WebProNews

Tag: Amazon

  • Coronavirus: Amazon’s First Warehouse Case Raises Supply Questions

    Coronavirus: Amazon’s First Warehouse Case Raises Supply Questions

    Amazon has reported its first coronavirus case in one of their warehouses, raising questions about the possible impact on supply lines.

    The Atlantic is reporting that an Amazon warehouse worker in Queens, New York has tested positive for coronavirus, prompting the company to email all the other workers to inform them.

    “We’re writing to let you know that a positive case of the coronavirus (COVID-19) was found at our facility today,” the email read.

    In the short-term, Amazon has closed the facility and is taking extra time to deep-clean it, while all employees were sent home with full pay. In the long-term, the revelation leaves a lot of questions about the supply chain at a time when companies’ capabilities are already being pushed to the limit. Amazon recently announced it would suspend shipments of all non-essential items in an effort to keep up with demand.

    Studies have shown that the coronavirus can live for up to 24 hours on cardboard, and as long as 72 hours on plastic or steel. If more warehouse workers test positive for the virus, it could raise concerns about transmission through the very supplies people are relying on to stay safely at home. As Amazon and other fulfillment centers have to close facilities to disinfect following confirmed cases, it could have a profound impact on the entire supply chain, causing delays that no one can afford.

  • Coronavirus: Amazon Taking Drastic Action to Meet Demand

    Coronavirus: Amazon Taking Drastic Action to Meet Demand

    Amazon is prioritizing shipments of essential items to its warehouses, as it struggles to keep up with demand in the face of the coronavirus pandemic.

    As governments, schools and companies take drastic measures to stop the spread of the virus, unprecedented numbers of individuals are staying home. With restaurants and bars closed in many areas, and grocery store shelves running light, people are having to rely on their home supplies and online shopping like never before. The new status quo has strained supply chains, prompting even Walmart to adjust hours to help give stocking crews a chance to catch up.

    Amazon has likewise felt the strain, and is now taking major action to try to meet demand.

    “As COVID-19 has spread, we’ve recently seen an increase in people shopping online which has had an impact on how we serve our customers,” reads a company blog post. “So in the short term, we are making the decision to temporarily prioritize household staples, medical supplies and other high-demand products coming into our fulfillment centers so we can more quickly receive, restock and ship these products to customers. Products already on its way to our fulfillment centers will be accepted. This does not impact products being delivered to customers, or products currently in stock in our store. Customers can continue to buy any in-stock product in our store, and we will continue to deliver them.”

    Amazon’s announcement is a major change and will likely have far-reaching financial consequences for companies that rely on Amazon to sell their products. Amazon has already faced tremendous skepticism from retail companies who are reluctant to rely on the company’s cloud solutions, as Amazon is one of their biggest competitors. Now that many companies are seeing one of their primary order fulfillment avenues suspend shipment of their products, even temporarily, companies may be more hesitant to rely as heavily on Amazon in the future.

  • Coronavirus: Amazon Hiring Additional 100,000 Warehouse Workers

    Coronavirus: Amazon Hiring Additional 100,000 Warehouse Workers

    With more Americans relying on online shopping during the coronavirus pandemic, Amazon is hiring an additional 100,000 warehouse workers.

    Dave Clark, Senior Vice President of Worldwide Operations said: “We are opening 100,000 new full and part-time positions across the U.S. in our fulfillment centers and delivery network to meet the surge in demand from people relying on Amazon’s service during this stressful time, particularly those most vulnerable to being out in public.”

    In addition to working to meet demand and help people who are relying on the ecommerce giant, Amazon is also taking measures to help employees cope with the added challenges by offering a $2 per hour raise.

    “In addition to the additional 100,000 new roles we’re creating, we want to recognize our employees who are playing an essential role for people at a time when many of the services that might normally be there to support them are closed,” Clark continued. “In the U.S., we will be adding an additional $2 USD per hour worked through April from our current rate of $15/hour or more, depending on the region, £2 per hour in the UK, and approximately €2 per hour in many EU countries. This commitment to increased pay through the end of April represents an investment of over $350 million in increased compensation for hourly employees across the U.S., Europe, and Canada.”

    Amazon’s announcement is welcome news for customers and warehouse employees alike, and will hopefully help ease the strain from the coronavirus pandemic.

