Australia
AustraliaGartner: How to Boost the Success Rate of IT Projects in 2025
Gartner research shows IT leaders can enhance the success prospects of digital initiatives in simple ways.
Ben is TechRepublic's local content lead for Australia and the Asia-Pacific region. Based in Sydney, Australia, he has over two decades of experience as a B2B journalist and editor in Australia, Asia and the UK covering developments in technology across multiple industry verticals, including banking and finance, education and the law. He currently covers news and trends relevant to business technology buyers, from technology vendor and product updates, to analysis from local industry thought leaders on the challenges and opportunities organizations are facing in a areas like AI, digital transformation and cybersecurity.
Gartner research shows IT leaders can enhance the success prospects of digital initiatives in simple ways.
Agentic AI, AI governance platforms and post-quantum cryptography are among the most disruptive future technology trends facing IT leaders.
New data reveals 40% of Australian companies are lagging in digital transformation. Explore the reasons behind this gap and its potential impacts.
Gartner’s analysts detailed the different approaches to adopting AI at the Gartner IT Symposium/Xpo in Australia.
The internet-facing assets were found to be susceptible to potential exploitation in a sample of 90 banking and financial services organisations.
New mandatory guardrails will apply to AI models in high-risk settings, with businesses encouraged to adopt new safety standards starting now.
Data fragmentation across legacy data warehouses and systems is a core business problem driving Australian enterprises to utilise Databricks.
Australian banks and government agencies are not rushing to adopt passkey authentication methods, despite the added security benefits.
Australia could become the world’s first quantum computing nation — but it won’t come without controversy.
5G in APAC is also growing strongly in 2024, with the region considered a global “hotspot” for 5G standalone networks.