If your IT strategy relies on waiting for things to break before fixing them, you are likely operating on borrowed time. Network maintenance is often treated as an afterthought, leaving servers prone to hardware fatigue, backups unverified, and firewalls exposed through outdated firmware.
We’ve all been there, you’re in the middle of an important meeting or trying to upload a large proposal, and suddenly the loading wheel of death appears. You look over at your laptop, and you’ve got one lonely bar of Wi-Fi.
I was looking at a client’s budget recently and noticed something that has become all too common. They were paying for three different project management tools, two separate cloud storage providers, and a dozen "AI-powered" browser extensions that nobody could quite explain.
I’ve been doing this my entire career, and if there is one thing I’ve learned about the cloud, it’s that the price only ever seems to go in one direction.
Microsoft recently announced another round of price adjustments for several of their core business products. I know what you’re thinking; it feels like a subscription tax that hits your bottom line without actually changing the way your computer looks or feels on a Tuesday morning. It’s frustrating.
A ransomware attack can feel like a hostage situation. Your data is encrypted, your operations are at a standstill, and a countdown timer is ticking away alongside a demand for thousands—or even millions—of dollars in cryptocurrency.