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Category: CloudRevolutionUpdate

CloudRevolutionUpdate

  • Rackspace May Sell Off Some of Its Business

    Rackspace May Sell Off Some of Its Business

    Rackspace may sell off some of its business as the company looks to ‘sharpen its focus’ on its cloud business.

    Rackspace has been pivoting its business, rolling out services aimed at helping customers migrate to the cloud and take advantage of multicloud offerings. The company now believes it may have some businesses it can offload, ones that don’t necessarily align with its overall goals, according to San Antonio Express News.

    “We concluded that a sum of the parts of Rackspace Technology could be greater than our current enterprise value,” CEO Kevin Jones said in a statement. “Accordingly, we are evaluating strategic alternatives and options.”

    “The market has evolved, and it’s evolved pretty rapidly in the last 18 to 24 months,” he continued. “We have a public cloud business that is significantly scaled from 18 months ago. We’ve been proactively evaluating all of our strategic options to take advantage of the public cloud market opportunity and sharpen our focus.”

    The company has been posting solid growth, with its latest quarter being the tenth consecutive quarter of revenue growth. The company posted a loss of $38.5 million on $775.5 million in revenue. While a loss, it was significantly better than the $64 million the company lost on $725.9 million in revenue in the year-ago quarter.

    Jones remained bullish on the company’s outlook:

    “While there are near-term headwinds in the economy, such as supply chain disruption and the war in Ukraine, we do not see any recessionary pressure in this business,” he said, later adding: “Cloud is only accelerating, even in the economic environment we’ve seen so far this year.”

  • How the Cloud Can Reduce Emissions in the Financial Services Industry

    How the Cloud Can Reduce Emissions in the Financial Services Industry

    Sustainability is becoming one of the most important topics for financial industry consumers.  For all the joys and conveniences of electronic banking, there is a hidden cost attached to each transaction: emissions.  Nearly 369 billion purchases happen every day on electronic platforms, and each one might be polluting the environment.  The more relevant an issue climate change becomes, the more attention will be paid to this problem.

    Both businesses and consumers want to move in a green direction.  60% of financial industry consumers are more likely to purchase sustainable services.  52% of banks see environmental concerns as an emerging risk over the next 5 years.  Green trend adoption is no longer a feature; it is turning into a necessity for survival.  Nearly every CEO agrees that sustainability issues are critical to the survival of a successful business.  However, 65% also said that while they want to make a difference in sustainability efforts, they aren’t sure how to do it.  Only 36% of those survey have quantifiable ways to measure the success of their sustainability initiatives.  For an industry that loves assigning monetary value and numbers to every action, this is an incredible oversight.

    Let cloud computing be the start of the solution.  People don’t typically turn to the cloud for its environmental benefits, but cloud services can help reduce greenhouse gasses in a number of ways.  To start, cloud data centers use less energy than traditional, on-premise data centers do.  They can do more with less.  Additionally, the cloud’s virtualization of physical machines means that the high-carbon physical equivalent of a machine does not need to be built.  Finally, cloud services are more flexible in function than previous generations, reducing the harmful effects of decommissioned servers, networking equipment, and racks in a landfill.  The cloud can divert up to 81% of waste from a landfill. 

    To put some numbers on the cloud’s ability to reduce carbon emissions, migrations to the cloud can bring global emissions down by 59 million metric tons every year.  That is a 5.9% reduction in total IT emissions, equivalent to pulling 22 million cars off the road.  From 2021 to 2024, the transition to cloud computing is on track to save 629 million metric tons of carbon dioxide from entering the atmosphere.  Companies drive even greater carbon reductions through enabling cloud-native architectures and deployments.  Another way to compound emission reductions is by strategic placement of the cloud’s physical location.  Because cloud services don’t have to be located near the businesses they serve, cloud data centers can take advantage of the places with the greenest energy grids.  Google Cloud has already seized upon this opportunity.  The company is working towards 24/7 carbon-free energy for its cloud services by 2030.  For grids where the energy source can switch between renewable and non-renewable, Google shifts its flexible computing tasks to times when the power on the grid is cleanest.  In 2020, 10 years pre-goal, Google achieved 67% round-the-clock carbon free energy across all of their data centers.

