IT Department stories
Toronto will gain 27MW of new capacity in mid-2026 as Yondr enters Canada with a campus designed to curb water use and meet green standards.
Customers needing faster database performance can now buy Hetzner’s EX131, which pairs Intel Xeon 6731P chips with Gen5 NVMe storage.
New guidance aims to help firms curb data leakage and rogue actions as AI agents and models are embedded in daily operations.
Enterprises could gain tighter control over AI deployments as the new stack combines governance, security and on-premise data sovereignty.
Despite widespread confidence, only 32% of firms test AI disaster recovery plans monthly, leaving identity and SaaS access exposed to outages.
The funding gives Wasabi room to expand storage capacity and global reach as demand rises for data-heavy AI workloads.
Local customers will gain more support as Tines expands in response to rising demand from Australian and New Zealand enterprises.
Adoption is rising as customers report faster fixes and lower running costs, with one college cutting troubleshooting time by 90%.
AWS users can now run GitLab Duo Agent Platform inference through Amazon Bedrock, keeping AI workflows inside existing controls and budgets.
The award could help Fortinet deepen enterprise ties as cloud security buyers seek fewer tools and faster remediation across hybrid environments.
Industrial operators could cut downtime and costs as Schneider Electric and Deloitte target AI-led links between factory systems and business software.
The five-year deal will give Swedish researchers and smaller firms cloud-style access to AI infrastructure as demand for Mimer grows.
Many UK IT leaders say open source could reduce reliance on a single AI vendor, even as most lack robust governance for autonomous tools.
Continuity for customers and partners is HPE South Pacific’s priority as Anthony Sanelli steps in after Patrick Matthews leaves next month.
Search visibility, trade coverage and peer mentions now shape which managed service providers make CIO shortlists in Australia.
For CIOs, independent coverage can reveal whether a vendor's online prominence reflects real market traction or just polished marketing.
A stronger FY26 lifted Persistent's dividend to INR 40 a share as annual revenue climbed 17.4%, with quarterly growth extending to a 24th straight quarter.
The change signals a push towards recurring software and IT revenue as the company expands beyond printers and copiers in Australia.
Credential theft is being tackled earlier as Australian organisations face more phishing and automated attacks that can slip past standard defences.
The insurer will use cloud and AI tools to cut claims admin and speed up customer service under a five-year agreement with Microsoft.