InfoWorld Daily: Morning Edition | | | | Multiple frameworks and libraries make it easier to build browser-based apps with the web's lingua franca language Read More ▶ | | | White Paper: Bitsight Technologies The GDPR is comprised of 99 articles and plenty of complexities. Cut through the noise and ensure your organisation is prepared with this free guide. If your organisation processes data for EU citizens, the GDPR will impact you and every department in your company. And any good risk manager knows finding solutions for GDPR-related issues is of the utmost criticality. Read More ▶ | Get ready for a whole new—and very cold—way of developing software Read More ▶ | | This handy gadget from SanDisk automatically backs up your iPhone's photos, videos contacts and more, every time you charge. And its currently discounted 35% on Amazon. Read More ▶ | | Cloud-native applications and infrastructure require a radically different approach to security. Keep these best practices in mind Read More ▶ | | | New data shows that enterprises are moving to devops with integrated security teams, processes, and tools. That should be standard practice Read More ▶ | | Open source contributions aren't selfless charity but a virtuous intersection of corporate, user, and community benefit. Which is how AWS approaches open source Read More ▶ | | TypeScript 2.6 introduces a new strict checking flag, error suppression comments, and "minor" breaking changes Read More ▶ | | Both the enterprise and desktop editions of Docker will include Kubernetes, making the container technology easier to use in both development and production environments Read More ▶ | | At its currently discounted price of $11.19, the 32GB capacity card is actually $0.61 cheaper than the 16GB model. SanDisk has discounts running today on higher capacity cards as well. Read More ▶ | | Python and TypeScript makes big gains in pull requests, while Java slips to third place Read More ▶ | | White Paper: GlobalSCAPE Are you making it too easy for hackers to infiltrate your system? If your employees are using unsanctioned devices and applications, then the answer is yes! Unsanctioned devices and applications can leave your IT infrastructure and data far more vulnerable to being exploited by cybercriminals. Unfortunately, it's become easier than ever for employees to access rogue applications, much to the chagrin of busy IT staff. Read More ▶ | Get ongoing access to our exclusive Insider content — Deep Dive PDFs and in-depth articles — available to Insider members. You get access not only to InfoWorld's Insider content but to selected Insider content from Computerworld, CIO.com, Network World, CSO, and other IDG Enterprise publications. Sign up at no cost today! ▶ | | | |
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