    How the Cloud Can Help Reduce Carbon Emissions for the Financial Services Industry
  • Report: Cloud Computing to Grow at 11% CAGR Till 2028

    Report: Cloud Computing to Grow at 11% CAGR Till 2028

    Cloud computing has been experiencing stellar growth, but the industry still has years of growth ahead of it.

    A new report by BlueWeave Consulting says the global cloud computing market was worth $390 billion in 2021. What’s more, the industry is set to continue growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 11% till 2028. This would put its value at $852 billion.

    The industry’s growth is attributed to the widescale adoption of various technologies, such as as AI, machine learning, big data, and more, all of which are heavily reliant on cloud computing.

    In addition, there is an uptick in cloud adoption by small and medium-sized enterprises.

    Cloud computing is gaining significant traction among small and medium enterprises. The SMEs are utilizing cloud computing to expand their business along with keeping the cost low and boosting the overall productivity. Furthermore, cloud computing is also helpful in offering advanced data security, reduced downtime, flexible storage, better CRM management, etc. Cloud computing also proves to be cost efficient for SMEs as they only pay according to their size and financial capability. This is anticipated to drive the growth of the cloud computing market in the forecast period.

    The global pandemic kicked cloud adoption into overdrive, but BlueWeave’s report shows there’s little sign of it slowing down anytime soon.

  • Microsoft Takes Page From Rivals, Targeting ‘Holdout’ Businesses For Cloud Services

    Microsoft Takes Page From Rivals, Targeting ‘Holdout’ Businesses For Cloud Services

    Microsoft is taking a page from rivals in a bid to expand its cloud business, targeting “holdout” businesses that have yet to migrate to the cloud.

    Microsoft is currently in second-place in the cloud market, behind AWS and ahead of Google Cloud. The company is taking a more hands-on approach, according to The Information (by way of Seeking Alpha), investing $200 million to establish an acquisition team that will work to bring cloud holdouts onboard.

    The strategy is similar that employed by Amazon, Salesforce, and Zoom. Microsoft evidently wants to proactively go after these holdout companies in an effort to sew up their business before the company’s rivals do.

    Microsoft already has a major advantage over some other companies, thanks to its ecosystem of software and services that goes back decades. Emulating strategies that other successful companies have been using should help the Redmond giant even more, and may aid it in its efforts to close in on AWS.

  • IBM’s Hybrid Cloud Strategy Pays Off in Latest Quarterly Results

    IBM’s Hybrid Cloud Strategy Pays Off in Latest Quarterly Results

    IBM has released its latest quarterly results, lending support to the company’s efforts to pivot to a hybrid cloud provider.

    IBM announced in 2020 it planned to split into two companies, spinning off its legacy hardware business, with the core company focusing on hybrid cloud solutions. The company has since been on a spending spree, buying up smaller companies to help round out its offerings.

    The company’s strategy appears to be paying off, if its latest quarterly results are any indication.

    “Demand for hybrid cloud and AI drove growth in both Software and Consulting in the first quarter. Today we’re a more focused business and our results reflect the execution of our strategy,” said Arvind Krishna, IBM chairman and chief executive officer. “We are off to a solid start for the year, and we now see revenue growth for 2022 at the high end of our model.”

    The company reported revenue of $14.2 billion, up 8%. Software revenue was up 12% and consulting revenue was up 13%, while infrastructure revenue was down 2%. Hybrid cloud revenue, however, was up 14%, coming in at $5 billion.

    “In the first quarter we continued to strengthen the fundamentals of our business, consistent with our medium-term model,” said James Kavanaugh, IBM senior vice president and chief financial officer. “We are a faster growing, more profitable company with a higher-value business mix, a significant recurring revenue base and strong cash generation.”

