Following the rise of Digital Humanities as a way-of-working as well as, most notably, an interdisciplinary arena, designated university programmes, as well as research infrastructures are being developed. Here we present two relevant, parallel actions in Greece: the development of APOLLONIS, the Greek National Infrastructure for Digital Arts, Humanities and Language Research and Innovation, and the launch of a new postgraduate programme, the MSc in Digital Methods for the Humanities offered by the Department of Informatics, Athens University of Economics and Business. APOLLONIS has emerged from the cooperation of the pre-existing infrastructure networks CLARIN:EL and DARIAH-GR, through which Greece continues to participate in the European infrastructures CLARIN and DARIAH. The MSc programme, on the other hand, primarily targets graduates with a strong interest in applying digital methods and technologies in the humanities, as well as in the changes in work practices these methods and technologies bring about. A working relation is being gradually established between APOLLONIS and the MSc programme realizing that they largely share the same disciplinary communities and there are opportunities of supporting and enhancing each others reach, exposing and testing resources and services of the infrastructure, as well as obtaining valuable critical feedback from users who stand at the intersection of digital technology and the humanities.