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Nothing launches the Phone (4a) and Headphone (a) in UAE and Saudi

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the nothing phone models


Nothing, has launched the Phone (4a) in the UAE and Saudi Arabia, marking a major leap forward for its smartphone lineup. Nothing has also announced the launch of the Headphone (a), a playful addition to its over-ear audio lineup, designed for a generation that requires tech products that look, sound and feel different.

The new Phone (4a) redefines the mid-range segment, blending refined premium design, bold colour options, flagship-grade cameras with an advanced periscope telephoto lens, and powerful Snapdragon performance. Built on the latest Nothing OS, it reflects the technical warmth of Nothing’s hardware design while delivering a fast, fluid, and highly personal user experience.

The Middle East smartphone market grew 13% in 2025, with the UAE recording 13% year-on-year growth, driven by strong consumer demand for capable mid-tier devices and a wave of high-profile product launches supported by the region’s leading retail partners. With upgrade cycles accelerating and consumers increasingly seeking flagship-grade features at accessible price points, the Phone (4a) makes for the perfect choice.

The launch of Nothing’s Phone (4a) builds on the momentum of the Nothing Headphone (a) available across the UAE now and in Saudi Arabia from 18 March 2026, priced at AED 599/SAR 699. The Headphone (a) comes in four bold colour options; Pink, Yellow, White and Black and is packed with new features including an industry-leading five day battery life on a single charge.

“We’ve been incredibly encouraged by the global response to the Phone (4a) and the positive feedback,” said Rishi Kishor Gupta, Regional Director for Middle East and Africa at Nothing. “Following record-breaking Day-1 sales in India we’re very excited to continue that momentum in the Middle East. With Eid approaching, the Phone (4a), especially when paired with the new Headphone (a), makes for a thoughtful gift at an accessible price.”

The Phone (4a) is available in black, white, blue, and pink in three configurations across the UAE via key retail partners including Amazon, noon, Jumbo Electronics, and Sharaf DG.

  • 8+128 GB – AED 1,199 / SAR 1,399
  • 8+256 GB –  AED 1,499 / SAR 1,599
  • 12+256 GB – AED 1,599 / SAR 1,899.

The Phone (4a) will be available in black, white, blue and pink from 18 March 2026 in Saudi Arabia through leading retailers including noon, Amazon, Jarir Bookstore, Al Haddad Telecom, and STC, among others.

Product Specifications:

A Standout Design

The Phone (4a) evolves Nothing’s signature design, fusing human warmth with elite engineering.

Phone (4a)’s upper section of its transparent design highlights a central camera, red Recording Light, and the brand-new Glyph Bar, emphasising functionality, while the lower section reveals internal structures beneath transparent glass. Enhanced metal buttons, a reinforced camera bump, and a strengthened frame deliver greater durability, with IP64 protection and custom submersion support up to 25 cm for 20 minutes. Colour options reach new heights: transparent blue and a soft pink introduce warmth, subtlety, and individuality without compromising sophistication.

Masterful Photography

The Nothing Phone (4a) delivers a best-in-class camera system, featuring a 50MP 3.5x OIS periscope lens, a 50MP OIS main sensor, a versatile Sony ultra-wide, and a 32MP wide-angle selfie camera. Capture every detail from 0.6x to 70x zoom, from expansive landscapes to true-to-life portraits. Powered by the flagship TrueLens Engine 4, Phone (4a) brings cutting-edge computational photography with AI, including Ultra XDR photos co-developed with Google, enhancing highlights and shadows for natural contrast, now also supported in motion photos and directly shareable on Instagram. A fully reimagined camera experience includes expert-designed presets, finely adjustable professional settings, AI Photo Eraser to remove unwanted objects, and seven new Nothing watermarks for creative expression.

The Latest Snapdragon® 7 Series Platform

Powered by the latest Snapdragon® 7s Gen 4, the Phone (4a) offers 7% faster CPU and graphics, and 10% better power efficiency than its predecessor. Combined with LPDDR4x and UFS 3.1, it delivers significantly faster data speeds. Its AI performance is up to 92.5% faster than the Phone (2a), utilising the Snapdragon Neural Intellect and 6th-gen Qualcomm® AI Engine. Gamers benefit from smooth performance, with BGMI running at 120 Hz and PUBG at 90 Hz.

