AI Adoption stories
Most organisations must upgrade their systems to run agentic AI in production, as cloud costs, governance and energy use climb.
The appointments signal a sharper partner-led route to market as the software group pushes AI deeper into customer service systems used by thousands.
Poor data quality is now a business risk for Chief Data Officers, undermining AI, customer service and compliance across the enterprise.
The software group is sharpening its global growth push as Tarun Nandwani takes the top job and Pramod Kumar gets a new role.
Employees are prioritising control and flexibility, suggesting heavy investment in digital tools may not improve workplace experience on its own.
The award reflects measurable gains from Sidetrade's AI-led redesign, which cut feature delivery from 60 days to three and slashed staffing needs.
The software tester is expanding into agentic AI validation as Aatish Salvi takes over from Chris Malone and Tacita Morway becomes Chief Technology Officer.
The shortfall is set to intensify competition for power, land and grid connections as AI workloads push global data centre demand far ahead of supply.
Most Australian employees using AI say it lifts productivity, but many still hide that use from bosses as workplace rules lag behind adoption.
Android users will get new security and multitasking tools first, as Google rolls out Gemini 3.5 Live Translate and other updates.
Many finance teams are spending the equivalent of days a week checking AI outputs, wiping out hoped-for productivity gains and slowing adoption.
More than a third of New Zealand workers feel guilty about using AI, as businesses lag peers in adopting it, a report says.
Only a quarter of Indian organisations say staff are ready for AI, as deployment races ahead of training, governance and trust.
Only a third of Irish organisations have a formal AI strategy, leaving boards scrambling to align rapid adoption with governance and returns.
The venture targets a GCC oil and gas digitalisation market worth more than USD $1 billion a year, as operators seek efficiency gains.
The move targets government and critical infrastructure clients seeking secure AI deployment inside complex operations rather than advisory support.
Australian users are leaning on Claude far more than expected, with Anthropic saying adoption is more than six times population norms.
Many workers are risking disciplinary action by feeding customer data and confidential files into public AI tools, the survey found.
Temporary loss of access to a frontier model could disrupt service delivery, compliance and operations as AI enters core business systems.
Australian firms learned the hard way that relying on one AI model can halt operations, as cheaper open alternatives now make diversification practical.