Victoria Gayton
Latest from Victoria Gayton
Three insights you may have missed from theCUBE’s coverage of FICO World
Forget demographics. In today’s financial world, customer intelligence comes from patterns, not personas. Modern institutions are shifting from static profiles to adaptive insight, building real-time behavioral models that evolve with every login, transaction or risk event. Personalization may open the door, but timing, relevance and nuance move the relationship forward. That break from old-school segmentation ...
Where containers meet AI: Google’s evolving Kubernetes ecosystem
There was a time when Kubernetes was mostly a curiosity — a developer tool built in the wilds of open source to solve problems not everyone knew they had yet. But a little more than a decade later, the open-source project has become the backbone of cloud-native computing and a cornerstone of how artificial intelligence ...
What to expect at Red Hat Summit: Join theCUBE May 19–21
Generative AI may dominate headlines, but for enterprise tech leaders, the real conversation is about the hybrid cloud architecture that supports it. Red Hat Inc. has become one of the most critical players helping developers and information technology teams manage that complexity, from the operating system to platform-level automation and AI. At last year’s Summit, Red ...
Five keys to creating an agentic AI business
Startups that succeed in the agentic AI space are betting on vertical specialization, digital labor and new kinds of software primitives. Rather than broad platforms, these companies are zeroing in on deep domain challenges and embedding AI agents where judgment, context and autonomy matter most. In theCUBE Research’s latest analysis, discussed in the “Next Frontiers ...
Three insights you may have missed from theCUBE’s coverage of RSAC 2025
From water grids to autonomous vehicles, the line between digital and physical has all but disappeared — and in its place, a sprawling attack surface now defines the frontlines of cybersecurity. To manage this expanding risk, cybersecurity vendors are pushing toward platform-based models meant to simplify control and boost visibility. But even as the promise of ...
What to expect at NetApp’s ‘Architecting Outcomes in the Era of Intelligence’ event: Join theCUBE May 13
Modern AI models demand massive, fast-moving datasets, and that pressure is exposing limits in existing infrastructure, especially for companies pursuing enterprise AI readiness across hybrid and multicloud environments. NetApp Inc. is sharpening its focus on enterprise AI readiness with a platform strategy built for speed, security and data-centric operations, according to Rob Strechay, managing director ...
Nutanix brings AI out of the lab and into production
Artificial intelligence is stepping out of the lab and into the heart of enterprise infrastructure. As AI moves past the proof-of-concept phase, enterprise leaders face a new challenge: Embedding intelligence into infrastructure without creating operational chaos. That’s where Nutanix Inc. positions itself — as the bridge between ambition and execution, according to Debo Dutta (pictured, ...
Google and Accenture look to streamline security without compromising trust
As threat actors grow more sophisticated, enterprise security teams face mounting pressure to protect sprawling infrastructures with fewer resources. The challenge isn’t just about better tools. It’s also about smarter integration and faster outcomes. That’s where the partnership between Google LLC and Accenture PLC comes in. The two companies have built not just on product ...
What to expect at SAS Innovate: Join theCUBE May 7
As artificial intelligence moves from a promising experiment to an enterprise necessity, the stakes grow higher by the day. The future of trusted AI now depends on how organizations rethink governance, scaling and sustainability. From data oversight to energy consumption, the conversation is shifting from “How can we use AI?” to “How can we use it ...
How Superna brings real-time prevention to the storage layer
Cybersecurity defenses have long prioritized network, application and identity protection — but not data security, where a critical gap has persisted. That layer is exactly where Superna Inc. has staked its claim, focusing on securing data storage, according to Alex Hesterberg (pictured, left), chief executive officer of Superna Inc. “If you think about it, every ...