High‑end GPUs remained scarce, queue times stretched from hours to days, and model teams learned the hard way that single‑cloud loyalty often delayed launches more than it protected them from complexity. The case for cross‑cloud was not philosophical; it was practical—get access to capacity,
Quantum computing’s scale problem has been well known for years, yet the bind has sharpened as practical workloads demand far more logical qubits than any standalone device can deliver, making networking not a luxury but a necessity for progress. Cisco’s prototype universal quantum switch enters
Boardrooms kept asking for proof that AI agents could manage messy, real-world work instead of chat-script parlor tricks, and the answer arrived with a staged but telling trial: a multi-agent system planning a full marathon through the chaos of Las Vegas while showcasing the entire lifecycle of
Trading models hungry for granular history stumble when petabytes live in sprawling CSV silos that burn cash with every scan and still miss deadlines because latency outruns decision cycles in live markets. That friction is why a quiet shift in file formats has become a headline story. Delta
Boardrooms buzzed about generative breakthroughs, yet a colder reality surfaced as a new survey found that the majority of enterprises still cannot move data freely enough to feed the very models they hope will transform the business. That tension between ambition and access set the stakes: growth
Operational missteps in aviation rarely stem from a lack of data; they arise when flight events, maintenance actions, and parts movements live in silos that resist timely reconciliation and leave crews guessing at the truth on the ramp. When a flight logbook update must traverse email chains before