Dell Technologies stories
Enterprises under pressure from AI growth and ransomware get mixed-generation clustering, stronger recovery tools and higher capacity in Dell's new platform.
Businesses face rising data centre pressure as Dell adds storage, servers and automation tools for AI and legacy workloads.
The on-premises system aims to cut cloud costs and ease data-sovereignty concerns for firms running AI closer to sensitive data.
Renewed AI spending is boosting demand for Dell's secure, certified infrastructure as companies chase faster deployment and lower cloud costs.
Rising hypervisor costs and AI demand are pushing customers towards disaggregated systems, as Dell says HCI is becoming too expensive and inflexible.
It could ease adoption for regulated firms keen to keep sensitive data and workloads inside existing Dell systems.
Partners selling Dell's focus products will get quicker rebates and real-time pricing as the company moves to simplify AI dealmaking.
Enterprises can now run more AI projects on their own infrastructure as Dell adds data tools, racks and partner software to its NVIDIA tie-up.
Local deployment could cut agentic AI costs by up to 87% over two years, Dell says, while keeping enterprise data on premises.
The system could make hybrid quantum computing usable in existing data centres, as it runs from a standard socket and 19-inch rack.
Dell is widening its consumer line-up with a lower-priced Alienware gaming option and new AI PCs for everyday productivity.
The move gives Dell users a way to verify recent snapshots and recover cleaner data after ransomware, reducing downtime and data loss.
Governments are weighing agentic AI to ease staffing pressure, but most leaders want stronger security and sovereignty safeguards before scaling up.
Older servers may be unprotected for years because some backup providers no longer fully support them, risking recovery failures and audit breaches.
Fewer than 1 in 20 governments have made major investment, even as concerns over resilience and security push sovereign AI up the agenda.
Businesses can add higher-density AI capacity in existing data centres without a redesign as Dell brings AMD Instinct MI350P GPUs to its servers.
The new system aims to cut infrastructure friction for firms shifting AI from pilots to always-on agents across cloud and on-premises setups.
Enterprises can now add AI capacity to existing data centres without reworking cooling or racks, as Dell and AMD target on-premises deployments.
Nearly half of larger Asia Pacific firms have deployed AI PCs, while 95% expect workstations to be vital for AI work within two years.
Many US enterprises still cannot trace AI failures across infrastructure, leaving costly GPU bottlenecks and hidden risks unresolved.