IT Department stories
Industrial AI could soon sharpen factory output and cut downtime as Hitachi and Intel move to deploy physical AI across plants and power systems.
Non-developers are driving Codex growth, prompting OpenAI to add business plugins and a preview for shareable internal sites.
Demand for automation-savvy IT staff is rising as firms seek to cut manual processes and manage complex cloud and hybrid systems.
Industrial groups may cut manual effort and speed up issue resolution as Siemens pushes AI from pilots into governed production workflows.
Demand for local AI development is reshaping HP's PC line-up, with new laptops, mini desktops and secure systems aimed at developers and enterprises.
The chip maker's desktop push could raise prices and force businesses to rethink upgrades around on-device AI, security and battery life.
Personal-device access to production systems prompted DrillDocs to tighten oversight of offshore engineers and contractors across time zones.
AI-driven oversight and call handling could help organisations keep customer service consistent as Teams becomes their main workspace.
Enterprises could cut integration work and security risk as pre-tested FlexPod systems are aimed at production AI deployments and edge use cases.
Pressure to curb AI costs and improve returns is pushing Asia Pacific organisations towards multi-model deployment strategies across the software lifecycle.
Malaysia gains a new global operator as Digital Realty begins building capacity for cloud and AI demand in Cyberjaya.
The hire signals a sharper push into AV and unified communications as Dynamic Supplies targets resellers serving education, business and government.
Many large UK businesses are already piloting quantum computing as a means to tackle cost-heavy optimisation tasks and AI bottlenecks.
Joint customers can search telemetry in place, cutting duplication and storage costs while improving security visibility across hybrid cloud estates.
Preparatory works will begin on a major West London campus as Corscale pushes ahead with a brownfield site remade for rising cloud and AI demand.
A push for more cloud choice in Britain has gained another backer as customers face lock-in, higher costs and data-location worries.
Higher budgets have not sped delivery, with most UK digital transformation programmes running late as implementation issues bite.
Most Australian workers using AI at work have had no formal training, leaving security, privacy and skills gaps as adoption races ahead.
The survey also found most firms still lack secrets scanning and rapid audit proof, leaving hidden credentials and compliance delays as weak spots.
Continuous improvement, not ticket handling, is becoming the measure of value as firms expect managed services to keep pace with fast-changing IT needs.