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" ... Agility must remain core to your mindset, as your business needs might change. It's important to reevaluate project goals on a consistent basis and realign internal processes. Seek cloud-based technologies that offer the flexibility to support future adaption needs and deliver cost flexibility that can prove beneficial, particularly if there are pandemic-related financial restraints. ... "
" ... For more and more companies, the journey of continuous, intelligent adaption in changing habitats will start with the cloud. In a survey of IT managers by Enterprise Strategy Group, about half of respondents said their organization is taking a "cloud-first" approach in 2021, up from 38% last year. ... "
" ... How has it simultaneously managed so much disruption and growth? Executives credit the company’s culture of local decision making and its employees’ focus on service quality and on finding quick, practical solutions to problems as they arise. Netflix’s culture ties closely to the company’s well-understood corporate purpose: to entertain the world. That purpose dates back to the Silicon Valley company’s early days, and over time has supported repeated reinvention, adaption, and innovation. ... "
" ... I’ve never read an Agatha Christie novel, nor seen an adaption, so I was coming into this one completely fresh, but I have seen her tropes endlessly parodied in pop culture. We get it, all these connected people are boarding a train with an obsessive-compulsive detective. Please, just start the story. It’s cool, honestly. We’ve seen Sherlock, and House, we understand that this guy is really smart, and doesn't care about social conventions. Is the train coming yet? ... "
" ... While admittedly not in her purview, Swisher misses a crucial yet undervalued aspect to harnessing technology to remain productive. The pandemic has forced virtually everyone to take a months-long lesson in accessibility and adaption, however unbeknownst. To have one’s lives so utterly disrupted and summarily scramble to adapt is not dissimilar to the challenges people with disabilities face every single day—even before “Covid-19” became an indelible part of the American vernacular. In a society that thrives on ableism—and confronted far less than racism and sexism—disabled people are attuned to finding ways to getting things done. We do so out of necessity, and we’ve been doing so far longer than the coronavirus has been around. ... "