Quantum computers may not be able to crack conventional encryption protocols until 2030, but cybersecurity and risk managers should evaluate their options now.
Via JC Gaillard
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Quantum computers may not be able to crack conventional encryption protocols until 2030, but cybersecurity and risk managers should evaluate their options now. Via JC Gaillard No comment yet.
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A NEW data analytics lab, jointly funded by NICTA and RMIT University, will make it easier for industry to partner with world-class researchers for big data projects. Via RMITComputer Science&IT
RMITComputer Science&IT's curator insight,
November 27, 2014 12:29 AM
The Australian interviews Professor Timos Sellis over the new NICTA RMIT Data Analytics Lab, which he jointly leads with Professor Mark Sanderson.
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By Karen Coyle: "With the visible speed-up of all forms of information resources, even those that are ostensibly in traditional offline formats, doubts are growing about the ability of libraries to afford the costs of hand-hewn bibliographic control today and in the future. Linking and federating What if you extrapolate from developments within library systems, such as federated searching, enhanced catalogs, and OpenURL, to the idea of libraries on the web?" [...] "The Semantic Web will develop in two ways: First, by linking information that exists within documents, and second, by making the data itself accessible on the web. The ability to mark up information in documents could allow smarter access to that information than we get with keyword searching. For example, markup could identify the author of a document so that an author search could be done, something search engines do not provide today." Via Karen du Toit |