As Amazon battles with retailers in the grocery-store and drug-store sectors, Microsoft locks down contracts with a number of the world’s top retail chains.
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A look at how 3 cloud heavyweights—Oracle, SAP and Google Cloud—are positioning themselves for the coming hybrid-cloud revolution.
What to watch for in the coming hybrid wave. Cementing its future growth and relevance, the cloud industry is warmly embracing hybrid computing.
Remarks from Microsoft’s EVP and CMO Chris Capossela in late 2018 shed light on Microsoft’s marketing strategy going into 2019.
In an exclusive interview, President of SAP Digital Core & Industry Solutions Franck Cohen spoke on ERP innovation, coming automation, and more.
Cloud heavyweights Oracle, SAP and Workday continue to compete savagely in terms of mission-critical cloud ERP growth going into 2019.
What were the most important trends, vendor moves, and innovations for the cloud-computing industry in 2018? Read my 10 picks.
Oracle founder Larry Ellison this week said businesses using arch-rival Amazon’s Amazon Web Services cloud have become major cybersecurity threats
CEO Bill McDermott tells Bloomberg TV that SAP is in the #1 cloud company on the planet, but Microsoft and Amazon have reported cloud revenue 3x’s as large.
IBM plans to leapfrog its tech competitors by offering new tools that simplify & streamline the management of complex technologies regardless of cloud or AI
The cloud’s ability to completely revolutionize customer engagement & experience is the dominant topic for CEOs of many leading vendors in the Cloud Wars.
Microsoft’s sweeping transformations of its sales and engineering organizations and its unique focus on intelligent cloud plus intelligent edge.
In today’s blindingly fast world of digital business, it’s no longer enough for every business to become a software business they must become an AI company.
Blockchain has enormous potential, that might be just what Oracle needs to reignite its sprawling cloud business, which has has lower performance.
Microsoft, IBM & SAP posted a combined $13 billion in calendar-Q2 cloud revenue, led by Microsoft’s commercial-cloud growth rate of 53% to $6.9 billion.
Why would any company competing with Amazon voluntary subsidize bare-knuckle competitor Amazon by choosing subsidiary AWS as its cloud-computing vendor?
Oracle recently unleashed new SaaS services and capabilities designed to make it easier and faster for customers to take full advantage of the cloud.
As SAP & Salesforce compete, the biggest winners will be business customers who’ll stand to gain huge value from fruits of this bare-knuckles competition.
Amazon actually lost ground in its efforts to overtake Microsoft as the world’s leading enterprise-cloud provider as Satya Nadella’s company reported.
I wonder if Amazon cloud chief Andy Jassy knows—& takes any comfort from—the history of Bum Phillips? It’s Amazon’s last chance to catch #1 Microsoft in Q1?

















