IT Department stories
Most large US enterprises say AI agents are creating unmanaged financial and compliance risks, with many forced to reverse their actions.
The packaging group aims to improve efficiency and user experience as TCS takes control of its global IT operations under a multi-year deal.
Cost pressures are emerging as UK and Irish firms move generative AI from pilots to production, with 41% calling model spend prohibitive.
The preview could help businesses adopt office AI without exposing sensitive data, as search and automation run locally under encryption.
Cloud users could gain access to fault-tolerant quantum computing in 2028, as QuEra and AWS expand their collaboration.
Enterprises could cut handling times and improve compliance as UiPath pushes its automation software into more complex, exception-heavy case work.
The open-source release gives enterprises a single control layer for fragmented AI agent tools, with governance and cost controls built in.
AI workloads are pushing log volumes up 93%, yet most large companies still leave 86% of data unanalyzed to keep costs down.
The milestone highlights rising demand for devices that turn workplace conversations into usable records as AI firms push beyond chatbots.
The tie-up could speed AI rollout in banking, aviation and government, as DXC trains tens of thousands of engineers to deploy Claude.
Meeting-room decisions will now flow into follow-up work more easily as Zoom rolls out AI capture, signage and camera tools for offices.
Legacy systems are slowing enterprise AI gains, with only 10% of large firms saying the technology is core to operations.
AWS customers building AI agents gain policy enforcement and recovery tools as Rubrik extends its governance layer into Bedrock AgentCore.
The free check could help security teams uncover overlooked Java runtimes before AI-driven attackers exploit known flaws and outdated versions.
The tie-up adds tighter access checks as firms deploy AI agents and browser tools more widely, amid rising identity attacks.
Australia's banks are steadily increasing their use of artificial intelligence, but regulation and data security fears are tempering adoption.
The rise reflects growing demand for its expanded technology platform after a recent acquisition and caps 14 straight years on CRN's list.
Rising AI costs and weaker oversight are pushing enterprises to demand tighter controls as token use spreads across clouds and in-house models.
Visitors and engineers now face easier access and better facilities after a GBP £2 million overhaul across eight UK sites, Pulsant said.
Rising AI use is making cloud bills harder to predict, with 85% of organisations saying cost control is now their main cloud challenge.