Document & Records Management

In a world drowning in corporate data, artificial intelligence is emerging as the life raft that major organizations are desperately reaching for. This was the clear message from OpenText's February 20 Sydney Summit, where industry leaders shared their struggles with information overload and their hopes for AI-driven solutions.

Healthcare technology firm Concord Technologies has launched a new platform designed to dramatically reduce the manual processing burden associated with healthcare documentation.

Documo has unveiled Documo Signature, a purpose-built eSignature solution targeting healthcare and other highly regulated sectors.

ContractPodAi has unveiled Leah Drive, a new AI-powered platform designed to transform how legal teams manage and analyze documents.

Document processing company Nutrient announced the release of its new AI Assistant, a tool designed to enhance how users interact with documents through artificial intelligence capabilities.

Engineering software company eQuorum has released Version 12.2 of its document management solutions, introducing new features focused on workflow automation and data management capabilities.

A lengthy evaluation of Microsoft's Copilot AI assistant at the Australian Department of Treasury has revealed both promising benefits and significant limitations of the technology, according to a newly released report.

Atlanta-based Reveille Software has announced an expansion of its partnership with ABBYY, adding support for ABBYY Vantage and FlexiCapture Cloud to its observability solutions portfolio.

Trillo has unveiled a new AI-powered document processing pipeline designed  to process and enable complex documents for generative AI applications, marking a significant advancement in the field of intelligent document processing (IDP). The solution, which is now generally available as part of the company's Trillo Doc AI product suite, operates on Google Cloud.

Adobe has unveiled new artificial intelligence features for Acrobat that aim to simplify how people read and understand contracts. The enhancement comes as research shows nearly 70% of consumers sign contracts without fully understanding their terms.

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