WHITE PAPER:
This whitepaper will teach you more about the new frontier of GPUs in the cloud and how you can bypass the stumbling blocks that have prevented organizations from enabling GPU-accelerated VDI with NVIDIA Grid.
TECHNICAL ARTICLE:
This article describes how game developers can use the power of CSS3 to design common game indicators, such as health, magic, ammo, money, etc.
EGUIDE:
In this critical guide, desktop virtualization guru Brian Madden takes a look at "zero clients", pointing out the key differences between them and thin clients. Read on and learn how this solution can simplify the management of your virtual desktop infrastructure.
TECHNICAL ARTICLE:
With the newly introduced canvas element in HMTL5, all you need to do is put an element on your page and paint anything you want by creating scriptable graphics with JavaScript. Read this article to learn how to paint on a page with HTML5's canvas element through a simple painting application example.
WHITE PAPER:
Learn more about the history of graphics processing over the past few decades and discover a technology that enables true professional-caliber interactivity that scales smoothly with a number of concurrent users.
EBOOK:
The National Museum of Computing has again been looking into Computer Weekly's 50 years of magazine issues for another selection of articles highlighting significant news published in the month of July over the past five decades.
EGUIDE:
The National Museum of Computing has trawled the Computer Weekly archives for another selection of articles highlighting significant articles published in the month of June over the past few decades.
ESSENTIAL GUIDE:
The National Museum of Computing has trawled the Computer Weekly archives for another selection of articles highlighting significant articles published in the month of May over the past five decades.
EZINE:
We search back through the Computer Weekly archives held at The National Museum of Computing to present what was happening in IT over the past five decades.
EGUIDE:
In these uncertain times, making solid predictions for the year ahead looks like a definition of a mug's game. While this has been the fuel for the fire for the boom in applications such as video conferencing as used to support remote working, the same really can be said for the internet of things (IoT).