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Quantum computing’s potential is still far off, but quantum supremacy shows we’re on the right track

O'Reilly

It does not mean that cryptography is broken, or that we can achieve general artificial intelligence, or anything of the sort. But unlike Watson, I can tell you where those quantum computers will be: they will live in the cloud. The total market might end up being a few dozen—but because of the cloud, that will be all we need.

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A 5G future

O'Reilly

I don’t need more bandwidth for video conferences or movies, but I would like to be able to download operating system updates and other large items in seconds rather than minutes. What would the world look like if all of our storage was in the cloud, and access to that storage was so fast we didn’t care?

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5 key areas for tech leaders to watch in 2020

O'Reilly

This year’s growth in Python usage was buoyed by its increasing popularity among data scientists and machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI) engineers. Software architecture, infrastructure, and operations are each changing rapidly. Still cloud-y, but with a possibility of migration.

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The death of Agile?

O'Reilly

The most important is discovering how to work with data science and artificial intelligence projects. Development timelines for these projects aren’t as predictable as traditional software; they stretch the meaning of “testing” in strange ways; they aren’t deterministic. Upcoming events.