EZINE:
Norway's second largest city, Bergen, is building a tech ecosystem that is beginning its development with a focus on the city's industrial heritage. Also in this issue, read how Norway's government has had to backtrack on a law that removed tax relief on energy consumption at datacentres that process cryptocurrency mining.
EGUIDE:
The results of TechTarget and Computer Weekly's annual reader survey, which asks for feedback on readers' media consumption when considering an IT purchase, reveals the complexity of IT purchase decisions.
EZINE:
Oil may be the main fuel to the economies of the Middle East, but the region is trying to break from its reliance on the black stuff. This ezine has already featured articles about the UAE and Saudi Arabia diversifying their economies, with particular interest in fintech.
EZINE:
The Netherlands has for years attracted datacentre investment and has seen major construction projects. Amsterdam alone has 33 datacentres within a radius of 20km. So when the local authority in Amsterdam and Haarlemmermeer called an immediate halt to datacentre construction, it was a shock.
EGUIDE:
Read analysis of some of the Nordic results from the Computer Weekly IT priorities survey for this year. Unsurprisingly, cloud computing is one of the biggest draws and more than half of CIOs in the region will spend more on cloud technologies this year than they did in 2016.
EZINE:
In this quarter's CW Middle East ezine, we feature the IT journeys of three companies in the region with detailed analysis of recent IT projects that were designed to support business transformation in a changing world.
WHITE PAPER:
Find out more about value management and building value realization practices into every IT project. Discover how using value realization best practices during the lifecycle of your implementation can help you achieve greater value from your IT investments. Learn about the value of ASAP methodology and SAP offerings.
EZINE:
Software robots are being used by more than 20 local authorities in Sweden to carry out repetitive tasks previously done manually, such as document and data checks, freeing up social workers to make life-changing decisions for the needy.