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Showing posts from May 31, 2026

NVIDIA brings secure agent workspaces and confidential computing to AI factories

As enterprise AI use cases move from chatbots to persistent, autonomous agents capable of reasoning, writing their own software tools, and executing complex cross-system workflows, demands on token generation fundamentally rewrite the enterprise model for security, compliance, infrastructure and cost.  To scale safely, organisations need AI factories  that are built for secure, trusted and efficient AI production. NVIDIA is supporting this trend with new reference architectures for  Secure Agent Workspaces ,  Confidential VMs and Confidential Containers .  Legacy IT security controls — static credentials, network allowlists and standard role-based access — were not designed for autonomous agents, NVIDIA said. Securing an AI factory requires a paradigm shift to runtime-enforced, policy-driven guardrails. Enterprises need secure agent workspaces — persistent, single-user environments accessed via enterprise single sign-on. Secure agent workspaces are governed by...

A trillion-parameter AI supercomputer on every enterprise desk

- NVIDIA has positioned the DGX Station for Windows as the world’s most powerful deskside AI supercomputer - DGX Station brings frontier AI agents to Windows - DGX Station will support NVIDIA OpenShell on Windows, built on new Windows security and containment primitives    NVIDIA has announced NVIDIA DGX Station for Windows, billing it "the world’s most powerful deskside AI supercomputer designed to build, run and connect always-on AI agents to Windows applications and workflows". The system is capable of running frontier AI models of up to 1 trillion parameters locally. Historically, heavy-duty enterprise AI workloads — training, fine-tuning, large-scale inference and multi-agent development — have required powerful AI systems in the data centre that run on Linux, while the vast majority of Fortune 500 companies use Windows for everyday productivity, creative, design and engineering applications, NVIDIA observed. Building on the NVIDIA DGX Station system design, DGX Station ...

Ping Identity redefines identity control for agentic enterprises

- AI-first headless interfaces and skills make enterprise identity programmable - AI agent governance delivered across the full lifecycle - Privileged access for AI agents without exposing secrets Ping Identity, which securing digital identities for the world’s largest enterprises, has announced new capabilities that extend the Ping Identity Platform for the agentic enterprise. The company's vision is one where AI agents, builders, and automation increasingly participate in how access is configured, governed, and used across organisations. According to Ping, AI agents are changing both sides of the identity equation. They are new actors that need to be discovered, governed, and managed across their lifecycle, and they are also new operators that can help builders administer and secure identity environments through machine-native interfaces.  At the same time, desktop agents and AI assistants are beginning to interact with enterprise applications and resources on behalf of us...