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Enterprise AI

90 summarised stories about Enterprise AI, each linking back to the original source. Browse all topics →

Thursday, 16 July 2026

UST is bringing Claude to physical AI

Anthropic News

UST, a technology and engineering services company, is integrating Claude into its platforms for hardware validation, healthcare, telecom, and banking operations, while training 20,000 of its engineers and consultants worldwide on the AI model. UST's iDEC validation platform already cuts chip validation cycle times by 50 to 70%, condensing standard four-day turnarounds into 48 hours by using Claude to read hardware designs and generate regression tests automatically. The integration enables earlier detection of design flaws and reduces manual scripting work, with all Claude-generated recommendations requiring human approval before implementation in regulated industries.

Claude Science, an AI workbench for scientists

Anthropic News

Anthropic launched Claude Science, an AI workbench that integrates scientific tools, databases, and computing resources into a single environment for researchers. The platform includes over 60 pre-configured skills for genomics, proteomics, and cheminformatics, with access to major scientific databases like UniProt, PDB, and Ensembl. Scientists can now conduct multi-step analyses with auditable results and reproducible code, with one neuroscientist reducing review-writing time from two years to weeks using the system.

Applied Computing wants to give oil and gas operators an AI model for the entire plant

TechCrunch AI 11 hours ago

Applied Computing, a London-based startup, raised $20 million in Series A funding to deploy an AI model called Orbital that helps oil and gas facilities integrate sensor data, engineering documentation, and physics-based analysis. The company claims Orbital can compress investigations that previously took days or weeks into seconds, and is already generating double-digit millions in annual recurring revenue across unnamed large, publicly listed energy operators. With the funding, Applied Computing plans to expand internationally, hire AI researchers, and establish operations in Houston and the Middle East to serve more energy clients.