IT service management (ITSM) stories
IT teams may gain broader visibility and faster remediation after ScienceLogic expanded Skylar AI and was named an IDC MarketScape Leader for AIOps.
IT teams can now spot oversharing and AI-readiness risks in Microsoft 365 from one chat window, as governance workloads rise.
The platform aims to close the gap between heavy AI spending and everyday use, especially for frontline staff across fragmented workplace systems.
It lets organisations approve access requests inside Teams, reducing email trails and helping keep credentials and permissions under tighter control.
The move is aimed at helping large firms shift AI from pilots into production with tighter governance across manufacturing, service and IT workflows.
Enterprise renewals are set to shrink as agents replace logins, forcing software vendors to rethink seat-based pricing before revenue slips.
Teams can now spot unapproved infrastructure changes in minutes, helping reduce outage and audit risk as firms face tighter resilience scrutiny.
The chipmaker will shift more of its enterprise systems to a managed model as Infosys takes on applications, infrastructure and support.
More than 1,300 organisations have adopted the platform in six weeks, as Tanium bets AI can cut endpoint security and IT workflows.
The semiconductor maker will shift internal IT operations to a managed services model designed to cut incidents and improve employee support.
Enterprises wrestling with AI workload failures and infrastructure bottlenecks may use the new tool to automate incident response and service assurance.
IT teams will be able to use Claude and Microsoft Copilot for real-time Kaseya workflows, with general release due in 2027.
The listing should speed procurement for cloud customers as employers face rising risks from impersonation, fraud and stolen credentials.
Managed service providers could cut hours of manual vulnerability work per client as the update links scans, remediation and audit evidence.
The shift to AI that can act, not just summarise, raises new questions over auditability, data residency and who controls operations.
It offers firms a cheaper way to align technology with strategy while reducing duplication, technical debt and security risk.
The biggest gains from autonomous IT come from cleaner CMDBs and faster incident resolution, not new software, as firms join up existing tools.
The update should ease compliance concerns for regulated firms by keeping incident data inside customer environments, including air-gapped sites.
Many large UK firms are still struggling to embed AI into daily operations, despite strong demand and rising governance spend.
The deal is set to cut costs and speed issue resolution as Valmet shifts core IT operations onto an AI-led, cloud-based model.