole new way to brand their site. Read more â¶
Scavenging energy by foraging for metal could power Internet of Things electronics and robots, suggest researchers at University of Pennsylvania. Read more â¶
If Linux stood on the shoulders of giants, Gatsby relies on an entire ecosystem of JavaScript developers and upstream projects Read more â¶
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in the U.S. recently approved some wireless spectrum within the 6GHz band for Wi-Fi 6 use. This will nearly quintuple the existing Wi-Fi 6 spectrum. The version of Wi-Fi that will take advantage of this spectrum is called Wi-Fi 6E. Existing Wi-Fi 6 clients operate within the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands, so they will not be immediately able to access this new 6GHz band. Deploying Wi-Fi 6 may be appealing to enterprisesâ employees now working remotely, many of whom are working off of Wi-Fi 5 or Wi-Fi 4 networks. Network World senior writer Jon Gold joins Juliet to discuss what Wi-Fi 6E, when to adopt the much-hyped Wi-Fi 6 and what it means for the future of networking. Read more â¶
Images captured by drones and processed by artificial intelligence help Bayer Crop Science better serve its customers and develop crops that are more resistant to insects, disease, and storm damage. Read more â¶
Release addressing extremely poor editing and compilation speeds associated with packages is now at the release candidate stage Read more â¶
Microsoft is releasing new versions of Windows 10 on a set schedule â and just as regularly retiring older versions from support. Here are all the dates you need to know about. Read more â¶
Read this white paper to learn 9 factors to consider when selecting a content services platform for your resilient organization. Read more â¶
© 2025