  • Cloud Business Powers Oracle’s Quarterly Results

    Cloud Business Powers Oracle’s Quarterly Results

    Oracle announced its quarterly results and its cloud business was the star of the show.

    The company reported total revenue of $9.8 billion for the 2020 Q3 results, up 2% year-over-year. Most notably, its Cloud Services and License Support revenue came in at $6.9 billion, a 4% increase year-over-year.

    “We had an extremely strong quarter with Total Revenues growing 3% in constant currency,” said Oracle CEO, Safra Catz. “Subscription revenues, made up of Cloud Services and License Support revenues, grew 5% in constant currency. These consistently growing and recurring subscription revenues now account for 71% of total company revenues, thus enabling a sequential increase in our operating margin, and double-digit non-GAAP Earnings Per Share growth in Q3.”

    “The Oracle Autonomous Database, the world’s only fully autonomous data management system, can automatically patch security vulnerabilities while running; it keeps your data safe,” said Oracle Chairman and CTO, Larry Ellison. “Oracle Autonomous Database is also both serverless and elastic. It’s the only database that can instantaneously scale itself to an optimal level of CPU and IO resources. You only pay for what you use. Security and economy are two fundamental reasons why thousands of customers are now using the revolutionary new Oracle Autonomous Database in our Generation 2 Public Cloud.”

    Oracle has been trying to gain ground against Amazon, Microsoft and Google, with mixed results. Recently, the company has faced an investor lawsuit claiming it bullied customers into accepting cloud contracts and has been inflating its cloud business. Documents were even unveiled wherein Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian, who previously served as head of product development at Oracle, called Oracle Cloud “a disgrace” when he was with the company.

    Oracle’s quarterly results should go a long way toward helping the company answer critics.

  • Bad News For Microsoft: Pentagon Wants a Mulligan On JEDI Contract (Updated)

    Bad News For Microsoft: Pentagon Wants a Mulligan On JEDI Contract (Updated)

    The Department of Defense is reconsidering its decision to award Microsoft the JEDI contract, following legal challenges by Amazon.

    Microsoft stunned Amazon and industry insiders when it won the Pentagon’s coveted JEDI contract, worth some $10 billion. The win lent a tremendous amount of credibility to Microsoft’s cloud business, proving it could compete with the biggest, for the best contracts. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella predicted the contract could lead to a “halo effect” for the company, bringing in even more business.

    Amazon, however, has not taken the loss lying down. The company almost immediately mounted a legal challenge and succeeded in getting a temporary injunction, preventing Microsoft from beginning on the contract. A judge agreed that Amazon stood a good chance of winning its case.

    Now, according to Business Insider, “the Department of Defense on Thursday in a court filing said it ‘wishes to reconsider’ its decision to award the $US10 billion JEDI cloud computing contract to Microsoft.” The Department of Defense said its decision was “in response to the other technical challenges presented by AWS.”

    An Amazon spokesperson told WebProNews: “We are pleased that the DoD has acknowledged ‘substantial and legitimate’ issues that affected the JEDI award decision, and that corrective action is necessary. We look forward to complete, fair, and effective corrective action that fully insulates the re-evaluation from political influence and corrects the many issues affecting the initial flawed award.”

    A reversal by the Pentagon would be a big loss for Microsoft, and likely have a major impact on how the Pentagon awards contracts going forward.

     

    *Updated with comment from Amazon*

  • Coronavirus: Google Tells All North American Employees to Telecommute

    Coronavirus: Google Tells All North American Employees to Telecommute

    Just days after encouraging all Washington State employees to work from home, Google is telling all of its North American employees to do the same.

    According to Business Insider, Google sent out a memo on Tuesday recommending that all of its employees in North America avoid going into the office if at all possible and work from home instead. At the same time, the company will keep its offices open for those jobs that require onsite access. Google also informed hourly contractors they would be compensated for hours they miss out on as a result of the virus.

    Amazon, Apple, Microsoft and Twitter have all recommended that at least some employees work from home. With the vast majority of Google’s 100,000 workers in North America, however, the company’s decision represents one of the biggest telecommuting efforts yet in response to the coronavirus.

    For years, experts have been predicting that telecommuting was the way of the future, providing an opportunity for companies to cut cost and increase morale. After the health crisis passes, it will be interesting to see if the workforce returns to normal, or if work from home options become the new normal.