  • EU’s Vestager: ‘We’ve Had No Concerns’ About Cloud Antitrust

    EU’s Vestager: ‘We’ve Had No Concerns’ About Cloud Antitrust

    The EU may be taking aim at Big Tech over antitrust concerns, but the bloc doesn’t yet have concerns about cloud providers.

    The cloud market has numerous companies vying for market share, but the top three — AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud — control the lion’s share of the market. Despite the three companies dominating the market, EU antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager says there’s not been any major concerns.

    “No, so far we’ve had no concerns,” Vestager told Reuters in an interview.

    Vestager credits Gaia-X, a project aimed at bolstering the EU’s independence from Silicon Valley, with creating a relatively healthy market.

    “This is not something that we are engaged in, but I basically see it as pro-competitive when you have someone to show potential customers that there are more than two giants where you can place your business,” she said.

    Vestager’s response is interesting, especially since Microsoft has already been hit with an antitrust complaint in the EU from other cloud providers. Vestager’s comments may indicate the complaint is not likely to gain much traction.

  • Boeing Goes Multicloud, Choosing Top Three Providers

    Boeing Goes Multicloud, Choosing Top Three Providers

    Boeing is increasing its investment in its cloud infrastructure, tapping the top three providers for a multicloud approach.

    AWS, Microsoft, and Google Cloud are the top three players in the cloud market, and it appears Boeing wants to work with all of them, rather than going all-in on a single one. The company “announced a significant investment” today, expanding its existing relationships with each of the companies.

    “These partnerships will strengthen our ability to test a system – or an aircraft – hundreds of times using digital twin technology before it is deployed,” said Susan Doniz, Boeing chief information officer and senior vice president of Information Technology & Data Analytics. “Our partners will help Boeing take advantage of the best the industry has to offer while enabling employees to tap into leading tools, training and experts to improve skills and learn new ones.”

    While many companies choose to build their business around a single cloud provider, many experts believe multicloud deployments are the future of the industry, and offer the best combination of reliability and scalability.

    Boeing seems to agree, citing their belief that a multicloud approach is critical to the company’s success and sustainability.

    “No one company or industry can ensure a sustainable future alone,” said Boeing Chief Sustainability Officer Chris Raymond. “We’re grateful to partner with technology leaders like AWS, Google, and Microsoft, who share our commitment to reducing carbon emissions.”

  • Pentagon Pushes Cloud Contract Award to December

    Pentagon Pushes Cloud Contract Award to December

    The Pentagon has pushed back the Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability (JWCC) contract award to December, adding to the saga of its cloud transition.

    The Pentagon initially awarded the $10 billion JEDI cloud contract to Microsoft, surprising industry experts who saw AWS as the front-runner. AWS immediately sued and tied up the contract award in court so long that the Pentagon finally canceled it and started over, replacing JEDI with JWCC.

    According to Reuters, the process to award a new contract is taking longer than expected, with the time-frame for an award pushed back to December, instead of April.

    “This is going to take us a little bit longer than we thought,” Pentagon Chief Information Officer John Sherman said.

    The same major players are being considered, including Microsoft, AWS, Oracle, and Google. Unlike JEDI, which was awarded to a single company, JWCC will likely be awarded to multiple companies, possibly all four. With a total of roughly $9 billion on the line, even a four-way split would still be a substantial contract for the cloud providers.

  • Microsoft Azure Usage Pulls Ahead of AWS

    Microsoft Azure Usage Pulls Ahead of AWS

    Microsoft continues to gain ground in the cloud market, even pulling ahead of leader AWS in some usage scnarios.

    AWS and Azure are the top two cloud platforms, with Google Cloud coming in third. Despite AWS still being the market leader, Flexera’s 2022 State of the Cloud Report shows Microsoft is making some impressive headway.

