AI Strategy stories
Corporate learning teams are being pushed to redesign structures and skills as employers move from AI trials to daily use across operations.
More firms are tying AI spending to measurable results, yet just 7% have established a return on investment, KPMG says.
The platform aims to close the gap between heavy AI spending and everyday use, especially for frontline staff across fragmented workplace systems.
The deal gives Qualcomm a stronger software layer for developers as AI workloads spread from edge devices into data centres.
Armenia's research push gets a boost as a 64-GPU supercomputer is installed in a retrofitted university building.
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.
The tie-up gives enterprises a single policy layer to curb data leaks and compliance risks as AI workloads spread across clouds and models.
European cloud and AI customers will gain locally built NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 systems as Bull and Foxconn shift production to France and the Czech Republic.
Howard Wilson's retirement will hand PagerDuty a finance chief with deeper banking and public-company experience as it pushes further into AI tools.
Client mandates and staff retention are at risk as most professional services firms struggle to turn widespread AI use into daily practice.
Ad-hoc data work is draining staff time and slowing AI projects, as only a quarter of large firms have structured data programmes.
Sovereign AI is becoming vital to mission readiness as Defence Australia builds a connected data ecosystem for faster decisions.
Businesses face growing pressure to keep AI data and costs in-house, as CTI Digital tests a private platform for employees in Manchester.
Australian firms risk losing AI advantage if core models and pricing stay offshore, as sovereign control becomes a resilience and trust issue.
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.
UK businesses face fresh pressure to tighten AI governance as Microsoft's pricing changes make bundled licences more compelling.
Despite widespread pilots, only 17% of Malaysian financial institutions have scaled strategic AI initiatives, a new report says.
The Leeds consultancy is adding 15 AI roles as clients grapple with data and governance hurdles that keep pilots from reaching production.