  • Fight For Bronze: IBM Disputes Google Cloud Is Third Cloud Vendor

    Fight For Bronze: IBM Disputes Google Cloud Is Third Cloud Vendor

    While Amazon and Microsoft are the undisputed first and second U.S. cloud vendors, IBM is disputing that Google is the company sitting in third place.

    When Google reported its Q4 earnings, it also revealed Google Cloud’s earnings for the first time, coming it at $8.9 billion for 2019. In contrast, when IBM reported its Q4 results, its cloud business generated $6.8 billion, $21 billion for the year. On paper, that would seem to put it well ahead of Google Cloud, yet it consistently ranks fifth place. According to Bloomberg, Gartner analyst Ed Anderson says Google is still in third place.

    “What IBM calls cloud is different to what Amazon and Google call cloud,” said Anderson. As Bloomberg highlights, “all companies have their own unique definition of cloud, and analysts like Anderson employ a process called ‘cloud washing’ to try to weed out the numbers that go beyond traditional descriptions.”

    “You can see this posturing with IBM,” Anderson continued. “They are really nervous about reporting a number that is too small and nervous about reporting a number that is too big that no one will believe.”

    IBM has been in the news recently, with critics wanting to see more results from the company’s cloud efforts. IBM is widely seen as having been too slow to react to the rise of cloud computing, relying on its legacy systems instead. This has seen it fall far behind Amazon and Microsoft.

    Padding the numbers by playing fast and loose with the definition of cloud computing, however, may not be the best way to improve investor confidence.

  • Coronavirus: Apple and Amazon Latest to Recommend Telecommuting

    Coronavirus: Apple and Amazon Latest to Recommend Telecommuting

    Apple and Amazon are among the latest companies to recommend their employees work from home due to the growing threat of the coronavirus.

    As the World Health Organization (WHO) warns “the threat of a pandemic has become very real,” governments and companies are scrambling to contain the spread. Major events, such as SXSW, have been cancelled, while others, such as WWDC, hang in the balance. In addition to those measures, multiple companies have implemented work-from-home policies, in some cases voluntary and others mandatory. Microsoft, Twitter and Google have all recommended at least some of their employees—especially those in heavily impacted regions—work from home.

    Now Apple and Amazon have joined their ranks. Amazon has specifically asked employees in New Jersey and New York to work from home, as New York has one of the biggest concentrations of confirmed cases. Apple has taken it a step further, giving employees at most of its global offices the opportunity to work from home.

    Long before the coronavirus was a concern, some estimates projected 60% of office workers telecommuting by 2022. As the virus continues to spread, telecommuting may very well become the new norm long before that.

  • Not So Fast: Amazon Likely to Win Defense Contract Lawsuit

    Not So Fast: Amazon Likely to Win Defense Contract Lawsuit

    U.S. Court of Federal Claims Judge Patricia Campbell-Smith says Amazon is likely to win its lawsuit challenging Microsoft’s win of a coveted Pentagon contract.

    Last year Microsoft surprised Amazon, and industry insiders alike, by securing the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure Cloud (JEDI) contract from the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD), worth some $10 billion. Many believed Amazon was all but guaranteed to win the contract, given its long history of working on sensitive projects for the government. In addition, at the time the contract was awarded, Amazon was the only company to have the coveted Impact Level 6 security clearance, although Microsoft was awarded it shortly thereafter.

    Amazon almost immediately launched a lawsuit to overturn the contract award, claiming improper interference by President Trump, who allegedly told then-Defense Secretary James Mattis to “screw Amazon.” Amazon was successful in getting a temporary injunction, preventing Microsoft from beginning work on the contract, which was slated to begin February 13.

    According to U.S. News & World Report, although she did not address Trump’s comments, “Campbell-Smith wrote Amazon ‘is likely to succeed on the merits of its argument that the DOD improperly evaluated’ a Microsoft price scenario. She added Amazon is likely to show that Microsoft’s scenario was not ‘technically feasible’ as the Pentagon assessed.”

    Given that Microsoft is already counting on a halo effect from winning the contract, having the Pentagon’s decision overturned would be a big loss for the company.

  • Google Cloud Focusing on Telecom Industry

    Google Cloud Focusing on Telecom Industry

    In its ongoing efforts to gain cloud market share, Google Cloud has launched a version of its platform specifically aimed at the telecom industry.

