This message was sent to ##Email##
|
|
|
|
Advertisement
|
|
|
Dallas Business Journal
Hope Shimabuku took her post Jan. 4 at the new office in Dallas. Here's a look at what she's seen and what she expects. "This job is what I would call the pinnacle of my career," she told me after her first keynote speech at a Tech Titans luncheon. "To come into this position at this point in time is just a culmination of everything that I've always done."
READ MORE
Tech Titans
Pete DeNagy, tri-chair of the Internet of Things forum, has been named the Tech Titans Volunteer of the Year for 2015. DeNagy was not only instrumental in organizing the Internet of Things forum, he also played key roles in developing the forum's mission and plan forum programs. He has encouraged representatives of some of the key IoT companies in the region to participate in forum activities and encouraged them to become members of Tech Titans, as well. As a result, the IoT Forum is now the largest committee in Tech Titans.
READ MORE
Promoted by
|
|
|
 |
InformationWeek
Industry analyst Peter Crocker outlines three emerging technology trends that will have you rethinking your organization's mobile development strategy.
READ MORE
Tech Titans
Equinix Inc. will be the opening of our new data center in the Dallas area and featuring the senior director of technology from Southwest Airlines and Jay Novacek from the Dallas Cowboys on Thursday, March 30. The Tech Titans community is invited to join in on the networking, music and cocktails.
READ MORE
TechTarget
The buzz about 3-D printing comes with the usual pontification that occurs every time a new technology passes the novelty stage into the realm where real money can be made. Canalys, a market research firm, predicts the global market for 3-D printers and services will grow from $2.5 billion in 2013 to $16.2 billion in 2018, a compound annual growth rate of 45.7 percent.
READ MORE
Tech Titans
Hiring a veteran is more than goodwill, it is good business, and due to the tremendous number of service members projected to leave the service, close to 250,000 per year during the next five years, many will be searching for employment opportunities.
READ MORE
Missed last week's issue? See which articles your colleagues read most.
|
Don't be left behind. Click here to see what else you missed.
|
TechCrunch
For years, many of the key components of wearables have been drafting off the strengths of the smartphone supply chain. During the last two years, the application processors and sensors for wrist and head-worn wearable products have more or less been taken off the parts bin of low- and mid-tier smartphones.
READ MORE
NDTV
For humans to arrive at the Red Planet with the available technology, it will approximately take five months to touch down on the Martian surface. NASA researchers are now working on a new laser technology that can send humans to Mars in just three days.
The idea is to use lasers to propel spacecraft with giant sails to Mars in just three days, and this is no science fiction.
READ MORE
|
|
Business Insider
The Internet of Things has been labeled as "the next Industrial Revolution" because of the way it will change the way people live, work, entertain and travel, as well as how governments and businesses interact with the world.
In fact, the revolution is already starting.
READ MORE
CSO Online
It is not a comfortable topic — virtually all cases involving a cybersecurity whistleblower have ended with a confidential settlement. But experts, and lawyers, say that in an increasingly connected world, those cases are bound to increase
READ MORE
Bloomberg
Two of the biggest forces influencing global economic activity over the past three decades — globalization and automation — have had polar-opposite effects on workers in emerging markets.
The former pushed multinationals to move production to countries with cheaper labor costs than advanced economies, while the latter effectively substitutes capital for labor in the production process.
READ MORE
Forbes
The modern era is, as you probably know, a pretty amazing time to be alive and working in science. It's not just the super-exotic stories like detecting gravitational waves that move matter less than the width of a proton, either, but things that are fairly commonplace. It's now a fairly routine matter to make pictures of materials with a resolution comparable to the size of an atom.
READ MORE
Switch & Shift
What do President Barack Obama and heavy metal guitarist Yngwie Malmsteen have in common? They both wear essentially the same thing every day so they can save their brain power for bigger, more important decisions. Constantly making decisions can strain a decision-maker, so the opportunity to share the decision-making space can be quite appealing. And if involving employees in decision making is meaningful to them, then enabling them to actually make the decision will be exponentially more important.
READ MORE
CNBC
When Kimberly Bryant was in college in the '80s, she felt culturally isolated in her electrical engineering classes.
"I was one of maybe two or three students of color," said Bryant, who is African-American. "And I found that representation was still the same when I graduated and began my career."
Not much has changed. Black women make up less than 3 percent of the workforce at the biggest U.S. tech companies.
So, when Bryant's daughter Kai, now 16, expressed interest in following in her mother's footsteps, Bryant decided to literally change the face of the industry.
READ MORE
|
|
|
 7701 Las Colinas Ridge, Ste. 800, Irving, TX 75063
|