AI Adoption stories
Australian businesses may struggle to keep up as Asana expands AI across workflows, with only 14% having scaled it organisation-wide.
Only 10% of banks and asset managers are prioritising AI-ready storage, leaving many to tackle compliance and rising data costs first.
The deal broadens Megaport's AI push by joining network, compute and data services in one platform for customers across multiple clouds and data centres.
More than 1,000 CI&T AI engineers are being trained on Claude as the firm targets financial services, retail and consumer goods projects.
Security teams get real-time risk scoring for AI agents as Radiant Logic extends its identity platform across fragmented registries.
The expansion will add 200 jobs and deepen the skills group's AI engineering footprint as it seeks talent beyond London.
The wider rollout will put AI tools in the hands of more than 276,000 KPMG staff, as the firm pushes clients beyond pilot projects.
Sensitive data can stay off the cloud as Custodia's Sentinel gives executives and researchers a local AI appliance for private document analysis.
FinOps teams are struggling to assign the bulk of agentic AI costs, as token fees often pale beside APIs, data and human review work.
New compute funding and billions in private pledges are set to widen access to AI tools, sharpening Britain's bid for investment and growth.
Legacy systems are slowing AI roll-outs at large firms, with most executives saying modernisation and governance are now the main bottlenecks.
Small businesses risk falling behind unless outside advisers help them govern AI, as Pax8 says adoption is outpacing security and workflows.
More than 800 managed service providers are expected in Sydney as Pax8 seeks to deepen its Asia-Pacific presence with a regional conference.
Behavioural analytics is becoming essential as AI agents can pursue tasks so efficiently that they may cause damage without any malicious intent.
It aims to close monitoring gaps as firms adopt multiple AI coding assistants, with spending, productivity and compliance now harder to track.
Governance and review processes are lagging as AI-assisted coding lifts developer output, with 71% saying it adds team coordination work.
Boards are being warned to assess AI risk as well as opportunity, after new demand from executives prompted the course expansion.
The capital's lead in AI use may widen Britain's productivity divide, with many regional firms lacking the data and cloud basics to scale.
The telecoms group will use Anthropic's Claude Mythos Preview to spot vulnerabilities faster as cyber threats grow more automated.
Confidence among New Zealand firms is being driven more by productivity and investment than hopes of a return to pre-pandemic normality.