Thursday, January 29, 2026
For many professionals, the workweek has begun to feel strangely weightless. There is movement everywhere — meetings, updates, optimisations — yet little sense of arrival. Activity has become constant, direction optional. From the outside, organisations appear energetic. From the inside, many experience something quieter: a fatigue that has little to do with workload and everything to do with meaning.
Read More
Thursday, January 29, 2026
In many organisations, digital progress has slowed not because of technology, but because the core has become cluttered and opaque. Clean Core is not an IT project — it is institutional maintenance, restoring clarity and authority so organisations can act with confidence.
Read More
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Innovation is easy to promise. Delivering it while millions of businesses, governments and public institutions rely on your systems is another story. SAP’s challenge is not creating flashy solutions that attract attention, but ensuring that those solutions actually keep the world running, every day.
Read More
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
Europe may be SAP’s home, but it is no longer the place where its future will be decided. That future is shaped elsewhere — in the boardrooms of American multinationals, in the industrial corridors of Asia and in innovation hubs stretching from Silicon Valley to Bangalore. For a company born in Walldorf, Germany, global presence is no longer a strategic option. It is an existential condition.
Read More
Monday, January 26, 2026
Technology is moving faster than human comprehension. AI, autonomous networks and 5G/6G infrastructures are reshaping industries. CEOs are caught in the middle: accountable for decisions they cannot fully understand. Shareholders demand results. Regulators demand compliance. Society demands responsibility.
Read More
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Across Europe, telecom operators are navigating a historic transformation. From AI-native architectures to autonomous networks, the industry is no longer just about connectivity—it is about trust, culture and influence. Deutsche Telekom, Orange, BT, Vodafone and Telefónica are all experimenting with AI-driven networks, yet the road ahead is far from straightforward.
Read More
Sunday, January 25, 2026
For decades, telecommunications lived comfortably behind a powerful assumption: neutrality. Operators built the pipes. Society decided what flowed through them. Connectivity was infrastructure — invisible, technical, politically silent. This separation created reassurance. If networks were neutral, responsibility lay elsewhere: with governments, platforms or users. Telecom, in this view, merely enabled.
Read More
Saturday, January 24, 2026
Vodafone is at a pivotal juncture. The question is no longer whether to integrate AI, but whether to overlay it on existing legacy networks or to embrace a radical, AI-native architecture. The choices made today will define the operator’s role in the rapidly evolving global telecom landscape.
Read More
Monday, January 19, 2026
Most discussions about artificial intelligence begin with innovation. This one should begin with power. SAP is not a visible technology giant in the public imagination. It does not shape culture, consumer behaviour or daily communication. Yet few companies exert more influence over the functioning of the global economy. An estimated 87 percent of worldwide trade touches SAP systems somewhere along its journey. Orders, invoices, customs declarations, supply chains and public-sector processes move through SAP’s logic layers every second of the day.
Read More
Sunday, January 18, 2026
For decades, Europe built its digital world from the ground up. Fibre followed roads. Mobile masts followed population density. Connectivity was something engineers could point at — tangible, terrestrial and geographically bounded. When networks failed, the causes were usually visible: a storm, a cut cable, a damaged site. That mental model is no longer sufficient.
Read More