Skills shortage stories
Only 12% of Australian operators say now is a good time to open a venue, as rising costs and weaker spend squeeze margins.
Most Australian workers using AI at work have had no formal training, leaving security, privacy and skills gaps as adoption races ahead.
Cost-of-living pressures are leaving many staff with little real wage growth, even as most remain in jobs they see as secure.
More than 10,000 delegates will gather in Sydney as New South Wales pushes its education technology sector as an export and jobs driver.
The new Melbourne hub gives researchers and students access to live vehicle data as Australia pushes safer, cleaner transport planning.
Firms using integrated cloud systems report fewer finance and budgeting errors, as pressure mounts to cut rework and overtime.
Nearly half of small businesses suffered cyber incidents last year, despite most saying they were confident in their defences.
Many finance chiefs still struggle to shape strategy, as EY found only a quarter lead investment calls and few are seen as value partners.
British businesses are recovering slowly from attacks, with fewer than half back to normal within 10 days despite rapid detection.
Scattered data and stricter rules are slowing rivals, while 37% of North American finance teams already use AI in multi-step workflows.
Blind spots in monitoring are pushing outage bills higher, with Splunk estimating average downtime now costs USD $15,000 a minute.
Industrial maintenance teams could save time on routine planning and safety tasks as Ultimo rolls out AI tools through Microsoft Teams.
Businesses adopting AI now face a single service aimed at filling gaps in governance, monitoring and incident response across workflows.
Knowledge gaps and sustainability concerns are still holding back wider adoption, even as 73% of Web3 professionals back blockchain for enterprise security.
Britain's green push is being hampered by patchy charging, poor data and weak supply-chain transparency, executives say.
Learners across the UK will gain access to AI video creation, as employers look for practical returns from workplace training.
Continuous improvement, not ticket handling, is becoming the measure of value as firms expect managed services to keep pace with fast-changing IT needs.
Accountancy firms could cut month-end close work by half on some clients, as the new system automates reconciliations, entries and reviews.
Public confidence is trailing adoption, with nearly half of citizens uneasy about AI in services despite rapid uptake by public bodies.
A majority of large UK firms fear quantum computing could erode competitiveness, but most are delaying hiring and planning until 2030 or later.