    Google Cloud is currently a distant third in the U.S. cloud industry, with a mere 4% of the market. CEO Thomas Kurian has set the goal of becoming at least the second largest U.S. cloud vendor within five years. One way the company is working to grow its market share is by appealing to specific industries. The company had previously released Google Cloud Anthos for Retail in an attempt to capitalize on retailers’ aversion to using a cloud solution from Amazon, one of their biggest competitors.

    Now Google has launched Anthos for Telecom, “an open hybrid and multi-cloud application platform offering telecommunications companies the flexibility to modernize existing applications, build new ones, and securely run them on-premises and across multiple clouds.”

    Anthos is based on open source technology and includes “Kubernetes, Istio, and Knative,” enabling “consistency between on-premises and cloud environments and helps accelerate application development.”

    With Google’s latest addition to its cloud offerings, its obviously working to close the gap with its bigger competitors. Whether it will help the company meet Kurian’s goal remains to be seen.

  • Amazon Working to Cure the Common Cold

    Amazon Working to Cure the Common Cold

    Amazon is working on a cure for the common cold, under the aptly named “Project Gesundheit.”

    According to CNBC, Amazon has a research and development group called the Grand Challenge, which focuses on the biggest challenges facing the world. Amazon wants to make sure it can see the next big thing coming, rather than be surprised by a shift in industry or a disruptive startup.

    As part of the Grand Challenge, Project Gesundheit is “hoping to develop a vaccine, but is exploring a variety of approaches to the problem. Internally, the effort is sometimes referred to as the ‘vaccine project.’” The effort has been going on for years, although Amazon will not acknowledge either the project’s existence or that of the Grand Challenge.

    If Amazon is successful, it would be a boon to both the company and the U.S. economy. As CNBC points out, in 2003 a study showed the common cold costing the economy some $40 billion a year, a figure that is likely much higher now.

  • Coronavirus: Apple, Netflix and Others Pull Out of SXSW Conference

    Coronavirus: Apple, Netflix and Others Pull Out of SXSW Conference

    Apple and Netflix are among the latest companies to pull out of the South by Southwest Conference scheduled for March 13 in Austin, Texas.

    As fears about the spread of the coronavirus continue to mount, with more infections and deaths being reported in the U.S., companies are increasingly pulling out of or cancelling conferences. SXSW has already had a number of high-profile companies cancel their plans to attend, including Amazon, Facebook and Twitter.

    According to Bloomberg, Apple has announced it’s cancelling its plans to attend despite its intentions to debut three new Apple TV+ programs. Similarly, Netflix planned on unveiling a feature film and four documentaries. CNN has also cancelled its plans to attend.

    As Bloomberg points out, with Apple’s WWDC scheduled for June, the company will soon have to make a decision about whether to proceed or change to a virtual conference as Google did with its Google Cloud Next conference.

  • Twitter Encourages Telecommuting Due to Coronavirus

    Twitter Encourages Telecommuting Due to Coronavirus

    Twitter is encouraging employees worldwide to work from home, if at all possible, in an effort to help contain the spread of the coronavirus.

    As the coronavirus, or COVID-19, continues to spread around the world, governments and companies alike are trying to contain it. Japan recently began recommending that companies encourage their employees to telecommute where possible. Amazon has begun relying on video interviews for some positions, rather than in-person interviews. Now Twitter has followed suit, encouraging its employees to work from home if they are able.

    “In addition to the travel, event and visitor restrictions that we previously shared, today we provided additional guidance as we look to protect the health and safety of our workforce. Beginning today, we are strongly encouraging all employees globally to work from home if they’re able,” reads a company blog post. “Our goal is to lower the probability of the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus for us – and the world around us. We are operating out of an abundance of caution and the utmost dedication to keeping our Tweeps healthy.

    “We are working to make sure internal meetings, all hands, and other important tasks are optimized for remote participation. We recognize that working from home is not ideal for some job functions. For those employees who prefer or need to come into the offices, they will remain open for business. Our Real Estate & Workplace team is increasing deep cleaning and sanitizing in all spaces, as well as more visual reminders for personal hygiene best practices and pre-packaged, pre-composed, and pre-plated food options.

