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IT physical security: 8 readiness moves from Genetec

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IT owns more than networks now. Buildings, cameras, access readers, and intercoms connect to the same fabric as apps and cloud. That’s why IT physical security needs a single plan. Genetec’s guidance lands at the right moment for a region racing toward smart cities, energy hubs, and mega events. Here are eight moves that raise readiness—without adding silos.

1) Tie security to business and IT strategy

Start with intent. Map risks, processes, and outcomes. Then select a unified platform that brings video, access control, ALPR, comms, forensics, and analytics under one console. Centralized operations improve collaboration across security, compliance, and IT. Better yet, the data stream—facility usage, incident patterns, dwell times—feeds safety improvements and smart resourcing.

2) Demand technical compatibility (and avoid lock-in)

Architect for choice. Favor open systems that talk to Active Directory, identity platforms, and your cloud. Open APIs let you add third-party tools and industry-specific apps. As needs change, you can extend the stack instead of ripping it out.

3) Put cybersecurity and compliance at the core

Treat physical security like any business-critical workload. Encrypt data in transit and at rest. Enforce granular roles, MFA, and least privilege. Keep full audit trails. Then align with recognized frameworks and certifications such as NIST CSF, ISO/IEC 27001, and SOC 2. Ask vendors to share their vulnerability management and disclosure practices. Transparency builds trust.

4) Specify reliability and performance up front

Downtime breaks safety. Therefore, write high-availability, SLA targets, and disaster-recovery requirements into the contract. Test failover. Size the system for growth in cameras, doors, and analytics. If you plan to add sites next year, design for that today.

5) Model total cost—and prove ROI

Go beyond license price. Include implementation, maintenance, storage, and training. Then quantify value: faster investigations, fewer truck rolls, less shrink, and leaner staffing through automation. A choice-driven path—cloud where it fits, on-prem where it pays—usually wins on both cost and control.

6) Check vendor depth and support

You will live with this partner. Review references across industries, roadmap cadence, and security track record. Next, probe support: 24/7 assistance, customer portal, documented playbooks, and named contacts for critical incidents. Continuous software updates should ship on a predictable rhythm.

7) Plan rollout and adoption like a product

Technology only works when people use it. Build an implementation plan with phases, pilots, and success metrics. Train operators and IT admins with hands-on sessions. Share quick-reference guides. Capture feedback, tune policies, and celebrate early wins. Adoption drives outcomes.

8) Test, measure, and iterate

Run a risk assessment before full deployment. Pilot in a live but low-risk area. Validate performance, compatibility, and usability. Measure mean time to detect, mean time to respond, and investigation speed. Then adjust. Repeat after each site or feature wave.

What convergence looks like in practice

In a unified design, a single identity follows the user from badge to browser. Threat intel informs both firewall policy and door rules. Camera analytics trigger IT tickets and SOC alerts. Meanwhile, operators rely on one console that blends physical events and cyber signals. As a result, investigations compress from hours to minutes—and audits become easier.

How to get started this quarter

First, pick two sites for a pilot and define three business outcomes. Second, align cyber and physical runbooks so alerts flow to the same queue. Third, harden the basics: MFA, encryption, patching, and role hygiene. Finally, brief leaders on ROI and risk reduction, not just feature lists.

Bottom line

The perimeter now includes people, places, and packets. By unifying platforms, setting clear standards, and planning adoption, IT leaders turn IT physical security into a force multiplier. The payoff shows up fast: fewer blind spots, quicker response, and stronger compliance—across every site you protect.

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Hitachi Energy grid automation leads global market

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Hitachi Energy grid automation has achieved the No.1 global ranking in ARC Advisory Group’s 2024–2029 market study. This recognition highlights the company’s pivotal role in transforming power grids for a sustainable energy future.

ARC’s study named Hitachi Energy as the top supplier of grid automation products and services for transmission and distribution utilities. Moreover, the company secured leadership in software categories such as Grid Control & Management, Outage Management, and AI Applications, as well as hardware segments including wireless networks, measurement devices, and RTUs.

