Remove 2025 Remove Agile Remove Budget Remove Virtualization
article thumbnail

Top 10 business needs driving IT spending today

CIO Business Intelligence

Ceridian SVP and CIO Carrie Rasmussen got a 7% bump in her IT budget for 2022, with her company’s growth, its ongoing digitalization drive, and security mindfulness driving the boost. This comes after years of transformational initiatives being cited as the top reason driving budget increases. Top 10 business needs driving IT spend.

Budget 135
article thumbnail

Prioritizing AI? Don’t shortchange IT fundamentals

CIO Business Intelligence

It’s easy to view these as competing priorities vying for CIO attention and budget that are unfairly dwarfed by boardroom interest in the new and shiny opportunities promised by gen AI. But in other areas, IT teams will look to increase budgets and spending.

Hardware 142
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Perspectives on how cloud computing & app development trends will take shape in 2023

CIO Business Intelligence

However, it is also important to note that there are still many apps that run on virtual machines and do not work natively in containers, especially in the case of third-party software. Gartner predicts that through 2025, 80% of the operational tasks will require skills that less than half the workforce is trained in today.

Trends 133
article thumbnail

Air Force CDAIO Eileen Vidrine on leading top-flight AI operations

CIO Business Intelligence

Artificial intelligence is transforming the ways in which we do virtually everything. With the appointment, Vidrine rejoined the department after serving as the senior strategic advisor for data to the federal CIO in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), a post she held since January 2022.

article thumbnail

Space nuclear power is nearing critical mass as the final frontier’s next frontier

GeekWire

At least that’s the way a panel of experts at the intersection of the space industry and the nuclear industry described the state of things this week during the American Nuclear Society’s virtual annual meeting. “In order to do significant activity in space, you need power.

Study 145