The Evolution of the Glyph Interface

The Nothing Glyph Interface is more than just lights; it’s a functional and playful visual language that is designed to reduce distraction and avoid you having to turn your phone over:

The Nothing Phone (4a) introduces a refined Glyph Bar with 63 mini-LEDs in 7 square light zones, each square precisely controlled for pure, uniform illumination up to 3500 nits, 40% brighter than theGlyph Interface on Phone (3a). Leveraging three patented technologies, including dual-colour injection-moulded lampshades, the design ensures zero light leakage, no yellow edges, and smooth diffusion, keeping notifications clear even in bright sunlight. The Glyph Bar can also double as a gentle fill light for photos or videos. Smarter notifications come to life with progress-based cues for calls, messages, charging, timers, and more. Custom light sequences for contacts and notifications, paired with Nothing’s signature sounds, turn essential alerts into expressive, playful patterns—all while reducing screen distractions.

Nothing OS

Nothing OS is calm, intentional and genuinely helpful. It looks beautiful without being loud, moves fast without feeling rushed, and adapts to you without adding effort.

Nothing OS 4.1, based on Android 16, delivers a cleaner, more intuitive interface with redesigned icons, a refreshed lock screen, and a deeper dark mode. Multitasking is easier with floating apps and resizable Quick Settings, while widgets are more flexible than ever. The AI Dashboard gives precise control over AI features, under-the-hood optimisations make the system smoother and faster, and camera and gallery apps are enhanced. Customisation now includes hiding apps and creating lightweight widgets via the Playground, helping you stay productive, creative, and in control every day.

NOS 4.1 introduces a more vibrant, customisable lock screen, two relaxation-focused widgets, upgraded Live Notifications across the screens and Glyph Interface. Polished animations, and faster app launches make every swipe and interaction effortless and highly intuitive. NOS 4.1 builds on Nothing OS 4.0 with a smarter, smoother, and more personal experience that keeps you informed, relaxed, and fully in control.

3 years of Android updates and 6 years of security patches.

Nothing AI makes life simple, organised, and inspired.

Nothing’s Essential AI tools streamline daily life: Essential Search provides instant, multi-app access to information with a keyword. Essential Memory personalises results based on your activity and saved Memories. Furthermore, the Playground allows users to build and share their own no-code Essential Apps on the home screen, using AI to bring ideas to life. Nothing AI makes your phone smarter, more personal, and infinitely intuitive.

For the first time on the Phone (4a), Essential Space supports cloud access, enabling seamless cross-platform use across phones, desktops, laptops, and more.

A Flagship Display

The Nothing Phone (4a) features a 6.78″ AMOLED display with 1.5K resolution (1224 × 2720) and 440 PPI, delivering exceptional detail across every inch. With peak brightness of 4500 nits (HDR) and 1600 nits (HMB), content remains clear even under direct sunlight, while Ultra HDR photos and videos shine with brilliant highlights and deep AMOLED blacks. A 120 Hz adaptive refresh rate and 2500 Hz touch sampling ensure smooth interactions and instant responsiveness, while 2160 Hz PWM dimming reduces eye strain. The screen is protected by Corning Gorilla Glass 7i, twice as scratch-resistant as previous-generation cover glass, and survives a 1-meter drop, letting users place the phone face down without worry and fully enjoy the transparent design and Glyph Bar.

Listen, Watch, Create, and Play

The Nothing Phone (4a) is powered by a 5080 mAh battery, supporting up to 17 hours of mixed use for music, video, gaming, and messaging. Rapid 50W Fast Charging refills the battery to 60% in just 30 minutes—nearly 10% faster than the previous Phone (2a) Series. Advanced battery health management ensures over 90% capacity retention after 1,200 charge cycles, equivalent to more than three years of daily charging.

Lowest Carbon Footprint Yet

The Nothing Phone (4a) sets a new benchmark for sustainable manufacturing, with a carbon footprint of 51.13 kg CO₂e, the lowest ever for a Nothing device. 30 components use recycled materials, including 30% recycled plastic, 100% recycled aluminium and tin, and 80% recycled steel. Over 99% of the packaging is plastic-free, and the final assembly process uses 100% renewable energy.

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UAE Investors Want More Than Just Trading Apps

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Traders’ Hub’s Michael Barbour on investor trust, technology, and the future of finance in the Gulf.

BY SRIJITH KN FOR FINANCIAL INTEGRATOR

Over the past few years, investor participation across the region has evolved beyond speculative trading activity into something far more structured, technology-driven, and institutionally aligned. Retail traders are becoming increasingly sophisticated, expectations around transparency and execution quality are rising, and financial platforms are under pressure to offer far more than simple market access.