    According to the report, Azure surpassed AWS in the enterprise, with 80% of enterprises using it, as opposed to 77% using AWS. Similarly, 71% of enterprises are running at least 51 Azure virtual machines (VMs), as opposed to 69% for AWS.

    Microsoft is also slightly edging out AWS on spending among its installed base, with 53% of enterprise Azure users spending at least $1.2 million annually, as opposed to 52% of AWS users.

    Year-over-year adoptions rates also help gauge the relative strength of each platform in the market, with Microsoft showing the largest increase over 2021. Azure’s adoption rate in 2022 is 77% across all organizations, up from 73% in 2021. In contrast, AWS’ adoption rate dropped a point, from 77 to 76%. Google Cloud increased by one point, from 47 to 48%. Oracle dropped from 29 to 28%. IBM held steady at 24%, as did Alibaba Cloud at 12%,

    Microsoft has also made headway against VMware, with the Azure Stack being used in 37% of private clouds, compared to VMware’s 31%.

    Flexera’s report is good news for Microsoft as the Redmond giant clearly has significant momentum in the cloud market, putting pressure on its competitors, both above and below it.

  • Microsoft Taking Platform Agnostic Approach to Cloud Security

    Microsoft Taking Platform Agnostic Approach to Cloud Security

    Microsoft has signaled it wants to provide security for cloud-based companies in general, regardless of whether they use Azure, AWS, or Google Cloud.

    Microsoft is a far different company under Satya Nadella than it was under Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer. Instead of ruthlessly protecting and pushing its own operating systems and platforms, the company has shifted to the cloud, with a focus on providing the best applications and services on a variety of systems and platforms.

    The company is now extending that philosophy to cloud security, with its latest update to Microsoft Defender for Cloud. Formerly known as Azure Defender, the company changed its name to better reflect its emphasis on securing multicloud environments. Microsoft has also added support for Google Cloud, roughly three months after adding support for AWS. In both cases, the company used open programming APIs to integrate Microsoft Defender with its rivals’ platforms.

    “Today most of our customers have AWS and they have Azure and they have Google Cloud and they have different workloads around and then they have security solutions which are native to each of these,” Vasu Jakkal, CVP Microsoft Security, Compliance, Identity & Privacy told Bloomberg in an interview. “Think about the security practitioners sitting in a Security Operations Center looking at these alerts in this pane of glass — they’re dealing with three if not more.”

    This is not the first time Microsoft has set itself apart from its rivals. In early February, the company released its Open App Store Principles, in which it committed to behavior that is almost diametrically opposite from the manner in which Apple and Google run their app stores.

    For those who remember Microsoft of the ’90s and early 2000s, this open, enlightened Microsoft is a refreshing change, and increasingly serves as an example for the rest of the industry. Hopefully more companies will take note and imitate it.

  • Outage Impacting Slack, AWS, Github, Walmart, and Others

    Outage Impacting Slack, AWS, Github, Walmart, and Others

    What appears to be a major outage is impacting a number of high-profile sites, including Slack, AWS, Github, Walmart, and others.

    According to Downdetector.com, some of the internet’s largest sites and platforms are experiencing a spike in outage reports. The reports started mid-morning on Tuesday.

    At this time, it’s unclear what has caused the outage, although AWS’ inclusion in the list makes it at least possible that it is the culprit, since the platform powers so many other sites.

    Slack updated its Status page to let users know it was aware of the issue, but still not sure of the cause.

    Some customers are unable to load Slack. We’re still actively investigating this issue, but we don’t have any new information to share at this time. We’ll keep you posted as soon as we have an update.

    We will update as more details become available.

  • Akamai Buying Linode For $900 Million

    Akamai Buying Linode For $900 Million

    Akamai Technologies, Inc. has entered an agreement to buy private-owned Linode for $900 million.

