Federal defenders woke up to an uncomfortable reality as device-layer cracks widened faster than the guidance could settle, with three more Cisco networking bugs joining the Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog and converting a cautious “watch this space” into a calendar-driven mandate to patch
Budget officers counted line items, mission owners pressed for speed, and security leaders flagged opaque risks that could not pass an audit, and together they confronted a straightforward reality: the biggest model on the market was rarely the right fit for a high‑stakes federal workload. As
Boardrooms stopped asking whether agile or AI matter and started demanding proof that the right partner can ship compliant, beautiful software at real speed without blowing budgets or trust. The market now splits into boutiques focused on design-led velocity, mid-market specialists balancing
Software teams did not ask for another assistant that writes cheerful status notes; they asked for dependable automation that notices when the ground moves under it, corrects course without hand-holding, and proves that its work actually advanced the goal rather than rehearsing the same mistakes
Downtime no longer announces itself with a roaring flood; it slips through habits, shared ingress, and brittle retries until customers simply give up. That change in how outages unfold has recast DDoS from a network nuisance into a design constraint, one that must be considered alongside scaling,
When automated forklifts stall behind a hesitant AMR at a congested aisle, the delay ripples through picking, staging, and dispatch like a tax on throughput that compounds by the minute and clouds the real cost of design choices. Kollmorgen’s new NDC Layout Assistant targets that hidden tax by