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Graph Leader Also Reveals Connectors for Snowflake and Tableau, Announces Hackathon Winners, and Shares Early Release of Graph-Powered Analytics Book at Graph + AI Summit 2021
REDWOOD CITY, Calif., April 21, 2021, provider of the leading graph analytics platform, today announced that the company continues to accelerate the adoption, application, and use of graph analytics on the cloud with broadened support across all cloud providers. TigerGraph Cloud is accessible with Amazon AWS, Microsoft Azure, and now, GCP. The company also announced connectors for Snowflake and Tableau, meaning users can access relationship analytics directly from their Snowflake and Tableau dashboards; valuable data insights are now just a few clicks away. TigerGraph made these announcements and shared details about its growing global developer community and more at
Aruba, a Hewlett Packard Enterprise company, announced an expansive set of cross-portfolio edge-to-cloud security integrations for Aruba ESP (Edge Services Platform).
Why it s Time to Re-Think the Dashboard Wednesday, 21 April 2021 16:38 Why it s Time to Re-Think the Dashboard
Shares Eyal Mekler, Regional Vice President of APAC, Sisense
Guest Opinion: Data is a critical company asset that has continued to grow exponentially for over a decade. According to a recent whitepaper by research firm Frost & Sullivan, 2.5 exabytes of data are created daily. However, to create game-changing business value, data not only needs to be analysed, but it needs to be available when and where people need it so it can be actioned.
Business Intelligence (BI) has long been delivered through dashboards that promised self-service, but adoption rates remain low among business users. While adoption may be low, more organisations are looking towards using BI and data dashboards in the future.
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SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Tencent Holdings Ltd is the best of China s energy-guzzling cloud services providers when it comes to tackling carbon emissions and procuring from renewable sources, Greenpeace said in a research report.
Internet firms now rank among the biggest corporate consumers of electricity, and in China rely largely on carbon-intensive coal-fired power to keep their data centres humming around the clock.
The environmental group has predicted that energy consumption by China s data centre industry will rise by two-thirds between 2019 and 2023, at which point the sector s total power use will equal the whole of Australia s.
Tencent had a positive record on transparency and had increased renewable energy procurement, Greenpeace said, without giving details.