    Linode is an infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) provider, based in the US. Founded in 2003, the company offers a range of services, but is especially popular for its Linux-powered virtual machines. The company competes in the same market as much larger companies, such as Microsoft, AWS and Google.

    Linode sees the acquisition as the best way for it to continue to scale and widen its reach.

    “When we started to look at our long term roadmap and how to deliver the best possible customer experience, we knew it would require more — more network, more security, more scale,” writes Linode founder and CEO Christopher Aker. “Those are things Akamai does better than anyone. Applications and data are increasingly pushing out to the edge where you need a wider span of resiliency, reach, low latency, and security. Combining the things Akamai does well with the things Linode does well brings these together under one roof at massive scale, creating the world’s most distributed compute platform — from core to edge.”

    For its part, Akamai sees the acquisition as a way to become “world’s most distributed compute platform,” thanks to Linode’s solid reputation for making cloud computing easy for just about everyone.

    “The opportunity to combine Linode’s developer-friendly cloud computing capabilities with Akamai’s market-leading edge platform and security services is transformational for Akamai,” said Dr. Tom Leighton, chief executive officer and co-founder, Akamai Technologies. “Akamai has been a pioneer in the edge computing business for over 20 years, and today we are excited to begin a new chapter in our evolution by creating a unique cloud platform to build, run and secure applications from the cloud to the edge. This a big win for developers who will now be able to build applications on a platform that delivers unprecedented scale, reach, performance, reliability and security.”

    Akamai is already the 800-lb gorilla in the CDN market. The the Linode acquisition will only help the company become even more formidable.

    The deal is expected to close in the first quarter of 2022.

  • Amazon Elastic File System Achieves Sub-Millisecond Read Speed

    Amazon Elastic File System Achieves Sub-Millisecond Read Speed

    AWS has announced a major upgrade to its Elastic File System (EFS), achieving sub-millisecond speeds.

    EFS is at the heart of the AWS platform, and is used in a wide array of applications. As a result, any increase in performance can result in significant quality-of-life improvements for AWS customers.

    The latest announcement should be welcome to the company’s customers, with EFS now boasting sub-millisecond read latency.

    “Up until today, EFS latency for read operations (both data and metadata) was typically in the low single-digit milliseconds,” writes Jeff Barr, Chief Evangelist for AWS. “Effective today, new and existing EFS file systems now provide average latency as low as 600 microseconds for the majority of read operations on data and metadata.

    “This performance boost applies to One Zone and Standard General Purpose EFS file systems. New or old, you will still get the same availability, durability, scalability, and strong read-after-write consistency that you have come to expect from EFS, at no additional cost and with no configuration changes.”

    AWS began rolling the update out over the last few weeks, so some customers may already have noticed the speed boost.

  • IBM and SAP Partner to Assist Companies Move to the Cloud

    IBM and SAP Partner to Assist Companies Move to the Cloud

    IBM and SAP have announced a deepening of their existing partnership, with the goal of helping more companies move their SAP workflows to the cloud.

    SAP is one of the leading enterprise and CRM software makers and, like most companies, is working to help its customers move to the cloud. IBM, while not one of the top three companies, is nonetheless a leading cloud provider. The company even announced its intention to split into two companies, with the main one focused on hybrid cloud solutions.

    IBM has now become a premium SAP supplier with IBM for RISE with SAP. The company is also offering its BREAKTHROUGH with IBM for RISE with SAP, “a portfolio of solutions and consulting services that help accelerate and amplify the journey to SAP S/4HANA® Cloud.”

    The expanded partnership makes IBM the only SAP partner to provide a complete solution, including cloud infrastructure, managed services, and business transformation solutions.

    “We are thrilled to advance our long-standing partnership through RISE with SAP,” said John Granger, Senior Vice President, IBM Consulting. “Our shared commitment is to meet our clients, especially those in highly regulated industries, where they are in their digital journey, while giving them choices for migrating or modernizing their mission critical workloads with a hybrid cloud approach.”

