AI-driven offense, autonomous defense, and new insider threats are converging fast. These three cyber revolutions show how machine intelligence will reshape enterprise security strategies in 2026.
In 2025, the internet’s fragility and AI’s complexity collided in public. The big vendors responded by buying the pieces they need to sell the integrated story that they have AI risk under control.
Robots aren’t going to fold your laundry by February. But Voice of Innovation Niv Sundaram predicts that an urgent caregiver shortage will move humanoids “from warehouses to living rooms” in 2026.
From circularity to U.S. assembly, Giga Computing lays out a rack-scale roadmap tuned for the next phase of AI—where inference drives scale and regional supply chains become a competitive edge.
By fusing Ansys simulation with NVIDIA AI, Synopsys is industrializing the design of software-defined vehicles, helping automakers slash prototype costs and launch new platforms up to a year faster.
AI cuts design time 70%, software architecture separates winners from losers, and subsidy rollbacks mask an unstoppable electric shift. Legacy automakers face the challenges of adapting in 2026.
Equinix’s Glenn Dekhayser and Solidigm’s Scott Shadley discuss how power, cooling, and cost considerations are causing enterprises to embrace co-location among their AI infrastructure strategies.
Despite regulatory confusion slowing innovation, AI-driven ESG tools are gaining traction as corporations race to meet evolving compliance demands and data transparency expectations.
As shifting regulations disrupt environmental, social and governance efforts, AI and advanced data analytics emerge as key drivers of progress, offering opportunities for scalable, impactful ESG strategies.