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.
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Hear Bob Evans’ 20-minute Cloud Wars Live conversation with Microsoft CTO Norm Judah, on AI, bots, cloud innovation, and more.
#1 Microsoft Widens Lead as commercial-cloud revenue surged 53% to $6.9 billion and gave it an $800-million spread for the quarter over Amazon.
Amazon – AWS cloud-computing unit will post exceptionally strong numbers, and those numbers will fail to match those of Microsoft’s in The Cloud.
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.
Walmart has commited to massive 5-year cloud deal with Microsoft that extends the two companies’ existing partnership, accelerating digital transformation.
Microsoft has a good chance of becoming the first tech vendor to reach $7 billion in quarterly cloud revenue, releases earnings on July 19.
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.
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.
Microsoft has unleashed an AI technology strategy that’s as complete and ambitious as any you’ll find from any company in the world.
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.
As competition among top cloud vendors intensifies, cloud customer success is rapidly emerging as strategic differentiator more important than snazzy tech.
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 CEO Mark Hurd said this week that 95 percent of cyberattacks are on databases that administrators have failed to patch for more than 9 months
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.”