    “Working from home will be mandatory for employees based in our Hong Kong, Japan, and South Korea offices due in part to government restrictions. Our criteria will evolve over time as we get more information, and we will communicate to affected Tweeps as appropriate.”

    Twitter’s stand illustrates the effect the virus is having on companies around the world, as governments and medical personnel struggle to deal with the outbreak.

  • Google Employee Diagnosed With Coronavirus

    Google Employee Diagnosed With Coronavirus

    Despite limiting travel, an employee at Google’s Switzerland offices has been diagnosed with the coronavirus.

    According to a report by Business Insider (BI), Google informed employees via email that an employee in the Zurich offices had tested positive for the virus. However, the employee was not symptomatic while they were in the office.

    In a statement provided to BI, Google said: “We can confirm that one employee from our Zurich office has been diagnosed with the coronavirus. They were in the Zurich office for a limited time, before they had any symptoms. We have taken — and will continue to take — all necessary precautionary measures, following the advice of public health officials, as we prioritize everyone’s health and safety.”

    This is just the latest example of how the virus continues to impact industries, with experts warning of a possible pandemic. Japan recently began urging companies to allow their employees to telecommute and Amazon has begun relying on video interviews for some open positions.

  • Amazon AppStream 2.0 Adds Native Application Mode On Windows

    Amazon AppStream 2.0 Adds Native Application Mode On Windows

    Amazon AppStream 2.0 has received an upgrade, adding native application mode for Windows PCs.

    AppStream allows companies to stream applications from Amazon’s servers, saving local resources. AppStream 2.0 brings a number of improvements to the service, including the ability to switch back and forth between local and streamed applications, in addition to providing a more native experience.

    “When AppStream 2.0 users start a streaming session in native application mode and open a streaming application, the application opens in its own window and functions in the same way as a locally installed application,” according to the statement. “Because AppStream 2.0 also supports file system redirection, users can share their local folders or drives with their streaming applications. When users do so, their shared drives and folders remain available for them to access within an active session. With the combined capabilities of native application mode and file system redirection, you can provide your AppStream 2.0 users with a seamless, truly native experience for streaming applications.

    Native application mode is supported only through the AppStream 2.0 client for Windows. It is available at no additional cost in all AWS Regions where AppStream 2.0 is available.”

  • Google Cloud Releases New Security Tools

    Google Cloud Releases New Security Tools

    Google used RSA Conference to announce new security tools aimed at helping secure customers’ data and cloud services.

    The first new feature is related to Chronicle, the Alphabet-sponsored cybersecurity firm that has since been rolled into Google Cloud. Chronicle’s security analytics software helped “change the way any business could quickly, efficiently, and affordably investigate alerts and threats in their organization.” Google says the new feature is designed to help companies “detect threats using YARA-L, a new rules language built specifically for modern threats and behaviors, including types described in Mitre ATT&CK. This advanced threat detection provides massively scalable, real-time and retroactive rule execution.”

    Google is also “introducing Chronicle’s intelligent data fusion, a combination of a new data model and the ability to automatically link multiple events into a single timeline. Palo Alto Networks, with Cortex XSOAR, is our first partner to integrate with this new data structure to enable even more powerful threat response.”

    The company has also announced the general availability of its reCAPTCHA Enterprise and Web Risk tools. reCAPTCHA Enterprise helps protect websites from unauthorized scraping, automated account creation and more, while the Web Risk API lets companies check URLs against Google’s list of malicious sites.

    The announcement comes as Google is working hard to build its cloud business, trying to make headway against rivals Microsoft and Amazon, and will likely help the company as it works to attract new enterprise clients.

  • Grocery Foot Traffic is Walmart’s Secret, Says Analyst

    Grocery Foot Traffic is Walmart’s Secret, Says Analyst

    “Foot traffic has been the secret,” says Tim Lesko of Granite Investment Advisors. “Walmart a couple dozen years ago moved into grocery and that move, which was widely panned at the time, has really led foot traffic to stay steady. You’re still seeing same store sales growth in a retail industry that is really really under a lot of pressure. Stores that are able to maintain foot traffic, people that are going for grocery and then buying other goods, really creates a strong backdrop against other retailers.”

