Automation stories
The Melbourne-based software firm is stepping up overseas growth as Peter Holmes takes charge of operations, customer strategy and expansion.
Codex and ChatGPT users get a model that OpenAI says performs better on coding, research and office work while using fewer tokens.
Pressure is mounting on platform teams to prove AI can cut outage risk and costs without adding fresh complexity to production systems.
The expanded tie-up aims to automate telecoms, retail and IT workflows while giving enterprises tighter oversight of AI agents across both platforms.
Smaller investment firms could cut costs and manual work as a single system replaces fragmented trading and risk tools across asset classes.
The deal should cut manual reconciliation by about 95% and help the cybersecurity training firm accept payments in more than 140 currencies.
Mid-market firms in North America can now link HR, payroll and finance data in one system, helping to cut manual work and compliance risks.
Banks that fail to modernise core systems may struggle to scale AI, cloud services and new payment rails, Temenos and Bain warn.
Customers can keep existing workflows as web application and API protection moves inside Google Cloud, reducing latency and operational overhead.
Stricter EU pay rules are driving multinationals to centralise payroll data, with Payslip now processing 1.3 million payslips a year.
The rollout puts generative AI in front of Citigold clients as banks race to show it can aid investors without sidelining advisers.
Native checks will now flag prompt injection and data leakage across more of the AI agent stack as enterprises push systems into production.
Hybrid working is emerging as a key draw for Canadian tech staff, with most business leaders saying flexibility now rivals pay in recruitment.
Payroll mistakes are already pushing some workers into debt, as HBHR says 61% of employees would quit if errors continued for six months.
Smaller science and technology firms outside London are driving the gains, as young staff pay rose 1.9% and hiring outpaced the wider sector.
Most operators fear the UK is unready for AI growth, with weak testing, ageing kit and outages exposing infrastructure gaps.
Grid security checks at the Dutch operator now run at least ten times faster, easing congestion analysis and outage planning as demand grows.
Small UK employers could cut compliance headaches as the firm takes on payroll, tax and statutory duties under a new managed employment model.
The tie-up could speed secure AI adoption for regulated Japanese firms, with NEC set to roll out Claude to about 30,000 staff.
Extra government support may help UK fintech scale, but firms still face costly reporting and compliance frictions, Leo Labeis said.