Red Hat stories
The pact aims to help enterprises patch vulnerable open source code faster without forcing disruptive upgrades to production systems.
Enterprises can now patch older open source software without disruptive upgrades, as IBM and Red Hat target stubborn vulnerability backlogs.
The ranking could help EDB win larger enterprises seeking to run analytics and AI closer to core data without adding more specialist systems.
Enterprises can now run AI agents on live PostgreSQL data with governance controls, as EDB expands its Postgres AI platform.
Backed by Amazon, Google and Microsoft, the scheme aims to speed fixes for flaws that could ripple through banks, hospitals and power grids.
AI-generated code is outpacing enterprise review processes, prompting Qodo to add tools that flag cross-repo risks and enforce standards.
Enterprise security teams gain a new AI-assisted way to spot exploitable code flaws, as IBM widens its cyber work with OpenAI.
Cloud providers facing the end of VMware's CSP programme in 2027 can now tap migration tools and new pricing to protect margins.
The new service is aimed at reducing downtime and data loss for enterprises running Kubernetes and virtual machines across hybrid HPE environments.
It aims to solve a key enterprise AI problem by standardising how software reads PDFs, Word files and images without losing layout or meaning.
The move signals tighter financial oversight as IP Fabric steps up hiring and targets more enterprise demand for network visibility tools.
The platform aims to cut idle cloud spend for Kubernetes users, with DevZero saying it can shift workloads live as demand changes without restarts.
Asia Pacific enterprises are driving stronger demand for observability tools as LogicMonitor steps up regional execution to win more contracts.
The database firm's rapid revenue growth and customer gains are driving a bigger sales push across Asia Pacific and Japan, including Australia and New Zealand.
The addition gives companies a shared layer for securing and routing AI traffic as agentic systems move into production.
Software groups in chip design and healthcare are already using Nvidia's new agent tools to automate complex workflows with tighter security controls.
Enterprises can now vet open-source dependencies before build time, as the catalogue adds independent malware and vulnerability checks for Python and Java.
The system could help crews diagnose and treat illness during deep-space missions when contact with Earth is delayed or cut off.
Tech and software groups are most at risk as breaches, supplier access and stale credentials let attackers reach source code and customer data.
The trial could help public safety and government users keep AI processing in Canada while improving latency for distributed workloads.