The speculative frenzy that once defined large parts of retail trading is gradually giving way to a more measured investor mindset, shaped largely by regulation, financial awareness, and long-term wealth preservation rather than short-term market excitement.

In this changing landscape, brokerage firms are no longer positioning themselves purely as trading providers. Instead, many are beginning to evolve into broader financial ecosystems, combining infrastructure, education, technology, regulatory credibility, and long-term investment access into a single platform experience.

For UAE-based firms such as Traders’ Hub Capital Markets, this shift represents more than market expansion. It signals a transformation in how the region’s next generation of investors may engage with financial markets altogether.

Founded in 2022 and headquartered in Abu Dhabi, Traders’ Hub has rapidly positioned itself as a locally regulated, technology-enabled brokerage focused on transparency, multi-asset access, and client-centric trading infrastructure.

Today, the company offers access to more than 2,000 instruments across forex, commodities, equities, indices, and cryptocurrencies, while simultaneously preparing for a broader move into wealth management and long-term investment services.

But the story surrounding Traders’ Hub is not simply about growth.

It is also about the wider evolution of the UAE’s financial ecosystem itself.

THE SHIFT IN UAE INVESTOR CULTURE

Across the GCC, financial participation is changing shape.

The rapid rise of digital platforms, increasing financial literacy, regulatory modernization, and mobile-first investing have fundamentally altered how younger investors interact with markets.

In parallel, the UAE has continued strengthening its position as a regional financial hub, attracting capital, fintech innovation, institutional activity, and globally mobile investors seeking regulated access to international markets. This transformation has also created new expectations.

Today’s investors are increasingly prioritising transparency, regulatory protection, execution quality, multi-asset accessibility, and seamless digital experiences.

In many ways, expectations around trading platforms are beginning to resemble expectations traditionally associated with banking and wealth management institutions.

According to Michael Barbour, Head of Product Implementation at Traders’ Hub Capital Markets, these changes reflect a deeper transformation in investor behaviour itself.

Investors increasingly seek integrated, trustworthy financial ecosystems prioritising long-term value, convenience, and institutional-grade service.”

Over the past five years, the psychological profile of the UAE investor has gradually shifted from short-term speculation toward a far more informed, disciplined, and globally aware mindset. Earlier retail participation was often driven primarily by leverage, speed, and short-term market movements. Today, however, younger investors across the UAE are becoming more research-driven, risk-conscious, and focused on long-term wealth creation rather than impulsive trading behaviour.

Modern traders are also seeking far more than market access alone. Transparency, educational support, analytical tools, platform stability, and institutional credibility are becoming increasingly important components of the investor experience itself.

FROM SCOTLAND TO GULF CAPITAL MARKETS

Long before helping shape the growth trajectory of Traders’ Hub Capital Markets, Michael Barbour’s early ambitions were far removed from financial markets.

Growing up in Stonehaven, a small Scottish town south of Aberdeen, he originally aspired to become a professional footballer, eventually playing semi-professionally before moving into finance.

His early exposure to financial systems came during the 2008 financial crisis while working within the legal and asset management sector in Scotland, assisting major UK banking institutions in managing distressed real estate portfolios during one of the most volatile periods in modern financial history.

That experience, combined with his later move to the Middle East in 2011 and subsequent years at the Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange (DGCX), helped shape a perspective grounded not only in trading infrastructure, but in how markets behave under pressure, uncertainty, and rapid transformation.

Today, that institutional perspective continues influencing Traders’ Hub’s broader focus on operational credibility, technology infrastructure, and long-term investor engagement across the UAE market.

BUILDING A LOCALLY ROOTED TRADING PLATFORM

One of Traders’ Hub’s strongest positioning advantages lies in its status as a UAE-regulated Category 1 Capital Markets Authority (CMA) licensed broker, one of the highest licensing classifications within the country’s financial ecosystem.

In a market where offshore platforms have historically dominated retail participation, regulatory credibility has become increasingly significant, particularly as investors grow more conscious of operational risk, fund protection, execution transparency, and long-term platform reliability.

Rather than positioning itself through aggressive speculative messaging, Traders’ Hub appears to be building its identity around institutional-grade infrastructure, operational discipline, and client alignment.

Its trading environment is built around a Straight Through Processing (STP) execution model, meaning trades are routed directly to liquidity providers rather than internally warehoused by the broker itself.

