Beverley Head, ComputerWeekly

Beverley Head

ComputerWeekly

Sydney, NSW, Australia

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Recent:
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Past:
  • ComputerWeekly

Past articles by Beverley:

Australia’s productivity woes pinned on poor employee experience

New research by Ricoh suggests that the lukewarm view of employee experience among IT leaders is part of the reason for Australia’s declining productivity → Read More

How Australia is keeping pace with microservices

Adoption of microservices remains patchy in Australia, although some sectors pursuing digital transformation are catching up rapidly. → Read More

Australia races towards commercial quantum computing

Universities make headway in the challenge of commercialising quantum computing. → Read More

Australia’s chief scientist calls for AI regulations

The proposal would require companies to apply for a trustmark so they know from the outset how their AI is expected to behave → Read More

Citrix touts digital workspace app in services play

The software supplier’s cloud-based workspace app is part of its efforts to deliver integrated services that support the modern workplace → Read More

OpenStack gains early foothold in Australia

Although the open source technology has its cheerleaders, it has yet to crack Australia’s mainstream and challenge the market share of proprietary cloud suppliers → Read More

Australia's state of cyber security report reveals rise in phishing attacks

Amid growing cyber threats, the country's cyber security centre calls for businesses to be more open about cyber incidents and plug potential loopholes in their supply chains. → Read More

How Australia is tackling cyber crime

Telcos such as Telstra and industry associations in Australia are chipping in to help enterprises that are being targeted by cyber criminals with phishing and social engineering exploits. → Read More

Australia outlines space ambitions

A national space agency would put the country in the league of nations with space capabilities, but questions about its true value remain. → Read More

AI poses no threat to IT careers

A SolarWinds survey reveals that IT professionals are more concerned with cyber security than losing their jobs to AI → Read More

Rethinking storage in the age of big data

The volume, variety and velocity of data are challenging organisations such as insurance giant IAG to rethink the way storage architectures are designed. → Read More

SAP Ariba gaining ground in APAC

Companies like Woolworths and DuluxGroup in Australia are using the cloud-based service to reduce procurement costs and risks. → Read More

Price war blamed for poor fibre broadband speeds in Australia

The Australian Communications and Media Authority has ordered a review into the problem, which one ISP says is compounded by nbn Co’s pricing model → Read More

Australian businesses bullish on AI

Demand for artificial intelligence technology is growing in Australia amid looming fears over job losses → Read More

Australia to abolish visa for skilled workers

The government will replace the 457 visa programme with temporary skills visas to stem the loss of jobs that could go to Australians → Read More

Robot tax not feasible for Australia

Data61 CEO Adrian Turner says Australia needs to reskill workers rather than implement a robot tax → Read More

Australia a hotbed for data analytics

Market for technologies that help organisations make sense of vast volumes of data is hotting up Down Under. → Read More

Australian government technology suffers failure after failure

Former government IT leader says Australia’s IT is so bad that if the government were a private sector organisation, it would fail. → Read More

Future of Apple Pay Australia still unresolved

There are still uncertainties over Apple Pay among Australia’s big banks, but smaller finance firms are looking at ways to offer the payment service to their customers. → Read More

IBM blamed for Australian census website crash

Computer giant reportedly pays $30m to Australian government as reports are released from two inquiries into DDoS attacks on census website. → Read More