    Tim Lesko, partner at Granite Investment Advisors, discusses how foot traffic driven by their grocery business is key to Walmart’s continued growth in an otherwise difficult retail sector:

    Grocery Foot Traffic is Walmart’s Secret

    There are two things that are most important to us. One is that Walmart a couple dozen years ago moved into grocery and that move, which was widely panned at the time, has really led foot traffic to stay steady. You’re still seeing same store sales growth in a retail industry that is really really under a lot of pressure. So pretty happy to see that even though same store sales were a little light compared to street estimates, they were still positive. 

    Second is the online business. They continued to spend a lot of money and have done a really good job of growing that online business. People fail to recognize that they’re the second largest online retailer in the US. 

    Foot traffic has been the secret. Stores that are able to maintain foot traffic, whether they be stores that are people hunting for bargains in the TJ Max’s of the world or people that are going for grocery and then buying other goods really creates a strong backdrop against companies like Pier 1 which went bankrupt over the weekend. You’re seeing bankruptcies all over the landscape. You have to drive foot traffic. 

    Multiple Revenue Streams Makes Amazon a Difficult Competitor

    Multiple revenue streams is why Amazon is such a difficult competitor. They have businesses outside of their core retail business that really drive the profits and they continue to sell goods at a loss online. But interestingly, you have Amazon that’s moving from being a virtual merchant to now a bricks and mortar merchant, getting into grocery, getting into daily distribution of goods to people. 

    Walmart’s been doing that for years and has all of the goods in your geography. In the future world of same-day delivery and next day delivery, Walmart’s very well-positioned to provide that service. It’s almost like they’re both heading towards the same way but with Walmart at a much better valuation.

    Grocery Foot Traffic is Walmart’s Secret, Says Analyst
  • Amazon Wins Temporary JEDI Injunction

    Amazon Wins Temporary JEDI Injunction

    A federal judge has sided with Amazon imposing a temporary injunction preventing Microsoft from working on the Pentagon’s JEDI contract.

    Microsoft won the Pentagon’s coveted Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) contract in October 2019, pulling off what was seen as an upset against rival Amazon. Industry experts had believed Amazon was all but guaranteed to win the contract, given its long history of working with classified government data. In fact, it wasn’t until after Microsoft won the award that it was granted the Impact Level 6 clearance, allowing it to store sensitive data in the cloud, rather than air-gapped computers.

    Following Microsoft’s win, Amazon immediately decried what it saw as bias and interference from President Trump. According to former Defense Secretary James Mattis’ biography, President Trump called him in 2018 and told him to “screw Amazon” over the JEDI contract.

    Amazon almost immediately filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. In the meantime, it also filed for a temporary injunction to prevent Microsoft from working on the contract until the matter could be settled. With a judge now granting the injunction, it appears the JEDI saga is far from over.

  • IBM Goes All-In On Slack, Deploys App To All 350,000 Employees

    IBM Goes All-In On Slack, Deploys App To All 350,000 Employees

    In a big win for Slack, Business Insider (BI) is reporting that IBM is deploying the messaging app to all of its 350,000 employees.

    Slack is locked in a rivalry with Microsoft Teams, with the two companies battling for the corporate messaging market. Microsoft Teams recently doubled Slack’s user base, and has kept the pressure up with TV ads. In spite of Microsoft’s momentum, however, IBM has chosen Slack as its messaging app of choice. This, in turn, helps Slack make the case that it can compete with Microsoft on the largest scale, in the most mission-critical environments.

    “Going wall to wall in IBM — it’s basically the maximum scale that there is, so we now know that Slack will work for literally the largest organizations in the world,” Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield told BI.

    Konrad Lagarde, director of IBM Toolbox, told BI that one of the reasons IBM went with Slack was their willingness to meet IBM’s needs. When Lagarde first starting using the app, teams were limited to 2,000 individuals. With some departments larger than that, IBM needed an app that could scale better and Slack was willing to add the necessary features.

    IBM also likely chose Slack over Microsoft Teams as a result of increasing competition between the two computing giants. Microsoft is second in the U.S. cloud market, and IBM has increasingly staked its future on moving into the cloud. In fact, IBM’s recent earnings were buoyed by its cloud business. Just as many retail companies are turning to Microsoft rather than relying their prime competitor Amazon, IBM probably wants to avoid relying on a company it directly competes with.

    Either way, today’s announcement is good news for Slack and will likely help the company continue to attract business, both large and small.

