Cloud stories
Demand for AI and cloud services in India is driving fresh infrastructure investment as Equinix adds capacity in Mumbai with MB3.
Boardroom focus shifted to war risk in Q1, with Iran mentions jumping as chief executives kept AI at the top of the agenda.
Growing fears over harvest-now, decrypt-later attacks are driving demand for quantum-safe controls as data moves to edge systems and cloud services.
The shift could lift AI-related income and margins as Sidetrade seeks to turn its vast transaction data into subscription products by 2030.
The software maker is leaning on partners to win bigger enterprise deals, after more than 60% of annual recurring revenue came from mid-market and enterprise customers.
The benchmark win could help enterprises compare AI cloud performance more clearly as demand grows for reliable large-scale model training.
The hotel group expects the new system to unify guest data and privacy controls across 640 properties, with full rollout due in 2026.
Greater survey capacity is set to ease global cable installation campaigns as OMS Group adds another uncrewed vessel to its fleet.
The new tools let teams turn Confluence pages into charts, prototypes and presentations without manual copying, cutting friction for users.
Governance gaps are slowing customer AI rollouts, as 51% of MSPs cite compliance as the main barrier and demand for integrated tools rises.
Downtime at large employers could fall as the new system flags workplace IT faults before staff are disrupted.
Demand for quantum-safe encryption is accelerating as regulators and large enterprises race to replace vulnerable standards before quantum threats emerge.
The nonprofit expects the cloud-based system to cut admin for staff across the country’s largest hostel network and improve guest service.
It aims to help UK channel partners turn AI pilots into production systems by adding specialist support, testing and a shared portal.
Enterprises could avoid new data centres as the firms say a mixed-chip setup can run coding agents and other AI tasks in existing sites.
The acquisitions give the Italian software group a stronger foothold in markets where new tax and billing rules are accelerating digitisation.
The Manchester IT provider must keep investing in staff and service quality to retain a rare trio of Microsoft designations.
Poorly chosen systems can slow projects, frustrate crews and leave construction firms paying for software that nobody uses.
Thousands of student placement claims were paid and screened out in the scheme’s first six months, easing compliance pressure on universities.
Finance teams could cut invoice processing time in half as Aqilla folds capture, coding and approvals into one system.