Cloud computing has come to occupy a central locus in the data management ecosystem, much more so than it did even a couple months ago. In the wake of patent economic instabilities, global health concerns, and unparalleled need for remote access, many organizations are struggling to simply keep their lights on to retain what customers they still have.
Advanced analytics only helps so much with the necessities of reducing costs and provisioning IT resources in immensely distributed settings—which is the crux of the requirements for maintaining operations in such an arduous business climate.
Although Artificial Intelligence will likely always be considered “cool”, the cloud—and not AI—is the indisputably pragmatic means of staying in business in an era in which budget slashing and computer engineer salary (even of IT personnel) are a disturbingly familiar reality.
Advanced analytics only helps so much with the necessities of reducing costs and provisioning IT resources in immensely distributed settings—which is the crux of the requirements for maintaining operations in such an arduous business climate.
Although Artificial Intelligence will likely always be considered “cool”, the cloud—and not AI—is the indisputably pragmatic means of staying in business in an era in which budget slashing and computer engineer salary (even of IT personnel) are a disturbingly familiar reality.
No comments:
Post a Comment