
Ara Trembly
Ara C. Trembly is the founder of Ara Trembly, The Tech Consultant and a longtime observer of technology in insurance and financial services.

Ara C. Trembly is the founder of Ara Trembly, The Tech Consultant and a longtime observer of technology in insurance and financial services.
ISO plans to develop a behavior database to aid underwriting decisions, but its important to remember that correlation does not necessarily equal causation.
Outsourcing jobs may or may not be a sensible financial decision, but either way, both the outsourced individual and the company pay the price.
Risk management software company is a natural fit with Big Blues insurance offerings
A noted Childrens Hospital is appealing a $250,000 fine for not reporting a data breach, but this should be a huge red flag for insurers.
When perpetrators of major cyber-crimes get a mere slap on the hand, we all lose.
With the economy continuing to suck wind, vendors, too, need to find ways to get more value out of what they produce.
A new report says PC shipments will diminish over the rest of this year due to a sluggish economy, but maybe people are just tired of large boxes.
Bounties on defects make a lot of fiscal sense.
Academics and security vendors say they uncovered Windows vulnerabilities months ago; what did Microsoft know?
New drives are smaller than a postage stamp with no moving parts.
The government of India may shut down BlackBerry and other messaging services for security reasons, but is wireless technology really the problem?
Toshiba drives offer auto-erasing of sensitive data on shutdown, but their limits have yet to be tested.
Technology may some day enable cars to sense danger and avoid it, but how will this affect auto insurance?
The innovative app took social networking to new levels, but failed to make it relevant to the humans who tried it.
An apparent shift in criminals strategies toward poorly protected banking services should spark concern, but does it?
Enterprise managers are keeping their cards close to the vest as they wait for the economy to show more definite signs of recovery.
Survey data reveal that IT employees are more confident about a number of thingsincluding finding employment elsewhere.
Giving customers what they want seems like a no-brainer, but where do we draw the line between service and servitude?
Black Hat was set to expose Chinese cyber-attack capabilities until big-money agencies stepped in to silence them.
Researchers and TV shows have already proven that its possible, but is it advisable?