CNME asks a panel of experts to look forward to the nine biggest storage trends of 2014.

CNME asks a panel of experts to look forward to the nine biggest storage trends of 2014.
A decent tablet that costs just a little bit too much.
If you’re in the market for a high-performing, low-priced Ultrabook, this has to be the one to go for.
Network visibility vendor Gigamon has taken the last couple of months as an opportunity to explain to customers and resellers exactly why its products are relevant to the Middle Eastern market.
If there’s a new challenge to overcome, Zubair Ahmed, Head of IT and Business Innovation, Emirates Islamic Bank, is the one who’s likely to take it up.
It’s 12 o’clock, midnight. You’re hunched over a spare desk in the dimly lit room housing your company’s data centre. The only sources of light come from a few overhead lights by the door, left on by the last employee to be sent home after a dismally long day, and the laptop screen in front of you.
Operators that bring 4G LTE to market ahead of their competitors stand a good chance of capturing significant market share, according to Glenn Booth, Vice President and General Manager, LTE Business Unit, Alcatel-Lucent.
Can Big Data programmes be run using traditional IT teams, or do organisations need to take a new approach to hiring?
With some commentators labeling the BYOD trend as unstoppable, organisations are now turning to MDM to ensure the security of their networks. But how should MDM be tackled?
On the first day of GITEX 2013, I glimpsed a future that could have been straight out of a Black Mirror episode.
The Note 8.0 is decent small tablet that costs just a little bit too much.
“Collecting more and more unstructured data will open up another whole degree of attractiveness and may well lead to attackers seeing value in a form not previously recognised by the organisation that owns the data.”
CNME goes one-on-one with the CEO to see how he found meeting some of Avaya’s biggest regional customers.
A British man has been charged with hacking into US government computers and stealing personal data about thousands of employees, then bragging about it on Twitter.