Virtualization stories
Businesses will get cheaper storage and wider backup coverage as Synology adds SATA-based systems, object storage and AI tools to its roadmap.
Businesses will soon get on-site AI workflows and broader backup coverage as Synology's latest software updates target compliance and ransomware risk.
The compact desktop aims to cut cloud costs for AI developers by letting them fine-tune and run large models locally on Windows.
Growth in managed service provider demand lifted revenue 4% at NAKIVO, as the backup software group added customers in 190 countries and territories.
Operators are shifting towards AI, satellite links and embedded security as telecom and IoT networking converge with compute and device control.
The refreshed servers add up to 40% more CPU cores and 1.5 TB of memory for VMware customers migrating or scaling private cloud workloads.
Cluster operators gain automated workload balancing and broader networking controls in the latest release, reducing manual intervention during maintenance.
It gives regulated organisations a single platform for private and hybrid clouds, with tighter control over data location and compliance.
Developers can now run Claude agents in Cloudflare sandboxes, with code, tools and private connectivity handled outside Anthropic's core platform.
The expanded remit underscores StorMagic's push to grow partner-led sales as customers reassess virtualised infrastructure across EMEA.
Businesses face rising data centre pressure as Dell adds storage, servers and automation tools for AI and legacy workloads.
The Polish lender expects a 60% drop in virtualisation costs as it shifts hundreds of critical workloads onto Red Hat OpenShift and Hitachi Vantara.
Rising hypervisor costs and AI demand are pushing customers towards disaggregated systems, as Dell says HCI is becoming too expensive and inflexible.
Customers will get broader cyber recovery options as the pair add resale agreements and tighter integration across hybrid cloud tools.
The update could ease migrations for IT teams seeking to cut VMware dependence without adding Linux administration overhead.
Rising virtual machine estates on Red Hat OpenShift are driving demand for faster backups and more predictable recovery across hybrid cloud setups.
Service providers facing rising cloud bills and data residency demands now have a packaged alternative for infrastructure and protection services.
The tie-up gives organisations real-time controls against prompt injection and data leakage as enterprise AI moves into live deployment.
Older servers may be unprotected for years because some backup providers no longer fully support them, risking recovery failures and audit breaches.
Rising hardware costs and scarce GPUs are pushing providers towards integrated AI stacks that can cut complexity and TCO, Virtuozzo says.