Whaling preys on a vulnerability in every company, regardless of their IT acumen or financial resources. Human nature.
All in technology
Whaling preys on a vulnerability in every company, regardless of their IT acumen or financial resources. Human nature.
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.
Don't have a Yahoo! account? You may still have been among the 1 billion whose sensitive information was hacked if you have an account with one of any number of large companies that use Yahoo! to provide email and authentication services.
Planning for unexpected and unlikely is a hard thing. But ask businesses up and down the South Carolina coast how important it is to have an emergency plan. Hurricane, tornado. power outage, ransomware - the disaster may be different, but you need a response.
Your business has a 15-65 percent chance of successfully implementing new technology in your business. How can you change that? Here are some ideas.
New technology surfaces every day and yet there are some applications we just can't let go of. Even those we really don't like. Why do we keep letting familiarity crush collaboration, productivity and just plain better?
Technology and social media played a pivotal role in the last few weeks of social upheaval, exceeding the boundaries of their original design. When that happens, we are often confronted with the unintended circumstances and unforeseen situations that make us ask: Should we just because we can? Can we stop, if we want to?