Data always tells a story
Data always tells a story. Today, data and its stories have become one of the most valuable resources to strategic and operational decision makers.
This year’s edition of Microsoft Build has now wrapped up, but don’t worry if you missed it!
Data always tells a story. Today, data and its stories have become one of the most valuable resources to strategic and operational decision makers.
This article and video, by Pratim Das and Greg Loxton, is the first in a new series that aims to bust some of the myths surrounding Azure technologies.
We may be a few days into the new year, but there's still one more thing we need to do before saying goodbye to 2019 - check out the top ten articles of the year! A massive thank you to our guest writers and contributors for providing these articles, and we hope to work with writers new and old in 2020 to create even more great content for everyone at TechNet UK.
Ed Baker takes a look at the Azure Stack, including a detailed look at what options are available, how to deploy the Azure Stack Development Kit, and why you might want to use them.
Want to learn how to set-up the Azure Kubernetes Service and Dev Spaces? Luckily we have Richard Conway, Microsoft Regional Director, MVP and Co-founder of the UK Azure User Group on hand to show us how!
This blog provides a “how to” guide for generating JAR files for Scala projects maintained in GitHub, which may be useful in scenarios where a user needs to take a fix to a project whose dependencies are coordinated in Maven, but where a recent fix might only be available in GitHub.
Ed Shepley returns with a follow up to his popular upgrade readiness article, looking at even more tips on how we can use Upgrade Readiness to identify users that are ready for Windows 10 piloting.
Jamie Maguire documents the key steps and patterns you can follow to easily implement Cognitive Services within your existing stack.
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At London’s Imperial College, Serverless Days 2019 saw a community of serverless developers and engineers discuss ways they can create and maintain secure, observable, high-performance serverless systems.
In the parts one, two and three of this series, I described how to build containers using Dockerfiles, then how to share and access them from Azure. In this part, we’ll move briefly away from Python to look at R together with Shiny as a dynamic reporting and visualisation capability pulling data from a Postgres database.
Competition can be tough, and companies need to provide smarter interactions with customers to survive. As a result, we’ve seen a trend over the last couple of years indicating that more businesses are assigning larger budgets for projects that help deliver next-generation communications.