Defence stories
Satellite links are helping 70 veterans stay safe and in touch as a 13-week sailing challenge circles the UK to raise GBP £300,000.
Argyll Data Development launches UK sovereign AI inference cloud with SambaNova, targeting regulated firms seeking local control over data and systems.
UK organisations can now keep sensitive AI workloads onshore as Argyll’s new cloud aims to ease compliance, trust and energy concerns.
More than half of public sector IT staff say artificial intelligence has added work, as fragmented systems and policy gaps complicate adoption.
The Manchester firm is now weighing outside funding and headcount growth after repeat business pushed first-year revenue above GBP £250,000.
The updated device adds 2TB capacity and automatic shutdown protection, as Apricorn targets federal approval for stricter security buyers.
More than 500 investors and founders will gather in Bologna as Italy's venture capital market hits its busiest quarter in a decade.
The listing could speed procurement for defence buyers seeking pre-evaluated tools for secure deployment across complex NATO environments.
Users in manufacturing and defence will get faster deployment of rugged edge devices as Panasonic bundles Red Hat software on TOUGHBOOKs.
Only seven per cent of organisations are data ready, raising doubts over whether enterprise AI can move from prototypes to production.
QuEra survey finds quantum buyers and backers are demanding stronger proof of value, even as 46% of organisations expect budgets to stay flat.
Its research aims to show developers why deterministic software is becoming crucial as AI robots move into shared, safety-critical spaces.
Security teams gain wider visibility as Infoblox folds Axur into a new service that scans 40 million URLs a day for phishing and impersonation.
The move aims to widen security coverage as firms struggle to test expanding attack surfaces quickly enough.
New Zealand’s first Balikatan cyber role is giving an Army corporal hands-on experience with US and Philippine forces in a simulated threat hunt.
The hardware observability startup is expanding its leadership bench as it targets aerospace, defence and autonomy customers with software for physical systems.
Worries over cyberattacks, bias and weak data systems are driving calls for AI rules that protect trust, jobs and security.
The move could help Canadian chipmakers keep more design and production work at home, boosting a sector that already supports thousands of jobs.
Security teams facing rising alert volumes now have a guide for deciding which tasks AI should handle and which need human control.
Ottawa hopes the move will draw private investment and speed access to wafer fabrication for Canadian firms in AI, quantum and defence.