AI Adoption stories
The surge underscores how quickly AI use is spreading, while economists say official data still misses its impact on jobs and output.
Teams could save hours on fixes and pipeline setup as GitLab widens AI agents across security, delivery analytics and billing controls.
Most firms expect autonomous tools to outstrip guardrails within a year, leaving agent actions hard to see, control and roll back.
Joint customers can now see which cloud alerts threaten regulated or business-critical data, helping them prioritise remediation and cut alert fatigue.
Australian firms under productivity pressure can now offload routine work to an always-on agent that links Gmail, Slack and calendars.
By handling emails, calendars and routine requests in the background, the tool aims to cut admin for businesses wary of autonomous AI risks.
Business teams can now run product data tasks via chat, as the new interface aims to cut manual work and speed launches across retail channels.
More than half of organisations have shipped AI tools, but quality problems and weak testing are leaving many projects stranded before production.
Human review remains central as 77% of security professionals back AI tools in operations, with 88% already adding guardrails.
It is aimed at cutting manual reformatting and reconciliation of inconsistent custodian records for wealth managers handling multi-source portfolio data.
The Tel Aviv startup says enterprises need runtime controls as AI agents take on more privileged tasks across core business systems.
Consumers are set to encounter AI in robots, transport and personalised shopping, as Forrester says business returns will arrive sooner than expected.
Security teams will get Claude tools inside TrendAI Vision One as the firms target AI-driven attacks and faster incident response.
Most providers are using AI already, but only a minority have the governance and revenue models needed to turn it into growth.
Heavy use of AI at work could erode staff judgement and critical thinking, Hogan Assessments says, as employers adopt the tools more widely.
Manufacturers saw faster technical support and enquiry handling, with one trial cutting response times by 67.3% and reducing manual effort.
Fees are under pressure as two-thirds of service providers say clients want more for less and expect AI to cut costs.
Final-year students in Cincinnati will get paid AI training and a route into TCS roles through a three-month university-linked scheme.
AI-led search is pushing brands to adapt fast, with UK marketers more prepared than global peers for a click-less discovery model.
Most Irish data and AI professionals are staying put as employers prepare to expand teams and compete for scarce talent.