Market recognition of Hitachi Energy’s grid automation

“Grid automation is essential for operating and maintaining the modern grid,” said Richard Rys, Director of Consulting at ARC Advisory. “Our analysis shows Hitachi Energy at the top. Its expertise, integrated solutions, and digital capabilities drive industry leadership.”

The report forecasts rapid growth in grid automation due to new energy mixes, grid storage, and emerging market structures such as virtual power plants. In addition, regions rebuilding after extreme weather or conflicts show the highest demand for automation.

Grid automation at a turning point

Massimo Danieli, Managing Director of Grid Automation at Hitachi Energy, emphasized the company’s commitment: “Rapid electrification and the urgency of the energy transition are placing unprecedented demands on the grid. As market leader, we are proud to deliver advanced solutions that modernize infrastructure, strengthen resilience, and speed the move to clean energy.”

This position reflects how Hitachi Energy’s grid automation solutions help utilities manage energy challenges. Consequently, the company enables customers to plan, monitor, protect, and control their grids with a unified, data-driven approach.

Digital innovation driving sustainable grids

Hitachi Energy continues to embed AI, analytics, and automation into grid systems. As a result, more than three billion people benefit daily from technologies that ensure safe, reliable, and efficient energy delivery. The company’s portfolio supports utilities worldwide in balancing demand growth with decarbonization goals.

ARC’s Grid Automation Global Market Study, published annually since 2021, provides five-year forecasts and detailed supplier rankings. It underscores the growing importance of automation as utilities invest in digital infrastructure to accelerate the energy transition.

About Hitachi Energy

Headquartered in Switzerland, Hitachi Energy employs more than 50,000 people across 60 countries and generates annual revenues of around $16 billion USD. Its century-long heritage in high-voltage, transformers, and automation makes it a trusted partner for utilities, industries, transportation, and data centers.

About ARC Advisory Group

Founded in 1986, ARC Advisory Group is a global research and advisory firm focused on industrial, energy, and infrastructure markets. Its annual studies provide critical insights into supplier performance and future technology trends.

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Agentic AI startups are reshaping the corporate world

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By Subrato Basu, Global Transformation Advisor

Agentic AI startups are driving a new era of autonomy in business. They combine intelligence, adaptability, and goal-directed action in ways that traditional automation cannot match. From workflows that optimise themselves to marketing campaigns that shift in real time, these startups are reshaping how enterprises operate.


HR transformation with Agentic AI startups

Companies such as Hume AI, PeopleGPT, and Sora embed empathy and foresight into HR. Rather than simply process leave requests, agents detect burnout, analyse diversity, and propose inclusion strategies. As a result, HR becomes a strategic partner.

Smarter talent acquisition with intelligent agents

Recruitment tools like TalentPulse AI and HireLogic interpret résumés, evaluate culture fit, and even simulate interviews. Consequently, recruiters gain decision-ready insights while candidates enjoy a personalised experience.

FinOps and cost optimisation with AI

Cloud overspending erodes margins, but platforms such as Harness.io and Granulate provide autonomous financial optimisation. Their agents forecast demand, right-size infrastructure, and enforce budget control.

Governance and compliance supported by Agentic AI startups

Regulatory change is constant. Tools like TitanGuard and LogicGate act as compliance engines, flagging risks and suggesting updates. For example, agents can detect ESG gaps or recommend GDPR adjustments.

Business decisioning powered by AI

Executives overwhelmed by data can turn to platforms like Hyperplane or Delphi AI. These digital partners test scenarios, weigh risks, and refine strategies, offering clarity where dashboards overwhelm.

Cybersecurity redefined with intelligent defence

Startups, including Darktrace and SentinelOne, deliver proactive protection. Agents predict attack paths, detect anomalies, and isolate threats instantly, functioning like digital immune systems.

Marketing and product innovation with adaptive AI

Brands use tools like Mutiny and Personal.ai to run personalised, real-time campaigns. Similarly, product teams rely on Tandem or LinearGPT to track usage, prioritise features, and draft specs.

Agentic AI in government and society

Governments are also adopting AI agents. Startups such as Zencity and PolicyPal help process permits, detect anomalies, and answer citizen queries with context. Bureaucracies gain speed, transparency, and citizen trust.

