ICT sector stories
Pressure to lift margins is pushing New Zealand firms to target AI and automation at energy use, reporting and admin tasks.
Rugby clubs and provincial unions will get discounted accounting software as Xero deepens ties with New Zealand Rugby beyond branding.
Growing demand for AI coding tools has prompted Cursor to strengthen its regional sales team as it expands closer to customers in ANZ.
Businesses can now run Claude-powered agents in isolated Cloudflare sandboxes, with tighter controls for private data, audit trails and scaling.
Architectural firms could save GBP £21,500 a year under a new metered model after telemetry showed cloud workstations rarely use full GPU capacity.
Most brands are posting widely on social media but failing to turn activity into engagement, according to Sprinklr's new index.
Search users will get background AI agents and custom layouts as Google broadens Gemini across its apps, YouTube and Workspace.
Industrial operators may get faster AI access to plant and business data, as the deal avoids copying information into separate systems.
Unapproved collaboration apps are widening security loopholes for APAC businesses as AI tools spread faster than governance can keep up.
The expanded business will give hospitals faster patient feedback tools as pressure grows to improve care, communication and outcomes.
Enterprises are testing only about 32% of their attack surface, leaving many assets outside regular security checks as threats grow faster.
The funding will help the hospitality software group hire, expand AI tools and buy smaller rivals as venues face rising costs.
Cautious support from tech leaders hinges on whether Canberra can turn new AI and digital funding into real productivity gains.
The lender is deepening its talent pipeline as automation reshapes entry-level jobs, with interns expected to make up most of this year's intake.
The probe could force new UK rules on software bundling and cloud licensing, potentially easing rivals' access to Microsoft's AI-heavy ecosystem.
The London training group will use fresh capital to widen its European push as firms race to turn AI spending into productivity gains.
Regulatory sandboxes could help firms move AI systems from pilot to wider use as ministers seek to overhaul outdated rules.
The Brisbane IT services group is keeping its brand as it pushes deeper into not-for-profit work after Evergreen's acquisition and Lyra transition.
AI tools are expected to speed attacks and vulnerability discovery, prompting US industry groups to press Washington for coordinated safeguards.
The three-day event is set to draw regional tech, creative and education figures as Bath seeks a bigger role in the South West digital economy.