In increasingly crowded financial markets, brokerage differentiation is no longer being shaped purely by leverage offerings or execution speed. Investors across the UAE are becoming far more conscious of pricing transparency, liquidity structures, operational credibility, and how trades are ultimately executed, particularly as financial literacy continues maturing across the region.

According to Michael Barbour, many investors still misunderstand how brokerage models differ operationally, particularly around spreads, slippage, pricing structures, and conflicts of interest between market-making and STP environments.

For Barbour, transparency itself is becoming a defining factor in long-term investor confidence.

Modern investors are also becoming more selective around how brokers disclose execution policies, fee structures, liquidity relationships, and client fund protections. In many ways, execution architecture itself is increasingly becoming part of the trust equation.

For regulated regional firms such as Traders’ Hub, this shift may ultimately represent a broader advantage. As investor sophistication continues evolving across the UAE, operational credibility and institutional transparency are beginning to matter as much as platform functionality itself.

FROM BROKERAGE TO FINANCIAL ECOSYSTEM

The transition from Traders’ Hub Currency Brokerage to Traders’ Hub Capital Markets reflects more than a naming evolution. It signals a broader ambition to position the company as a longer-term financial institution within the UAE’s evolving investment ecosystem.

Globally, the distinction between trading platforms, investment platforms, and wealth management ecosystems is beginning to blur. Increasingly, investors no longer want fragmented financial experiences spread across multiple platforms. Instead, they are seeking connected environments capable of combining active trading, long-term investing, financial planning, analytics, and educational support within a single ecosystem.

For Traders’ Hub, this transition also reflects an effort to solve a longstanding regional friction point: the difficulty many UAE investors face when moving between active trading and structured long-term wealth accumulation.

“The modern investor no longer wants isolated trading access. They want a complete financial environment,” says Barbour.

The company’s planned expansion into wealth management and broader investment services reflects a wider regional shift toward more integrated financial participation models.

TECHNOLOGY, AI, AND THE NEXT INVESTOR EXPERIENCE

As trading platforms become increasingly automated and algorithmically assisted, the financial industry is also confronting a deeper question: how much of investing should remain human?

Technology is rapidly becoming the defining layer of modern financial platforms, from AI-assisted analytics and mobile-first investing experiences to increasingly sophisticated execution infrastructure.

But while automation can enhance speed and efficiency, long-term investing still remains deeply shaped by human behaviour itself. Markets continue being influenced by fear, overconfidence, emotional reaction, and risk perception, factors technology alone cannot fully eliminate.

One potential differentiator for firms such as Traders’ Hub may therefore lie in how effectively they balance algorithmic intelligence with human judgement.

EDUCATION, TRUST, AND LONG-TERM ENGAGEMENT

As trading participation expands across the GCC, financial platforms are increasingly carrying responsibilities extending far beyond market access alone.

While digital platforms have lowered barriers into global financial markets, they have also intensified conversations around behavioural investing, financial literacy, emotional discipline, and long-term risk awareness.

Increasingly, sustainable platform growth may depend not only on user acquisition, but on trust, transparency, and investor education itself.

In the GCC particularly, where retail participation continues expanding rapidly, financial firms are beginning to recognise their role in shaping long-term investor behaviour and financial understanding.

THE NEXT PHASE OF REGIONAL FINANCE

The UAE’s financial landscape is evolving rapidly.

As regulation strengthens, investor sophistication increases, and technology continues reshaping how capital moves through markets, financial platforms and capital markets institutions are being forced to rethink what they represent within the broader financial ecosystem.

The company’s broader direction, spanning infrastructure investment, wealth management expansion, AI integration, mobile accessibility, and educational initiatives, reflects a wider regional transition toward more mature, technology-enabled financial participation.

 Barbour believes the future of finance will increasingly belong to intelligent platforms capable of combining technology, trust, education, accessibility, and long-term wealth creation into a unified experience.

Whether this next generation of financial platforms ultimately succeeds will depend not only on execution speed or product breadth, but on something far more enduring: trust.

And in an increasingly crowded financial landscape, trust may ultimately become the most valuable asset of all.

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The Shift to Unified Content Workflows Is Redefining Enterprise Media!

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By: Srijith KN


Walk into any modern content setup today, whether it’s a podcast studio, a corporate webinar room, or a hybrid event environment, and you’ll see a familiar pattern, one that reflects how fragmented the content production stack has become.

A microphone connected to an interface.
An interface connected to a laptop.
A laptop running multiple layers of software to mix, switch, stream, and record.

