Enterprise AI
6 articles

Microsoft Scout vs Claude Cowork: Autopilot or Delegation?
Two of 2026's biggest agent launches make opposite bets. Microsoft Scout is a desktop autopilot that runs in the background and acts on your behalf; Claude Cowork waits for you to hand it a task, then delivers. One is push, the other pull — here's which fits your team.

Building AI Agents in the Enterprise: Implementation Patterns for 2026
Anthropic's playbook is right about the enterprise shape. The missing layer is implementation: governed skills, MCP tools, memory, observability, worktree-safe orchestration, and agent fleets that survive contact with a 1,000-person company.

What STADLER's ChatGPT Rollout Teaches About Industrial AI Adoption
OpenAI's STADLER customer story is one of the cleanest enterprise AI cases of 2026: a 650-person, 230-year-old industrial manufacturer reaching >85% daily active usage on a horizontal LLM. The interesting part is the operating layer underneath the numbers — and what it tells European mid-market boards about industrial AI adoption.

Claude Microsoft 365 Connectors: Now Available on Every Claude Plan
Claude can now connect to Outlook, OneDrive, and SharePoint on every Claude plan. That lowers the barrier for teams who want Claude working against the email, documents, and files they already use every day.

Microsoft Copilot Cowork vs Claude Cowork: The Borrowed Brain
Travis had the tab open for forty minutes before he typed a single word. On one screen: Microsoft Copilot Cowork, announced that morning. On the other: Claude Cowork, which he'd been trialing quietly for six weeks. Both run on Claude. Both claim to do the same thing. The difference is the container — and the container turns out to be the entire decision.

Microsoft Copilot Cowork vs Claude Code: The Two Floors Nobody Automated
Marcus is a CTO watching his engineers ship pull requests on Claude Code — and simultaneously reading Microsoft's Copilot Cowork announcement. His VP of Operations wants to know: should the whole company switch? The question is wrong. There are two floors. There are two tools.