    “BREAKTHROUGH with IBM is an outstanding complement to RISE with SAP as it lays the foundation for our customers to embark on or advance their business transformation journeys. Further, it reaffirms the value customers recognize from RISE with SAP and the impact and innovation opportunity RISE with SAP offers to organizations that move to the cloud. I have every confidence that the combined expertise and experience SAP and IBM offer will accelerate cloud adoption and business growth for customers across the globe,” said Brian Duffy, President of Cloud, SAP.

  • Microsoft Quarterly Report Smashes Expectations on Strong Cloud

    Microsoft Quarterly Report Smashes Expectations on Strong Cloud

    Microsoft has reported its latest quarterly earnings, smashing Wall Street expectations on strong cloud growth.

    Microsoft reported revenue of $51.7 billion, an increase of 20% from the year-ago quarter. Earnings per share came in at $2.48, an increase of 22%. In contrast, analysts were expecting the company to report $50.1 billion, and earnings per share of $2.31. Similarly, net income came in at $18.8 billion, an increase of 21%.

    Microsoft is currently the second-largest cloud provider, behind AWS and ahead of Google Cloud. The company’s cloud results didn’t disappoint, growing by 32% year-over-year to $22.1 billion.

    “Digital technology is the most malleable resource at the world’s disposal to overcome constraints and reimagine everyday work and life,” said Satya Nadella, chairman and chief executive officer of Microsoft. “As tech as a percentage of global GDP continues to increase, we are innovating and investing across diverse and growing markets, with a common underlying technology stack and an operating model that reinforces a common strategy, culture, and sense of purpose.”

    “Solid commercial execution, represented by strong bookings growth driven by long-term Azure commitments, increased Microsoft Cloud revenue to $22.1 billion, up 32% year over year” said Amy Hood, executive vice president and chief financial officer of Microsoft.

  • SAP’s Cloud Revenue Grew 28% in Q4

    SAP’s Cloud Revenue Grew 28% in Q4

    SAP will release its fourth-quarter results next week, but the company has already revealed its Q4 cloud revenue grew a whopping 28%.

    SAP is one of the leading ERP companies in the world and, like others, has been focusing its efforts on the cloud. Those efforts are paying off, with a 28% increase in its cloud revenue.

    The company is also reporting an increase in its cloud backlog to €9.45 billion, an increase of 32%.

    “The magnitude of our cloud strength is evident,” said Christian Klein, CEO. “More and more companies are choosing SAP to help them transform their businesses, build resilient supply chains and become sustainable enterprises as they move to the cloud. This momentum is reflected in the tremendous success of ‘RISE with SAP,’ our signature cloud offering, as well as excellent growth across our entire portfolio. Our growth acceleration points to even greater potential ahead.”

    “I am proud that our team has delivered an exceptional year with strong results, far exceeding our expectations,” said Luka Mucic, CFO. “After three quarters of home runs with our cloud momentum, we hit it out of the park this quarter. We are confident that we will continue our Q4 current cloud backlog growth in 2022. This is reflected in our accelerated cloud guidance for 2022 as we make great progress towards our mid-term ambition.”

    The company is scheduled to report its full earnings January 27.

  • Salesforce Will Enforce MFA Beginning February 1

    Salesforce Will Enforce MFA Beginning February 1

    Salesforce users will need to enable multi-factor authentication (MFA) by February 1 if they want to maintain access to their Salesforce products.

    MFA is an important element in modern cybersecurity, using multiple factors to secure accounts. The factors can be a combination of username, password, security key, app authenticator, etc.

    In an effort to increase security, Salesforce is making MFA a mandatory option for all users, effective February 1.

    Beginning February 1, 2022, Salesforce will require customers to use MFA in order to access Salesforce products. All internal users who log in to Salesforce products (including partner solutions) through the user interface must use MFA for every login. We encourage you to start planning for this change now, and where possible, begin implementing MFA.

