IT Strategy stories
Custom-built agents could leave Irish boards carrying the full cost of AI errors, with fines and compliance failures possible under EU rules.
Regional demand for its data and AI tools jumped more than 85% in the fourth quarter, prompting a bigger APJ push from Databricks.
Downtime on Colt's switchover was cut to 6.5 hours, helping the telecoms group reduce disruption across operations in 40 countries.
Breach risk stays high for smaller firms because stolen credentials and weakly joined controls let attackers slip past existing tools.
Rising use of AI assistants is making software harder to understand, prompting teams to revive stricter testing, controls and oversight.
Most IT teams now say AI is making their work more strategic and demanding, with 71% needing to double-check outputs.
Businesses chasing AI gains are turning to data and integration upgrades, as akto gains higher Boomi backing to support that shift.
Many organisations face higher renewal costs as Microsoft tightens Enterprise Agreement access and shifts customers toward newer licensing models.
Many Asia-Pacific firms are seeing AI efforts stalled by rigid systems, with failed modernisation programmes driving higher costs and risk.
Most firms say AI will fail to pay off unless CIOs fix fragmented processes and add real-time business context first.
AI tools are making more firms reassess SaaS, but Thoughtworks says legacy systems and enterprise risk will keep custom builds selective.
Customers running critical workloads should gain faster recovery and more flexible hybrid storage options as Nutanix broadens ties with MongoDB and NetApp.
Most technology leaders are still finding their feet as companies race to deploy AI despite skills gaps, data problems and compliance pressure.
More than 90 per cent of large-company executives now see outsourced support as vital to scaling agentic AI, a KPMG survey found.
Businesses are under pressure to prove returns on existing tech spend, prompting EY New Zealand to bolster its AI and SAP leadership.
Rising licence costs and the Windows 10 exit are pushing organisations to rethink endpoint refresh plans, as 10ZiG adds a UK media base.
Businesses that fail to turn data, automation and integration into action risk slower growth, missed leads and weaker customer experiences.
Wider use of cloud, remote access and suppliers is leaving New Zealand organisations with harder-to-track cyber risk and weaker control.
Poorly chosen systems can slow projects, frustrate crews and leave construction firms paying for software that nobody uses.
Rising bills and AI demand are pushing cloud spending onto board agendas, with most finance chiefs worried about profits and waste.