BLOG

Machine to machine: the submerged part of the IoT iceberg

What do a billboard, water meter, box compactor and a recharging station for electrical vehicles have in common? The OVH Blog.

Read More

BLOG

10 key considerations before going DIY on your IoT

By Ryan Lester, Director of IoT Strategy, Xively by LogMeIn.

Read More



BLOG

IoT by 2020

By Abhijit Roy, Associate Director – M2M/IoT Practice at Happiest Minds.

Read More

BLOG

Security of the IoT in business

By Klaus Gheri, VP Network Security at Barracuda Networks.

Read More

Problems with communications and collaboration tools are responsible for over half of all helpdesk...
Sophos has released new research on how the cybersecurity industry can leverage GPT-3, the language...
First to enable machine learning inference together with unlimited on-orbit reconfiguration for...
Ivanti has launched its new fully enabled Partner Portal and Campaign Central. The Partner Portal...
Survey of 500 IT and business decision makers examines perspectives on systematic automation of...
McConnell Dowell, a leading infrastructure construction company has selected Orange Business...
Latest Video

Docker on IoT devices

Docker is an open platform for developers and system administrators to build, ship and run distributed applications. With Docker, IT organizations shrink application delivery from months to minutes, frictionlessly move workloads between data centers and the cloud and can achieve up to 20X greater efficiency in their use of computing resources. Inspired by an active community and by transparent, open source innovation, Docker containers have been downloaded more than 700 million times and Docker is used by millions of developers across thousands of the world?s most innovative organizations, including eBay, Baidu, the BBC, Goldman Sachs, Groupon, ING, Yelp, and Spotify. Docker?s rapid adoption has catalyzed an active ecosystem, resulting in more than 180,000 ?Dockerized? applications, over 40 Docker-related startups and integration partnerships with AWS, Cloud Foundry, Google, IBM, Microsoft, OpenStack, Rackspace, Red Hat and VMware.

Read more