AI Adoption stories
The tie-up could speed customer service automation for regulated sectors, with first joint deals already closed and roll-outs due in weeks.
The move is aimed at helping large firms shift AI from pilots into production with tighter governance across manufacturing, service and IT workflows.
Rising token use and usage-based pricing could make AI coding a bigger line item than developer salaries, Gartner said.
Chief marketers now have a members-only AI tool that turns peer research and case studies into quick guidance as marketing teams face pressure to adapt.
Despite heavy use of AI tools, fewer than 10% of firms have scaled them across marketing, leaving billions in potential gains unrealised.
Legacy-system modernisation could accelerate as NTT DATA rolls out Cursor's AI coding tools internally before offering them to clients.
AI demand is pushing cloud providers towards GPU-as-a-service models, with efficiency and utilisation emerging as key differentiators.
Rising AI data volumes are forcing observability vendors to rethink pricing and storage as Tsuga wins fresh backing to keep telemetry in-house.
Many companies are deploying autonomous software faster than they can govern it, leaving thousands of agents able to act without approval.
Weak revenue growth is pushing telecom groups to invest in AI infrastructure and automation, as they seek new income beyond basic connectivity.
Growing AI use in coding is widening software risk, forcing security leaders to match training and controls to each adoption stage.
Quality failures are prompting some firms to pull back from AI projects, as a UK survey found 18% have already abandoned or scaled them back.
Three-quarters of geospatial teams say demand is rising faster than capacity, heightening pressure on staff, systems and decision-making.
Rising adoption is sharpening fears over jobs and security, even as three-quarters of Irish business leaders trust AI use in their firms.
The free release could help firms avoid costly single-vendor AI contracts as Rebel links employees to shared company memory and portable workflows.
The shift to AI that can act, not just summarise, raises new questions over auditability, data residency and who controls operations.
Productivity gains are lagging as Australian workers spend longer at work, prompting Logitech to pitch devices that ease mobility and presentation stress.
Most organisations are scaling AI in database management without formal controls, Redgate says, despite adoption rising to 44% last year.
Regulatory scrutiny is pushing employers to keep people in hiring decisions, as AI takes on admin rather than replacing HR staff.
Public confidence in digital government is fragile, with AI adoption, vendor dependence and weak governance now posing a bigger risk than outages.