From automation to autonomy

The leap is clear:

  • Automation: Task execution → Agentic AI: Goal pursuit
  • Automation: Static workflows → Agentic AI: Adaptive orchestration
  • Automation: Human oversight → Agentic AI: Human trust earned

Human-agent partnerships

AI agents do not replace humans; they augment them. Leaders must orchestrate intelligence, ensuring systems remain transparent, ethical, and aligned with values.

Are you ready for Agentic AI startups?

The next unicorns will not only automate. They will deploy intelligent, autonomous agents that redefine how businesses think and grow. The key question is not if companies adopt Agentic AI, but how fast they lead with it.

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Future of Sport and AI report by G42 launches

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Abu Dhabi-based technology group G42 has released the second edition of its landmark Future of Sport and AI report. Developed in partnership with London foresight consultancy The Future Laboratory, the report explores how artificial intelligence is transforming sport worldwide.

Building on the success of its 2024 edition, this annual publication now serves as a benchmark for tracking AI’s adoption and impact. Moreover, the research for the latest report included a global survey of senior sports executives. As a result, findings revealed strong optimism: 88% expressed confidence in AI adoption and 85% in its practical application.

Key themes in the Future of Sport and AI

This year’s edition highlights two major themes. First, AI is emerging as a democratizing force, bringing insights once exclusive to elite teams to grassroots athletes and mid-tier clubs. Consequently, this shift is unlocking new talent pathways and raising competitiveness across levels.

Second, the report points to a persistent strategy gap. While leaders recognize AI’s importance, many lack a clear roadmap. In addition, resistance to change and poor planning keep pilots from scaling, with data showing up to 95% of AI projects fail to expand beyond trial phases.

Partnerships bringing AI innovation to sport

G42 has partnered with leading teams to test and refine AI applications. For example, collaborations with Mercedes-AMG Petronas Formula One Team and UAE Team Emirates-XRG are generating performance and fan-engagement insights that can benefit the wider industry. Furthermore, these partnerships highlight how AI can serve as a force for good, improving decision-making, health outcomes, and audience connection.

How AI is reshaping global sport

According to the report, AI is transforming sport across five pillars:

  • Strategy and tactics – real-time decision-making tools and tactical agents.
  • Talent – new scouting and training insights to identify emerging athletes.
  • Fan engagement – AI-powered commentary and immersive digital experiences.
  • Health and performance – analytics into physiology, injury prevention, and recovery.
  • Design – innovations such as low-carbon sportswear and VR-enabled training.

For instance, examples include immersive VR training for athletes, AI-driven commentary for fans, and pioneering research into female athlete physiology. Importantly, these innovations demonstrate how AI impacts not only elite sport but also community and grassroots levels.

Expert contributions to the report

The report features insights from experts across sports, medicine, and design. Contributors include Michael Taylor of Mercedes-AMG Petronas Formula One Team, Sarah Bailey of the Tennessee Titans, Dr Chris Brady of Sportsology, Helene Guillaume Pabis of Wild.AI, and Sotiris Salamouris of Olympic Broadcasting Services. Moreover, additional voices such as Kevin Poulton of UAE Team Emirates-XRG and Dr Thomas Mroz of Cleveland Clinic add depth to the analysis.

G42’s vision for AI in sport

Faheem Ahamed, Group Chief Marketing and Communications Officer at G42, underlined the group’s vision:

“At G42, we see sport as a powerful proving ground for AI’s potential. From training to fan engagement, AI is transforming every aspect of the game. Our collaborations show that AI is no longer a distant possibility; it is a force for good we are already deploying to reimagine the future of sport and beyond.”

Therefore, G42 positions AI not just as a technology, but as a tool for inclusion, innovation, and inspiration.

About the report partners

Founded in Abu Dhabi, G42 is a global technology group applying AI across industries from molecular biology to space. The Future Laboratory, based in London, is a strategic foresight consultancy helping organizations anticipate change and harness new opportunities. Together, they provide a roadmap for how AI can make sport more inclusive, competitive, and innovative — while also setting the stage for broader applications in society.

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