    Salesforce has published a support document to help companies prepare for the transition. All Salesforce users would do well to review it.

  • Google Cloud Acquires Security Firm Siemplify

    Google Cloud Acquires Security Firm Siemplify

    Google is making security a priority, acquiring Siemplify, one of the top security orchestration, automation and response (SOAR) providers.

    With rising ransomware attacks and security threats, cybersecurity has become one of the biggest issues facing businesses and government agencies alike. As the third-largest cloud provider, Google is working to ensure the security of its clients, and Siemplify is poised to play a large role in that.

    “Providing a proven SOAR capability unified with Chronicle’s innovative approach to security analytics is an important step forward in our vision,” writes Sunil Potti, VP/GM, Google Cloud Security. “Building an intuitive, efficient security operations workflow around planet-scale security telemetry will further realize Google Cloud’s vision of a modern threat management stack that empowers customers to go beyond typical security event and information management (SIEM) and extended detection and response (XDR) tooling, enabling better detection and response at the speed and scale of modern environments.”

    Siemplify’s CEO Amos Stern said the acquisition will help his company further its mission of providing security options to customers.

    “Beyond Google’s resources, expertise and overall commitment to cybersecurity (including a recent pledge to invest $10 billion in cybersecurity over the next five years), we have found a remarkable partner in Google Cloud,” writes Stern. “A partner that truly shares our mission, vision, values and culture. We could not be more excited to join forces with Google Cloud to drive innovation and help many more security teams take their operations to a whole new level.”

  • AWS Experiences Third Outage This Month

    AWS Experiences Third Outage This Month

    AWS has experienced its third outage this month, impacting yet more sites and services.

    AWS has had a rough December, with outages that have impacted some of the largest online services. According to The Verge, this latest outage has hit Slack, Epic Games Store, Asana, and others.

    The company said it had fixed the issue as of 9:13 AM ET, but some customers may continue to see issues.

    A look at DownDetector shows many familiar companies — ones that were impacted by previous outages — experiencing issues again. While the issues appear to be tapering off, there’s still a ways to go before things return to normal.

  • In the Wake of Major Cloud Outages, Multicloud Is the Future

    In the Wake of Major Cloud Outages, Multicloud Is the Future

    Following multiple AWS outages that crippled entire sections of the internet, companies are increasingly looking to a multicloud future.

    Multicloud refers to companies relying on multiple cloud vendors rather than a single one. AWS experienced two major outages in as many weeks, bringing some of the biggest sites and services on the web to a halt.

    According to CNBC, the outages are causing companies to look more closely at multicloud options. As evidence of that is HashiCorp’s public offering, just two days after the AWS outage. HashiCorp helps companies utilize multiple clouds. In just its second day of trading, the company surged to a market cap of more than $15 billion.

    Critics have long warned that reliance on just a few cloud vendors could put entire industries at risk, and it appears companies are increasingly taking notice of those warnings, especially in the wake of AWS’ failures.

  • Oracle In Talks to Buy Medical Records Giant Cerner

    Oracle In Talks to Buy Medical Records Giant Cerner

    Oracle is in talks to buy medical records giant Cerner, in a move that puts it on a collision course with its larger rivals.

    Oracle has been making headway in the cloud market, but still lags behind the top three: AWS, Microsoft, and Google Cloud. Cloud companies of all sizes are working to expand their markets, and the medical industry is a prime target. Microsoft acquired healthcare AI firm Nuance, and Google made a bid for the healthcare market with its Project Nightingale, before ultimately disbanding the effort.

    Oracle appears to be making its own bid for the healthcare market, with talks to purchase Cerner Corp, a leading electronic-medical-records company. According to The Wall Street Journal, the deal could be worth as much as $30 billion, which would make it the largest acquisition in Oracle’s history.

    According to WSJ’s sources, the deal could be finalized soon. If it goes through, it could help Oracle make significant headway in the cloud market, and add to the company’s reputation for offering a full end-to-end solution.