  • Verizon CEO: 5G and Cloud Computing Combination ‘Is So Transformative’

    Verizon CEO: 5G and Cloud Computing Combination ‘Is So Transformative’

    In an interview with Bloomberg Businessweek, Verizon CEO Hans Vestberg talked about Verizon’s recent cloud partnership with Amazon, as well as the transformative effects 5G will bring, especially when paired with cloud computing.

    On Cloud Computer Partnership With Amazon

    “It is extremely exciting…we spent almost one and a half years with Amazon to do this. So—just to understand what we’re doing with Amazon—we’re bringing the cloud service out to the edge, together with 5G, in order to give super low latency, enormous throughput for applications being developed by developers.”

    “This cannot be done. This is the first time in the world where actually we have seen that partnership. Amazon couldn’t have done it by themselves, because they don’t have wireless 5G. Verizon couldn’t have done it by itself, because we are not in cloud service, we don’t have cloud software. The combination of us can create something that is so transformative that, today you basically as a developer you can click on our first 5G edge site in Chicago and start developing an application for 5G with low latency, enormous throughput.”

    “Of course…we’re one site right now. Think of us when we have hundreds of them, maybe thousands of them, over time….We can then give 5G experiences of low latency….Autonomous cars, real-time AR/VR, artificial intelligence, all of that can be at the edge.”

    “And we’re just seeing the start of it, so that’s why we’re so excited about this partnership and what we launched 3rd of December last year.”

    On How 5G Differs From Previous Generations

    “Remember, when the design of 5G was done, the idea was this is wireless technology for industries and society….It was of course thought that consumers would get the benefit, but from the beginning was: How can you take away all the cables in the world and have the same performance as you had with cable, being much more agile, having new ways of doing it? That was the idea.

    “When I think about 5G, 4G has basically two capabilities: speed and throughput. The phone is better every time you get a new generation. In 5G, eight currencies: battery optimizations, low latency. I mean, just one of the currencies, today I can connect 100,000 devices per square kilometer, tomorrow I can do 1,000,000. There’s never going to be 1,000,000 people on a square kilometer, so it’s done for devices talking to devices, optimizing flows for industries.

    “So where are we? I mean, the plan was actually to come out 2020. We came out 2018. I think we’re ahead of the game, but still, from a consumer market, we’re just now starting to massively come into it. As we have said, this year we’re going to launch 20 5G phones….We think that our 5G is so different from others, because the performance on our millimeter wave 5G is just extraordinary. Today I get 2 gigabit per second in my phone! If you have a 4G phone, which you probably have over there, you probably have 40 to 50 megabits per second on Verizon, which is the best network in the country. And here we’re getting 2 gig. You cannot even imagine how much faster that is.”

     

  • Microsoft Sees Amazon and Google As Primary Xbox Competition

    Microsoft Sees Amazon and Google As Primary Xbox Competition

    People love rivalries. Apple vs Microsoft, Ford vs Chevy, Patriots vs the Bills and Xbox vs PlayStation are just a few of the greats. According to Protocol, however, the Xbox vs PlayStation rivalry may be nearing its end as Microsoft’s focus has shifted to Amazon and Google as its primary rivals.

    “When you talk about Nintendo and Sony, we have a ton of respect for them, but we see Amazon and Google as the main competitors going forward,” Phil Spencer, head of Microsoft’s games business, told Protocol in an interview. “That’s not to disrespect Nintendo and Sony, but the traditional gaming companies are somewhat out of position. I guess they could try to re-create Azure, but we’ve invested tens of billions of dollars in cloud over the years.”

    The change in focus is another indication of the growing importance of the cloud, and Microsoft’s determination to continue gaining ground in the market. While the company has enjoyed phenomenal success with its Xbox line, it sees the future of gaming in cloud-based streaming, according to Business Insider.

    Google has already released its streaming game service Stadia, and Apple has a similar service called Apple Arcade. While Amazon doesn’t currently have a gaming service, it has the underlying cloud architecture to support one. Unlike Microsoft or Sony’s current offerings, for a low monthly price Stadia and Arcade stream a myriad of games to devices people already own and use, meaning there is a far lower barrier-to-entry. This is significant when taking into consideration the cost of a gaming console. Suddenly the potential market goes from hundreds of millions to billions.

    Microsoft’s changed focus is just the latest thing that illustrates the many different fronts the cloud wars will be fought on—including gaming.