top of page

Nth Symposium: AI & Quantum Computing, Cyber Threats, & more

  • Writer: Nth Generation
    Nth Generation
  • Aug 9, 2024
  • 1 min read

Updated: Sep 26, 2024


ree
ree


ANAHEIM

Thursday, 09.19.24


ree

_____________________________________________________________________



AGENDA


7:15 AM – 8:15 AM 

Event Check-In & Continental Breakfast


8:15 AM – 12:15 PM

General Session

See schedule below…


12:15 PM – 2:00 PM

Lunch & Demo Hall


2:00 PM – 5:00 PM

Rapid Presentation & Workshop Sessions


4:45 PM – 7:00 PM

Cocktail Reception & Demo Hall


___________



General Session Schedule

Welcome

 

Keynote: Nth Co-Presidents

Adapt to accelerating market changes + Adopt AI, security, and other modern technologies

 

Fireside Chat: Nutanix

GPT-in-a-Box | VMware Hypervisor Alternatives | Hybrid Cloud

 

Keynote: Hewlett Packard Enterprise, CTO, USA

Unlock AI: NVIDIA AI Computing by HPE | Private Cloud AI |Supercomputing and Edge-to-Cloud

 

Client Testimonial: AI Use Case

HPE + Grossmont Union High School District -

Applied AI for community safety and fighting human trafficking

 

Keynote: HPE Aruba

VPN Vulnerabilities | Zero Trust and secure access for a hybrid IT World

 

Fireside Chat: Quantum Computing

Quantum hacking risks | Upcoming federal regulations and how to prepare

 

Keynote: Varonis

Stop data breaches automatically and tackle new data exposure risks

associated with AI LLMs, including Copilot for Microsoft 365

 

Keynote: Arctic Wolf

24x7x365 Security | IR Readiness | Security Awareness | Cyber Insurance

 

Cybersecurity Panel: FBI + CISA + vCISOs

Election 2024 Cyber Risks | Quantum Computing | AI


Exact session times TBA


_____________________________________________________________________


Partnering Technologies


ree



More details to come!


_____________________________________________________________________



1 Comment


Score Cred10
Score Cred10
Oct 24

Closed accounts can still mess with your credit if they’re reported wrong — wrong dates, balances, or “open” status when they’re long gone. Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), you can dispute that data and force the credit bureaus to fix or remove it. When they don’t, that’s not a dead end — it’s a violation. There’s a good breakdown here: https://consumerattorneys.com/article/how-to-remove-closed-accounts-from-credit-report. It explains when closed accounts should disappear and what to do when they don’t. Sometimes it takes an attorney’s letter, not another online form, to finally make the report tell the truth.

Like
bottom of page