What's on the horizon? The EU throws down the gauntlet for security, states stake a claim to lead on cybersecurity, and virtual assistants may help make a 20-year-old promise a reality.
All in futurist
What's on the horizon? The EU throws down the gauntlet for security, states stake a claim to lead on cybersecurity, and virtual assistants may help make a 20-year-old promise a reality.
In less than a half-century, the world of work may be changed forever. That's not as far away as you think - not for your children and grandchildren. How will we get there and what will we do when there's no work to get?
CES was full of future tech and hopeful entrepreneurs, but what are the ideas that will stick? Sarah Segrest of Wynit knows.
Most of us are relatively data illiterate, yet we have massive amounts of data. Without the skills to identify what it all means, it's an unexplored opportunity. Enter artificial intelligence.
What if you could charge your car while you were driving down the highway? Or power up your cell phone just by walking around using it? Technology freed from outlets, bricks, cables and adapters that makes us truly mobile? That would really be powerful. And it may be closer than you think.
The Internet of Things has vast possibilities. But also great risks. Don't let your devices becoming unwitting conscripts in an Internet attack.
Some trends that evolved in 2015 - IT as integrator not sole proprietor, an elevation of the skills demanded for IT staff and the knowledge that security is not just a buzzword anymore - will change IT in 2016 and beyond.