It works, but it’s rarely seamless.

Because the biggest challenge in content creation today isn’t access to tools, it’s understanding how they all fit together.

The Real Problem: Too Many Tools, Too Little Clarity

The rise of podcasting and video content has created a new kind of friction. Users are no longer asking what they can create; they are asking how to make the tools work together.

Recording audio separately, syncing video later, transferring large files to high-end machines, and relying on multiple software layers have become the default workflow. It works, but it is inefficient, expensive, and prone to failure.

The expanding ecosystem of devices, features, and formats has made even basic setup decisions unnecessarily complex.

When it comes to products from RØDE, users & creators already recognize the product’s potential to simply clarify and help elevate the overall workflow experience.

From Tools to Unified Systems

This is where the shift begins to stand out.

What we are seeing is not simply the addition of new features, but the consolidation of functions.

Mixer. Recorder. Audio interface. Video switcher. Stream encoder.

What traditionally required a stack of hardware and software is now being brought into a single console environment.

For creators, that simplifies production.

For enterprises, it changes how content infrastructure is designed.

As this shift gains momentum, it is also being acknowledged at a leadership level.

“Real innovation isn’t about adding more; it’s about removing friction and enhancing workflows.

With the introduction of platforms like the RØDECaster Video, we’re starting to see audio and video unified in one system, unlocking faster, more focused creative output.”

Kalinda Atkinson,
Global Marketing Director, RØDE

Why This Matters Beyond Creators

This shift is not limited to podcasters or streamers. Enterprises are increasingly building in-house content studios, executive communication channels, internal video platforms, and hybrid event capabilities as part of their broader communication strategy.

In these environments, complexity quickly becomes a bottleneck. Multiple tools often translate into longer setup times, increased points of failure, and a growing dependency on technical operators to manage what should ideally be straightforward workflows.

A unified system begins to reduce that friction, allowing teams to focus less on managing the process and more on the output itself.

The End of the Laptop-Centric Setup

One of the most significant changes is subtle: the laptop is no longer central.

With recording, streaming, and switching built directly into the console, content can now be produced without relying on external software or intermediary platforms. Audio and video routing happens natively within the system, removing the need to manage multiple layers of tools.

This, in turn, reduces reliance on tools like OBS Studio and lowers the need for high-performance machines in the production chain.

Broadcast Capabilities, Simplified

Features that were once limited to broadcast environments are now being integrated directly into compact systems. Capabilities such as multi-camera switching, ISO recording with separate tracks for each input, audio-based automatic switching between speakers, and network-driven video workflows like NDI are no longer confined to high-end production setups.

For enterprise teams, this translates into professional-grade production without the need for dedicated control rooms or complex broadcast infrastructure.

Modularity Signals Long-Term Thinking

Another important shift lies in how these systems evolve over time.

With expansion options such as adding video capabilities to existing audio consoles, RØDE is enabling a more modular approach to production. Instead of replacing entire systems, users can extend them based on their needs.

This becomes particularly relevant for organizations that may begin with audio-first content using consoles such as the RØDECaster Duo or RØDECaster Pro II, gradually expanding into video production with consoles such as RØDECaster Video, RØDECaster Video S, or even the RØDECaster Core, and scaling internal media capabilities over time. The result is a more flexible investment model that reduces upfront costs while supporting long-term growth.

A Shift in the Competitive Landscape

On the surface, this still appears to sit within the audio hardware category. In practice, however, it competes with something far broader.

As these systems begin to handle capture, processing, and output within a single environment, they start to overlap with production software ecosystems, video switching platforms, and content workflow tools.

The implication is clear: when orchestration happens within the system itself, the need for external layers begins to diminish.

The Opportunity Ahead

As the layers of complexity fade, creators will have more time for creative storytelling and less time worrying about the setup.

The new products and technology from RØDE not only remove setup barriers, but they also enable creators & enterprises to operate at a full professional standard, accelerating both the creativity and innovation ecosystems.

Srijith KN covers enterprise technology, media infrastructure, and digital transformation across the Middle East.
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Cloud waste isn’t about Visibility it’s about Timing, says Atmoz CEO

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“Cloud waste isn’t created by bad engineers. It’s created by systems that show problems too late. Once I saw that, it became clear, the solution wasn’t better reporting. It was prevention.” – Atmoz CEO Yael Shatzky

Yael Shatzky didn’t set out to build a company around cloud costs. What she noticed, after more than 25 years across enterprise technology, product marketing, and growth at organisations including Amdocs and Microsoft’s R&D ecosystem, was a pattern.

