Managing Application Development: The public-sector perspective

The public sector may suffer from its reputation as a technology laggard, but the reality is often quite different. Around the world, government agencies are about as likely to use cloud technology as any private-sector company, according to our survey. In fact, governments are more likely than their private-sector counterparts to use Agile, an innovative application-development approach. And just as private-sector companies do, public-sector organisations wrestle with the growing challenge of keeping their systems, applications and data secure.

Managing Application Development: The gaming & media perspective

Few industries have felt the effects of digital technologies as profoundly as gaming and media. Without digital, gaming—now a multi-billion-dollar industry—would barely see such growth. Media, meanwhile, has seen its basic foundations of print, film, TV and radio crumble under the weight of newer technologies including podcasts, streaming, e-books and mobile tech.

To learn more about the role of application development in the growth of gaming and media, The Economist Intelligence Unit took an in-depth review of the industry’s survey results. The following insights were uncovered:

Emotion and Cognition in the Age of AI

Learn more about Emotion and Cognition in the Age of AI by watching our view above.

Emotion and Cognition in the Age of AI

The transparent business barometer

The transparent business barometer: Preparing for the end of easy data is a report from The Economist Intelligence Unit, sponsored by Ant Financial. The report is largely based on a survey of 250 executives conducted in October-December 2018. It explores the opportunities and challenges of a changing data-privacy landscape.

The transparent business barometer: Preparing for the end of easy data

The rapidly growing amount of data created in digital societies has led to an increase in personal data collection and usage for commercial purposes. Many large international companies use data to sell targeted advertising and services, while smaller organisations may also collect and sell such information to other businesses, or for other reasons. For instance, data gathering can reduce costs, help improve existing services and provide opportunities for innovation, such as geo-location information to match supply and demand in certain fields, like ride-sharing.

Emotion and Cognition in the Age of AI

How do educators view social and emotional learning? Are they putting in place policies and programs to support well-being and the development of psychosocial assets such as resilience, autonomy, and self-regulation? And what forms do these policies and programs take? This report, informed by an expert advisory panel and a global survey, explores the integration of emotional well-being, social learning and cognition in education systems across the continents. 

Emotion and Cognition in the Age of AI

Emotion and Cognition in the Age of AI is an Economist Intelligence Unit report commissioned by Microsoft. It explores, via an international survey, expert interview panel and academic literature review, how educators view the relationship between emotional well-being and learning.

The AI-enabled organisation of the future

AI will fundamentally affect how companies work with each other, notably in procuring goods, refocusing their supply chains and sharing knowledge. The evolution of AI will also empower procurement to speed up the purchasing of services.

This report explores the likely impact of AI on future organisations in several areas:

  • The central foundation of successful AI adoption—namely, data— in boosting insight and prediction, and the ramifications for how companies work with each other;

The AI-enabled organisation of the future

Experts expect this will undoubtedly be the case with artificial intelligence (AI). But the extent and nature of its impact will ultimately depend on the willingness of firms to embrace its potential, co- operate in its adoption and, of course, the role of regulators in overseeing its use. 

This report explores the likely impact of AI on future organisations in several areas:

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