Why high-growth companies should build decision cultures
As AI accelerates the pace of business, organizations need to move decisions closer to those with intimate knowledge.
ComputerWorld AI·

For years, meeting room technology was evaluated primarily on ease of use and audiovisual quality. If people could walk in, plug in, and start presenting, the job was considered done. That mindset no longer holds. Today’s meeting rooms are deeply connected to digital environments, and security has become a business-critical concern rather than a technical afterthought. According to IDC, 50.8% of organizations now rank security as the most important factor when selecting collaboration and videoconferencing technology, ahead of price or quality considerations. That shift reflects a broader reality: what happens in meeting rooms has direct implications for data protection, regulatory compliance, operational resilience, and corporate trust. The meeting room as an expanded attack surface Hybrid work has fundamentally changed the role of the meeting room. It is no longer a closed, isolated space. Instead, it has become a convergence point where corporate networks, cloud services, collabor
Read full articleAs AI accelerates the pace of business, organizations need to move decisions closer to those with intimate knowledge.
OpenAI is launching additional opt-in protections for ChatGPT accounts. The new security initiative includes a new partnership with security key provider Yubico.
The organizations that get the most from agentic AI will be those that understand the threat model clearly enough to design against it.
Getting stalled enterprise AI rollouts in the EMEA region moving again will require CIOs to aggressively audit their systems. Over the past 18 months, AI deployments across Europe advanced far beyond initial testing. Companies poured capital into large language models and machine learning, expecting heavy operational upgrades. IDC research reveals that boards are slowing down, […] The post IDC: How EMEA CIOs can jumpstart AI rollouts appeared first on AI News.
Building on a long-standing MIT–IBM collaboration, the new lab will chart the convergence of AI, algorithms, and quantum computing.
The way organizations support collaboration today still varies widely from space to space. Small huddle rooms, project spaces, and large boardrooms often come with different setups, different workflows, and different expectations. For employees, that inconsistency creates friction. For IT teams, it creates complexity. And for organizations, it quietly undermines the promise of hybrid work. What’s becoming clear is that the meeting room is no longer just a physical space. It is where hybrid work either flows or fails. Meetings remain the backbone of collaboration Despite new ways of working, meetings remain central to how teams align, make decisions, and move projects forward. People come to the office not to sit behind individual screens, but to connect, co‑create, and build momentum together. In a hybrid reality, those moments increasingly involve a mix of in‑room and remote participants. That places a new kind of pressure on meeting spaces. They must support different group si
Hybrid work has settled into everyday reality, but the technology that supports it is still catching up. As collaboration becomes more distributed, organizations are reassessing how meeting spaces, digital tools, and infrastructure actually support the way people work. What’s emerging is a shift from fragmented solutions toward more intentional, integrated collaboration environments that are designed to perform, scale, and adapt over time. Three trends in collaboration technology stand out. Meeting rooms are becoming fully integrated IT assets. Artificial intelligence is shifting from promise to practical necessity. And sustainability is returning as a strategic priority, grounded in data and long-term efficiency. Together, these forces are redefining how collaboration technology is designed, deployed, and evaluated. Meeting rooms become managed digital environments Meeting spaces have evolved from static rooms into active, connected environments. In hybrid organizations, they are w
Claude Mythos and GenAI are reshaping security — discover why faster exploits, endless patching, and resilient detection now define defense.