Not just rising cloud spend, but a deeper structural disconnect in how it’s managed.

If you were introducing yourself and Atmoz to someone outside tech, where would you begin?

I’d say I’m building a company that changes how people think about waste—specifically cloud and AI waste.

Imagine a house where electricity prices constantly change depending on what you use and when, but no one knows the cost. Lights stay on, AC runs all day, and while you know you’re wasting about 30%, you have no way to prevent it. The only signal you get is last month’s bill.

That’s how companies operate in the cloud today.

Atmoz changes that by bringing cost awareness into the moment decisions are made, helping teams make smarter choices without disrupting how they work. The result is simple: waste is prevented before it happens.

What is the core problem Atmoz is solving—and where has the market gone wrong?

The market has focused on visibility, dashboards and reports that explain what already happened.

But the problem isn’t visibility.
It’s timing.

By the time companies see the data, the money is already spent and systems are already in production. Even with perfect visibility, nothing changes.

Atmoz works at the moment engineers are building, engaging them with immediate, simple recommendations that don’t slow them down. That’s where prevention becomes possible.

What does ‘AI-first’ product development look like at Atmoz?

We built a data foundation that reconstructs cost signals as resources are created, before billing data exists. That’s the hard part.

On top of that, we use AI where it matters most: interaction and execution. Our AI agent takes accurate, contextual data and delivers actionable recommendations directly within developer workflows.

Because the system is grounded in precise data, the guidance isn’t just intelligent, it’s reliable and immediately usable.

What are the biggest challenges in getting engineers to trust AI-driven recommendations?

Interestingly, it’s not trust in AI, it’s the belief that prevention is even possible.

For years, companies have been told they can reduce costs, yet around 30% of cloud spend is still wasted. That’s because most tools analyse waste after it happens, they don’t stop it.

Once engineers see an issue flagged in real time, with clear context and a simple fix, the skepticism disappears. It becomes tangible.

What is one leadership mistake that fundamentally changed how you operate?

Focusing too much on the product, and not enough on marketing early on.

Great products don’t speak for themselves, especially when you’re creating a new category. Marketing isn’t something you layer on later; it shapes how the product is understood and adopted. Starting early makes a significant difference.

Where do you see the biggest inefficiencies today?

The biggest inefficiency is the disconnect between engineering decisions and their financial impact.

Every time a developer deploys infrastructure or triggers an AI workload, they’re making a financial decision, without visibility into its cost implications.

AI is amplifying this. Costs are more volatile, and traditional feedback loops can’t keep up.

Atmoz brings cost awareness into that decision point, making efficiency part of the engineering discipline, much like security became over time.

At this stage, how do you define success?

Success isn’t a single milestone, it’s a series of moments.

Signing a new customer. Launching a capability that impacts spend. Getting a call from a customer excited because they just saved $30K on something they didn’t even know was happening.

Those moments are what drive us forward.

You’re defining a new category. What does it take to change long-held assumptions?

It starts with conviction. You’re asking people to question something they’ve accepted as normal.

But conviction alone isn’t enough, proof is everything. Category change happens when someone sees it working in their own environment and has that “aha” moment.

That’s why we focus on immediate, tangible value. When waste is prevented in real time, the mindset shift follows naturally.

Resilience also matters. When you challenge established models, you will be dismissed. The key is to stay grounded in the problem and keep showing evidence.

Has the industry been solving cloud waste the wrong way? Why hasn’t it changed?

I wouldn’t say wrong, FinOps tools solved the problem they were designed for. They brought visibility and governance, which was critical.

But they were built on the assumption that cost is something you analyse after it happens.

Today, cost is created instantly, when infrastructure is provisioned or AI workloads run. But feedback still comes later. That gap is the issue.

What’s changed is the pace of engineering. With AI, decisions are faster and costs are more dynamic. What used to be inefficient is now unsustainable.

That’s why prevention isn’t just an improvement, it’s becoming essential.

How will engineering teams work differently in five years?

Cost will no longer be treated as something external, owned by finance. It will become part of the engineering feedback loop, like performance or reliability.

Atmoz brings that awareness into everyday workflows, guiding better decisions without adding friction.

Over time, this shifts behaviour. Waste isn’t something you detect and fix later, it simply doesn’t get created.

The result is not just lower cost, but faster teams, better decisions, and more room to innovate.

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