IT Department stories
The deal could bring Australia its first sovereign quantum computer, as Archer tests local demand for secure access in defence and banking.
Most organisations are exposed to AI security breaches, with AvePoint finding 88.4% suffered at least one incident in the past year.
Enterprises can now add more tailored IT tools after the new Marketplace passed 170 extensions and 10,000 downloads worldwide.
Enterprises facing costly renewals may now get a lower-risk route off proprietary databases and into PostgreSQL, MySQL or MariaDB.
Customers will avoid Windows Server licensing costs as 10ZiG shifts endpoint management to a Linux appliance with tighter controls and lower overhead.
Security teams face a new governance gap as AI agents spread across Microsoft systems, with many lacking inventories, controls or monitoring.
Boards are being urged to overhaul defences as AI speeds attacks and exposes firms to foreign vendors' access risks.
The rollout gives Insight a test case for selling Microsoft's newest AI tools after a survey found most Australian firms are still only experimenting.
Partners across Australia and New Zealand will gain more AI-linked incentives and tools as Dell reshapes its programme around customer demand.
It gives IT teams a way to track agent activity, enforce access rules and watch AI spending as deployments move beyond pilots.
Most users are still relying on virtual desktops, but patching confidence and rising management costs are pushing IT teams to rethink operations.
Researchers can now analyse data, search literature and draft papers in one place, with outputs kept reproducible on their own infrastructure.
Teams users can now handle critical alerts inside their usual workspace as BlackBerry extends AtHoc for faster responses to incidents.
Developers on Linux can now use Claude Desktop natively, though the beta lacks Computer Use and voice input for now.
Audited feedback has lifted Nasuni's customer-service standing, with a 98% CSAT score and top G2 placements across 15 categories.
The Irish-headquartered group is stepping up dealmaking in healthcare software, with more than 20 products and €100 million earmarked for acquisitions.
The refinancing gives the Copenhagen-based software group room to expand enterprise sales and fund AI services built on backup data.
About 800 agents are already using AI guidance as Sopra Steria looks to meet a 90% call-answer target within 20 seconds.
Access to closed AI models can be cut off overnight, prompting governments and firms to rethink their reliance on foreign providers.
Reliable Wi-Fi and cyber security helped organisers keep broadcasts, ticketing and fan services running at the U.S. Open.