In this video course, you'll learn how to integrate Celery and Django using Redis as a message broker. You'll refactor the synchronous email sending functionality of an existing Django app into an asynchronous task that you'll run with Celery instead.
HP Amplify — NVIDIA and HP Inc. today announced that NVIDIA CUDA-X™ data processing libraries will be integrated with HP AI workstation solutions to turbocharge the data preparation and processing work that forms the foundation of generative AI development.
Today Salesforce announced the general availability of its Tableau Pulse technology, bringing the power of multiple forms of AI, including generative AI to help organizations get more business intelligence insights from their data.
Mobile payments are starting to come to U.S. carriers in various forms after years of expectations, with AT&T announcing a trial with back-end service provider Boku a day after Sprint Nextel announced its Sprint Mobile Wallet.
Two partnerships backing different forms of mobile TV are using this year's International Consumer Electronics Show to announce devices that can bring TV to iPhones through the back door.
U.S. policies toward defending against cyber warfare need to take a different approach than the government has against other forms of attack, three cybersecurity experts said Thursday.
In response to criticism from a leading expert on forming consortia, the interim president of Microsoft's CodePlex Foundation, Sam Ramji, says the open source group is in a "beta" phase for its first 100 days and is welcoming all forms of evaluation and critique of its bylaws and governance model.
Email managers have a lot at stake. After all, the volume of global electronic messages sent via email dwarfs all other forms of electronic communication, including social networking. Since the inception of electronic mail, which, according to some Internet historians, can be traced to a small mainframe app called 'MAILBOX' from the mid-1960s, human-to-human messages have been created, transmitted and stored in electronic format. But early email administrators could hardly have envisioned the complexity of
* Dr. Internet columnist Steve Blass discusses sending Web form e-mails to cell phones
* Help Desk columnist Ron Nutter discusses building or buying a NAS system
While divisions and differences rage on among Linux and open source vendors, two Linux-focused standards and technology organizations recently joined forces, at least ostensibly, for the betterment of the open source operating system and community.
Problem employees take many different forms: some do sloppy work or are incompetent, others have attitude problems or anger management issues and still more staffers suffer from addiction or emotional issues. What they have in common is that you may one day be called upon to manage them.
The insurance industry is probably one of the most paper-intensive industries in our global economy. It seems that every action begins and ends with a piece of paper. Enrollment applications. Claims forms. Customer invoices. Reimbursement checks.
Over the past several years, we’ve often advocated using (at least) two forms of broadband access to the remote office/branch office(ROBO) and small office/home office (SOHO) environments. The reasons have been at least twofold. First, DSL, cable modem, and some services have been offered so inexpensively that the price point is negligible – compared with traditional access methods – so there’s no reason not to have both. But more importantly, these services have not tended to offer fantastic up-ti
Former One Laptop Per Child President of software and content Walter Bender has launched Sugar Labs, an organization that will promote the development of the open-source user interface originally developed for the XO laptop.
In our last newsletter, we discussed a couple of forms of convergence and highlighted the benefits of each form, as well as the associated technical and organizational impediments. Today, we are going to discuss yet another form of convergence that is just beginning to be discussed.
Last week, Mary Anne Winniford wrote about IT process automation as a mixture of sub-markets that, as a group, are helping to move some IT organizations towards superior levels of operational efficiency and accountability. The submarkets she mentioned include service desk related technologies such as workflow, data center rooted technologies, such as job scheduling, as well as more whole-cloth forms of IT process automation such as top-down and bottoms-up process mappings. These support well-defined proces
Some forms of WAN firewalls have been around for a couple of decades. It is hard to deny that firewalls are helpful. They are. It is also hard to argue that they are very exciting. In fact, since the turn of the century the types of security threats facing IT organizations has changed dramatically while the WAN firewall has not added much new functionality. That situation appears to be changing. As we’ll explain in the next couple of newsletters, a next-generation WAN firewall is being deployed that is i
Over the past year or so we’ve spent a lot of time talking about the category that could be referred to generically as “application acceleration.” However, application acceleration can take a lot of forms. In this newsletter, we’re starting a discussion based on a joint project between Webtorials and Robin Layland of Layland Consulting.
Remember the days when communicating with colleagues always involved walking down the hall? Now voicemail and e-mail are the norm and companies are tapping newer forms of technology to improve communications with employees, according to a new report from IT staffing firm Robert Half Technology.
Innovation comes in many forms and sometimes a small, seemingly obvious device can make a lot of difference. Responding to our recent columns about VoIP over Wi-Fi, a reader mentioned that he had come across a cool device that could let him connect to his office using Skype and then to make calls from Skype's PBX.