Stream Bob Evans’ 20-min Cloud Wars Live converation with CarMax CIO Shamim Mohammad on how the company is putting the customer first.
Search Results: digital transformation (1333)
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.
SaaS industry will no longer support many hundreds or even thousands of boutique apps firms and will consolidate rapidly around a dozen or so top players.
Microsoft decides to become a global community powerhouse via the acquisitions of LinkedIn two years ago and GitHub last week.
Just a handful of the world’s leading cloud vendors are on pace to generate $100 billion in combined enterprise-cloud revenue this calendar year.
Oracle is using “adaptive intelligence” capabilities for its entire NetSuite family of integrated applications aimed at small and mid-sized businesses.
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?
SAP is taking direct aim at Salesforce.com, CEO McDermott promises to deliver “next-generation business modeling for the perfect customer experience.”
Three largest enterprise-cloud providers—Microsoft, Amazon and IBM—all closing in on $20 billion in trailing-12-month revenue. What cloud powerhouse wins?
Salesforce.com announced its intention several days ago to acquire API vendor Mulesoft for $6.5 billion, and Marc Benioff’s decision was smart.
Oracle founder Larry Ellison said Oracle will beat Amazon in the cloud by releasing a sweeping set of “self-driving”, cloud solutions.
The Big 3 Cloud Wars leaders —Microsoft ($18.6B), Amazon ($17.5 billion) and IBM ($17.0B)—combined for 2017 earnings cloud revenue of $53.1B.