Interoperability stories
Stricter data and AI rules are pushing enterprises to demand more control over where workloads run and how they are governed.
Italian universities will gain a shared, Italy-based storage system as GARR and Cubbit begin a 1 petabyte pilot to improve resilience and control.
Manufacturers could cut engineering work by half as Schneider Electric and Microsoft use Azure AI to streamline plant design and operations.
Government and defence users get faster failover and more automation as VQ Conference Manager 4.8 adds tighter controls for sensitive conferencing.
Rising AI power and cooling demands are pushing operators towards open hardware as Legrand adds rack, power and thermal gear for dense sites.
The move gives the payments group a direct role in securing early transactions on a network built for real-time and machine-to-machine payments.
The hires aim to strengthen iManage’s partner network as software buyers demand more integrations, automation and broader customer support.
Buyers at ISC West were focused on simpler upgrades and better system connections as Gallagher pushed migration tools and cloud access management.
It aims to help warehouse operators cut the risk of costly retrofits by testing automation and labour scenarios before spending capital.
Poor patient records are driving errors, denied claims and delays as hospitals race to secure the data behind digital care.
Sales rose in Iberia and Asia-Pacific as Snom added more than 20 devices, while the UK and wider Europe stayed broadly stable.
Utilities could more easily link meter data to demand response as DLMS User Association and the OpenADR Alliance align their technical standards.
Banks and insurers could cut implementation times from months to weeks as FintechOS 8 adds governed AI and new product operations tools.
Enterprises will be able to move data and run workloads privately between Oracle Cloud Infrastructure and AWS without using the public internet.
OEMs could cut development time as Thoro's CoreFlex uses Orbbec 3D cameras to run autonomous functions across multiple industrial vehicles.
Australian households get a security camera that also acts as a hub for Apple, Google, Alexa and SmartThings, at AUD $269.
Fragmented records and weak governance are making health IT roll-outs slower, costlier and less effective than budgets suggest.
A new GSMA report says legacy systems and skills gaps are still slowing Japan’s digital economy, despite strengths in 5G, AI and 6G.
Stronger safeguards and faster rollout could help Japan turn advanced connectivity into wider economic gains as scams and exclusion persist.
Australian builders are using more model-based workflows, but rising data-control fears and AI rules are slowing wider gains.