Full Summary
This Tuesday morning, multiple reports confirm a major shift towards agentic AI, with companies worldwide adopting and developing these systems to automate tasks and boost efficiency. Both SiliconANGLE and HPCwire highlight that while 41% of organizations are already deploying agentic AI in production, a significant hurdle remains: only 15% believe their data foundations are truly ready. This lack of proper context and unified architecture, as noted by AOL.com, leads to 88% of AI pilot programs failing to reach production. Red Hat is addressing this by expanding its developer portfolio, introducing Red Hat Desktop for consistent AI agent development and isolated sandboxing, as SD Times reports. The company is also enhancing its Advanced Developer Suite with "exploit intelligence" to assess AI-generated code vulnerabilities. Meanwhile, Secure Blockchain, in partnership with the Eliza Foundation, is developing Agentic SME, a white-label AI agent product for small and mid-sized businesses, aiming for a final version within three months. This initiative, covered by ACCESS Newswire, focuses on making practical AI tools accessible without needing an internal AI team. In sector-specific news, Nokia is launching agentic AI for fixed broadband and home networks, promising to automate operations and troubleshooting for fiber and Wi-Fi, drawing insights from over 600 million broadband lines, according to marketscreener.com. John Galt Solutions will showcase agentic AI's impact on supply chain planning at Gartner Supply Chain Symposium/Xpo 2026, as detailed by newswire.com, with predictions that by 2030, half of cross-functional supply chain solutions will use intelligent agents for autonomous decisions. R&D World reports an AI agent called LLMB has mined over 3,000 scientific papers to create a comprehensive database for lithium metal batteries, boasting high accuracy and the ability to predict battery performance. Google is also rolling out new Gemini Intelligence features for Android devices, allowing AI to complete tasks across apps, copy grocery lists, and even auto-browse the web, as TechCrunch confirms. These features will first appear on Samsung Galaxy and Google Pixel devices this summer. This widespread push means that the next device you use, the services you rely on, and even your workplace operations are rapidly integrating these autonomous AI agents, promising greater efficiency but also demanding better data infrastructure and ethical considerations.