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Growing adoption of 5G, cloud computing and AI is likely to drive digital transformation within the energy and utilities sector in the coming year.
Factors including a lack of funding, consumer resistance and unwillingness by utilities to deploy smart meter technologies in the past years have restrained the growth of the market.
The energy transition is gathering pace with renewables taking a greater share of the energy mix, a rise in behind the meter innovation and a shift towards distributed energy and electric vehicles.
As the logistics industry moves into the new year, supply chain challenges still remain. Although yard operations serve a critical link, the yard can become a black hole if not managed properly.
Lower costs, improved products and increased comfort with sharing data is contributing to a rise in cloud applications.
The proliferation of cheap RFID tags and Wi-Fi-enabled machines and devices means IoT is more present than ever in the supply chain.
With the penetration of travel technology, travellers are getting used to booking a hotel room online, planning their travel itinerary online and even purchasing destination tickets online.
Just as the hotel industry was finally getting back on track, the much-needed recovery was dealt yet another blow with the emergence of the Omicron variant.
As hotel occupancy levels climb back towards pre-pandemic levels, the sector is turning to AI technology as it faces challenges to fill contact center and customer service vacancies
Fifteen years ago, Steve Jobs introduced the iPod. Since then, most music fans have understood this has radically changed how they listen to music.
The OTT industry is booming. Every area of home entertainment spending has declined over the past five years except online video. That segment of the industry, in contrast, is exploding.
The TV and video market is highly dynamic and is characterized by a great number of drivers: digitalization, new market offers, and disruption by digital players ensure rapid change.
The university experience is evolving, with changes that amount to nothing less than an educational revolution.
To say that the pandemic has been disruptive to education is an understatement. Understandably, two years ago when the UK entered its first national lockdown
Students express concern about the amount and the personal nature of information shared with exam proctoring companies. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic
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