Application infrastructure stories
The expansion will create 400 high-skilled jobs in Cork and Galway as Ireland becomes OpenText's biggest European bet.
Enterprise users could gain more secure long-running AI workflows as OpenAI folds Ona's cloud execution tools into Codex for production use.
Enterprises could cut agent coding costs and compliance risks as the new releases add server-side repository access, audit tools and spend controls.
Customers will be able to enforce zero trust controls across more AI tools as Zscaler broadens its security programme to key cloud partners.
The win highlights growing demand for governed AI tools that speed up identity admin without weakening approvals, audit trails or compliance.
The repeat regional honour may help Umbrellar strengthen ties with global vendors as cloud and AI demand intensifies across Asia-Pacific.
The platform aims to cut idle cloud spend for Kubernetes users, with DevZero saying it can shift workloads live as demand changes without restarts.
Oracle cloud users will be able to charge eligible OpenAI model and Codex usage to existing Universal Credits within weeks.
Automated buying by AI systems could soon run at machine speed, with Mastercard backed by more than 30 partners to enable it.
The hire comes as cloud providers jostle for business from customers weighing AI workloads, sovereignty and compliance in Europe.
The update aims to simplify security operations as enterprises grapple with unmanaged devices, partners and multi-cloud workloads across AI projects.
The wider partnership push aims to help enterprises control AI risk across cloud, identity and data systems as deployments move into production.
The alliance aims to help enterprises curb security and recovery risks as AI agents write and deploy code more widely.
The certification may help the cloud and cyber security provider attract scarce talent as 95% of Australian staff rated it a great place to work.
Surrey's Longcross campus will gain more capacity for AI workloads as Ark commits GBP £807 million to meet Nebius's growing UK demand.
Australian agencies and regulated firms can now keep virtual machine workloads local, as Yurika and RackCorp target tighter data-residency rules.
Demand for controlled cloud services is rising as governments and regulated industries seek to keep sensitive data and operations within national boundaries.
Pressure to add AI capacity is pushing developers towards modular builds that can be launched in 24 weeks rather than years.
Real-time data from 77 wells should cut manual checks and speed maintenance across Oil India's dispersed field operations.
The deal secures rare long-term UK AI capacity as demand for power-hungry inference computing outstrips available data centre infrastructure.