Skills shortage stories
The tool aims to cut paperwork before advisers charge fees, as Australia's financial advice sector shrinks and compliance burdens mount.
The move adds 50 creative technologists as clients scramble for staff who can turn AI trials into production work.
The expansion will add 200 jobs and deepen the skills group's AI engineering footprint as it seeks talent beyond London.
Only 45% of employees say they are involved in workplace change, despite 97% of managers claiming they include their teams.
Legacy systems are slowing AI roll-outs at large firms, with most executives saying modernisation and governance are now the main bottlenecks.
Passes in a sponsored hacking exam will trigger USD $1,000 in training credits for underserved communities, with up to USD $1 million on offer.
The funding will help Kodesage expand in the United States and Europe as it targets banks and utilities stuck with ageing on-premise software.
Pressure to ship faster is leaving most firms exposed, with AI-generated code now outpacing testing and lifting quality risks across industries.
Demand for automation-savvy IT staff is rising as firms seek to cut manual processes and manage complex cloud and hybrid systems.
Only 8% of senior finance leaders feel ready to adopt AI, despite widespread belief it can lift productivity if workflows are redesigned.
Accountants face a shift towards advisory work as AI and data tools reshape finance, with trust and judgement remaining vital.
Governance and review processes are lagging as AI-assisted coding lifts developer output, with 71% saying it adds team coordination work.
Students at Milwaukee School of Engineering gained hands-on practice with enterprise AI tools, as firms seek graduates ready for production deployments.
Frequent users were more likely to feel shaky in live exchanges, even as many said AI made them feel more polished in writing.
The capital's lead in AI use may widen Britain's productivity divide, with many regional firms lacking the data and cloud basics to scale.
A smaller pipeline of tech graduates could leave the UK economy GBP £14.5 billion worse off by 2035, a new study warns.
Technology investment softened last year, but the UK still drew more projects than France and Germany as London stayed ahead of Paris.
Electricity costs at three Yasawa Islands resorts are set to fall as off-grid solar cuts diesel use by about half next year.
Only 31% of UK finance chiefs are leading long-term investment calls, leaving strategy, AI adoption and investor messaging underpowered.
Many large UK businesses are already piloting quantum computing as a means to tackle cost-heavy optimisation tasks and AI bottlenecks.