NexaQuanta Weekly

Welcome to This Week’s NexaQuanta Newsletter

As the global AI race intensifies, NexaQuanta weekly brings a wave of major announcements from tech giants redefining the enterprise landscape.

From smarter automation to conversational ecosystems, innovation continues to accelerate across industries — shaping how businesses operate, analyze, and collaborate.

In this edition of NexaQuanta weekly newsletter, we explore Google’s launch of Gemini Enterprise, an AI platform built for business intelligence; Amazon’s debut of Quick Suite, an “agentic” assistant designed for workplace productivity; and IBM’s expansion of watsonx Orchestrate, now featuring domain-driven AI agents and advanced governance.

NexaQuanta weekly also covers OpenAI’s unveiling of Apps in ChatGPT, enabling users and developers to build and interact with intelligent apps directly within conversations — signaling a new phase in conversational computing.

Google Launches Gemini Enterprise: A New AI Platform for Businesses

Google expands its AI footprint with a new enterprise-focused platform.

Alphabet’s Google has introduced Gemini Enterprise, an advanced AI platform built for business customers.

The new system allows employees to interact with company data, documents, and applications through conversational AI, creating a more intuitive workflow.

Built for corporate use

Gemini Enterprise is powered by Google’s latest AI models and offers a suite of prebuilt agents to support deep research, data analysis, and other business tasks.

Companies can also build and deploy their own custom AI agents using the platform’s tools.

Early adopters and competitors

Several major brands — including Gap, Figma, and Klarna — have already signed up for Gemini Enterprise.

The move comes as Google competes with Microsoft, OpenAI, and Anthropic, all of which are expanding their enterprise AI offerings.

Gemini Enterprise builds on Google’s existing Workspace AI features, marking another step in the company’s race to capture the growing corporate AI market.

Click here to read more about the news.

Amazon Unveils Quick Suite: AI That Redefines Workplace Productivity

AWS launches an “agentic” AI platform built to transform how employees work.

Amazon Web Services has introduced Quick Suite, an AI-powered workplace assistant designed to help employees find insights, automate workflows, and collaborate across multiple applications.

The platform integrates data from internal systems, third-party apps such as Salesforce, Slack, and Adobe Analytics, and AWS services such as S3 and Redshift, bringing all work data into a single intelligent interface.

Your AI teammate at work

Quick Suite acts as an “AI teammate,” capable of conducting deep research, visualizing data, writing communications, and automating repetitive tasks.

Its enterprise-grade privacy standards ensure that user queries are never used for model training—a major concern for corporate clients.

Proven results across industries

Amazon tested Quick internally and with partners including DXC Technology, Vertiv, Jabil, and Propulse Lab. Early users report dramatic productivity gains—Propulse Lab cut customer service handling time by 80%, while Jabil expects annual savings of $400,000 through automation.

Key features

  • Quick Research delivers in-depth, cited answers from company data and trusted public sources.
  • Quick Flows automates repetitive tasks, such as report generation.
  • Quick Automate handles complex workflows spanning multiple systems.

A new era of intelligent work

With Quick Suite, AWS aims to bring the power of generative AI directly into enterprise operations. Employees can interact with Quick through web apps, browsers, or integrations with Microsoft 365 and Slack—making AI-driven work as natural as chatting with a colleague.

Want to read more about this? Click here!

IBM Expands watsonx Orchestrate with New Agentic Workflows and Domain Agents

IBM has announced a major update to its watsonx Orchestrate platform, introducing new agentic workflows and domain-specific AI agents built to help enterprises move from AI experimentation to measurable business outcomes.

Smarter, safer AI orchestration

The new Agentic Workflows feature lets developers design reusable, auditable automation flows that combine multiple AI agents and tools. With integrated Langflow, users can visually map complex processes, adding conditional logic and checkpoints to ensure accuracy and compliance.

IBM also unveiled AgentOps, a governance and monitoring layer providing real-time visibility into agent performance, security, and reliability.

Developers can now evaluate agents for accuracy, completion rates, and compliance before deployment.

AI built for real business domains

IBM introduced pre-built Domain Agents tailored for finance, supply chain, and customer service:

  • Finance Agents automate forecasting, planning, and risk analysis.
  • Supply Chain Agents enhance agility and optimize inventory by integrating with platforms such as SAP and Oracle.
  • Customer Service Agents cut resolution times by handling routine inquiries and automating back-end workflows.

Why it matters

As more enterprises adopt agentic AI, IBM aims to address two key concerns—trust and scalability. According to IBM, 79% of CFOs are accelerating AI transformation but struggle with reliability and governance.

The new features in WatsonX Orchestrate deliver transparent, responsible automation at enterprise scale.

With this launch, IBM strengthens its position in enterprise AI, uniting reasoning, orchestration, and execution into a single, controlled platform.

Click here to read more about the news.

OpenAI Introduces Apps in ChatGPT and the New Apps SDK

A new generation of interactive apps inside ChatGPT marks a major shift in conversational AI.

OpenAI has unveiled apps inside ChatGPT, allowing users to interact directly with third-party services within conversations.

Alongside the launch, developers now have access to the Apps SDK (in preview) — a toolkit for building apps that integrate seamlessly with ChatGPT’s conversational interface.

Chat with your favorite apps

Users can now use natural language to interact with apps like Booking.com, Canva, Coursera, Expedia, Figma, Spotify, and Zillow, performing tasks such as creating playlists, browsing homes, or designing slides — all without leaving ChatGPT.

Apps can be called by name or suggested automatically based on the conversation’s context.

The feature is currently available to all logged-in ChatGPT users outside the European Economic Area, Switzerland, and the UK, across Free, Go, Plus, and Pro plans.

More partners, including Peloton, Uber, Target, and OpenTable, are set to join later this year.

For developers: a new opportunity

The Apps SDK is built on the Model Context Protocol (MCP) — an open standard that enables ChatGPT to securely connect to external tools and data.

Developers can now create their own apps, define interactive interfaces, and connect them to their backend systems.

Later this year, OpenAI plans to open app submissions for review and listing in a new ChatGPT App Directory, with options for developers to monetize their creations.

Privacy and safety first

Each app must comply with OpenAI’s safety and data privacy standards. Users are prompted to explicitly connect apps, ensuring transparency about what data is shared. Future updates will include finer control over app permissions.

Looking ahead

OpenAI will extend app availability to ChatGPT Business, Enterprise, and Edu users later this year — marking the beginning of a new ecosystem where AI chat meets fully interactive applications.

Read more about this news by clicking here.

Stay Ahead with NexaQuanta Weekly

The enterprise AI ecosystem is evolving faster than ever — and we’re here to help you keep up. Subscribe to NexaQuanta weekly newsletter to get concise, expert-curated updates on the latest in AI, automation, and digital transformation — delivered straight to your inbox every week.

Subscribe to NexaQuanta's Weekly Newsletter

Your Guide to AI News, Latest Tools & Research

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

You may use these <abbr title="HyperText Markup Language">HTML</abbr> tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

*

nineteen − eleven =