In today’s environment, to meet customer expectations, organisations should equip themselves to deliver an ‘always-on’ service. Yet, the traditional service hours (9-to-5) are still common practice across industry. No longer do they need to be.
Traditional banks have often relied on a strong brand reputation and financial products to attract and retain customers. But with a new wave of youthful and more digitally-savvy consumers emerging, simply being reputable may no longer be enough to stay competitive in this market.
Whenever we set up at a large conference – as we did at Giant Health in London last month – we’re almost always buoyed by the reaction we receive. When it comes to mixed reality seeing is certainly believing.
Traditionally, banks have thought of anti-money laundering and know your customer (AML-KYC), fraud and cybercrime as three separate problem sets. They each have their own distinct teams with their own independent processes, tools and reporting structures. AML-KYC has been the primary focus for financial regulators.
I hear a lot of people talking about the journey to the cloud. But for me, the cloud isn’t a destination, it’s the enabler. The destination is agility. When we talk about app innovation, we’re talking about exploring new ways to become more agile as organisations.
The responsibility of building an AI model often lies with the data scientists in the team. However, the responsibility to make the model and the resulting software product fair and ethical should belong to all roles within the team.
The Microsoft Research Summit will be streaming virtually across three time zones, so you’ll have the opportunity to hear from science and technology leaders from around the world—people who are driving advances across the sciences and pushing the limits of technology toward achieving a meaningful impact on humanity.
AI has the potential to disrupt every industry and every business, enabling companies of all sizes to achieve better business results by maximising three trends: massive data, massive computing power, and breakthrough algorithms.
This year’s digital edition of Microsoft Build has now wrapped up. With hundreds of sessions to choose from on a variety of different topics it might be hard to know where to start, so we’re showcasing a selection of them to help you get started.