User experience (UX) stories
The deal broadens Studio Graphene’s European reach and gives clients access to design, engineering and cloud services from one provider.
The award could help Cherry stand out in the crowded peripherals market, as buyers increasingly seek ergonomic, customisable work mice.
Measured gains in service speed and transparency drove Granicus's awards, with councils cutting wait times, costs and phone enquiries.
Smaller investment firms could cut costs and manual work as a single system replaces fragmented trading and risk tools across asset classes.
The payment option is generating more completed sales, with approval rates for online guest checkouts rising to 75.18% in April 2026.
Users can now get help without leaving the app, as Amplitude's new assistant uses in-product data to guide and complete tasks.
Businesses selling into the EU face tighter accessibility scrutiny, with Accessiway targeting retailers and other firms using a new monitoring platform.
Users can now get help inside an app as Amplitude ties support to behavioural data, aiming to cut tickets and friction.
Retail investors using Stake can now see fuller portfolio history and stock-move context in-app as markets swing more sharply.
Businesses are turning to observability software to govern AI traffic and secure hybrid systems, as IDC sees the market rising to USD $4.39 billion by 2029.
Many large companies are making support harder to reach, with most failing to offer clear web, chat or phone access, a Parloa study found.
AI agents are set to erode ad-funded web traffic, forcing businesses to pivot from screen-based funnels to metered API revenue.
Financial services marketers can now test creative against synthetic AI personas before approval, reducing costly changes after campaigns go live.
The pilot could give households clearer proof a bill was received, easing fears of late fees as Zelle moves beyond transfers.
The new model aims to cut the need for constant monitoring, with Crompton saying it can cook food up to 30% faster and more evenly.
Retailers can now link existing AI tools to shop-floor staff through headsets, aiming to speed service without new hardware or retraining.
Clearer rules and institutional flows are making digital assets easier for Australians to trade, particularly younger investors seeking diversification.
Shoppers using AI tools are increasingly valuable to retailers, even as Adobe finds product pages still lag in machine readability.
Local secure access is moving up the agenda as outages, slower performance and data sovereignty concerns reshape how New Zealand firms manage risk.
Advertisers could gain better cross-channel results as TripleLift rolls out TL Spark, an AI layer linking buying, creative and measurement.