Latest news with #NickMitchell


Techday NZ
18-07-2025
- Business
- Techday NZ
Boost.ai launches on AWS Marketplace to aid secure AI adoption
has announced its availability on AWS Marketplace, a move that aims to streamline adoption and deployment of AI agents by large enterprises, particularly in regulated industries. The company's platform, built on AWS Cloud, is now offered to global organisations through AWS Marketplace and is intended to facilitate faster and more seamless implementation for new customers. This development is expected to simplify procurement processes for enterprises and further support compliance and control requirements in sectors where trust and security are of particular concern. Enterprise trust and compliance focus on regulated industries is reflected in its commitment to data protection standards, holding certifications for ISO 27001 and ISO 27701, which speak to enterprise-grade data security and privacy management. With more than 600 live virtual agents deployed across over 450 organisations around the world, the company provides AI solutions to clients in banking, insurance, government, and similar fields. The platform reportedly enables AI agents to go live within 50 days. Citing a recent deployment with Sage, highlights its blend of implementation speed without compromising regulatory or security obligations. Key benefits outlined According to the company, among the primary features of platform for AWS customers are advanced natural language algorithms for customer interaction, enterprise-level control enabled through a combination of conversational and generative AI, and seamless integration with platforms such as Salesforce to allow for enhanced self-service. These attributes, the company states, contribute to high market-leading resolution rates, with the platform achieving resolution rates above 90%. The AI solution is designed to empower customers to resolve their own queries and complete actions independently via virtual agents. Statements from leadership "AI adoption is accelerating, but enterprises are rightly cautious about platforms that sacrifice trust for speed. A seamless experience for customers can never come at the cost of safety," said Jerry Haywood, CEO of "By joining AWS Marketplace, can reach a broader customer base while offering a platform that meets the highest standards of accuracy, security, and control." Nick Mitchell, Chief Revenue Officer of commented on the significance of the AWS Marketplace listing: "With AWS Marketplace, we're expanding our global footprint to meet customers where they already are, while reducing the complexity of AI adoption. This is a key milestone in making trusted, enterprise-grade AI truly accessible, and our listing on AWS Marketplace makes it easier for organizations to adopt proven AI solutions that deliver real results, from day one." Industry recognition and ongoing development has been recognised in Gartner's 2023 Magic Quadrant for Enterprise Conversational AI Platforms, a reflection of its activities within the sector. The organisation continues to develop its offerings, focusing on combining conversational AI with generative AI to deliver customer engagement solutions adapted to the needs of regulated enterprises. Current clients include institutions in financial services, insurance, and broader enterprise sectors, such as Credit Union of Colourado, MSU Federal Credit Union, Coursera, and Tokio Marine HCC. The company highlights low-code deployment and security features that support reliability for sizeable and highly regulated brands.


West Australian
14-07-2025
- Business
- West Australian
Infini zeros in on uranium-rich fault corridor in Canada
Infini Resources is charging ahead with its uranium exploration ambitions in Canada after today revealing a refined targeting model for its Portland Creek project in Newfoundland that integrates multiple high-priority geophysical, geochemical and structural datasets to home in on a potential discovery. The company says its enhanced model stems from processing downhole acoustic and optical televiewer data collected from six drill holes at the site earlier this year. Infini believes the new datasets support the interpretation of steeply dipping structurally controlled uranium mineralisation beneath the Falls Lake prospect talus slope – the focal point of the Portland Creek campaign. Management says all six completed diamond drill holes intercepted multiple brecciated shear zones up to 75 metres wide associated with significant hydrothermal alteration and vein-hosted uranium mineralisation. The updated targeting model incorporates pXRF readings, downhole data, UAV magnetic analysis, structural interpretation and alteration mapping to build a comprehensive exploration vector framework. It represents the next major step in the company's quest to discover a potentially economic uranium deposit along the Trident Lake fault corridor – a 6-kilometre-long zone of anomalous uranium identified in the 1970s but never properly drill tested. Encouraging pXRF results from the maiden campaign included standout intercepts of 9391 parts per million (ppm) uranium trioxide, including 4694ppm and 4328ppm from within a narrow 1m interval in one hole. Results of 1878ppm and 1019ppm, as well as 1220ppm were recorded in two further holes, respectively. Portable XRF readings are considered indicative only and are pending confirmation from laboratory assays. However, they remain an important early-stage guide to uranium prospectivity in the company's frontier exploration terrain. The company's geological team is now back on site to complete detailed surface mapping and sampling to better delineate the fault and alteration systems identified through the first round of drilling. That work is expected to further refine the company's targeting strategy ahead of a second phase of drilling, anticipated to begin about August 15, after the end of the wildlife season. The Falls Lake area is believed to contain a shear-hosted (albitite-type) uranium system of the same geological style that produced major uranium deposits in other parts of the world. The target is interpreted to sit beneath talus material shed from an elevated scarp and is not exposed at surface, which may have contributed to its historical under-exploration. The campaign at Portland Creek is also being bolstered by the appointment of Infini's new exploration manager Nick Mitchell, who is on site to oversee field operations. The company says Mitchell's appointment reflects the importance it places on the project as its flagship Canadian uranium asset. Infini's initial 2025 drilling campaign was partly funded by a $3.4 million capital raising completed in February at a 27.8 per cent premium to the then market price. Importantly, the flow-through funding, secured under Canadian tax law, ensures capital raised will be directed solely to exploration activity. In addition to Portland Creek, Infini has been steadily expanding its broader Canadian uranium portfolio with the full acquisition of the Reynolds and Boulding Lake projects in Saskatchewan's renowned Athabasca Basin, which is home to the world's highest-grade uranium deposits. Reynolds and Boulding Lake span a combined 931 square kilometres and lie within 100km of the famous McArthur River and Eagle Point uranium mines. Initial work is targeting unconformity-style deposits, with airborne geophysics, sampling and mapping to kick off later this year. The acquisitions are considered a natural complement to Portland Creek, with both assets giving the company significant exposure to premier uranium jurisdictions in North America. Infini says its strategic objective is to build a portfolio of high-impact uranium projects capable of supporting the clean energy transition through the discovery and development of new supply sources. With uranium prices showing long-term strength and nuclear power regaining its global prominence, the timing could hardly be better. Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:

Sydney Morning Herald
14-07-2025
- Business
- Sydney Morning Herald
Infini zeros in on uranium-rich fault corridor in Canada
Infini Resources is charging ahead with its uranium exploration ambitions in Canada after today revealing a refined targeting model for its Portland Creek project in Newfoundland that integrates multiple high-priority geophysical, geochemical and structural datasets to home in on a potential discovery. The company says its enhanced model stems from processing downhole acoustic and optical televiewer data collected from six drill holes at the site earlier this year. Infini believes the new datasets support the interpretation of steeply dipping structurally controlled uranium mineralisation beneath the Falls Lake prospect talus slope – the focal point of the Portland Creek campaign. Management says all six completed diamond drill holes intercepted multiple brecciated shear zones up to 75 metres wide associated with significant hydrothermal alteration and vein-hosted uranium mineralisation. The updated targeting model incorporates pXRF readings, downhole data, UAV magnetic analysis, structural interpretation and alteration mapping to build a comprehensive exploration vector framework. It represents the next major step in the company's quest to discover a potentially economic uranium deposit along the Trident Lake fault corridor – a 6-kilometre-long zone of anomalous uranium identified in the 1970s but never properly drill tested. Encouraging pXRF results from the maiden campaign included standout intercepts of 9391 parts per million (ppm) uranium trioxide, including 4694ppm and 4328ppm from within a narrow 1m interval in one hole. Results of 1878ppm and 1019ppm, as well as 1220ppm were recorded in two further holes respectively. Portable XRF readings are considered indicative only and are pending confirmation from laboratory assays. However, they remain an important early-stage guide to uranium prospectivity in the company's frontier exploration terrain. The company's geological team is now back on site to complete detailed surface mapping and sampling to better delineate the fault and alteration systems identified through the first round of drilling. That work is expected to further refine the company's targeting strategy ahead of a second phase of drilling, anticipated to begin about August 15, after the end of the wildlife season. The Falls Lake area is believed to contain a shear-hosted (albitite-type) uranium system of the same geological style that produced major uranium deposits in other parts of the world. The target is interpreted to sit beneath talus material shed from an elevated scarp and is not exposed at surface, which may have contributed to its historical under-exploration. The campaign at Portland Creek is also being bolstered by the appointment of Infini's new exploration manager Nick Mitchell, who is on site to oversee field operations. The company says Mitchell's appointment reflects the importance it places on the project as its flagship Canadian uranium asset.

The Age
14-07-2025
- Business
- The Age
Infini zeros in on uranium-rich fault corridor in Canada
Infini Resources is charging ahead with its uranium exploration ambitions in Canada after today revealing a refined targeting model for its Portland Creek project in Newfoundland that integrates multiple high-priority geophysical, geochemical and structural datasets to home in on a potential discovery. The company says its enhanced model stems from processing downhole acoustic and optical televiewer data collected from six drill holes at the site earlier this year. Infini believes the new datasets support the interpretation of steeply dipping structurally controlled uranium mineralisation beneath the Falls Lake prospect talus slope – the focal point of the Portland Creek campaign. Management says all six completed diamond drill holes intercepted multiple brecciated shear zones up to 75 metres wide associated with significant hydrothermal alteration and vein-hosted uranium mineralisation. The updated targeting model incorporates pXRF readings, downhole data, UAV magnetic analysis, structural interpretation and alteration mapping to build a comprehensive exploration vector framework. It represents the next major step in the company's quest to discover a potentially economic uranium deposit along the Trident Lake fault corridor – a 6-kilometre-long zone of anomalous uranium identified in the 1970s but never properly drill tested. Encouraging pXRF results from the maiden campaign included standout intercepts of 9391 parts per million (ppm) uranium trioxide, including 4694ppm and 4328ppm from within a narrow 1m interval in one hole. Results of 1878ppm and 1019ppm, as well as 1220ppm were recorded in two further holes respectively. Portable XRF readings are considered indicative only and are pending confirmation from laboratory assays. However, they remain an important early-stage guide to uranium prospectivity in the company's frontier exploration terrain. The company's geological team is now back on site to complete detailed surface mapping and sampling to better delineate the fault and alteration systems identified through the first round of drilling. That work is expected to further refine the company's targeting strategy ahead of a second phase of drilling, anticipated to begin about August 15, after the end of the wildlife season. The Falls Lake area is believed to contain a shear-hosted (albitite-type) uranium system of the same geological style that produced major uranium deposits in other parts of the world. The target is interpreted to sit beneath talus material shed from an elevated scarp and is not exposed at surface, which may have contributed to its historical under-exploration. The campaign at Portland Creek is also being bolstered by the appointment of Infini's new exploration manager Nick Mitchell, who is on site to oversee field operations. The company says Mitchell's appointment reflects the importance it places on the project as its flagship Canadian uranium asset.