Analyst report stories
Gartner says specialist providers are gaining ground as enterprises seek cheaper, sovereign access to scarce GPU capacity for AI projects.
Security chiefs are being given a framework to curb risks as AI spreads through coding, no-code tools and autonomous software workflows.
Pressure on firms to secure sensitive AI workloads is driving the summit agenda as adoption of confidential computing accelerates, IDC says.
Only 23% of firms say staff are fully ready for AI, even as spending and deployment surge ahead of training and governance.
The move puts Europe at the centre of One Identity's strategy as tighter cyber rules and identity risks reshape demand for its software.
Enterprise buyers are treating software supply chain security as a standalone priority as Gartner creates a dedicated Magic Quadrant for the category.
Platform teams can now enforce access, naming and tagging rules automatically, reducing ticket-driven deployment delays and chargeback errors.
The award underlines growing enterprise demand for optimisation tools that can deliver gains on existing hardware without quantum systems.
Rising token use and usage-based pricing could make AI coding a bigger line item than developer salaries, Gartner said.
Enterprise renewals are set to shrink as agents replace logins, forcing software vendors to rethink seat-based pricing before revenue slips.
The recognition underlines rising demand for tools that secure software builds before attackers can exploit open source dependencies and pipelines.
Finance teams face tighter AP controls and fraud risks as Basware gains a second major analyst endorsement for its AI-driven platform.
Growing AI use in coding is widening software risk, forcing security leaders to match training and controls to each adoption stage.
AI-driven phishing is forcing buyers to favour platforms that cut false positives and blend email defence with user training, Frost & Sullivan said.
With software costs under scrutiny, the ranking could bolster Calero's pitch to large buyers seeking tighter control over SaaS spend and licences.
Governance and cost controls are moving into the platform layer as new tools aim to cut manual requests and speed up deployments.
Australian firms risk losing AI advantage if core models and pricing stay offshore, as sovereign control becomes a resilience and trust issue.
As AI spend surges, finance is being asked to prove which bets earn attention, revenue and growth, not just efficiency.
Nearly half of Canadian business leaders are testing AI without seeing returns, as firms struggle to embed the technology into daily operations.
The software aims to stop printed and scanned documents slipping outside managed workflows, a growing compliance risk for AI-heavy firms.