Cloud-first Chrome OS simplifies IT management, secures work environments, and keeps employees productive and connected, wherever work happens.
Browsing: Marketing in the Age of 5G & IoT
In this technical paper, you’ll learn how Google has innovated security to protect at the device, firmware, operating system, browser, and application levels. You’ll also find examples of how Chrome OS:
IT organizations are facing increasing endpoint device management challenges, the result of increased IT complexity as well as the COVID-19 pandemic and concomitant shift to working from home. One-fifth of knowledge workers reported that devices were the area in which their company was least prepared to effectively facilitate the work-from-home transition.
Global organizations are managing ongoing pandemic-related challenges—supply chain issues, worker shortages, and the continued need to respond to changing regulatory health and safety mandates. Businesses across industries are moving forward, leveraging technology to rebuild customer relationships, automate and streamline business processes, and increase revenue.
Hybrid work will be the right path for many companies. But how do you secure enterprise apps and data when they—and your employees—can be located anywhere?
Slow or unavailable websites, apps, and APIs frustrate visitors, reduce conversions, and degrade SEO. Cloud-based load balancers reduce latency and improve availability by distributing web traffic across your cloud servers based on availability and geographic distance.
Cloud communications give businesses all sorts of ways to collaborate more effectively, improve their operations, get more done, and save money. But if you don’t set up these solutions the right way, you could be creating a new set of problems for your business.
As businesses increasingly embrace a cloud-first strategy, many are migrating their most heavily used business applications — including office productivity, customer relationship management (CRM), customer care, and more — to the public cloud. In today’s remote workplace, in which work from home (WFH) and work from anywhere (WFA) have become the new normal, this cloud-first strategy is a productivity booster for office employees, remote workers, IT staff, and others who need to stay connected with each other, as well as customers, business partners, and suppliers, regardless of their locations or devices.
Digital transformation journeys need a logical place to start, and migrating workloads that are running on existing virtual machines to Google Cloud is an ideal beginning.
The more organizations rely on video surveillance, the more difficult it will become to store and manage the massive volumes of footage being generated — the pressure put on existing infrastructure can become critical and stretch staff members and budgets past the breaking point. Discover how a hybrid approach to video surveillance storage can get you the best of on-site infrastructure and public clouds and minimize the hassles.